, J. R. R. Tolkien - The Adventures of Tom Bombadil, ebook, Temp, pobierz pdf 

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1THE ADVENTURES OF TOM BOMBADILOld Tom Bombadil was a merry felow;bright blue his jacket was and his bloots were yellow,green were his girdle and his breeches all of leather;he wore in his tall hat a swan-wing feather.He lived up under Hill, where the Withywindleran from a grassy well down into the dingle.Old Tom in summertime walked about the meadowsgathering the buttercups, running after shadows,tickling the bumblebees that buzzed among the flowers,sitting by the waterside for hours upon hours.There his beard dangled long down into the water:up came Goldberry, the River-woman's daughter;pulled Tom's hanging hair. In he went a-wallowingunder the water-lilies, bubbling and a-swallowing.'Hey, Tom Bombadil! Whither are you going?'said fair Goldberry. 'Bubbles you are blowing,frightening the finny fish and the brown water-rat,startling the dabchicks, and drowning your feather-hat!''You bring it back again, there's a pretty maiden!'said Tom Bombadil. 'I do not care for wading.Go down! Sleep again where the pools are shadyfar below willow-roots, little water-lady!'Back to her mother's house in the deepest hollowswam young Goldberry. But Tom, he would not follow;on knotted willow-roots he sat in sunny weather,drying his yellow boots and his draggled feather.Up woke Willow-man, began upon his singing,sang Tom fast asleep under branches swinging;in a crack caught him tight: snick! it closed together,trapped Tom Bombadil, coat and hat and feather.'Ha. Tom Bombadil! What be you a-thinking,peeping inside my free, watching me a-drinkingdeep in my wooden house, tickling me with feather,dripping wet down my face like a rainy weather?''You let me out again, Old Man Willow!I am stiff lying here; they're no sort of pillow,your hard crooked roots. Drink your river-water!Go back to sleep again like the River-daughter!'Willow-man let him loose when he heard him speaking;locked fast his wooden house, muttering and creaking,whispering inside the tree. Out from willow-dingleTom went walking on up the Withywindle.Under the forest-eaves he sat a while a-iistening:on the boughs piping birds were chirruping andwhistling.Butterflies about his head went quivering and winking,until grey clouds came up, as the sun was sinking.Then Tom hurried on. Rain began to shiver,round rings spattering in the running river;a wind blew, shaken leaves chilly drops were dripping;into a sheltering hole Old Tom went skipping.Out came Badger-brock with his snowy foreheadand his dark blinking eyes. In the hill he quarriedwith his wife and many sons. By the coat they caughthim,pulled him inside their earth, down their tunnelsbrought him.Inside their secret house, there they sat a-mumbling:'Ho, Tom Bombadil' Where have you come tumbling,bursting in the front-door? Badger-folk have caughtyou.You'll never find it out, the way that we have broughtyou!''Now. old Badger-brock, do you hear me talking?You show me out at once! I must be a-walking.Show me to your backdoor under briar-roses;then clean grimy paws, wipe your earthy noses!Go back to sleep again on your straw pillow,like fair Goldberry and Oid Man Willow!'Then all the Badger-folk said: 'We beg your pardon!'They showed Tom out again to their thorny garden,went back and hid themselves, a-shivering anda-shaking,blocked up all their doors, earth together raking.Rain had passed. The sky was clear, and in the summer-gloamingOld Tom BombadH laughed as he came homing,unlocked his door again, and opened up a shutter.In the kitchen round the lamp moths began to flutter:Tom through the window saw waking stars comewinking,and the new slender moon early westward sinking.Dark came under Hill. Tom, he lit a candle;upstairs creaking went, turned the door-handle.'Hoo. Tom Bombadil' Look what night has broughtyou!I'm here behind the door. Now at last I've caught you!You'd forgotten Barrow-wight dwelling in the oldmoundup there on hill-top with the ring of stones round.He's got loose again. Under earth he'll take you.Poor Tom Bombadilt pale and cold he'll make you!''Go out! Shut the door, and never come back after!Take away gleaming eyes, take your hollow laughter!Go back to grassy mound, on your stony pillowlay down your bony head, like Old Man Willow,like young Goldberry, and Badger-folk in burrow!Go back to buried gold and forgotten sorrow!'Out fled Barrow-wight through the window leaping,through the yard, over wall like a shadow sweeping,up hill wailing went back to leaning stone-rings,back under lonely mound, rattling his bone-rings.Old Tom Bombadil lay upon his pillowsweeter than Goldberry, quieter than the Willow,snugger than the Badger-folk or the Barrow-dwellers;slept like a humming-top, snored like a bellows.He woke in morning-light, whistled like a starling,sang, 'Come, derry-dol, merry-dol, my darling!'He clapped on his battered hat, boots, and coat andfeather;opened the window wide to the sunny weather.Wise old Bombadil, he was a wary fellow;bright blue his jacket was, and his boots were yellow.None ever caught old Tom in upland or in dingle,walking the forest-paths, or by the Withywindle,or out on the lily-pools in boat upon the water.But one day Tom, he went and caught the River-daughter,in green gown, flowing hair, sitting in the rushes,singing old water-songs to birds upon the bushes.He caught her, held her fast! Water-rats went scutteringreeds hissed, herons cried, and her heart was fluttering.Said Tom Bombadil: 'Here's my pretty maiden!You shall come home with me! The table is all laden:yellow cream, honeycomb, white bread and butter;roses at the window-sill and peeping round the shutter.You shall come under Hill! Never mind your motherin her deep weedy pool: there you'll find no lover!'Old Tom Bombadil had a merry wedding,crowned all with buttercups, hat and feather shedding;his bride with forgetmenots and flag-lilies for garlandwas robed all in silver-green. He sang like a starling,hummed like a honey-bee, lilted to the fiddle,clasping his river-maid round her slender middle.Lamps gleamed within his house, and white was thebedding;in the bright honey-moon Badger-folk came treading,danced down under Hill, and Old Man Willowtapped, tapped at window-pane, as they slept on thepillow,on the bank in the reeds River-woman sighingheard old Barrow-wight in his mound crying.Old Tom Bombadil heeded not the voices,taps, knocks, dancing feet, all the nightly noises;slept till the sun arose, then sang like a starling:'Hey! Come derry-dol, merry-dol, my darling!'sitting on the door-step chopping sticks of willow,while fair Goldberry combed her tresses yellow.2BOMBADIL GOES BOATINGThe old year was turning brown; the West Wind wascalling;Tom caught a beechen leaf in the Forest falling.'I've caught a happy day blown me by the breezes!Why wait till morrow-year? I'll take it when me pleases.This day I'll mend my boat and journey as it chanceswest down the withy-stream, following my fancies!'Little Bird sat on twig. 'Whillo, Tom! I heed you.I've a guess, I've a guess where your fancies lead you.Shall I go, shall I go, bring him word to meet you?''No names, you tell-tale, or I'll skin and eat you,babbling in every ear things that don't concern you!If you tell Willow-man where I've gone, I'll burn you,roast you on a willow-spit. That'll end your prying!'Willow-wren cocked her tail, piped as she went flying:'Catch me first, catch me first! No names are needed.I'll perch on his hither ear: the message will be heeded."Down by Mithe", I'll say, "just as sun is sinking"Hurry up, hurry up! That's the time for drinking!'Tom laughed to himself: 'Maybe then I'll go there.I might go by other ways, but today I'll row there.'He shaved oars, patched his boat; from hidden creek hehauled herthrough reed and sallow-brake, under leaning alder,then down the river went, singing: 'Silly-sallow,Flow withy-willow-stream over deep and shallow!''Whee! Tom Bombadil! Whither be you going,bobbing in a cockle-boat, down the river rowing?''Maybe to Brandywine along the Withywindle;maybe friends of mine fire for me will kindledown by the Hays-end. Little folk I know there,kind at the day's end. Now and then I go there'.'Take word to my kin, bring me back their tidings!Tell me of diving pools and the fishes' hidings!''Nay then,' said Bombadil, 'I am only rowingjust to smell the water like, not on errands going'.Tee hee! Cocky Tom! Mind your tub don't founder!Look out for willow-snags! I'd laugh to see youflounder'.'Talk less, Fisher Blue! Keep your kindly wishes!Fly off and preen yourself with the bones of fishes!Gay lord on your bough, at home a dirty varletliving in a sloven house, though your breast be scarlet.I've heard of fisher-birds beak in air a-danglingto show how the wind is set: that's an end of angling!'The King's fisher shut his beak, winked his eye, assingingTom passed under bough. Flash! then he went winging;dropped down jewel-blue a feather, and Tom caught itgleaming in a sun-ray: a pretty gift he thought it.He stuck it in his tall hat, the old feather casting:'Blue now for Tom', he said, "a merry hue and lasting!'Rings swirled round his boat, he saw the bubbles quiver.Tom slapped his oar, smack! at a shadow in the river.'Hoosh! Tom Bombadil! 'Tis long since last I met you.Turned water-boatman, eh? What if I upset you?''What? Why, Whisker-lad, I'd ride you down the river.My fingers on your back would set your hide a-shiver.''Pish, Tom Bombadil! I'll go and tell my m... [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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