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two towers-第83部分

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sprang  forward with a yell; and seized his master's sword in his left hand。 
Then he charged。  No onslaught more fierce was ever seen in the savage world 
of beasts; where  some  desperate  small creature  armed with  little  teeth 
alone;  will  spring  upon a tower of horn and  hide that  stands above  its 
fallen mate。 
     Disturbed as if out of some gloating dream by his small yell she turned 
slowly the dreadful malice of her glance upon him。 But almost before she was 
aware that a fury was upon her greater than any she  had known in  countless 
years;  the shining sword  bit upon her  foot  and shore away  the claw。 Sam 
sprang in; inside the arches of  her legs; and  with a quick upthrust of his 
other hand stabbed at  the clustered eyes upon her lowered  head。 One  great 
eye went dark。 
     Now  the miserable creature was right under her; for the  moment out of 
the reach of her  sting and of her claws。  Her vast belly was above him with 
its putrid light; and the stench of it almost smote him down。 Still his fury 
held for  one more blow; and  before she could sink upon him; smothering him 
and all his little impudence of courage; he  slashed  the bright elven…blade 
across her with desperate strength。 
     But Shelob was not as dragons are; no softer spot had she save only her 
eyes。  Knobbed  and pitted  with corruption  was her  age…old hide; but ever 
thickened from within with  layer on layer of evil  growth。 The blade scored 
it with a dreadful gash; but those hideous folds could not be pierced by any 
strength of men; not though Elf or Dwarf should  forge the steel or the hand 
of Beren or of T畆in wield it。 She yielded to the stroke; and then heaved up 
the great bag of her belly high above Sam's head。 Poison frothed and bubbled 
from  the wound。 Now splaying her legs she drove her huge  bulk down  on him 
again。  Too  soon。  For Sam still stood upon his feet; and dropping  his own 
sword; with both hands he  held the  elven…blade  point upwards; fending off 
that ghastly roof; and  so  Shelob; with  the driving force of her own cruel 
will; with  strength greater than  any warrior's hand; thrust herself upon a 
bitter  spike。  Deep;  deep it pricked; as Sam was  crushed  slowly  to  the 
ground。 
     No such anguish  had  Shelob ever known; or dreamed of knowing; in  all 
her long  world of wickedness。 Not the doughtiest soldier of old Gondor; nor 
the most savage Orc  entrapped; had ever thus  endured  her; or set blade to 
her beloved flesh。 A shudder  went through her。  Heaving up again; wrenching 
away  from the  pain;  she  bent her writhing limbs  beneath  her and sprang 
backwards in a convulsive leap。 
     Sam had fallen to his knees by Frodo's head; his senses  reeling in the 
foul stench; his two hands still gripping the hilt of the sword。 Through the 
mist before his eyes he was  aware  dimly of Frodo's face  and stubbornly he 
fought to  master himself and to drag himself out of the swoon that was upon 
him。  Slowly  he raised his head and saw her; only  a few paces away; eyeing 
him; her beak drabbling a spittle of venom;  and a green ooze trickling from 
below her wounded eye。 There she crouched; her shuddering belly splayed upon 
the ground;  the great bows of her legs quivering; as she  gathered  herself 
for another spring…this time to crush  and sting to death: no little bite of 
poison to  still the struggling of  her meat; this time  to slay and then to 
rend。 
     Even  as Sam himself crouched; looking at her; seeing  his death in her 
eyes;  a  thought came  to him; as  if some remote voice had  spoken。 and he 
fumbled in his breast with his left hand; and found what he sought: cold and 
hard  and  solid  it seemed to  his touch  in a phantom world of horror; the 
Phial of Galadriel。 
     'Galadriel!  ' he said  faintly; and  then he heard voices far off  but 
clear: the crying of the Elves as they walked under the stars in the beloved 
shadows of the  Shire; and  the music  of the Elves as  it came  through his 
sleep in the Hall of Fire in the house of Elrond。 
     Gilthoniel A Elbereth! 
     And then his tongue was loosed and  his voice cried in a language which 
he did not know: 
     A Elbereth Gilthoniel 
     o menel palan…diriel; 
     le nallon sn di'nguruthos! 
     A tiro nin; Fanuilos! 
     And  with  that  he staggered  to  his feet and was Samwise the hobbit; 
Hamfast's son; again。 
     ‘Now e; you filth!' he cried。 ‘You've hurt my master; you brute; and 
you'll pay for it。 We're going on; but we'll settle with you first。 e on; 
and taste it again!' 
     As  if his indomitable spirit had set  its potency in motion; the glass 
blazed  suddenly like a white torch in his  hand。 It flamed like a star that 
leaping from the firmament sears  the  dark  air with  intolerable light。 No 
such terror out of heaven had ever burned in Shelob's face before。 The beams 
of it entered into her wounded head  and scored it with unbearable pain; and 
the  dreadful  infection of light  spread  from  eye to  eye。 She  fell back 
beating  the air with her  forelegs; her  sight blasted by inner lightnings; 
her  mind  in agony。 Then turning her maimed head away; she rolled aside and 
began to crawl; claw by claw; towards the opening in the dark cliff behind。 
     Sam came  on。 He was reeling like a drunken man;  but he came  on。  And 
Shelob cowed at last; shrunken in defeat; jerked and quivered  as she  tried 
to  hasten from him。 She  reached  the hole;  and  squeezing down; leaving a 
trail of green…yellow slime; she slipped in; even as Sam hewed a last stroke 
at her dragging legs。 Then he fell to the ground。 
     Shelob was  gone; and  whether she lay  long in her  lair; nursing  her 
malice  and her misery; and  in slow years of darkness  healed  herself from 
within; rebuilding her clustered eyes; until with hunger like death she spun 
once more her dreadful snares in the glens of the Mountains of  Shadow; this 
tale does not tell。 
     Sam was left alone。 Wearily; as the evening  of the Nameless Land  fell 
upon the place of battle; he crawled back to his master。 
     'Master; dear master;' he said; but Frodo did not  speak。 As he had run 
forward; eager; rejoicing  to be  free;  Shelob  with hideous speed had e 
behind and with one swift stroke had stung him in the neck。 He lay now pale; 
and heard no voice。 and did not move。 
     ‘Master; dear  master! ' said Sam; and through  a long  silence waited。 
listening in vain。 
     Then as quickly as he could he  cut away the binding cords and laid his 
head upon  Frodo's  breast and to his mouth; but  no stir of life  could  he 
find; nor  feel  the  faintest flutter of  the  heart。 Often  he chafed  his 
master's hands and feet; and touched his brow; but all were cold。 
     ‘Frodo; Mr。 Frodo! ' he called。 'Don't leave me here alone!  It's  your 
Sam calling。 Don't go  where I can't follow! Wake up; Mr。 Frodo!  O wake up; 
Frodo; me dear; me dear。 Wake up!' 
     Then anger surged over hint;  and he ran  about his master's body in  a 
rage;  stabbing the air;  and smiting the  stones; and shouting  challenges。 
Presently he came back; and bending looked at Frodo's face; pale beneath him 
in the  dusk。  And  suddenly  he  saw that he was  in the  picture  that was 
revealed to him in the mirror of Galadriel in Lurien: Frodo with a pale face 
lying fast asleep under  a great  dark cliff。 Or fast asleep he had  thought 
then。 ‘He's dead! ' he said。 'Not asleep; dead! ' And  as he  said it; as if 
the words had set the venom to its work again。 it seemed to him that the hue 
of the face grew livid green。 
     And  then black despair came down  on him; and Sam bowed to the ground; 
and drew his grey hood over his head; and night came into  his heart; and he 
knew no more。 
     When at last the blackness passed; Sam looked up and shadows were about 
him; but for how many  minutes or  hours the world had  gone dragging on  he 
could not  tell。 He was still in  the  same place;  and still his master lay 
beside him dead。 The mountains had not crumbled  nor  the earth fallen  into 
ruin。 
     'What shall I do; what shall I do? ' he said。  ‘Did I e all this way 
with him for  nothing? ' And then he remembered his own voice speaking words 
that at the time he  did not  understand  himself; at the beginning of their 
journey: I have something to do before the end。 I must see  it through; sir; 
if you understand。 
     ‘But what can I do? Not leave  Mr。 Frodo dead; unburied on  the  top of 
the mountains; and go home? Or go on? Go on?' he repeated; and for  a moment 
doubt and fear  shook him。 ‘Go on?  Is  that what I've  got to do? And leave 
him?' 
     Then at last he began to weep; and going to Frodo he posed his body; 
and folded his cold hands upon his breast;  and wrapped his cloak about him; 
and he laid  his own sword at one side; and the staff that Faramir had given 
at the other。 
     'If I'm  to  go on;' he  said;  ‘then  I must take your sword;  by your 
leave; Mr。 Frodo; but I'll put this one to lie by you; as it lay by the  old 
king in the barrow; and you've got your beautiful mithril coat from  old Mr。 
Bilbo。 And  your star…glass; Mr。 Frodo; you did lend it to me and I'll  need 
it; for I'll be  always in the dark now。 It's too good  for me; and the Lady 
gave it  to you; but maybe she'd understand。 Do  you  understand; Mr。 Frodo? 
I've got to go on。' 
     But he could not  go; not yet。 He knelt and held Frodo's hand and could 
not release it。 And time went  by and  still he knelt; holding  his master's 
hand; and in his heart keeping a debate。 
     Now he tried to find strength to tear himself  away and go  on a lonely 
journey  for vengeance。 If once he could go; his anger would bear him down 
all the roads of the world; pursuing; until he had him at last: Gollum。 Then 
Gollum would die in a corner。 But that was not what he had set out to do。 It 
would  not be  worth while to leave his master for  that。 It would not bring 
him back。 Nothing would。 They had better both be dead together。 And that too 
would be a lonely journey。 
     He  looked on  the bright point of the sword。
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