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- Джон Толкин
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- Властелин колец: Две башни
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- Стр. 102/332
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'
I
see
a
great
smoke
,
'
said
Legolas
.
'
What
may
that
be
?
'
'
Battle
and
war
!
'
said
Gandalf
.
'
Ride
on
!
'
They
rode
on
through
sunset
,
and
slow
dusk
,
and
gathering
night
.
When
at
last
they
halted
and
dismounted
,
even
Aragorn
was
stiff
and
weary
.
Gandalf
only
allowed
them
a
few
hours
'
rest
.
Legolas
and
Gimli
slept
and
Aragorn
lay
flat
,
stretched
upon
his
back
;
but
Gandalf
stood
,
leaning
on
his
staff
,
gazing
into
the
darkness
,
east
and
west
.
All
was
silent
,
and
there
was
no
sign
or
sound
of
living
thing
.
The
night
was
barred
with
long
clouds
,
fleeting
on
a
chill
wind
,
when
they
arose
again
.
Under
the
cold
moon
they
went
on
once
more
,
as
swift
as
by
the
light
of
day
.
Hours
passed
and
still
they
rode
on
.
Gimli
nodded
and
would
have
fallen
from
his
seat
,
if
Gandalf
had
not
clutched
and
shaken
him
.
Hasufel
and
Arod
,
weary
but
proud
,
followed
their
tireless
leader
,
a
grey
shadow
before
them
hardly
to
he
seen
.
The
miles
went
by
.
The
waxing
moon
sank
into
the
cloudy
West
.
A
bitter
chill
came
into
the
air
.
Slowly
in
the
East
the
dark
faded
to
a
cold
grey
.
Red
shafts
of
light
leapt
above
the
black
walls
of
the
Emyn
Muil
far
away
upon
their
left
.
Dawn
came
clear
and
bright
;
a
wind
swept
across
their
path
,
rushing
through
the
bent
grasses
.
Suddenly
Shadowfax
stood
still
and
neighed
.
Gandalf
pointed
ahead
.
'
Look
!
'
he
cried
,
and
they
lifted
their
tired
eyes
.
Before
them
stood
the
mountains
of
the
South
:
white-tipped
and
streaked
with
black
.
The
grass-lands
rolled
against
the
hills
that
clustered
at
their
feet
,
and
flowed
up
into
many
valleys
still
dim
and
dark
,
untouched
by
the
light
of
dawn
,
winding
their
way
into
the
heart
of
the
great
mountains
.
Immediately
before
the
travellers
the
widest
of
these
glens
opened
like
a
long
gulf
among
the
hills
.
Far
inward
they
glimpsed
a
tumbled
mountain-mass
with
one
tall
peak
;
at
the
mouth
of
the
vale
there
stood
like
sentinel
a
lonely
height
.
About
its
feet
there
flowed
,
as
a
thread
of
silver
,
the
stream
that
issued
from
the
dale
;
upon
its
brow
they
caught
,
still
far
away
,
a
glint
in
the
rising
sun
,
a
glimmer
of
gold
.
'S
peak
,
Legolas
!
'
said
Gandalf
.
'
Tell
us
what
you
see
there
before
us
!
'
Legolas
gazed
ahead
,
shading
his
eyes
from
the
level
shafts
of
the
new-risen
sun
.
'
I
see
a
white
stream
that
comes
down
from
the
snows
,
'
he
said
.
'
Where
it
issues
from
the
shadow
of
the
vale
a
green
hill
rises
upon
the
east
.
A
dike
and
mighty
wall
and
thorny
fence
encircle
it
.
Within
there
rise
the
roofs
of
houses
;
and
in
the
midst
,
set
upon
a
green
terrace
,
there
stands
aloft
a
great
hall
of
Men
.
And
it
seems
to
my
eyes
that
it
is
thatched
with
gold
.
The
light
of
it
shines
far
over
the
land
.
Golden
,
too
,
are
the
posts
of
its
doors
.
There
men
in
bright
mail
stand
;
but
all
else
within
the
courts
are
yet
asleep
.
'
'
Edoras
those
courts
are
called
,
'
said
Gandalf
,
'
and
Meduseld
is
that
golden
hall
.
There
dwells
Théoden
son
of
Thengel
,
King
of
the
Mark
of
Rohan
.
We
are
come
with
the
rising
of
the
day
.
Now
the
road
lies
plain
to
see
before
us
.
But
we
must
ride
more
warily
;
for
war
is
abroad
,
and
the
Rohirrim
,
the
Horse-lords
,
do
not
sleep
,
even
if
it
seem
so
from
afar
.
Draw
no
weapon
,
speak
no
haughty
word
,
I
counsel
you
all
,
until
we
are
come
before
Théoden
's
seat
.
The
morning
was
bright
and
clear
about
them
,
and
birds
were
singing
,
when
the
travellers
came
to
the
stream
.
It
ran
down
swiftly
into
the
plain
,
and
beyond
the
feet
of
the
hills
turned
across
their
path
in
a
wide
bend
,
flowing
away
east
to
feed
the
Entwash
far
off
in
its
reed-choked
beds
.
The
land
was
green
:
in
the
wet
meads
and
along
the
grassy
borders
of
the
stream
grew
many
willow-trees
.
Already
in
this
southern
land
they
were
blushing
red
at
their
fingertips
.
Feeling
the
approach
of
spring
.
Over
the
stream
there
was
a
ford
between
low
banks
much
trampled
by
the
passage
of
horses
.
The
travellers
passed
over
and
came
upon
a
wide
rutted
track
leading
towards
the
uplands
.