CHAPTER EIGHT
too exed to see s body got rapidly smaller and disappeared into a splas of course sed at t, and it may ion) t sic satisfaction on tures face. is certain is t it upid animal, for instead of pursuing t turned its s o expected to find treader t treader ing and groaning all about till presently to talk about it, and to laug it. And ace (t done any good) and of Reepicheep.
After t sea and sky. On to to rise; by ternoon it at time ted land on t bow.
quot;By your leave, Sire,quot; said Drinian, quot;ry to get under t country by ro; Caspian agreed, but a long ro t bring to t lig day teered into a natural no one as nigry . From t summit clouds came streaming rapidly. t and loaded er casks wy.
quot;ream ser at, Drinian?quot; said Caspian as ook in tern-ss of t. quot;to be to the bay.”
quot;It makes little odds, Sire,quot; said Drinian. quot;But I ts a ser pull to t on tarboard-tern one.”
quot;; said Lucy.
quot;I s does!quot; said Edmund, for it ing ;I say, lets go to tream. trees ter.”
quot;Yes, lets,quot; said Eustace. quot;No point in getting ter than we need.”
But all time Drinian eadily steering to tarboard, like tiresome people in cars forty miles an o t the wrong road.
quot;t, Drinian,quot; said Caspian. quot; you bring ern stream?”
quot;As your Majesty pleases,quot; said Drinian a little sly. erday, and like advice from landsmen. But ered course; and it turned out after it hing he