THE DUFFLEPUDS MADE HAPPY
LUCY followed the great Lion out into the passage and at once she saw coming towards them an old man, barefoot, dressed in a red robe. His white hair was crowned with a chaplet of oak leaves, his beard fell to his girdle, and he supported himself with a curiously carved staff. When he saw Aslan he bowed low and said,
“Welcome, Sir, to the least of your houses.”
“Do you grow weary, Coriakin, of ruling such foolish subjects as I have given you here?”
“No,” said the Magician, “they are very stupid but there is no real harm in them. I begin to grow rather fond of the creatures. Sometimes, perhaps, I am a little impatient, waiting for the day when they can be governed by wisdom instead of this rough magic.”
“All in good time, Coriakin,” said Aslan.
“Yes, all in very good time, Sir,” was the answer. “Do you intend to show yourself to them?”
“Nay,” said the Lion, with a little half-growl that meant(Lucy thought)the same as a laugh. “I should frighten them out of their senses. Many stars will grow old and come to take their rest in islands before your people are ripe for that. And today before sunset I must visit Trumpkin the Dwarf where he sits in the castle of Cair Paravel counting the days till his master Caspian comes home. I will tell him all your story, Lucy. Do not look so sad. We shall meet soon again.”
“Please, Aslan,” said Lucy, “what do you call soon?”
“I call all times soon,” said Aslan; and instantly he was vanished away and Lucy was alone with the Magician.
“Gone!” said he, “and you and I quite crestfallen. It’s always like that, you can’t keep him; it’s not as if he were a tame lion. And how did you enjoy my book?”
“Parts of it very much indeed,” said Lucy. “Did you know I was there all the time?”
“Well, of course I knew when I let the Duffers make themselves invisible that you would be coming along presently to take the spell off. I wasn’t quite sure of the exact day. And I wasn’t especially on the watch this morning. You see they had made me invisible too and being invisible always makes me so sleepy. Heigh-ho—there I’m yawning again. Are you hungry?”
“Well, perhaps I am a little,” said Lucy. “I’ve no idea what the time is.”
“Come,” said the Magician. “All times may be soon to Aslan; but in my home all hungry times are one o’clock.”
He led her a little way down the passage and opened a door. Passing in, Lucy found herself in a pleasant room full of sunlight and flowers. The table was bare when they entered, but it was of course a magic table, and at a word from the old man the tablecloth, silver, plates, glasses and food appeared.
“I hope that is what you would like,” said he. “I have tried to give you food more like the food of your own land than perhaps you have had lately.”
“It’s lovely,” said Lucy, and so it was; an omelette, piping hot, cold lamb and green peas, a strawberry ice, lemon-squash to drink with the meal and a cup of chocolate to follow. But the magician himself drank only wine and ate only bread. There was nothing alarming about him, and Lucy and he were soon chatting away like old friends.
“When will the spell work?” asked Lucy. “Will the Duffers be visible again at once?”
“Oh yes, they’re visible now. But they’re probably all asleep still; they always take a rest in the middle of the day.”
“And now that they’re visible, are you going to let them off being ugly? Will you make them as they were before?”
“Well, that’s rather a delicate question,” said the Magician. “You see, it’s only they who think they were so nice to look at before. They say they’ve been uglified, but that isn’t what I called it. Many people might say the change was for the better.”
“Are they awfully conceited?”
“They are. Or at least the Chief Duffer is, and he’s taught all the rest to be. They always believe every word he says.”
“We’d noticed that,” said Lucy.
“Yes—we’d get on better without him, in a way. Of course I could turn him into something else, or even put a spell on him which would make them not believe a word he said. But I don’t like to do that. It’s better for them to admire him than to admire nobody.”
“Don’t they admire you?” asked Lucy.
“Oh, not me,” said the Magician. “They wouldn’t admire me.”
“What was it you uglified them for—I mean, what they call uglified?”
“Well, they wouldn’t do what they were told. Their work is to mind the garden and raise food—not for me, as they imagine, but for themselves.They wouldn’t do it at all if I didn’t make them. And of course for a garden you want water. There is a beautiful spring about half a mile away up the hill. And from that spring there flows a stream which comes right past the garden. All I asked them to do was to take their water from the stream instead of trudging up to the spring with their buckets two or three times a day and tiring themselves out besides spilling half of it on the way back. But they wouldn’t see it. In the end they refused point blank.”
“Are they as stupid as all that?” asked Lucy.
The Magician sighed. “You wouldn’t believe the troubles I’ve had with them. A few months ago they were all for washing up the plates and knives before dinner: they said it saved time afterwards. I’ve caught them planting boiled potatoes to save cooking them when they were dug up. One day the cat got into the dairy and twenty of them were at work moving all the milk out; no one thought of moving the cat. But I see you’ve finished. Let’s go and look at the Duffers now they can be looked at.”
They went into another room which was full of polished instruments hard to understand—such as Astrolabes, Orreries, Chronoscopes, Poesimeters, Choriambuses and Theodolinds—and here, when they had come to the window, the Magician said, “There. There are your Duffers.”
“I don’t see anybody,” said Lucy. “And what are those mushroom things?”
The things she pointed at were dotted all over the level grass. They were certainly very like mushrooms, but far too big—the stalks about three feet high and the umbrellas about the same length from edge to edge. When she looked carefully she noticed too that the stalks joined the umbrellas not in the middle but at one side which gave an unbalanced look to them. And there was something—a sort of little bundle—lying on the grass at the foot of each stalk. In fact the longer she gazed at them the less like mushrooms they appeared. The umbrella part was not really round as she had thought at first. It was longer than it was broad, and it widened at one end. There were a great many of them, fifty or more.
The clock struck three.
Instantly a most extraordinary thing happened. Each of the“mushrooms” suddenly turned upside-down. The little bundles which had lain at the bottom of the stalks were heads and bodies. The stalks themselves were legs. But not two legs to each body. Each body had a single thick leg right under it(not to one side like the leg of a one-legged man)and at the end of it, a single enormous foot—a broad-toed foot with the toes curling up a little so that it looked rather like a small canoe. She saw in a moment why they had looked like mushrooms. They had been lying flat on their backs each with its single leg straight up in the air and its enormous foot spread out above it. She learned afterwards that this was their ordinary way of resting; for the foot kept off both rain and sun and for a Monopod to lie under its own foot is almost as good as being in a tent.
“Oh, the funnies, the funnies,” cried Lucy, bursting into laughter. “Did you make them like that?”
“Yes, yes. I made the Duffers into Monopods,” said the Magician. He too was laughing till the tears ran down his cheeks. “But watch,” he added.
It was worth watching. Of course these little one-footed men couldn’t walk or run as we do. They got about by jumping, like fleas or frogs. And what jumps they made!—as if each big foot were a mass of springs. And with what a bounce they came down; that was what made the thumping noise which had so puzzled Lucy yesterday. For now they were jumping in all directions and calling out to one another, “Hey, lads! We’re visible again.”
“Visible we are,” said one in a tasselled red cap who was obviously the Chief Monopod. “And what I say is, when chaps are visible, why, they can see one another.”
“Ah, there it is, there it is, Chief,” cried all the others. “There’s the point. No one’s got a clearer head than you. You couldn’t have made it plainer.”
“She caught the old man napping, that little girl did,” said the Chief Monopod. “We’ve beaten him this time.”
“Just what we were, going to say ourselves,” chimed the chorus.“You’re going stronger than ever today, Chief. Keep it up, keep it up.”
“But do they dare to talk about you like that?” said Lucy. “They seemed to be so afraid of you yesterday. Don’t they know you might be listening?”
“That’s one of the funny things about the Duffers,” said the Magician. “One minute they talk as if I ran everything and overheard everything and was extremely dangerous. The next moment they think they can take me in by tricks that a baby would see through—bless them!”
“Will they have to be turned back into their proper shapes?” asked Lucy. “Oh, I do hope it wouldn’t be unkind to leave them as they are. Do they really mind very much? They seem pretty happy. I say—look at that jump. What were they like before?”
“Common little dwarfs,” said he. “Nothing like so nice as the sort you have in Narnia.”
“It would be a pity to change them back,” said Lucy. “They’re so funny: and they’re rather nice. Do you think it would make any difference if I told them that?”
“I’m sure it would—if you could get it into their heads.”
“Will you come with me and try?”
“No, no. You’ll get on far better without me.”
“Thanks awfully for the lunch,” said Lucy and turned quickly away. She ran down the stairs which she had come up so nervously that morning and cannoned into Edmund at the bottom. All the others were there with him waiting, and Lucy’s conscience smote her when she saw their anxious faces and realized how long she had forgotten them.
“It’s all right,” she shouted. “Everything’s all right. The Magician’s a brick—and I’ve seen Him—Aslan.”
After that she went from them like the wind and out into the garden. Here the earth was shaking with the jumps and the air ringing with the shouts of the Monopods. Both were redoubled when they caught sight of her.
“Here she comes, here she comes,” they cried. “Three cheers for the little girl. Ah! She put it across the old gentleman properly, she did.”
“And we’re extremely regrettable,” said the Chief Monopod, “that we can’t give you the pleasure of seeing us as we were before we were uglified, for you wouldn’t believe the difference, and that’s the truth, for there’s no denying we’re mortal ugly now, so we won’t deceive you.”
“Eh, that we are, Chief, that we are,” echoed the others, bouncing like so many toy balloons. “You’ve said it, you’ve said it.”
“But I don’t think you are at all,” said Lucy, shouting to make herself heard. “I think you look very nice.”
“Hear her, hear her,” said the Monopods. “True for you, Missie. Very nice we look. You couldn’t find a handsomer lot.” They said this without any surprise and did not seem to notice that they had changed their minds.
“She’s a-saying,” remarked the Chief Monopod, “as how we looked very nice before we were uglified.”
“True for you, Chief, true for you,” chanted the others. “That’s what she says. We heard her ourselves.”
“I did not,” bawled Lucy. “I said you’re very nice now.”
“So she did, so she did,” said the Chief Monopod, “said we were very nice then.”
“Hear ’em both, hear ’em both,” said the Monopods. “There’s a pair for you. Always right. They couldn’t have put it better.”
“But we’re saying just the opposite,” said Lucy, stamping her foot with impatience.
“So you are, to be sure, so you are,” said the Monopods. “Nothing like an opposite. Keep it up, both of you.”
“You’re enough to drive anyone mad,” said Lucy, and gave it up. But the Monopods seemed perfectly contented, and she decided that on the whole the conversation had been a success.
And before everyone went to bed that evening something else happened which made them even more satisfied with their one-legged condition. Caspian and all the Narnians went back as soon as possible to the shore to give their news to Rhince and the others on board the Dawn Treader, who were by now very anxious. And, of course, the Monopods went with them, bouncing like footballs and agreeing with one another in loud voices till Eustace said, “I wish the Magician would make them inaudible instead of invisible.”(He was soon sorry he had spoken because then he had to explain that an inaudible thing is something you can’t hear, and though he took a lot of trouble he never felt sure that the Monopods had really understood, and what especially annoyed him was that they said in the end, “Eh, he can’t put things the way our Chief does. But you’ll learn, young man. Hark to him. He’ll show you how to say things. There’s a speaker for you!”)When they reached the bay, Reepicheep had a brilliant idea. He had his little coracle lowered and paddled himself about in it till the Monopods were thoroughly interested. He then stood up in it and said, “Worthy and intelligent Monopods, you do not need boats. Each of you has a foot that will do instead. Just jump as lightly as you can on the water and see what happens.”
The Chief Monopod hung back and warned the others that they’d find the water powerful wet, but one or two of the younger ones tried it almost at once; and then a few others followed their example, and at last the whole lot did the same. It worked perfectly. The huge single foot of a Monopod acted as a natural raft or boat, and when Reepicheep had taught them how to cut rude paddles for themselves, they all paddled about the bay and round the Dawn Treader, looking for all the world like a fleet of little canoes with a fat dwarf standing up in the extreme stern of each. And they had races, and bottles of wine were lowered down to them from the ship as prizes, and the sailors stood leaning over the ship’s sides and laughed till their own sides ached.
The Duffers were also very pleased with their new name of Monopods, which seemed to them a magnificent name though they never got it right. “That’s what we are,” they bellowed, “Moneypuds, Pomonods, Poddymons. Just what it was on the tips of our tongue to call ourselves.” But they soon got it mixed up with their old name of Duffers and finally settled down to calling themselves the Dufflepuds; and that is what they will probably be called for centuries.
That evening all the Narnians dined upstairs with the Magician, and Lucy noticed how different the whole top floor looked now that she was no longer afraid of it. The mysterious signs on the doors were still mysterious but now looked as if they had kind and cheerful meanings, and even the bearded mirror now seemed funny rather than frightening. At dinner everyone had by magic what everyone liked best to eat and drink, and after dinner the Magician did a very useful and beautiful piece of magic. He laid two blank sheets of parchment on the table and asked Drinian to give him an exact account of their voyage up to date: and as Drinian spoke, everything he described came out on the parchment in fine clear lines till at last each sheet was a splendid map of the Eastern Ocean, showing Galma, Terebinthia, the Seven Isles, the Lone Islands, Dragon Island, Burnt Island, Deathwater, and the land of the Duffers itself, all exactly the right sizes and in the right positions. They were the first maps ever made of those seas and better than any that have been made since without magic. For on these, though the towns and mountains looked at first just as they would on an ordinary map, when the Magician lent them a magnifying glass you saw that they were perfect little pictures of the real things, so that you could see the very castle and slave market and streets in Narrowhaven, all very clear though very distant, like things seen through the wrong end of a telescope. The only drawback was that the coastline of most of the islands was incomplete, for the map showed only what Drinian had seen with his own eyes. When they were finished the. Magician kept one himself and presented the other to Caspian: it still hangs in his Chamber of Instruments at Cair Paravel. But the Magician could tell them nothing about seas or lands further east. He did, however, tell them that about seven years before a Narnian ship had put in at his waters and that she had on board the lords Revilian, Argoz, Mavramorn and Rhoop: so they judged that the golden man they had seen lying in Deathwater must be the Lord Restimar.
Next day, the Magician magically mended the stern of the Dawn Treaderwhere it had been damaged by the Sea Serpent and loaded her with useful gifts. There was a most friendly parting, and when she sailed, two hours after noon, all the Dufflepuds paddled out with her to the harbour mouth, and cheered until she was out of sound of their cheering.
露西跟著獅子出去,來到走廊上,她看見一個穿著紅色長袍的老人,赤著腳朝他們走來。他的白發(fā)上戴著橡樹葉編成的花冠,胡須垂到了腰帶,拄著一根雕工奇妙的手杖。他看見阿斯蘭就深深地鞠了一躬,說:“歡迎您光臨寒舍?!?/p>
“柯瑞金,我讓你在這里管這些愚蠢的東西,你感到厭煩了嗎?”
“不,”魔法師說,“他們確實很笨,但是不會做出什么有害的事情。我倒開始有點兒喜歡這些怪物了。我一直等著有一天能用智慧,而不是這種粗暴的魔法來管他們,可能我有時候等得有點兒不耐煩了?!?/p>
“柯瑞金,慢慢來?!卑⑺固m說。
“是,慢慢來,”他回答說,“您打算在他們面前露露面嗎?”
“不,”獅子輕吼道,(露西想)這大概和笑是一個意思吧,“我會把他們嚇壞的。就是等到星星都老了,在島上退休了,他們也還沒有厲害到能接受這樣的場面呢。今天日落之前,我必須去拜訪矮人杜魯普金,他正坐在凱爾帕拉維爾的城堡里數(shù)著他的主人凱斯賓回家的日子。露西,我要把你們的經(jīng)歷都告訴他。別這么傷心。我們不久就會見面的?!?/p>
“阿斯蘭,求你了,”露西說,“不久是多久?”
阿斯蘭說:“不管多長時間,我都說不久。”接著他馬上消失了,剩下露西和那個魔法師在一起。
“他走了!”他說,“你我一樣沮喪。一直都是這樣,你留不住他,他不像是頭溫馴的獅子。你覺得我的書怎么樣?”
“其中有些部分很不錯,”露西說,“你一直都知道我在那里嗎?”
“嗯,我當(dāng)然知道,我讓那些笨蛋變成隱身人的時候,就知道你不久就會來破解咒語。不過我不確定你哪天會來。今天早晨我也沒有特意留心。你看,這咒語讓我也隱形了,隱形之后我總是昏昏欲睡。嗨——呵——我又在打哈欠了。你餓嗎?”
“嗯,好像有點兒,”露西說,“我不知道現(xiàn)在幾點了。”
“來,”魔法師說,“對阿斯蘭來說,多長時間都算是不久。而在我家,只要肚子餓了,就算一點鐘?!?/p>
他帶著她沿著走廊走了一小段路,打開了一扇門。進門以后,露西發(fā)現(xiàn)自己在一間滿是陽光和鮮花的房間里。他們進來時桌子上面是空的,但那肯定是一張有魔法的桌子,老人念了一句咒語,桌布、銀器、餐盤、杯子和食物就都出現(xiàn)了。
“希望你喜歡吃這些東西,”他說,“我盡量給你弄了些你家鄉(xiāng)的食物,而不是你最近吃到的那些?!?/p>
“好可愛啊。”露西說。確實如此:一個熱騰騰的煎蛋卷、冷羊肉、青豆、一個草莓冰淇淋、佐餐檸檬水,還有一杯巧克力。但是魔法師自己只喝葡萄酒,只吃面包。他沒什么讓人害怕的,露西和他很快就像老朋友一樣聊起天來。
“這個咒語什么時候開始起作用?”露西問,“他們馬上就能現(xiàn)形了嗎?”
“是啊,他們現(xiàn)在都已經(jīng)現(xiàn)形了。但他們可能都睡著了,他們中午總要休息一下?!?/p>
“現(xiàn)在他們已經(jīng)現(xiàn)形了,你還要讓他們繼續(xù)丑陋下去嗎?你能把他們變回以前的樣子嗎?”
“嗯,這是個相當(dāng)微妙的問題,”魔法師說,“你知道嗎,只有他們自己覺得自己原來長得很好看。他們說自己被變丑了,我可不這么覺得。許多人可能會說他們變得好看多了?!?/p>
“他們很自負嗎?”
“是的。或者說只有笨蛋頭頭是這樣,而且他把剩下的人也帶壞了。他們總是相信他說的每一個字?!?/p>
“我們也注意到了。”露西說。
“是的,從某種程度上說,沒有他我們會過得更好。我當(dāng)然可以把他變成別的東西,甚至可以對他們施咒,讓他們不相信他說的話。但我不喜歡那樣做。對他們來說,崇拜他總比不崇拜任何人來得好?!?/p>
“他們不崇拜你?”露西問。
“哦,不,”魔法師說,“他們不崇拜我?!?/p>
“你為什么要把他們變丑——我是說,他們所謂的變丑?”
“好吧,他們不聽話。他們的工作是照看花園和栽培食物——他們以為那些都是為我做的,但其實都是為了他們自己。如果我不逼他們做,他們根本不會去做。當(dāng)然,要打理花園就需要水。在半英里之外的山上有一汪美麗的清泉。一條小溪從泉水中流出來,正好穿過花園。我只是讓他們用這小溪里的水,沒有讓他們一天兩三次地提著水桶去打泉水。要是這樣長途跋涉,他們恐怕該累壞了,水也會灑出來一半。但他們不明白。最后他們斷然拒絕了我?!?/p>
“他們愚蠢到了這種地步嗎?”露西問。
魔法師嘆了口氣:“他們給我?guī)淼穆闊?,說了你也不信。幾個月前,他們都是在晚飯前把盤子和刀子洗干凈,他們說這樣可以節(jié)省時間,免得吃了飯再洗。我還碰到過他們在種煮熟的土豆,說是免得挖起來之后再煮。有一天,貓鉆進了牛奶房,他們出動了二十個人把所有的牛奶往外搬,沒人想到去把貓趕出來。我看你吃好了。既然那些笨蛋現(xiàn)在已經(jīng)現(xiàn)形了,我們就去看看他們現(xiàn)在的模樣吧。”
他們走進另一個房間,里面都是些擦得錚亮、讓人摸不著頭腦的儀器,如星盤、太陽系儀、計時器、詩行表、詩律表和經(jīng)緯儀。他們來到窗口時,魔法師說:“在那兒。你要看的笨蛋在那兒。”
“我沒看見任何人,”露西說,“那些蘑菇一樣的是什么東西?”
她指的這些東西到處都是,鋪滿了草地。它們的確很像蘑菇,但又太大了——蘑菇柄大約有三英尺高,蘑菇蓋的直徑差不多也是三英尺。她仔細一看,發(fā)現(xiàn)蘑菇柄不連在蘑菇蓋中間,而是連在了一側(cè),看上去不太對稱。而且每個蘑菇柄根部都好像有什么東西,像個小包裹似的躺在草地上。其實,她越看這些東西越不像蘑菇。蘑菇蓋也不像她之前以為的那么圓。直里比橫里長,一頭比另一頭寬。個數(shù)很多,可能有五十多個。
鐘敲了三下。
一件離奇的事情發(fā)生了。每個“蘑菇”都突然一下子顛倒了過來。那些蘑菇柄下面的小包裹原來是頭和身體。蘑菇柄就是腿。但每個身子并不是長著兩條腿,而只有一條粗短的腿(不像只有一條腿的人那樣長在一邊),腿下面長著一只巨大的腳——腳趾很寬,微微向上翹起,看起來就像一艘小獨木舟。這下,她馬上就明白了為什么他們看起來像蘑菇。他們平躺在地上,那條腿朝空中伸直,巨大的腳丫被撐在半空。后來她才知道,這是他們平常的休息方式。因為這只腳可以遮雨遮陽,獨腳怪躺在自己的腳下就像躺在帳篷里一樣。
“啊呀,好有趣,好有趣,”露西大笑道,“是你把他們變成這樣的嗎?”
“對,是的,我把那些笨蛋變成了獨腳怪?!蹦Х◣熣f。他也在大笑,笑得眼淚都出來了?!暗悄憧础!彼a充道。
這值得一看。當(dāng)然,這些獨腳怪不能像我們這樣走路或奔跑。他們走路全靠跳,就像跳蚤和青蛙那樣。你看他們跳得多好啊,每只大腳都像一個彈簧。露西昨天聽到的莫名其妙的砰砰聲,其實就是他們蹦蹦跳跳發(fā)出來的聲音。
現(xiàn)在他們正往四面八方跳,互相喊著:“嘿,伙計們!我們現(xiàn)形啦?!?/p>
“我們現(xiàn)形了,”一個戴著紅色流蘇帽子的人說,他顯然是獨腳怪的頭兒,“我想說的是,伙計們都現(xiàn)形了,我們才能看到彼此?!?/p>
“啊,就是,就是,頭兒,”其他的人都叫道,“說得太對了,你真是頭腦最清醒的人了。你真是說到點子上了?!?/p>
“那個小女孩趁著魔法師措手不及成功了,”獨腳怪的頭兒說,“這次我們打敗了他。”
“我們也正想這么說呢,”其他的人齊聲說道,“頭兒,你今天比以往更強了。繼續(xù)說,繼續(xù)說。”
“他們竟然敢這樣說你?”露西說,“昨天他們好像還很怕你。難道他們不知道你有可能在聽嗎?”
“這就是這些笨蛋的有趣之處,”魔法師說,“一會兒把我說得好像掌控一切,什么都聽得到,是一個很危險的人。一會兒又覺得可以用他們的雕蟲小技騙過我——我的老天!”
“他們必須得變回原來的樣子嗎?”露西問道,“啊呀,如果讓他們維持這個樣子,不會顯得很無情吧。他們真的很介意嗎?他們看起來很開心。我是說,看他們跳來跳去的樣子。他們以前是什么樣子?”
“普通的矮人,”他說,“離你們納尼亞的矮人可差遠了?!?/p>
“把他們變回原樣真的太可惜了,”露西說,“他們這么有趣,而且也挺好看的。如果我跟他們說了,你覺得會有什么影響嗎?”
“我覺得肯定會有——如果你能讓他們聽進去?!?/p>
“你愿意和我一起去試試嗎?”
“不,不。我不在你會順利得多?!?/p>
“非常感謝你的午餐?!甭段髡f著,迅速轉(zhuǎn)過身去。她跑下樓梯,那天早晨她爬上這個樓梯時還緊張得要命。沒料到她在樓梯下撞到了艾德蒙。所有的人都陪著他在那兒等著,露西看到他們焦急的臉,意識到自己已經(jīng)把他們忘到了腦后,心里就感到一陣歉疚。
“沒事了,”她喊道,“一切都好了。魔法師是個大好人,我還看見了阿斯蘭?!?/p>
說完,她像一陣風(fēng)似的從他們身邊跑進了花園。這里的空氣中回響著獨腳怪的叫喊聲,地面被跳得直震動。他們看見她的時候,氣氛更加熱烈了。
“她來了,她來了,”他們喊道,“讓我們一起為她歡呼。?。∷_過了那個老頭兒,她成功了。”
“我們非常遺憾,”獨腳怪的頭兒說,“我們不能讓你看看我們被丑化之前的樣子,因為你不會相信這樣的差別,這是事實,因為我們現(xiàn)在真是太丑了,所以我們不會欺騙你?!?/p>
“啊,說得對,頭兒,說得對,”其他人附和著,像許多玩具氣球一樣彈跳著,“你說得太對了,你說得太對了?!?/p>
“可我覺得你們一點兒也不丑,”露西大聲喊道,努力讓大家都聽見她說的話,“我覺得你們挺好看的。”
“聽她說,聽她說,”獨腳怪們說,“小姐,你說得對。我們很好看。沒有更好看的人了?!彼麄兒敛惑@奇地說了這話,似乎沒有注意到他們改變了主意。
“她是在說,”獨腳怪的頭兒說,“在我們變丑之前,我們是多么好看?!?/p>
“頭兒,你說得對,你說得對,”其他人又開始喊叫,“她也是這么說的。我們也親耳聽到了。”
“我沒有,”露西大聲叫道,“我說你們現(xiàn)在很好看?!?/p>
“她是這么說的,”獨腳怪的頭兒說,“她說我們以前很好看?!?/p>
“他們倆說得都對,他們倆說得都對,”獨腳怪們說,“你們倆說到一塊兒去了。你們說的總是對的。他們說得太好了?!?/p>
“可我們說的意思恰恰相反?!甭段鞑荒蜔┑囟逯_說。
“是啊,當(dāng)然,是這樣的,”獨腳怪們說,“一點兒也不相反。你們兩個都繼續(xù)說。”
“你們真是要把人逼瘋了?!甭段髡f,干脆放棄了跟他們爭論。但是獨腳怪們似乎都很滿足。她想,總體上來說,這次對話還算成功。
那天晚上大家睡覺前又發(fā)生了一件事,讓獨腳怪們對自己只有一只腳的狀況更加滿意了。凱斯賓和所有的納尼亞人都盡快回到了岸邊,告訴萊斯和黎明踏浪號上的其他人發(fā)生了什么事,那會兒他們都已經(jīng)擔(dān)心壞了。當(dāng)然,獨腳怪們也一起去了,他們像足球似的蹦蹦跳跳,一路上還在不斷地大聲贊同彼此說的話,直到尤斯塔斯說:“我希望魔法師能讓他們靜音,而不是隱形?!保ㄋ芸炀蛯λf的話感到后悔了。因為他要跟他們解釋靜音的意思就是聽不見聲音。雖然他費了好大的力氣,還是不確定那些獨腳怪有沒有聽懂。最讓他生氣的是,他們最后還說:“啊,他不能像頭兒一樣把事情說明白。但是年輕人,你會知道的。聽聽我們頭兒說話吧。他會讓你知道該怎么說話。他就是你該學(xué)習(xí)的榜樣!”)他們來到海灣的時候,雷佩契普想到了一個絕妙的主意。他把自己的小船放到了水里,坐在里面劃槳,獨腳怪們看得很感興趣。然后,他站了起來,說:“尊敬而機智的獨腳先生們,你們不需要船。你們只需要用你們的腳就可以了。你們要盡量輕輕地在水面上跳,看看會發(fā)生什么?!?/p>
獨腳怪的頭兒躊躇不前,警告其他人他們會發(fā)現(xiàn)水是濕漉漉的。但有一兩個年輕人幾乎立馬就去試了。接著,又有幾個人效仿他們,最后所有人都去了。他們都在水面上跳了起來。獨腳怪的單腳可以當(dāng)作天然的筏或船。雷佩契普教他們?nèi)绾螢樽约嚎骋桓植诘哪緲?,他們學(xué)會了之后就在海灣和黎明踏浪號周圍劃來劃去,就像一支小船隊,每艘小船的一端都站著一個胖胖的矮人。他們舉行了比賽,大船上放下來一瓶瓶酒給他們做獎品。水手們靠在兩側(cè)船舷看著,笑得肚子都疼了。
這些笨蛋對他們的新名字“獨腳怪”也很滿意,這在他們看來是個厲害的名字,盡管他們壓根讀不準(zhǔn)這個名字?!斑@個名字說的就是我們,”他們吼道,“篤腳乖,腳怪獨,怪獨腳。我們稱呼自己的叫法就在舌尖上。”但是他們很快就把它和他們的舊名字混淆了,最后決定把自己叫作“笨蛋瓜”,這個名字可能會用上幾個世紀(jì)。
那天晚上,所有的納尼亞人都和魔法師一起在樓上用餐,露西注意到,她現(xiàn)在不再害怕了,整個頂樓看上去就不一樣了。門上的符號仍舊很神秘,但現(xiàn)在看來,它們似乎能讓人感覺到友好和愉快,甚至連那面長胡子的鏡子也顯得很滑稽,變得一點兒也不可怕了。晚餐時,每個人都靠魔法吃到了自己喜歡的食物和飲料。晚飯后,魔法師施了一個實用而精彩的魔法。他在桌子上放了兩張空白的羊皮紙,要求德里寧準(zhǔn)確地敘述他們目前為止的所有航程。德里寧一邊說,紙上就一邊線條清晰地出現(xiàn)他描述的內(nèi)容。最后兩張紙都變成了一幅壯麗的東海地圖,標(biāo)示出了加爾馬、泰瑞賓西亞、七島、孤獨群島、龍島、焦島、死水島,還有笨蛋們的地方,大小和位置都完全正確。它們是那些海域有史以來的第一批地圖,比那些此后不施魔法做出來的好多了。在這些地圖上,雖然城鎮(zhèn)和山乍看和普通地圖上的沒什么不同,但是魔法師借給他們一個放大鏡之后,他們就看到,這上面完完全全是真實原物的微縮景觀,雖然很遠,但是可以清楚地看到狹港的城堡、奴隸市場和街道,就像透過望遠鏡看過去似的。唯一的缺點是大部分島嶼的海岸線都是不完整的,因為地圖只顯示了德里寧親眼所見的東西。地圖制作完成后,魔法師自己保留了一幅,把另一幅送給了凱斯賓。這幅地圖現(xiàn)在還掛在他凱爾帕拉維爾的儀器館里。但是,魔法師也沒法告訴他們再往東去的海洋和陸地是什么情況。不過,他告訴他們,大約七年前,一艘納尼亞的船在這里???,雷維廉勛爵、阿爾格茲勛爵、馬夫拉蒙勛爵和羅普勛爵都在船上。因此他們推斷,他們看到的躺在死水里的金人一定是雷斯蒂瑪勛爵。
第二天,魔法師用魔法修補了黎明踏浪號被海蛇破壞的船尾,還在船上裝滿了實用的禮物。分別時,大家都友好極了,下午兩點出發(fā)時,所有的笨蛋瓜都跟著黎明踏浪號劃到了港口,歡呼不斷,直到船上的人聽不見他們的聲音。
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