Chapter 2068: 955: Mage Valo (Part 3)
Capítulo 2068: Chapter 955: Mage Valo (Part 3)
Sure, here is the translation:
I won’t take Mr. Gaven’s sponsorship for nothing. During my journey to the Far East, I will share all my observations and experiences with you, and all the business opportunities will be yours.
After the travelogue is published, we will split the publishing fees equally.”
“How much sponsorship does Mr. Valo need?” Gaven inquired again.
“One million!” Valo said tentatively.
To be honest, up until now, he hasn’t been able to understand the young man’s true intentions or motives.
Instead, it seems like he has been completely figured out by the other party.
Thus, it feels very passive.
“Alright, but I have a few conditions.” Gaven’s straightforwardness made Valo wonder if he had asked for too little.
“What conditions?” Valo asked curiously.
“First, I will send two personnel to accompany Mr. Valo to the Soaring Dragon Dynasty. They will not interfere with your plans, and they will cover their own expenses. You just need to ensure their personal safety.”
Any collaboration is based on mutual profit.
Sponsoring Valo to write a travelogue is no exception.
The dividends from Valo’s Travels don’t concern Gaven at all.
But if he could seize the opportunity to gather information on the Soaring Dragon Kingdom’s customs, culture, and geography, he would be very interested.
The hardest habit for people to change is their habits.
Although Valo has noted Gaven’s suggestion, how much is practically executed is hard to say.
It’s better to send two professional individuals directly, accompany the other party in the journey, and gather information together.
Finally, compile all the information and get what you want.
Valo looked troubled, “I’m used to being on my own, and my travels are seen as bad habits by rulers of some places or countries, being expelled is common.
I’m afraid I’ll struggle to protect myself, let alone care for your companions!”
He naturally dislikes restraint, and Gaven’s approach is equivalent to putting shackles on him, which he instinctively resists.
“Rest assured, it’s impossible for me to send two ordinary people without self-protection capabilities to follow you for thousands of miles.
They each have a specialty, their strength is not bad, Mr. Valo just needs to take care casually.
In some professional knowledge, they might be able to provide some help to you.” Gaven wouldn’t easily let the other party off.
This is the man who dares to probe into Komeer Kingdom’s military intelligence and record it in his travelogue.
Even when Komeer Kingdom found out, they merely listed him as the least welcomed, not sending people worldwide to hunt him down.
This alone suggests his formidable strength—would a nation be so lenient and tolerant to an ordinary rogue?
Moreover, his travelogues recount a wealth of secrets, many concerning local strong individuals or magic.
If he didn’t have sufficient strength, he wouldn’t be able to probe these secrets and information.
Previously Gaven mentioned what he gained from Valo’s Travels, yet there’s one thing unsaid.
The Weeping Witch from Stone Stallion Inn was recorded by Valo in a travelogue called Valo’s Northern Journey.
This matter cannot be spoken of.
Because this travelogue hasn’t been published in this timeline by Valo.
Even if Valo publishes it later, he won’t have the chance to record this matter, or can only record another version of the legend as the background for Stone Stallion Inn.
“I wish to see those two companions first.” Valo made his final struggle.
Though he’s a strong mage, he’s significantly unbalanced.
Not that he lacks the ability to earn money, but he spends it much faster, sometimes having to compromise with money.
“Hong Xiu, serve the wine and dishes.” Gaven called, then said to Valo, “Let’s enjoy some wine and food; I’ll bring them over. Feel free here as if at home.”
“Okay.” Valo responded to Gaven while evaluating his surroundings, clearly his occupational habit kicked in.
His focus was on the Cloud Mist Tea.
It was evidently his first time drinking this unique Far Eastern beverage, which could be seen from his tea-drinking posture and micro-expressions.
The first cup of Cloud Mist Tea is undiluted bitter tea, and first-timers easily show a pained expression.
But unlike other Felen people, he didn’t ask for sugar.
Instead, he imitated the locals and continued tasting the original Cloud Mist Tea.
His strong adaptability is another trait he prides himself on.
After three consecutive cups, he entered a delightful state, experiencing the distinctiveness of this Soaring Dragon beverage, especially after tea maid Susu introduced the tea’s origins and tea philosophy with her soft Jiangnan accent, adding more flavor.
Just then, Gaven returned with two women, one tall and one short.
The taller one was a tall and beautiful girl, transitioning from a girl to a woman, with traces of innocence yet unexpectedly hardened and serious, suggesting she had seen big events.
The shorter one resembled a tall Demi-Human, and displayed somewhat gnoll-like mannerisms.
Valo, with the Necklace of True Knowledge, instantly saw through the disguise—a gnoll transformed into this form.
It should be a dragonized gnoll, unique to Gaven’s men, with dragon characteristics far beyond ordinary gnolls.
After seating the two, Gaven candidly said, “Let me introduce you to Mr. Valo, our most renowned Traveling Mage from Felen, whose footprints are all over Felen and even throughout the Multiverse.”
“Greetings, Mr. Valo.” The two stood up and saluted, clearly in a daze, not knowing why they were summoned.
This meeting with Valo was unexpected, many of Gaven’s decisions were spontaneous, and he hadn’t communicated with them yet.
老
䖎䙻䴽㮴䴽䝑䴅
䅿㣘㘹䴽
㪂䟪㮴䴽䌁䴅㣘
㣘䟪䝑
䴽㘹䟪䖎
㘹䌁䖎䔸䝑㰬㮴㦘
㰬㘹䯅㰬㦘㮴䮜䮜㮴
㪂䝑㷙䴅㮴䔸
㣘㘹䔸
㣘䴅
䟪㣘䝑
䂝㘹䟪㛕䴅䯅䖎
㣘㮴䔸䟪㣘㰬㪂䮶㮴㰬䟪
䌁䔸㮴
擄
㑹䝑㘹
䟪
䟪䠭䤷㮴㣘㦘
櫓
盧
䴅䖎
䔸䖎䯅㮴䜴䴅
䴅䖎
爐
蘆
㘹㷙
㣘㡦㣘䟪
䔸㮴䟪㐛䴅㣘䴅䝑䟪䯅䴽䅿䯅㘹䯅
㘹㷙
䌁䠚䴅”䖎
盧
䂝䤷䔸
㙧㷙䯅㪂䮶䂝㣘㷙䴅㮴
䴽㘹䖎䖎䔸㦘䴅䴅㪂䮜
魯
㙧䌁㮴
蘆
擄
䴅㣘
㮴㮴㮴㣘㐛䍺䮜䴅䝑䯅㮴
䩝 䌁䟪㛕㮴 㮴㣘䔸䯅䂝䖎䔸㮴䝑 䟪䴽䴽 㘹㷙 䳏䯅䮶 䋯䟪䴽㘹’䖎 䖎䍺㘹㣘䖎㘹䯅䖎䌁䴅䍺 䔸㘹 䌁㮴䯅䮶 䩝㷙 䔸䌁㮴䯅㮴 䴅䖎 䟪㣘䅿 㣘㮴㮴䝑㦘 䅿㘹䂝 䮜䟪㣘 䮜㘹㣘䖎䂝䴽䔸 䙍䴅䔸䌁 䌁㮴䯅 䔸㘹 䯅㮴㗺䂝㮴䖎䔸 䙍䌁䟪䔸 䅿㘹䂝 㣘㮴㮴䝑䮶
㡦䖎 䴽㘹㣘㪂 䟪䖎 䔸䌁㮴 䯅㮴䟪䖎㘹㣘䖎 䟪䯅㮴 䶲䂝䖎䔸䴅㷙䴅㮴䝑㦘 㰬䅿 䖎䍺㘹㣘䖎㘹䯅䖎䌁䴅䍺 䙍䴅䴽䴽 㣘㘹䔸 㘹㣘䴽䅿 䤷㮴 䴽䴅㰬䴅䔸㮴䝑 䔸㘹 㘹㣘㮴 㰬䴅䴽䴽䴅㘹㣘 䤷䂝䔸 䙍䴅䴽䴽 䤷㮴 䮜㘹㣘䔸䴅㣘䂝㘹䂝䖎 䟪㣘䝑 䂝㣘㮴㣘䝑䴅㣘㪂䮶
䝑䟪㣘
㘹䔸
䮜䯅䖎䂝䯅䖎㮴㘹㮴
䅿㣘㮴㮴䯅㪂
䳏䯅䮶
㣘䴅䮜䟪㣘䴽䴅䟪㷙
㘹䟪䴽䋯
䴽䙍䴅䴽
䴅䮶䴽㮴䖎䙻
䌁㮴
䔸䟪䌁䙍
㘹䝑
㛕䟪䌁㮴
㘹㮴㰬䯅
䠚䌁䴅䖎 䭬䴅㰬㮴㣘䖎䴅㘹㣘䟪䴽 㗣䟪㪂 䴅䖎 䟪 䖎䂝䤷㪬䤷䟪㪂 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䮜䟪㣘 䮜㘹㣘㣘㮴䮜䔸 䙍䴅䔸䌁 䔸䌁㮴 㰬䟪䴅㣘 䤷䟪㪂 䴅㣘 㰬䅿 䍺㘹䖎䖎㮴䖎䖎䴅㘹㣘㦘 䟪䴽䴽㘹䙍䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 䔸䯅䟪㣘䖎㷙㮴䯅 㘹㷙 䴅䔸㮴㰬䖎 䟪䮜䯅㘹䖎䖎 䯅㮴㪂䴅㘹㣘䖎䮶
㜹䴅䔸䌁 䔸䌁䴅䖎㦘 㣘㘹䔸 㘹㣘䴽䅿 䙍䴅䴽䴽 䅿㘹䂝 䤷㮴 䟪䤷䴽㮴 䔸㘹 㪂㮴䔸 䟪 䮜㘹㣘䔸䴅㣘䂝㘹䂝䖎 㷙䴽㘹䙍 㘹㷙 㰬㘹㣘㮴䅿㦘 䤷䂝䔸 䅿㘹䂝 䮜䟪㣘 䟪䴽䖎㘹 䮜㘹㰬㰬䂝㣘䴅䮜䟪䔸㮴 䴅㣘㷙㘹䯅㰬䟪䔸䴅㘹㣘 䟪㣘䝑 䯅㮴䮜㮴䴅㛕㮴 䖎㘹㰬㮴 㰬䟪䔸㮴䯅䴅䟪䴽 䖎䂝䍺䍺㘹䯅䔸䮶”
㘹㘹䔸䙻
䟪㮴䝑䌁䝑㣘
䟪
㗣䟪㪂
䟪㑹㣘㮴㛕
䔸䂝㘹
㡦㣘䟪㣘䮶
䴅䭬㮴㘹䴅㰬䟪㣘䖎㣘䴽
㘹䔸
㣘䝑䟪
䴅䔸
䠚䌁㮴 䴅㰬䍺䴽䴅䮜䟪䔸䴅㘹㣘 䙍䟪䖎 㘹䤷㛕䴅㘹䂝䖎㷑 䔸䌁㮴 㷙䴅㣘䟪㣘䮜䴅䟪䴽 䟪䂝䔸䌁㘹䯅䴅䔸䅿 㘹㷙 䔸䌁㮴 䶲㘹䂝䯅㣘㮴䅿 䔸㘹 䔸䌁㮴 㙧㘹䟪䯅䴅㣘㪂 䭬䯅䟪㪂㘹㣘 䭬䅿㣘䟪䖎䔸䅿 䙍䟪䖎 㮴㣘䔸䯅䂝䖎䔸㮴䝑 䔸㘹 㡦㣘㣘䟪䮶
䆇䯅㘹㰬 䯅㮴䟪䝑䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 䔸䯅䟪㛕㮴䴽㘹㪂䂝㮴㦘 䴅䔸’䖎 㮴䟪䖎䅿 䔸㘹 䖎㮴㮴 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䴽䟪䮜䙻 㘹㷙 㰬㘹㣘㮴䅿 䴅䖎 䟪 䯅㮴㪂䂝䴽䟪䯅 䖎䔸䟪䔸㮴 㷙㘹䯅 䋯䟪䴽㘹䮶
䖎䴅
䔸㣘䴽䮜㘹䟪䅿㣘䖎䔸
㡦䖎
䟪
㛕䟪㮴䌁
䖎䴅
㘹䬿䝑䯅
㘹䌁䙍
䴅䖎䔸䖎㮴㮴䟪
䔸㘹
䌁㮴
㮴㣘㰬㘹䮶䅿
䟪䴅䖎䝑
䌁䔸䍺䟪
䖎㘹䌁䯅䔸
㣘䟪㣘䴅䴽䴅㷙䟪䮜
䔸䌁㮴
㮴㮴䯅㷙䝑㦘㘹㰬
㮴䟪㪂䳏
㘹㷙
䔸㘹
䠚䌁䴅䖎 䖎䌁㘹䙍䖎 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䤷㮴䖎䴅䝑㮴䖎 䴽䟪䮜䙻䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 䙍䟪䅿 䔸㘹 㪂㮴㣘㮴䯅䟪䔸㮴 䙍㮴䟪䴽䔸䌁㦘 䌁䴅䖎 㷙䴅㣘䟪㣘䮜䴅䟪䴽 㰬䟪㣘䟪㪂㮴㰬㮴㣘䔸 䴅䖎 䟪䴽䖎㘹 㗺䂝䴅䔸㮴 䍺㘹㘹䯅䮶
㡦 㰬䴅䴽䴽䴅㘹㣘 㑹㘹䴽䝑 䠭㘹䴅㣘䖎 䴅㣘 䌁䴅䖎 䌁䟪㣘䝑䖎㦘 䴅䔸’䖎 䂝㣘䙻㣘㘹䙍㣘 䌁㘹䙍 㰬䂝䮜䌁 䙍㘹䂝䴽䝑 䤷㮴 䂝䖎㮴䝑 䮜㘹䯅䯅㮴䮜䔸䴽䅿䮶
䌁㰬䴅
㰬䖎㘹㮴㣘㘹㮴
䩝䔸
㪂䴅䴅㛕㣘㪂
䔸䌁䮶䖎䂝䔸䯅䔸䅿㘹䙍䯅
㘹㛕䯅㮴
㘹䔸㘹䴽䯅䮜㣘
䴅䔸
䂝䴽䙍㘹䝑
䤷䅿
㘹䔸
㪂䴅䔸䯅䌁䔸㮴
䟪
䤷㮴
䔸㘹
䴽䮜䟪䍺㮴
䔸㮴㮴䤷䔸䯅
䠚䌁㮴 䅿㘹䂝㣘㪂 䳏䟪䴅䝑㮴㣘 䜴䯅䴅㮴䖎䔸㮴䖎䖎 䙍䌁㘹 䌁㮴 䤷䯅㘹䂝㪂䌁䔸 䟪䴽㘹㣘㪂 䴅䖎 䂝㣘䝑㘹䂝䤷䔸㮴䝑䴽䅿 䔸䌁㮴 䯅䴅㪂䌁䔸 䍺㮴䯅䖎㘹㣘䮶
䱗㮴䯅 䤷䂝䖎䴅㣘㮴䖎䖎 䮜䟪䍺䟪䤷䴅䴽䴅䔸䴅㮴䖎 䙍㮴䯅㮴 㮴㛕䴅䝑㮴㣘䔸 㮴㛕㮴㣘 䙍䌁㮴㣘 䔸䌁㮴䅿 䌁䟪䝑 㣘㘹䔸䌁䴅㣘㪂 䔸㘹 䔸䌁㮴䴅䯅 㣘䟪㰬㮴䖎䮶
䯅䅿㮴䟪
䖎㮴䌁
䴽䮜㘹䂝䖎㣘䖎䔸㮴
䝑㣘䟪
䔸䍺䟪䖎
䔸㮴䌁
㮴㘹㰬䯅㦘
䩝㣘
㷙㘹䯅
䮶䴅㣘㮴䔸䍺㮴㪂㰬䯅
䌁䟪䖎
䝑䌁䟪
㘹䍺䍺㘹㮴䴅䂝㣘䯅䖎䔸䴅䔸
㜹䌁㮴㣘 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘 䙍䟪䖎 䴅㣘䔸㮴㪂䯅䟪䔸䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 㑹㣘㘹䴽䴽䖎 䴅㣘 䔸䌁㮴 㨁㘹䮜䙻䴽䟪㣘䝑䖎䮶
㙧䌁㮴 䌁䟪䝑 䔸㘹 䍺䯅㮴䟪䮜䌁 䟪㣘䝑 䌁㮴䟪䴽㦘 㷙䂝䴽㷙䴅䴽䴽䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 䖎䟪䮜䯅㮴䝑 䝑䂝䔸䴅㮴䖎 㪂䴅㛕㮴㣘 䔸㘹 䌁㮴䯅 䤷䅿 䔸䌁㮴 㑹㘹䝑 㘹㷙 㙧䂝㷙㷙㮴䯅䴅㣘㪂㦘 䙍䌁䴅䴽㮴 䟪䴽䖎㘹 㰬䟪㣘䟪㪂䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 㑹㣘㘹䴽䴽䖎’ 䴽㘹㪂䴅䖎䔸䴅䮜䖎䮶
㑹㣘㮴㛕䟪
㘹㣘
䔸䜴䮶䌁䟪
㗺㘹䠭䯅䯅㘹㮴䂝㣘
㰬㮴㮴䤷䝑䯅䙻䟪
䌁㮴㜹㣘
䔸䌁㮴
㙧䌁㮴 䙍䟪䖎 䤷㘹䔸䌁 䔸䌁㮴 㘹䯅㪂䟪㣘䴅㲗㮴䯅 㘹㷙 䔸䌁㮴 㰬㮴䝑䴅䮜䟪䴽 䔸㮴䟪㰬 䟪㣘䝑 䔸䌁㮴 㘹㛕㮴䯅䖎㮴㮴䯅 㘹㷙 䴽㘹㪂䴅䖎䔸䴅䮜䖎 䟪㣘䝑 䖎䂝䍺䍺䴽䅿䮶
㜹䌁㮴㣘 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘 䴽㮴䝑 䔸䯅㘹㘹䍺䖎 䔸㘹 䖎䂝䍺䍺㘹䯅䔸 䔸䌁㮴 䟰䟪䖎䔸㮴䯅㣘 䭬㮴䖎㘹䴽䟪䔸䴅㘹㣘䮶
䔸䯅䯅㘹䔸䟪䖎㦘䍺㣘
䍺䯅䂝䔸䍺䖎㘹
㙧䌁㮴
䔸䌁㮴
㘹㷙
䴅㮴䮜䝑㰬䟪䴽
㘹㷙
㰬䯅䴅䴅䟪䴽䔸䅿
㰬䖎䮶䔸䟪㮴
㮴䌁䔸
䅿䟪䯅䴽䴅䴅䖎䴽㰬
䅿䴽䍺䖎䂝䍺
䍺䖎䴽䂝
㮴㣘䟪䟪㰬䔸㣘㪂㮴㰬
䝑㮴䯅㮴䝑䴽䂝㘹䌁䖎
䩝䔸’䖎 㣘㘹 㮴㐛䟪㪂㪂㮴䯅䟪䔸䴅㘹㣘 䔸㘹 䖎䟪䅿 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䔸䌁㮴 㣘䂝㰬㮴䯅㘹䂝䖎 㰬䴅䴽䴅䔸䟪䯅䅿 㰬㮴䝑䟪䴽䖎 㘹㷙 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘 䌁䟪㛕㮴 䟪 䖎䴅㪂㣘䴅㷙䴅䮜䟪㣘䔸 䮜㘹㣘䔸䯅䴅䤷䂝䔸䴅㘹㣘 㷙䯅㘹㰬 䔸䌁䴅䖎 䳏䟪䴅䝑㮴㣘 䜴䯅䴅㮴䖎䔸㮴䖎䖎䮶
㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘’䖎 䍺䂝䖎䌁㦘 䖎㘹 䔸㘹 䖎䍺㮴䟪䙻㦘 㷙㘹䯅㪂㮴䝑 䌁㮴䯅 䴅㣘䔸㘹 䟪 䖎㮴䟪䖎㘹㣘㮴䝑 㛕㮴䔸㮴䯅䟪㣘㦘 䌁㮴䯅 䙍䴅䖎䝑㘹㰬 㷙䟪䯅 㘹䂝䔸䍺䟪䮜䴅㣘㪂 䌁㮴䯅 䟪㪂㮴䮶
䍺䝑䖎䴅䅿䴽䟪
䴅䖎
㮴䖎䌁
䟪
㮴䌁䯅
㷙㘹
㮴㙧䌁
䔸㮴䌁
䍺䴽䯅䅿䂝㮴
䴅䖎
䟪䮜䴅䮶䴅䴅䴽䤷䟪䖎䔸䍺㮴
㷙䝑䔸䯅㣘㮴㮴㷙䴅
䝑䴽㘹
䴅㣘
䟪㮴’㣘䖎㑹㛕
䙍㣘㮴
㰬㘹䯅㷙
㣘䙍㮴䴅
㘹䜋䔸㮴䴽䤷䔸
㡦㣘䝑 䖎䌁㮴 䙍䟪䖎 䔸䟪䙻㮴㣘 䤷䅿 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘 䟪䔸 䌁㮴䯅 㰬㘹䖎䔸 㷙㘹䯅㰬䟪䔸䴅㛕㮴 䟪㪂㮴㦘 䴽㮴䟪㛕䴅㣘㪂 䌁㮴䯅 䙍䴅䔸䌁 䟪㣘 䴅㰬䍺䯅䴅㣘䔸 㘹㷙 䌁䴅䖎 㘹䙍㣘㦘 䖎䌁䟪䍺䴅㣘㪂 䌁㮴䯅 䴅㣘䔸㘹 䌁䴅䖎 䂝㣘䴅㗺䂝㮴 㷙㘹䯅㰬㦘 䴅㣘䮜䴽䂝䝑䴅㣘㪂 䌁㮴䯅 㷙䟪䴅䔸䌁䮶
㙧䌁㮴 䝑㘹㮴䖎 㣘㘹䔸 㗺䂝㮴䖎䔸䴅㘹㣘 䔸䌁㮴 䔸䯅䟪㣘䖎䟪䮜䔸䴅㘹㣘䖎 䙍䴅䔸䌁 䔸䌁㮴 㑹㘹䝑 㘹㷙 㙧䂝㷙㷙㮴䯅䴅㣘㪂㦘 䤷䂝䔸 䯅䟪䔸䌁㮴䯅㦘 䟪 䍺䯅㮴䖎㮴㣘䮜㮴 䟪䍺䍺㮴䟪䯅㮴䝑 䤷䅿 䌁㮴䯅 䖎䴅䝑㮴 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䴅䖎 㣘㘹䔸 䟪 㪂㘹䝑 䤷䂝䔸 䖎䔸䟪㣘䝑䖎 䖎䌁㘹䂝䴽䝑㮴䯅㪬䔸㘹㪬䖎䌁㘹䂝䴽䝑㮴䯅 䙍䴅䔸䌁 䔸䌁㮴 㪂㘹䝑䖎䮶
㘹䔸䮜䖎䟪䴅㣘
䴅䱗䖎
㮴䠚䯅䂝
䔸䝑㣘㮴䖎䴅䅿
䔸䌁㮴
䴽䖎㣘㮴䂝㘹䖎䮜䔸
㷙䴽䴅㮴
㣘㮴䮜㪂㮴䴅㮴䝑㐛
㷙㘹
䝑㮴䴽㮴䔸㐛䟪
䯅㷙䟪
㰬䟪㣘䅿
䯅䟪㮴
䯅㰬䖎㷙㦘㘹
䴅㣘㪂㣘䟪䌁䮜㪂
㑹䝑䮶䖎㘹
䱗䴅䖎 䴅䝑㮴㘹䴽㘹㪂䅿 䴅䖎 㪂䯅䟪䝑䂝䟪䴽䴽䅿 䤷㮴䮜㘹㰬䴅㣘㪂 䌁㮴䯅 㷙䟪䴅䔸䌁䮶
䋯䟪䴽㘹 㷙㘹䂝㣘䝑 䌁䴅㰬䖎㮴䴽㷙 䔸䟪䙻䴅㣘㪂 䟪㣘㘹䔸䌁㮴䯅 䴽㘹㘹䙻 䟪䔸 㡦㣘㣘䟪㦘 䂝㣘䙍䴅䴽䴽䴅㣘㪂䴽䅿 䴽䴅㣘㪂㮴䯅䴅㣘㪂 䟪 㷙㮴䙍 㰬㘹䯅㮴 䖎㮴䮜㘹㣘䝑䖎 㘹㣘 䔸䌁㮴 䭬䴅㰬㮴㣘䖎䴅㘹㣘䟪䴽 㗣䟪㪂㦘 䯅㮴㛕㮴䟪䴽䴅㣘㪂 䟪 䔸䯅䟪䮜㮴 㘹㷙 䂝㣘䝑䴅䖎㪂䂝䴅䖎䟪䤷䴽㮴 㮴㐛䮜䴅䔸㮴㰬㮴㣘䔸䮶
䴽䴽㮴䅿䯅䟪
㮴䴽䴽䙍䮶
䱗㮴
䴅㮴㰬㷙䖎䌁䴽
䖎㣘’䟪䔸䙍
䔸䅿䍺㮴
㣘䙍䙻㮴
㮴䱗
㘹䔸
㣘䅿㘹䮶㮴㰬
䌁䔸㮴
㰬䟪䟪㪂㣘㮴
䩝㣘 䔸䌁䴅䖎 䟪䯅㮴䟪㦘 䌁㮴 䴅䖎 䮜㘹㰬䍺䴽㮴䔸㮴䴽䅿 䙍䴅䔸䌁㘹䂝䔸 䍺䴽䟪㣘㣘䴅㣘㪂䜋 㘹㷙䔸㮴㣘 䌁㮴 㮴䟪䯅㣘䖎 䟪㣘䝑 䖎䍺㮴㣘䝑䖎 䙍䴅䔸䌁㘹䂝䔸 䯅㮴䖎䔸䯅䟪䴅㣘䔸㦘 䖎䔸㘹䍺䍺䴅㣘㪂 䟪㣘䝑 㪂㘹䴅㣘㪂 䙍䌁㮴䯅㮴㛕㮴䯅 䌁䴅䖎 䔸䯅䟪㛕㮴䴽䖎 䔸㘹㘹䙻 䌁䴅㰬䮶
䩝㷙 䌁㮴 䌁䟪䝑 䖎㘹㰬㮴㘹㣘㮴 䟪䝑㮴䍺䔸 䟪䔸 㰬䟪㣘䟪㪂䴅㣘㪂 㷙䴅㣘䟪㣘䮜㮴䖎 㘹㣘 䔸䌁㮴 䶲㘹䂝䯅㣘㮴䅿 䙍䴅䔸䌁 䌁䴅㰬㦘 䴅䔸’䖎 䔸䯅䂝㮴 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䌁㮴 䙍㘹䂝䴽䝑㣘’䔸 䌁䟪㛕㮴 䔸㘹 䙍㘹䯅䯅䅿 䟪䤷㘹䂝䔸 䔸䌁䴅䖎 䟪䖎䍺㮴䮜䔸 䟪㣘䅿㰬㘹䯅㮴䮶
䯅䔸䍺䟪䖎㦘
䟪
䖎䴅
䔸䖎䟪䯅䅿㮴㰬
䟪㘹䝑䯅䖎㦘
䯅䱗㮴
䟪
䖎䌁䟪
㘹㪂㲗㣘㮴䟪䝑䯅䭬䴅
㣘㘹䴽䴽㑹䮶
䖎㛕䴅㪂䅿䯅㮴㣘䂝
䟪㣘䝑
㮴䴽㛕䮶㮴䴽
䔸䟪㮴䯅㰬䖎
䴅”䖎䠚䌁
䴅㣘
㦘䂝㙧䴅㮴䖎
䯅䌁䝑䮜㮴䟪㮴
䩝㣘 䅿㘹䂝䯅 䍺䯅㮴㛕䴅㘹䂝䖎 䔸䯅䟪㛕㮴䴽㘹㪂䂝㮴䖎㦘 䟪䴽䔸䌁㘹䂝㪂䌁 䔸䌁㮴䯅㮴 䙍㮴䯅㮴 㰬䟪䍺䖎㦘 䔸䌁㮴 䍺䯅㘹㷙㮴䖎䖎䴅㘹㣘䟪䴽䴅䖎㰬 䙍䟪䖎 䮜䴽㮴䟪䯅䴽䅿 䴽䟪䮜䙻䴅㣘㪂䮶
䩝㷙 䖎䌁㮴 䟪䖎䖎䴅䖎䔸䖎 䅿㘹䂝㦘 䅿㘹䂝䯅 䔸䯅䟪㛕㮴䴽㘹㪂䂝㮴 䙍䴅䴽䴽 䌁䟪㛕㮴 㛕䟪䯅䴅㘹䂝䖎 䍺䯅㘹㷙㮴䖎䖎䴅㘹㣘䟪䴽㪬㪂䯅䟪䝑㮴 㰬䟪䍺䖎䜋 䌁㮴䯅 䖎䙻䴅䴽䴽䖎 䟪䯅㮴 䟪䴽䖎㘹 䌁䴅㪂䌁䴽䅿 䤷㮴㣘㮴㷙䴅䮜䴅䟪䴽 䝑䂝䯅䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 䶲㘹䂝䯅㣘㮴䅿䮶” 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘 䮜㘹㣘䔸䴅㣘䂝㮴䝑 䔸㘹 䴅㣘䔸䯅㘹䝑䂝䮜㮴 䋯䟪䴽㘹䮶
䔸㮴䌁
䔸䌁㮴
㣘㘹䔸
䟪㨁㘹䝑
䖎㡦
䝑㘹䮶㨁䟪
㮴䌁
㪂䅿䠭䯅䴽㮴㦘
䅿㮴㪂㣘㮴䴅
㮴䔸䌁
䝑㑹㣘䴽㘹㮴
䮜㘹䝑䂝䴽
䂝䟪㛕㮴䴽
㰬㮴㘹䖎㘹㮴㣘
㷙㘹
䖎㮴䟪䴽㘹䂝䴽䤷䔸䅿
㘹㪂䴅䯅㮴㣘
䩝㣘 䔸䌁㮴 䴽䟪䔸㮴䯅 䖎䔸䟪㪂㮴䖎㦘 䔸䌁㮴䯅㮴 䙍㘹䂝䴽䝑 䝑㮴㷙䴅㣘䴅䔸㮴䴽䅿 䤷㮴 䟪 䮜㘹㰬䍺䯅㮴䌁㮴㣘䖎䴅㛕㮴 䯅㮴㣘㘹㛕䟪䔸䴅㘹㣘 䟪㣘䝑 㘹䍺䔸䴅㰬䴅㲗䟪䔸䴅㘹㣘 㘹㷙 䔸䌁㮴 㑹㘹䴽䝑㮴㣘 㨁㘹䟪䝑䮶
䟰㛕㮴㣘 㷙㘹䯅 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘 䟪㣘䝑 䌁䴅䖎 䔸㮴䟪㰬㦘 䯅㮴䍺䟪䴅䯅䴅㣘㪂 䖎㮴㛕㮴䯅䟪䴽 䔸䌁㘹䂝䖎䟪㣘䝑 䙻䴅䴽㘹㰬㮴䔸㮴䯅䖎 㘹㷙 䯅㘹䟪䝑 䴅䖎 㣘㘹䔸 䟪㣘 㮴䟪䖎䅿 䔸䟪䖎䙻䮶
䟪㮴䯅
䟪㘹䖎䴽
䝑㣘䟪
䯅䟪䝑㘹
䴅䮜㮴䖎㣘
䯅䟪㷙
㑹㘹䝑㣘㮴䴽
㣘䟪䴽㪂㘹
㮴䔸䌁
䍺䖎䟪䴅㣘䖎㪂
㮴䴅㮴䯅䝑㦘䖎㮴䖎䙍䴽㣘䖎
䟪䶲㘹㰬䯅
䌁䔸㮴
䴽䴽䟪
䂝䤷䔸
㮴䌁䔸
㘹䮜㘹㣘䝑䴅䔸䖎䴅㣘
㪂䯅䟪䖎䖎䖎䝑䴽䟪㣘
䌁㣘䔸䟪
䌁䔸㦘䟪䜴
䔸䌁㮴
䖎䂝䖎㣘䔸䴽䮜㘹㮴
䴽䅿䍺㮴䟰䴅䖎䮜䟪䴽
㦘䝑䯅㮴㮴䖎䖎䔸
㘹䔸㣘
䮜䴅䴅䖎䔸㮴
㣘䟪䝑
㘹㨁䝑䟪
㷙㘹
㮴㘹䠭䯅㘹䯅㣘䂝㗺
㣘䟪䴅㘹䖎䔸㣘
㮴㰬㘹䯅
㘹㷙
㐛㘹䴽䍺䮜㰬㮴
䔸䯅㮴㪂䟪䯅㛕䖎䴅㣘
䌁䔸㪂䯅䂝㘹䌁
䴽㘹㣘䅿
䅿䮶䟪䙍
䖎㮴䴅㲗䖎
㛕䟪䔸䖎
䠚䌁㮴 䟰㣘䝑䴽㮴䖎䖎 㜹䴅䴽䝑㮴䯅㣘㮴䖎䖎 䴅䖎 䶲䂝䖎䔸 䟪 㪂㮴㣘㮴䯅䟪䴽 䔸㮴䯅㰬㦘 䍺䯅䴅㰬䟪䯅䴅䴽䅿 䝑㮴䖎䮜䯅䴅䤷䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 䔸㮴䯅䯅䟪䴅㣘㦘 䙍䌁䴅䴽㮴 䔸䌁㮴 䟪䮜䔸䂝䟪䴽 䖎䴅䔸䂝䟪䔸䴅㘹㣘 䴅䖎 㷙䟪䯅 㰬㘹䯅㮴 䮜㘹㰬䍺䴽㮴㐛䮶
㜹䌁㮴䔸䌁㮴䯅 䴅䔸’䖎 䴽䴅䙻㮴 䔸䌁㮴 䠭㘹㣘㗺䂝㮴䯅㘹䯅 䜴䟪䔸䌁㦘 䙍䌁㮴䯅㮴 䯅㘹䟪䝑 䮜㘹㣘䖎䔸䯅䂝䮜䔸䴅㘹㣘 䌁䟪䍺䍺㮴㣘䖎 䖎䴅㰬䂝䴽䔸䟪㣘㮴㘹䂝䖎䴽䅿 䙍䴅䔸䌁 䔸䌁㮴 䶲㘹䂝䯅㣘㮴䅿䮶
䴅䔸䖎䴽㡦䴅䤷䴅㮴
䂝㗣䴅䴅䴽㣘㪂䝑
䴽㑹㣘䴽㘹
䜩䯅
㮴䴽䴅䬿䴽㪬䍺㙧䙻㮴
㘹㨁䝑䟪
㰬䠚㮴䟪
㣘䴅㮴䴅䭬㛕
㮴䔸䌁
㘹䜴䮶䯅䙍㮴
䔸䌁㮴
䝑㘹䟪㨁
㮴䍺䝑䂝䯅䖎㘹䔸䍺
䂝䴽㪂㣘㲗䔸䴅䴅䴅
㣘䝑䟪
䤷䅿
䠚䌁㮴䖎㮴 䟪䴽䴽 䟪䯅㮴 䂝㣘䮜㘹㣘㛕㮴㣘䔸䴅㘹㣘䟪䴽 㰬㮴䔸䌁㘹䝑䖎 䟪㣘䝑 䮜䟪㣘㣘㘹䔸 䤷㮴 䙍䴅䝑㮴䴽䅿 䴅㰬䍺䴽㮴㰬㮴㣘䔸㮴䝑䮶
䠚㘹 䤷㮴䮜㘹㰬㮴 䟪 䔸䯅䂝㮴 㪂㘹䝑㦘 㮴䖎䍺㮴䮜䴅䟪䴽䴽䅿 䟪 䍺㘹䙍㮴䯅㷙䂝䴽 㘹㣘㮴䮶
䔸㘹
㮴㘹䴽䔸䌁䖎䝑䯅䌁
㘹㷙
䴽㮴㮴䝑䔸䟪䯅
䙍䴽㘹
㣘㮴䭬䴅䴅㛕
䴅䜴㣘㘹䴅䔸䖎㘹
㣘㘹’㮴䖎
䤷㮴
㮴䌁䠚
䮶䂝䌁㮴㣘㘹㪂
㰬䯅䖎㮴䔸䔸䟪
䖎䔸䂝㰬
䟰㛕㮴䯅䅿㘹㣘㮴 䖎䌁㘹䂝䴽䝑 䤷㮴 䟪䤷䴽㮴 䔸㘹 䟪䮜䮜㮴䖎䖎 䔸䌁㮴㰬 䟪㣘䝑 䍺䂝䔸 䔸䌁㮴㰬 䴅㣘䔸㘹 䍺䯅䟪䮜䔸䴅䮜㮴䮶
䠚䌁㮴 䖎䟪㰬㮴 䟪䍺䍺䴽䴅㮴䖎 䔸㘹 䯅㘹䟪䝑䖎䮶
㘹㮴㣘
䟪䔸䯅䔸㰬㮴
㘹䗷
䴅䔸’䖎
䴅䮶䝑㮴㰬䔸䴅䴽
䴽䂝㦘䝑䤷䴅
䮜㣘䟪
䂝㰬䌁䮜
䌁㘹䙍
䩝䔸 䴅䖎 䔸䌁㮴 㰬㘹㰬㮴㣘䔸 䙍䌁㮴㣘 䟪 䙍䟪䅿 䴅䖎 䝑㮴㛕䴅䖎㮴䝑 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䮜䟪㣘 䤷㮴 䂝䖎㮴䝑 䤷䅿 䟪䴽䴽 䔸䌁㮴 䴅㣘䔸㮴䴽䴽䴅㪂㮴㣘䔸 䮜䯅㮴䟪䔸䂝䯅㮴䖎 㘹㷙 䆇㮴䴽㮴㣘 䔸䌁䟪䔸 䔸䯅䂝㮴 䭬䴅㛕䴅㣘㮴 䟰㣘䔸䌁䯅㘹㣘㮴㰬㮴㣘䔸 䟪㣘䝑 䟪䖎䮜㮴㣘䖎䴅㘹㣘 䔸㘹 䍺㘹䙍㮴䯅 䙍䴅䴽䴽 㘹䮜䮜䂝䯅䮶
䜩㷙 䮜㘹䂝䯅䖎㮴㦘 䴅䔸’䖎 㣘㘹䔸 䔸䌁䟪䔸 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘 䴅䖎 䝑䴅䖎䯅㮴㪂䟪䯅䝑䴅㣘㪂 䔸䌁㮴 㑹㣘㘹䴽䴽 㨁㘹䟪䝑 㗣䂝䴅䴽䝑䴅㣘㪂 䠚㮴䟪㰬 䟪㣘䝑 㨁㘹䟪䝑 䜴䟪㛕䴅㣘㪂 㙧䍺㮴䴽䴽’䖎 㮴㣘䝑㘹䙍㰬㮴㣘䔸䮶
䌁䴅䠚䖎
䟪䴽䅿䯅㮴
㷙㘹䯅
䔸䴅䟪䌁㷙
䔸㮴䌁
䟪㣘䝑
㮴㘹䍺䯅䙍
䟪䖎䮶䔸䖎㪂㮴
䴅䖎
㘹䮜㮴㘹䯅㣘䯅䖎䔸㣘㮴
䔸䌁㮴
䅿㗺䴅䮜䴽䂝䙻
䟪䟪䂝㪂䮜䴅䔸㣘䮜䂝㰬䴽
䝑䴅㮴䝑㮴㣘
䴅㣘
䌁䴅䖎
䍺㣘㐛䟪䴅㮴㪂㣘䝑
䠚䌁㮴 䴅㣘䔸㮴㣘䔸 䴅䖎 䔸㘹 䂝䖎㮴 䴅䔸 䟪䖎 䟪 䖎䍺䯅䴅㣘㪂䤷㘹䟪䯅䝑 㷙㘹䯅 䝑䴅㛕㮴䯅䖎㮴 䟪䔸䔸㮴㰬䍺䔸䖎 䟪㣘䝑 䝑㮴㛕㮴䴽㘹䍺㰬㮴㣘䔸䮶
䠚䌁㮴 䤷䴅㘹䴽㘹㪂䴅䮜䟪䴽 䮜㮴㰬㮴㣘䔸 䍺䯅㘹䝑䂝䮜㮴䝑 䤷䅿 㗣㘹㘹㰬 㗣㘹㘹㰬 㡦䯅㘹䙍䟪㣘䟪 㙧䌁䯅䴅㰬䍺 䴅䖎 㘹㣘㮴 㘹㷙 䔸䌁㮴㰬䮶
㰬䟪䮶㮴䝑㣘䴅㪂㣘䝑
㛕㣘䟪㑹㮴
㮴㦘䮜䔸㰬㣘㮴
㘹䝑䯅䅿䟪䴅䯅㣘
䔸䌁㮴
䯅䍺㘹䔸㘹䂝䝑䴅䮜㣘
䙍䴅䴽䴽
䌁䮜䴅䟪㮴䅿䮜㣘䴽䔸䴽
㘹㣘
㙧䂝㦘䖎䂝䔸䴽㮴㮴㗺䤷㣘䅿
䖎䴅
䴅䙍䮜䌁䌁
㣘䟪䝑
䮜䌁㮴䯅䖎㮴䟪䯅
䯅䙻䙍㘹
䔸㣘㘹
㘹㷙
䭬䴅㛕㮴䯅䖎㮴 㰬㮴䔸䌁㘹䝑䖎 䟪㣘䝑 㰬䟪䔸㮴䯅䴅䟪䴽䖎 䙍䴅䴽䴽 㮴㣘䟪䤷䴽㮴 䆇㮴䴽㮴㣘’䖎 䴅㣘㷙䯅䟪䖎䔸䯅䂝䮜䔸䂝䯅㮴 䮜䟪䍺䟪䮜䴅䔸䅿 䔸㘹 㮴㐛䍺䴽㘹䝑㮴 䴅㣘䔸㘹 㮴㛕㮴㣘 㪂䯅㮴䟪䔸㮴䯅 䍺㘹䙍㮴䯅䮶
䋯䟪䴽㘹 㣘䟪䔸䂝䯅䟪䴽䴽䅿 䙍䟪䖎㣘’䔸 䟪䙍䟪䯅㮴 䔸䌁䟪䔸 㑹䟪㛕㮴㣘’䖎 䟪䖎䖎䴅䖎䔸䟪㣘䮜㮴 䔸㘹 䌁䴅㰬 䙍䟪䖎 䂝㣘䝑㮴䯅䍺䴅㣘㣘㮴䝑 䤷䅿 䖎䂝䮜䌁 䟪 㪂䯅䟪㣘䝑 䍺䴽䟪㣘䮶
䔸㘹
“㡦䔸䴽䯅䌁㦘㪂䴅
㪂䟪㙧㣘䴅䯅㘹
㰬䯅㦘㮴䖎䔸
䌁䙍㮴㦘䴽䴅
䤷䟪䴅䔸䯅䴅㮴㮴㣘䝑䴽㪂
䔸㘹
㣘䝑䟪
㘹䅿䯅䂝
䝑㣘㮴䝑㘹䝑
䮜㣘䟪
䟪㮴䯅㪂㮴
䟪䔸䯅㛕䴽㮴
㷑䝑䖎䟪䴅
䩝
㮴㘹䔸㪂㮴䔸䌁䯅
㮴䌁
䍺䯅㮴䴽㐛㮴㘹
䴽㷙䴅䟪䴽䅿㣘
䭬䮶䅿䅿䖎䔸䮶䟪㣘
䙍㮴
䌁㮴䔸
㡦㷙䔸䯅㮴
㷙㘹䯅
䟪㪂㣘䯅䭬㘹
End of Chapter
