CHAPTER FOUR
CASPIAN DID t morning ts early, and after breakfast o order every man o full armour. quot;And above all,quot; ;let everytrim and scoured as if it battle in a great ; tloads Caspian and out for Narroer h him.
ty at Narro t;t I sent last nig; said Bern. quot;t people.quot; And as soon as Caspian stepped as into s of, quot;Narnia! Narnia! Long live t; At t - and to Berns messengers - bells began ringing from many parts of too be advanced and rumpet to be bloernness, and treet so t treet s one could it steadily.
At first t to t t turbance to morning.
And t t of doors and ering and c ? And all t , so t by time Caspian reacle gates, nearly tole, muddling and messing about s and forms and rules and regulations, he noise.
At tle gate Caspians trumpeter ble and cried, quot;Open for to visit rusty and t; In ttle postern opened, and out came a tousled felloy old on ead of a , and a rusty old pike in t;Carn - seez - fis; ;You cant see ;). quot;No intervie pointments cept ten p.m. second Saturday every month.”
quot;Uncover before Narnia, you dog,quot; t leted flying from his head.
quot;Ere? ots it all about?quot; began t no one took any notice of epped tern and after some struggling s (for everyty) flung bote rode into tyard. and several more (tly umbling out of various doorion, t if t ime to think.
quot;ain?quot; he asked.
quot;I am, more or less, if you kno; said a languid and rat any j armour at all.