CHAPTER TWO
en) at one draugy boo the page.
quot;No,quot; said t;Do you bring us more news of Aslan?”
Roon looked very grave, frotle.
quot;Sire,quot; ;You knoars; for aurs live longer terrible tten in tly since tars say not t t been sucrous conjunctions of ts for five o come and y t some great evil last nig Aslan is abroad in Narnia. Sire, do not believe tale. It cannot be. tars never lie, but Men and Beasts do. If Aslan o Narnia told it. If gracious stars would be assembled in is all a lie.”
quot;A lie!quot; said t; creature in Narnia or all to lie on sucter?quot; And, kno, .
quot;t I kno, Lord King,quot; said taur. quot;But I knoars.”
quot;I ; said Je; come tars foretold ot tars but t not said in all tories t a tame lion.”
quot;ell said, ; cried t;t a tame lion.
It comes in many tales.”
Roon raised o say sometly to turned to listen to a o t of t t see t. But the words.
quot;oe, ; called t;oe for my broters! oe for trees! te. t us. e are being felled. Great trees are falling, falling, falling.”
it quot;fallingquot; t. S so tall t aurs yet sree too. It is o explain if you quite unmistakable once you in tirian and ts kne once t sree.
quot;Justice, Lord King!quot; s;Come to our aid. Protect your people. tern aste.
Forty great trunks of my broters are already on the ground.”
quot;, Lady! Felling Lantern aste? Murdering talking trees?quot; cried to and drahe Mane of Asl