CHAPTER TWO
uot; said Caspian, quot; already. You and Rhince”
(Re) quot;are sailing t ories, so you and cabin above. King Edmund and I can lie very snug ranger?”
Eustace, very green in torm getting less. But Caspian said, quot; storm?quot; and Drinian burst out laughing.
quot;Storm, young master!quot; ;ther as a man could ask for.”
quot;?quot; said Eustace irritably. quot;Send hrough my head.”
quot;Ive broug ter, Eustace,quot; said Lucy.
quot;O; groace. But ook a drop from ly stuff (t is certain t colour a fes after , and better because, instead of torm and
o be put as at t port ;lodge a dispositionquot; against tis ion ) Eustace could only reply, quot;Fancy not kno.quot; In tace t t as to land t to Cambridge - er t o put on t out for him and come on deck.
Caspian no already.
t up on tle and sa man standing on a little ss open moutle cers for sucser, ter-arc odd to s creaming back over t is because you are teams as far foraken up to ting top, and at first it o rock to and fro t if you fell ticular reason o ty t tiller, and be tail rose up, covered ran a little bencreader. Stle bit of a ter as tion in tors.
to sea, to buy a Galmian s noeaco be sea-faring folk once more, and treader s yet. S, for, tral c on one side and t sy of ;ladyquot; as sailors say, , ace of course on boasting about liners and motor-boats and aeroplanes and submarines (quot;As if t; muttered Edmund), but t to ter