Friendship Of Robots
هل تريد التفاعل مع هذه المساهمة؟ كل ما عليك هو إنشاء حساب جديد ببضع خطوات أو تسجيل الدخول للمتابعة.


Friendship Of Robots
 
الرئيسيةأحدث الصورالتسجيلدخولالقران الكريم كاملاً

إرسال موضوع جديد   إرسال مساهمة في موضوع
 

  Many Moons

اذهب الى الأسفل 
كاتب الموضوعرسالة


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دولتي : مصر
تاريخ التسجيل : 01/01/1970

 Many Moons Empty
مُساهمةموضوع: Many Moons    Many Moons Emptyالجمعة 19 يوليو 2013, 11:44 am

Many Moons

                                    James Thurber

Once upon a time, in a kingdom by the sea, there lived a little princess named Lenore. 
She was ten years old, going on eleven. One day Lenore fell ill of a surfeit of 
raspberry tarts and took to her bed. The Royal Physician came to see her and took her 
temperature and felt her pulse and made her stick out her tongue. The Royal Physician 
was worried. He sent for the king, Lenore's father, and the king came to see her. 

"I will get you anything your heart desires," the king said. "Is there anything your 
heart desires?" 

"Yes," said the princess. "I want the moon, if I can have the moon, I will be well 
again."

Now the king had a great many wise men who always got for him anything he wanted so he 
told his daughter that she could have the moon. Then he went to the throne room and 
pulled a bell cord, three long pulls and a short pull, and presently the Lord High 
Chamberlain came into the room.

The Lord High Chamberlain was a large, fat man who wore thick glasses which made his 
eyes seem twice as big as they really were. This made the Lord High Chamberlain seem 
twice as wise as he really was.

"I want the moon," said the king. "Princess Lenore wants the moon. If she can have 
the moon, she will get well again." 

"The moon?" exclaimed the Lord High Chamberlain, his eyes widening. This made him look 
four times as wise as he really was.

"Yes, the moon," said the king. "M-o-o-n, moon. Get it tonight, tomorrow at the latest."

The Lord High Chamberlain wiped his forehead with a handkerchief and then blew his nose 
loudly. "I have got a great many things for you in my time, your majesty," he said. "It 
just happens that I have with me a list of the things I have got for you in my time." 
He pulled a long scroll of parchment out of his pocket. "Let me see, now." he glanced at 
the list, frowning. "I have got ivory, apes, and peacocks, rubies, opals, and emeralds, 
black orchids, pink elephants, and blue poodles, gold bugs, scarabs, and flies in amber,
hummingbirds' tongues, angels' feathers, and unicorns' horns, giants, midgets, and 
mermaids, frankincense, ambergris, and myrrh, troubadors, minstrels, and dancing women,
a pound of butter, two dozen eggs, and a sack of sugar - sorry, my wife wrote that in 
there." 

"I don't remember any blue poodles," said the king.

"It says blue poodles right here on the list, and they are checked off with a little 
check mark," said the Lord High Chamberlain. "so there must have been blue poodles. You 
just forgot."

"Never mind the poodles," said the king. "What I want now is the moon." 

"I have sent as far Samarkand and Araby and Zanzibar to get things for you, your 
majesty," said the Lord High Chamberlain. "But the moon is out of the question. It is 
35,000 miles away and it is bigger than the room the princess lies in. Furthermore, it 
is made of molten copper. I cannot get the moon for you. Blue poodles, yes; the moon, 
no."

The king flew into a rage and told the Lord High Chamberlain to leave the room and 
to send the Royal Wizard to the throne room.

The Royal Wizard was a little, thin man with a long face. He wore a high red peaked 
hat coverted with silver stars, and a long blue robe covered with golden owls. His 
face grew very pale when the king told him that he wanted the moon for his little 
daughter, and that he expected the Royal Wizard to get it. 

"I have worked a great deal of magic for you in my time, your majesty," said the Royal 
Wizard. "As a matter of fact, I just happen to have in my pocket a list of the 
wizardries I have performed for you." He drew a paper from a deep pocket of his robe. 
"It begins: `Dear Royal Wizard: I am returning herewith the so-called philosopher's 
stone which you claimed-' No, that isn't it." The royal wizard brought a long scroll 
of parchment from another pocket of his robe. "Here it is," he said. "Now, let's see. I
have squeezed blood out of turnips for you, and turnips out of blood. I have produced 
rabbits out of silk hats, and silk hats out of rabbits. I have conjured up flowers, 
tambourines and doves. I have brought you divining rods, magic wands, and crystal 
spheres in which to behold the future. I have compounded philtres, unguents, and 
potions, to cure heartbreak, surfeit, and ringing in the ears. I have made you my 
own special mixture of wolfbane, nightshade, and eagles' tears, to ward off witches, 
demons, and things that go bump in the night. I have given you seven league boots, 
the golden touch, and a cloak of invisibility-" 

"It didn't work," said the king. "The cloak of invisibility didn't work."

"Yes it did," said the Royal Wizard.

"No, it didn't," said the king. "I kept bumping into things, the same as ever."

"The cloak of invisibility is supposed to make you invisible," said the Royal Wizard. 
"It is not supposed to keep you from bumping into things."

"All I know is, I kept bumping into things," said the king.

The Royal Wizard looked at his list again. "I got you," he said, "horns from elfland, 
sand from the sandman, and gold from the rainbow. Also a spool of thread, a paper of 
needles, and a lump of beeswax - sorry, those are things my wife wrote down for me to 
get her." 

"What I want you to do now," said the king, "is to get me the moon. Princess Lenore 
wants the moon, and when she gets it, she will be well again."

"Nobody can get the moon," said the Royal Wizard. "It is 150,000 miles away, and it 
is made of green cheese, and it is twice as big as the palace."

The king flew into another rage and sent the Royal Wizard back to his cave. Then he 
rang a gong and summonded the Royal Mathematician.

The Royal Mathematician was a bald-headed, nearsighted man, with a skullcap on his 
head and a pencil behind each ear. He wore a black suit with white numbers on it. 

"I don't want to hear a long list of all the things you have figured out for me since 
1907," the king said to him. "I want you to figure out how to get the moon for princess 
Lenore. When she gets the moon, she will be well again." 

"I am glad you mentioned all the things I have figured out for you since 1907," said 
the Royal Mathematician. "It so happens I have a list of them with me."

He pulled a long scroll of parchment out of a pocket and looked at it. "I have figured 
out for you the distance between the horns of a dilemma, night and day, and A and Z. I 
have computed how far is up, how long it takes to get to away, and what becomes of gone. 
I have discovered the length of the sea serpent, the price of the priceless, and the 
square of the hippopotamus. I know where you are when you are at sixes and sevens, how 
much is you have to have to make an are, and how many birds you can catch with the salt 
in the ocean- 187,796,132, if it would interest you to know." 

"There aren't that many birds," said the king.

"I didn't say there were," said the Royal Mathematician. "I said if there were."

"I don't want to hear about seven hundred million imaginary birds," said the king. "I 
want you to get the moon for princess Lenore." 

"The moon is 300,000 miles away," said the Royal Mathematician. "It is round and flat 
like a coin, only it is made of asbestos, and it is half the size of this kingdom. 
Furthermore, it is pasted on the sky. Nobody can get the moon."

The king flew into still another rage and sent the Royal Mathematician away. Then he rang 
for the court jester. The jester came bounding into the throne room in his motley and his 
cap and bells, and sat at the foot of the throne.

"What can I do for you, your majesty?" asked the court jester. 

"Nobody can do anything for me," said the king mournfully. "Princess Lenore wants the 
moon, and she cannot be well till she gets it, but nobody can get it for her. Every time 
I ask anybody for the moon, it gets larger and farther away. There is nothing you can do 
for me except play on your lute. Something sad."

"How big do they say it is," asked the court jester, "and how far away?"

"The Lord High Chamberlain says it is 35,000 miles away, and bigger than princess 
Lenore's room," said the king. "The Royal Wizard says it is 150,000 miles away, and 
twice as big as this palace. The Royal Mathematician says it is 300,000 miles away 
and half the size of this kingdom." 

The court jester strummed on his lute for a little while. "They are all wise men," he 
said, "and so they must all be right. If they are all right, then the moon must be just 
as large and as far away as each person thinks it is. The thing to do is find out how 
big princess Lenore thinks it is, and how far away."

"I never thought of that," said the king. 

"I will go to her, your majesty," said the court jester. And he crept softly into 
the little girl's room.

Princess Lenore was awake, and she was glad to see the court jester, but her face was 
very pale and her voice very weak.

"Have you brought the moon to me?" she asked. 

"Not yet," said the court jester, "but I will get it for you right away. How big do 
you think it is?"

"It is a little smaller than my thumbnail," she said, "for when I hold my thumbnail 
up at the moon, it covers it."

"And how far away is it?" asked the court jester.

"It is not as high as the big tree outside my window," said the princess, "for sometimes 
it gets caught in the top branches."

"It will be very easy to get the moon for you," said the court jester. "I will climb 
the tree tonight when it gets caught in the top branches and bring it to you."

Then he thought of something else. "What is the moon made of, princess?" he asked.

"Oh, " she said, "it's made of gold, of course, silly." 

The court jester left princess Lenore's room and went to see the Royal Goldsmith he had 
the Royal Goldsmith make a tiny round oon just a little smaller than the thumbnail of  
princess Lenore. Then he had him string it on a golden chain so the princess could wear 
it around her neck.

"What is this thing I have made?" asked the Royal Goldsmith when he was finished with it.

"You have made the moon," said the court jester. "that is the moon."

"But the moon," said the Royal Goldsmith, "is 500,000 miles away and is made of bronze 
and is round like a marble."

"That's what you think," said the court jester as he went away with the moon. 

The court jester took the moon to princess Lenore, and she was overjoyed. The next day 
she was well again and could get up and go out in the gardens to play. 

But the king's worries were not yet over. He knew that the moon would shine in the sky 
again that night, and he did not want the princess Lenore to see it. If she did, she 
would know that the moon she wore on a chain around her neck was not the real moon.

So the king sent for the lord high chamberlain and said, "we must keep princess 
Lenore from seeing the moon when it shines in the sky tonight. Think of something."
The Lord High chamberlain tapped his forehead with his fingers thoughtfully and said, "I 
know just the thing. We can make some dark glasses for the princess lenore. We can make 
them so dark that she will not be able to see the moon when it shines in the sky."

This made the king very angry, and he shook his head from side to side. "If she wore 
dark glasses, she would bump into things," he said, "and then she would be ill again." 
So he sent the Lord High Chamberlain away and called the Royal Wizard. 

"We must hide the moon," said the king, "so princess Lenore will not see it when it 
shines in the sky tonight. How are we going to do that?"

The Royal Wizard stood on his hands and then he stood on his head and then he stood on 
his feet again. "I know what we can do," he said. "We can stretch some black velvet 
curtains on poles. The curtains will cover all the palace gardens like a circus tent, 
and the princess lenore will not be able to see through them, so she will not see the 
moon in the sky."

The king was so angry at this that he waved his arms around. "Black velvet curtains 
would keep out the air," he said. "Princess Lenore would not be able to breathe, and 
she would be ill again." So he sent the Royal Wizard away and summoned the Royal 
Mathematicain. 

"We must do something," said the king, "so princess Lenore will not see the moon 
when it shines in the sky tonight. If you know so much, figure out a way to do that."

The Royal Mathematician walked around in a circle, and then he walked around in a square, 
and then he stood still. "I have it!" he said. "We can set off fireworks in the gardens 
every night. We will make a lot of silver fountains and gold cascades, and when they go 
off, they will fill the sky with so many sparks that it will be as light as day and  
princess Lenore will not be able to see the moon."

The king flew into such a rage that he began jumping up and down. "Fireworks would keep 
princess Lenore awake," he said. "She would not get any sleep at all and she would be ill 
again." So the king sent the Royal Mathematician away. 

When he looked up again, it was dark outside and he saw the bright rim of the moon just 
peeping over the horizon. He jumped up in a great fright and rang for the court jester. 
The court jester came bounding into the room and sat down at the foot of the throne.

"What can I do for you, your majesty?" he asked.

"Nobody can do anything for me," said the king, mournfully. "the moon is coming up again. 
It will shine into princess Lenore's bedroom, and she will know it is still in the sky 
and that she does not wear it on a golden chain around her neck. Play me something on 
your lute, something very sad, for when the princess sees the moon, she will be ill 
again."

The court jester strummed on his lute. "What do your wise men say?" he asked.

"They can think of no way to hide the moon that will not make princess Lenore ill," 
said the king.

The court jester played another song, very softly. "Your wise men know everything," he 
said, "and if they cannot hide the moon, then it cannot be hidden." 

The king put his head in his hands again and sighed. Suddenly he jumped from his throne 
and pointed to the windows. "Look!" he cried. "The moon is already shining in the 
princess Lenore's bedroom. Who can explain how the moon can be shining in the sky when 
it is hanging on a golden chain around her neck?"

The court jester stopped playing on his lute. "Who could explain how to get the moon 
when your wise men said it was too large and too far away? It was princess Lenore. 
Therefore princess Lenore is wiser than your wise men and knows more about the moon 
than they do. So I will ask her." And before the king could stop him, the court jester 
slipped quietly out of the throne room and up the wide marble staircase to princess 
Lenore's bedroom. 

The princess was lying in bed, but she was wide awake and she was looking out the window 
at the moon shining in the sky. Shining in her had was the moon the court jester had got 
for her. He looked very sad, and there seemed to be tears in his eyes.

"Tell me, princess lenore," he said mournfully, "how can the moon be shining in the sky 
when it is hanging on a golden chain around your neck?"

The princess looked at him and laughed. "that is easy, silly, " she said. "when I lose a 
tooth, a new one grows in its place, doesn't it?"

"Of course," said the court jester. "And when the unicorn loses his horn in the forest, 
a new one grows in the middle of his forehead."

"That is right," said the princess. "And when the Royal Gardener cuts the flowers in the 
garden, other flowers come back to take their place." 

"I should have thought of that," said the court jester, "for it is the same way with the 
daylight."

"And it is the same way with the moon," said princess Lenore. "I guess it is the same 
way with everything." Her voice became very low and faded away, and the court jester saw 
that she was asleep. Gently he tucked the covers around the sleeping princess. 

But before her left the room, he went over to the window and winked at the moon, for it 
seemed to the court jester that the moon had winked at him. 

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الرجوع الى أعلى الصفحة اذهب الى الأسفل
 
Many Moons
الرجوع الى أعلى الصفحة 
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