"Andre Norton - Merlin' s mirror" - читать интересную книгу автора (Norton Andre)that is not so. What you say you believe. Why?"
Now he looked from the child to her. "Why, woman? Because on the night he was conceived I felt the coming of the Power which was to bring him into being. We have lost so much." He shook his head regretfully. "So very much of the knowledge which made men great enough to challenge the stars themselves. We gabble odd tags of leg- end and are not sure which is truth, which the embroidery of some later man. But there is enough remaining that he who is trained can sense the Power when it is at work. "This 'son of no man' shall be great enough to make and unmake kings. Yet I believe that was not what he was sent to do. No, he is an opener of gates. And when he comes to his full strength he will speak the High Language and we shall see the beginning of a new world." MERLIN'S MIRROR 19 The passion in his voice awed Julia and she took the child back from Lugaid's hold, regarding the boy strangely. For she knew that the Druid believed what he had said. And from that moment she watched for any sign of coming greatness in Myrddin, not knowing how that Myrddin walked when he was four and, as Lugaid had said, he stepped out strongly from the first moment he found his feet, not wavering or crawling as was normal. A month later he spoke, and his words were as well pro- nounced as those of a grown man. But he made no attempt to join the other children at their games. Nor did he ever show interest in sword play, or hang about listening to the lounging warriors telling their battle tales. Instead he tailed Lugaid whenever the Druid was in sight. And it became accepted that Myrddin file:///F|/rah/Andre%20Norton/Norton,%20Andre%20-%20Merlin's%20Mirror.txt (11 of 168) [1/17/03 1:15:25 AM] file:///F|/rah/Andre%20Norton/Norton,%20Andre%20-%20Merlin's%20Mirror.txt would become a bard, or one of those learned in the law and the descent of houses. Nyren agreed to this on one of the rare intervals when he was at home. For the chief had made his choice. He and his men rode with Ambrosius, harrying both the High King who had betrayed them and the Saxons he had brought in as |
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