chater fifteen the wnder f the t ea (第5/17页)
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ked back,what she saw was very like what you see when you look down a winding road from the top of a hill.She could even see the shafts of sunlight falling through the deep water onto the wooded valley—and,in the extreme distance,everything melting away into a dim greenness.But some places—the sunny ones,she thought—were ultramarine blue.
She could not,however,spend much time looking back; what was coming into view in the forward direction was too exciting.The road had apparently now reached the top of the hill and ran straight forward.Little specks were moving to and fro on it.And now something most wonderful,fortunately in full sunlight—or as full as it can be when it falls through fathoms of water—flashed into sight.It was knobbly and jagged and of a pearly,or perhaps an ivory,colour.She was so nearly straight above it that at first she could hardly make out what it was. But everything became plain when she noticed its shadow.The sunlight was falling across Lucy’s shoulders,s