"Patricia A. McKillip - The Throme of the Erril of Sherill" - читать интересную книгу автора (McKillip Patricia A) THE THROME OF THE
ERRIL OF SHERILL Patricia A. McKillip Illustrated by Julie Noonan Atheneum 1973 New York Copyright ┬й 1973 by Patricia A. McKillip All rights reserved Library of Congress catalog card number 73-76324 ISBN 0-689-30115-4 Published simultaneously in Canada by McClelland & Stewart, Ltd. Manufactured in the United States of America by H. Wolff, New York Designed by Harriett Barton First Edition To Kathy and Michele and Lorene 1 The Erril of Sherill wrote a Throme. It was a deep Throme, and a dark, haunting, lovely Throme, a wild, special, sweet Throme made of the treasure of singing, boundariless land that did not exist within the kingdom of Magnus Thrall, King of Everywhere. The King had Cnites to come and go for him, and churttels to plant and harvest for him, but no Cnite had ever looked up into the winking morning sky and seen Sherill, and no churttel had ever looked at the rich clods of earth between his boots and seen the ErrilтАЩs world. Yet the Erril, long, long ago, wrote a Throme of singular and unsurpassed beauty, somewhere in his own land called Sherill, and the dark King of Everywhere desired that Throme. The house of the King was a tall thing of great, thick stones and high towers and tiny slits of windows that gleamed at night when the King paced his hearth stones longing for the Throme. He had a daughter who sat with him and wept and embroidered pictures of the green world beyond the walls, and listened to her father think aloud to the pale sunlight or the wisps of candle-flame. тАЬWho knows,тАЭ he would say, тАЬOh, who knows where lies the Throme, the Throme of peace, the Throme of loveliness, the dark Throme of Sherill ? I must have it. If I had it, the most precious of all precious things, my heart would be at rest in its beauty, and I could stop wanting. If I had the Throme, I could wake at mornings knowing it belonged to me, and I could be content with the simple sunrise and the silly birds.тАЭ The KingтАЩs Damsen would lift her hands and let them fall again into her lap. тАЬThere is no such thing. There is no Throme. Everyone knows that.тАЭ тАЬBah. Everyone is a fool.тАЭ And a tear would slide down the still face of the KingтАЩs Damsen, and plop and twinkle on her hands. Her long hair was the color of pale sunlight, and her |
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