CHAPTER FOURTEEN
st of air ing up from ttom, or for some oting doed, till t blotted out t;Good-bye to your ; sed Golg, and dived. Only a fe to follo in a pillarbox. No ensely brigrains craso a t, maddening smell vanished.
travellers were alone in an Underworld whan before.
Pale, dim, and dreary, tion of the road.
quot;No; said Puddleglum, quot;its ten to one ayed too long, but ry. t in five minutes, I s wonder.”
to a canter and tyle. But almost at once it began going do seen, on t at ttom of ter.
quot;e,quot; cried t tom even five minutes later for tide o s it ill only a foot or t sy.
to look at but t up and up as far as ter spreading. All t t some distant ligotal darkness every of it be gone out, t ser.
Alt go on for ever a rest. ted: and in silence ter.
quot;I no; said Jill. quot;And all those queer sleeping animals.”
quot;I dont t,quot; said Eustace. quot;Dont you remember o go doer imes cave yet.”
quot;ts as may be,quot; said Puddleglum. quot;Im more interested in this road.
Look a bit sickly, dont they?”
quot;t; said Jill.
quot;Aye,quot; said Puddleglum. quot;But theyre greener now.”
quot;You dont mean to say you t?quot; cried Eustace.
quot;ell, expect to last for ever, you kno; replied t;But dont let your spirits do my eye on ter too, and I dont ts rising so fast as it did.”
quot;Small comfort, friend,quot; said t;If find our . I cry you mercy, all. I am