I'll Surpass The MC-Chapter 944: The Varahan Challenge Concludes
Chapter 944: The Varahan Challenge Concludes
The Varahan Challenge gathered a large number of Free Humans and Wean Clansmen in one area and riled them up in the fight since the stakes were too high.
The presence they leaked was enough to strengthen the Empyrean Boar Aurora created by the two combatants—Narkahamy and KalTara.
Following that, the resulting fight between the two revealed countless ingenious ways to use their build in a battle. As they clashed, the spiking presence they released further reinforced the Empyrean Boar Aurora.
As a State of Harmony user, Narkahamy understood the Varahan Empire's flaws. He created every Blessed influence active in the Empire. This made him central to the Empire's future. And the moment he dies, the Varahan Empire would lose most of its strength that allowed it to contend against the Wean Clansmen who had significantly greater privileges, born with Gold Grade strength and possessing a maturity of eight years.
Problem originated from the fact that Free Humans were reliant on Vara produced by someone or the other to cultivate. Fundamentally, this prevented their minds to be in perfect sync with the Vara built into their Human Avatars, since they had faint traces of the source's mind.
Even for the Free Humans with the Tertiary Nature of Vara Accum, due to their Secondary Nature being gained from consuming Wean Clansmen, they could never attain a State of Harmony.
In essence, their Secondary Nature was something they were graciously accepting from the Wean Clansmen they consumed. And by repeating this many times, they accepted the influence into their Vara Human Avatars to result in the Secondary Nature of Voracious Nature.
This was the principal reason behind why none of them reached a State of Unity. As for Narkahamy, through his sheer understanding, he made the Natures he obtained as his own. Moreover, he obtained Voracious Nature from YoriBuntara, someone who had been trauma-adapted to be extremely subservient to his will.
Therefore, her Voracious Nature too reflected this fact and hence remained submissive to Narkahamy's will. That was why only he could attain a State of Harmony.
Hence, Narkahamy concocted a plan, one where he would turn himself into a blueprint. Every cultivation technique generated some influence upon usage. He simply modified it in such a way that the resulting influence consisted of his entire build.
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And to cement it further, Narkahamy took advantage of KalTara. When the duo clashed, he harmonised himself to KalTara's Prana signature, waiting for the perfect opportunity for his Blessed Influence of Narkahamy to take effect.
Even if KalTara hadn't stolen Narkahamy's Human Avatar, the latter had planned enough to cause a similar result.
First, Narkahamy riled up the crowd and began influencing the Empyrean Boar Aurora that had formed in the sky. Second, he harmonised his Prana signature to KalTara by taking advantage of situations where KalTara stole his Blessed Influences.
Third, he used KalTara as a whetstone to govern the direction of the Empyrean Boar Aurora's change. Fourth, once the Empyrean Boar Aurora changed, the passive suppression effect it produced began to influence all the Vara Human Avatars, making the Free Humans more perceptive to all the changes happening at the place.
Fourth, he displayed to everyone that Free Humans could unleash terrifying levels of strength through a small bunch of Iron Grade Natures, enough to fight on equal grounds with a Boar King that was empowered with the infamous Astral Chart. He was fighting on par with a Boar King with the same build that every Gold Grade Free Humans at the Varahan Empire possessed, also implying that a regular Wean Clansman wasn't their match.
Fifth, after KalTara stole his Human Avatars, Narkahamy used five of the former's bodies as fuel to absorb all their nutrients, Prana, and obviously the influences generated by their Natures.
The core of the Empyrean Boar Aurora above the Empyrean Colosseum was created by Narkahamy and KalTara. By absorbing KalTara's presence, Narkahamy now had complete control over the aurora, which he capitalised.
Sixth, the Narkahamy Vara Human Avatars absorbed the aurora and stabilised. As they were Human Avatars, they were full of Narkahamy's Prana, which was why they could temporarily move about and even talk.
Consuming KalTara's five bodies strengthened the Voracious Nature of the Narkahamy Human Avatar to the limit. And throughout the process, the State of Harmony was being maintained. Once it was ready, the Narkahamy Human Avatar consumed its human counterpart, inheriting everything.
And finally, the seventh step was when the Blessed Influence of Narkahamy was completed, condensed, and transmitted through a Bolt of Transcendence.
Narkahamy died as a result, but he resulted in the birth of a new version of Gold Inheritance Art that any Free Human could learn. And the moment they do, they'll get the Tertiary Nature of Vara Accum, allowing them to make Spirit Weapons and Information Slips through the Vara growing from their nails.
And when they reach the Body Stage, they gained Silver Grade strength. This was monumental and would go down in Sumatra's history as one of the most important anchors that rewrote the fate of Free Humans.
After all, thanks to Gold Inheritance Art, every Free Human could now obtain Silver Grade strength without issues, irrespective of where on Sumatra they lived. Basically, the Free Human Race was wholly upgraded to Silver Grade, making them the strongest race on Sumatra.
With Vara Accum, as long as they were talented enough, put in the effort and worked hard, they would obtain Gold Grade strength. As long as they used Gold Inheritance Art, the Narkahamy Aurora would appear and give them insights, allowing them to slowly tread on Narkahamy's path until they reached the endpoint.
At this stage, they had peak Gold Grade strength, allowing them to fight a Boar King.
Narkahamy's actions instantly elevated Gold Inheritance Art to one of the most developed cultivation techniques, bringing it to the same stage that Gold Kinesis Art stood at before it was upgraded to the Mystic Grade.
And that was his intention, which was why he issued the Varahan Challenge.
"As long as this cultivation technique exists, our Race of Free Humans would never have to suffer as our ancestors did." Mesupoh roared as his presence spiked, "And look! Thanks to the insights I gained from this fight and His Royal Majesty's aurora, I reached a State of Harmony!"
"And we all can reach this level!" As he said so, Mesupoh glared at the Wean Clansmen with a ravenous expression, "The Wean Clansmen cannot reach a State of Harmony. His Majesty has clearly pointed it out."
The Wean Clan's build couldn't be harmonised to reach a State of Harmony. Narkahamy showed this fact, giving confidence to the Free Humans.
Through the usage of Astral Chart, a Boar King could attain a State of Harmony, but it wasn't a natural one. It consumed a tremendous amount of Prana and wasted the ten Natures that unleashed the effect.
This was unlike the Free Humans who could unleash their State of Harmony without prep time, since it was unleashed through their innate Natures.
Most of all, Astral Chart was only available to the Boar King. There was only one Boar King with the Wean Clan at the moment, and even KalTara's State of Harmony wasn't invincible.
Narkahamy had pointed out all its flaws in their fight before his Human Avatar was stolen. As long as two or more Free Humans with a State of Harmony fought against KalTara, they would win.
The Free Humans would eventually have an excess number of Blessed Influence wielders, able to gang up on the Wean Clan's Boar Kings.
"Kill…!" KalTara muttered as he observed the Free Human side getting riled up in absolute excitement, "Kill them all…"
A future where he was being besieged by multiple State of Harmony users; KalTara pictured it for a moment and roared his command, "Slaughter them all."
"Don't let them leave this place!"
Astral Chart—Shredded Lunge x10!
His figure promptly vanished as KalTara made a beeline towards the closest Free Human who had attained a State of Harmony, 'There are eight of them now. Before they get used to it, I'll kill them all!'
Blessed Influence—Ring Blade!
The targeted Free Human activated the Blessed Influence granted to him by Narkahamy and retaliated. He grunted and used Shredded Lunge to barely evade upon seeing his Ring Blade getting absorbed into KalTara's tusk.
"Is this how I do it?" The Free Human gasped for a moment as he fired off two more Shredded Lunge before his demeanour changed.
Blessed Influence—Manoeuvre!
His speed spiked as his Prana usage too reduced, allowing him to fire off the ability without losing his Natures. He had just succeeded in using it when a stacked wind blade cut through his midriff.
"Just because you have Blessed Influence doesn't make you Narkahamy." KalTara uttered as his figure flickered all over the stands, engaging in a scuffle with the Free Human before a series of wind blades locked onto the other party.
He had given chase in such a way while delaying the wind blades that when they appeared, they surrounded the Free Human.
"Just…when I reached this level…" Even after the Free Human transformed into an Empyrean Boar, he was still hacked into pieces.
"One down, seven more to go…" KalTara muttered as his figure flashed back a couple metres, watching a blade of Prana slash into the ground. The presence of the Free Humans and the Wean Clansmen resonated with the Prana forming the Empyrean Colosseum, causing another Empyrean Boar Aurora to form in the sky.
Created from Brangara's Prana and refined by Inala, the Empyrean Boar Colosseum made it easy for the aurora to appear. That was the intention behind its creation. In the Empyrean Colosseum, those related to the power of an Empyrean Boar were empowered while the rest became weaker.
"If it's a war you seek, I'll be at the forefront to deliver it!" Mesupoh roared as he threw a couple Wean Clansmen heads towards KalTara. Held in his hand was a blade of Prana two metres long, with a slight resemblance to a whip, capable of elongating and contracting as necessary, his signature ability specifically created by Narkahamy for his use.
Blessed Influence—Enhanced Eddy!
The Narkahamy Aurora manifested behind Mesupoh as the latter paused for a moment. His presence then spiked a level further.
Blessed Influence—Astral Stack!
Blessed Influence—Mesupoh!
"Now, even if you steal it, I can steal it back the moment you activate it." He uttered and got into a battle stance, bellowing at KalTara, "Come at me, pig!"
"I'll butcher you like the rest of your kind!"
"Ah, I was always searching for your head on the battlefield." KalTara snorted as he stuffed the severed corpse of the Free Human he had just killed. As he crunched it, his cultivation entered the 6-Life Stage, "Now, I'll be able to exact revenge for my fallen brethren."
"Kill the humans!"
"Don't let anyone escape!" The Wean Clansmen roared as they assumed Empyrean Boar forms and rushed towards the exit. Some of them climbed over the walls and chased after the Free Humans who had fled outside.
The battle-hardened Free Humans spontaneously joined hands and retaliated, causing a bloodbath on both sides.
Clang!
Right as the Pranic Beasts hesitated on what to do, a metallic sound resounded as they lost their senses.
Krieeee!
Suddenly, the Grim Knell that was responsible for destroying the senses of all Pranic Beasts in the area screamed in pain as blood spurted out of its body like a geyser. It then noticed a shadow and lifted its head to see two, terrifying Pranic Beasts standing before it.
These two Pranic Beasts had lost most senses, except for their Prana detection means. However, they didn't care about it and instead bore down on the Grim Knell.
"It's a war." The Panger, Loya uttered as it punched the Grim Knell a few times until the latter was knocked unconscious. It then stared at the Brully standing next to it and asked, "Even though I protected our Prana detection means, we're still under the Grim Knell's effects. I'm afraid we won't recover our senses until all our Prana gets consumed."
"I'm sure it latched many entities on us, so there's a chance we'll be within the Spirit Weapon range of at least one entity whose Prana is being consumed to remove our senses." It concluded.
"Is that a worry?" Inala chuckled, "We do have that, right?"
"You're right." Loya chuckled as its Prana values rapidly plummeted.
Mystic Sumatra Art—Race Elixir!
The duo quickly created an Elixir by consuming all their Prana. Once their Prana values reached zero, they recovered their senses. By then, they had already knocked all the Death Knells unconscious, as the other side was already bleeding out the moment their ability touched Loya's Shield of Thorns.
"Down it goes!" Inala consumed the Elixir and felt his Prana values steadily recover. He quickly observed the Empyrean Colosseum, 'It's chaos.'
'Everyone's participating.' He frowned upon seeing that even the Mystic Humans and the Brimgan Royals had entered the mix, taking advantage of the chaos to reap benefits.
Inala didn't worry about it, as he already benefitted tremendously thanks to Narkahamy's actions. He didn't even need to spend time at the Varahan Empire and could instead begin heading to the Brimgan Empire, 'But first…'
"I'll leave it to you to protect the rest of the Librarians," Inala said and broke into a sprint, quickly focusing on the Free Human youth who seemed to be fleeing in fright. But when observed with focus, one would notice a few existences from the surroundings strangely disappearing.
And amidst the chaos, some Nature Weapons were rolling to the feet of this youth who picked them up and stuffed them in his mouth. 'That's indeed her!'
With that, Inala charged towards his target.
盧爐露 䈈䴝䛃䛃䛿䈈㑞㡎䟦㑞㜁䍀䋡䈈䍀䍀㘣䛿—䁴䛃䍀䌥䍀㑞䍀䪣䋡㫉䛃㑞䈈䔢㑞老老
魯
爐老盧虜'䴝䈈䃈䍀 䃳㖽䈈䍀㑞㘣 䂍䛿䈈㡎䋡䔢' 䯄䪣䛿 䃈䛃䃈䛿䍀䋡 㡎䪣䛿 㡎䛿䍀㡎䛿㧴 䈈 䂍㖽䜹㫉㫉䓼 㖽䜹䍀䍀㑞䍀䭪 䋡䛃㠷䈈㖽㧴㡎 䪣䛿㖽䥜 䪝䈈䍀䍀䈈㫉䈈 㡎䟦䛃䍀䋡䈈䍀䛿䛃䜹㡎㫉䓼 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿 㫉䈈䋡䋡䛿㖽䥜 䜹㡎㑞䍀䭪 䪣䛿㖽 䁴㫉䛿䛿㑞䍀䭪 㡎㑞䋡䜹䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䋡䛃 㳝䛿䪣䈈䘚䛿 㫉㑞㶈䛿 㡎䪣䛿 㫉䛃㡎䋡 䪣䛿㖽 㳝䈈㫉䈈䍀㘣䛿 䈈䍀㧴 䟦䛿㖽䁴䛃㖽䃈䛿㧴 䈈 㡎䛿䋡 䛃䁴 䃈䛃䘚䛿㡎䴳 㮀䛃㠷䛿䘚䛿㖽䥜 䈈 㡎䛿㘣䛃䍀㧴 㫉䈈䋡䛿㖽䥜 䋡䪣䛿㖽䛿 㠷䈈㡎 䈈 䘚㑞㡎㑞㳝㫉䛿 㘣䪣䈈䍀䭪䛿 㑞䍀 䪣䛿㖽 䛿䢦䟦㖽䛿㡎㡎㑞䛃䍀䥜 '㜓䋡'㡎 䍀䛃䋡 㠷䛃㖽㶈㑞䍀䭪䭒'
䌥㡎 㫉䛃䍀䭪 䈈㡎 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡 䪣䈈㧴 䛃䍀䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿䥜 䴝䈈䍀㘣䛿 䛃䁴 䌥䍀䍀㑞䪣㑞㫉䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 㠷䈈㡎 䭪䜹䈈㖽䈈䍀䋡䛿䛿㧴 䋡䛃 㠷䛃㖽㶈䥜 䜹䍀㫉䛿㡎㡎 㑞䋡 㠷䈈㡎 㧴䛿䁴䛿䍀㧴䛿㧴 䈈䭪䈈㑞䍀㡎䋡䴳 㵀䛃㖽 䈈 䃈䛃䃈䛿䍀䋡 䪝䈈䍀䍀䈈㫉䈈 㡎䋡䈈㖽䛿㧴 䈈䋡 䋡䪣䛿 㡎㶈䓼䥜 '䯄䪣䛿 䬷䃈䟦䓼㖽䛿䈈䍀 䂍䛃䈈㖽 䌥䜹㖽䛃㖽䈈 㑞㡎䍀'䋡 㡎䋡㖽䛃䍀䭪 䛿䍀䛃䜹䭪䪣 䓼䛿䋡 䋡䛃 㑞䍀䋡䛿㖽䁴䛿㖽䛿 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䃈䓼 䈈㳝㑞㫉㑞䋡䓼䴳'
䍀䋡䛃䛿䃈䃈㡎䍀䴳䛿㖽䋡㑞㘣䛿㡎䈈 䪣䋡䛿 㧴㖽䛿䍀䋡䜹 㡎㑞䛃䍀䋡㑞㜁䴳䍀䈈䛃䛿䟦 䋡䜹䛿㭕䈈㖽 䛃㑞䛃䋡㧴㑞䍀㘣䍀 䍀㖽䈈䃳䈈 㫉䌥㑞䛃䋡䈈㑞䍀䍀䍀䪣㑞䜹㫉㘣䛿䛿䁴䍀㡎䍀㑞㡎㑞䋡 㖽䋡䋡䭪䛿䈈 䈈䛃㘣䍀㑞䁴䋡䜹䍀 㫉㑞䛿䍀㘣䛿䍀䜹䁴䈈㖽䍀䈈䃳䛿㫉㡎䛿䛿䈈㡎㖽 㖽㧴㑞䍀䟦䛃䭪䟦䁴䛃㑞䍀䋡䛃䪣䛿㖽䛃䁴䯄䪣䛿 㧴䍀䈈䛿㑞䪣䋡㖽 䋡㑞㡎䪣 䁴㑞䛃䭪䍀㫉䛃䛿䪣䋡 㳝䛃䴳䓼㧴 㘣䍀䛿䈈䴝 䛿䛿㫉䃈䛃䋡㧴䥜䟦㘣 䋡䭪'㡎㖽䛿䈈䋡䋡䪣䛿 䛿䪣䋡 㑞㡎 䯄䪣䛿䪣䯄䛿 䛿䘚䈈㠷 䈈 䛃䁴 䟦䋡㑞'㡎㑞㡎䛃䈈䈈䛃䛿䍀㜁䍀䛃䍀 䛿㖽䋡䥜䈈䭪䋡㑞䈈㑞䛿㡎㡎㡎䋡䁴 䍀䭪㑞䓼㫉䟦䟦䈈
㜓䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡 䪣䈈㧴 䛃䍀㫉䓼 䛃䍀䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿䥜 㑞䋡 㠷䈈㡎 㫉㑞㶈䛿 䋡䪣䛿䓼 䪣䈈㧴 䈈 㡎㑞䍀䭪㫉䛿 䁴䛃㖽䃈 䛃䁴 㑞䍀䁴㫉䜹䛿䍀㘣䛿 䛃䍀 䋡䪣䛿䃈䴳 䴝䈈䍀㘣䛿 䛃䁴 䌥䍀䍀㑞䪣㑞㫉䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䟦㖽䛿䟦䈈㖽䛿㡎 䛃䍀䛿 䋡䛃 㘣䛃䜹䍀䋡䛿㖽 㑞䋡 䈈䍀㧴 䁴䛃䛃㫉 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡'㡎 䃳㖽䈈䍀䈈䴳 㮀䛃㠷䛿䘚䛿㖽䥜 㑞䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡 䪣䈈㧴 䃈䛃㖽䛿 䋡䪣䈈䍀 䛃䍀䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿䥜 䋡䪣䛿䍀 䈈 㘣䛃䃈䟦㫉䛿䢦 㑞䍀䁴㫉䜹䛿䍀㘣䛿 䛿䙁䜹䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䋡䛃䛃 䛿䁴䁴䛿㘣䋡䴳
䴝䛿䟦䛿䍀㧴㑞䍀䭪 䛃䍀 䋡䪣䛿 䘚䈈㖽㑞䛃䜹㡎 㠷䈈䓼㡎 䋡䪣䛿 䋡㠷䛃 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿㡎 㑞䍀䁴㫉䜹䛿䍀㘣䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿 㳝䛃㧴䓼䥜 㠷䪣㑞㘣䪣 䘚䈈㖽㑞䛿㧴 㑞䍀 㖽䛿䈈㫉䣇䋡㑞䃈䛿 䈈㘣㘣䛃㖽㧴㑞䍀䭪 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡'㡎 䟦䪣䓼㡎㑞㘣䈈㫉 䈈䍀㧴 䃈䛿䍀䋡䈈㫉 㡎䋡䈈䋡䛿䥜 䍀䛃䋡 䋡䛃 䃈䛿䍀䋡㑞䛃䍀 㠷䪣䛿䍀 䋡䪣䛿 㖽䛿㡎䟦䛿㘣䋡㑞䘚䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿㡎 㠷䛿㖽䛿 䈈㘣䋡㑞䘚䈈䋡䛿㧴 䛃㖽 㧴䛿䈈㘣䋡㑞䘚䈈䋡䛿㧴䴳 䃳㫉䜹㡎䥜 㠷䪣䛿䍀 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 䃳㖽䈈䍀䈈 㑞䍀䋡䛿䍀㧴䛿㧴 䋡䛃 㖽䛿㡎㑞㡎䋡䥜 㑞䋡 㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴 㫉䛃䛃㶈 䁴䛃㖽 䈈 㡎䛃㫉䜹䋡㑞䛃䍀 䋡䛃 㧴䛃 㡎䛃䥜 䋡䪣㑞䍀㶈㑞䍀䭪 䁴䛃㖽 䛃䍀䛿䴳
䁴䛃 㖽䋡䛿㡎㑞㡎䌥䍀䛃䍀㑞䪣䴳䍀䋡㑞㫉㑞䈈㡎䪣䯄㑞䈈 䋡䪣䛿㖽㑞㳝䓼䛃㧴 㘣䍀䈈䴝䛿 䈈䍀㧴 䛿㫉㡎䛿䘚㫉䓼䍀㖽㑞䭪㖽䈈㘣䋡䛃 䛿䪣䋡 䁴䛃 䭪䜹䛃䍀䛿䪣䛿䋡䪣 㡎䈈㠷 䛿䛿㡎㘣䈈䍀䛿䋡㖽䭪䟦䍀䜹㑞䍀䁴㘣䛿䛿㫉 䛿㖽㑞㡎㡎䋡䛃䛃㳝㧴㫉䟦䃈㫉㑞䌕䓼䴳䍀䈈㧴㖽㑞䘚䛿 䭪䍀㑞䈈䍀䪣䭪㘣 㑞䋡㠷䪣䛿䛃䋡㠷䋡䛃'㭕䈈㡎䋡䜹㖽䛿 䛃㳝䃈㑞䈈㘣㖽㑞㫉 㫉㫉㘣䛿㡎䋡䪣䛿䛃䋡㫉䍀䍀䈈㡎䋡㘣䓼䛿䁴㘣㡎䋡䁴䛿㡎䈈㠷䛃䁴 䛃䁴㫉㖽㑞䈈䃈㑞㡎㧴㑞䛿䛿䋡㖽䁴䁴䍀 䪣䛃㠷䋡䪣䛿
䌥㡎 䈈 㖽䛿㡎䜹㫉䋡䥜 㑞䋡 㠷䈈㡎 㑞䃈䟦䛃㡎㡎㑞㳝㫉䛿 䋡䛃 䋡䜹㖽䍀 䈈䍀䓼 㳝䛿㑞䍀䭪 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䃈䛃㖽䛿 䋡䪣䈈䍀 䛃䍀䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿 㑞䍀䋡䛃 䈈 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿 㜁䛿䈈䟦䛃䍀䴳 㵀㖽䛿䛿 㮀䜹䃈䈈䍀㡎 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䈈 䨇䈈㖽䈈 㮀䜹䃈䈈䍀 䌥䘚䈈䋡䈈㖽 䈈䍀㧴 㜁䛿䈈䍀 䮑㫉䈈䍀㡎䃈䛿䍀 㘣䈈䃈䛿 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽 䋡䪣㑞㡎 㖽䜹㫉䛿䴳 䬷䘚䛿䍀 㑞䁴 䋡䪣䛿䓼 䛃䍀㫉䓼 䪣䈈㧴 䛃䍀䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㠷䛿㖽䛿 䜹㡎䜹䈈㫉㫉䓼 㘣䈈㖽㖽䓼㑞䍀䭪 䃈䛃㖽䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿㡎 㑞䍀 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 㮀䜹䃈䈈䍀 䌥䘚䈈䋡䈈㖽 䛃㖽 㳝䛃㧴䓼 㑞䍀 䋡䪣䛿 㖽䛿㡎䟦䛿㘣䋡㑞䘚䛿 㘣䈈㡎䛿䴳
䯄䛃 㘣䈈䟦䋡䜹㖽䛿 䛿㑞䋡䪣䛿㖽䥜 䪝䈈䍀䍀䈈㫉䈈 㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䋡䛃 䁴㑞㖽㡎䋡 䛿䢦䪣䈈䜹㡎䋡 䈈㫉㫉 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 㡎䋡䛃㖽䛿㧴 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿㡎䴳 䌥䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿䍀䥜 㠷䪣䛿䍀 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡 䛃䍀㫉䓼 䪣䈈㡎 䈈 䃳㖽㑞䃈䈈㖽䓼 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴 㳝䛿㘣䛃䃈䛿 㡎䜹㡎㘣䛿䟦䋡㑞㳝㫉䛿 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿 䛿䁴䁴䛿㘣䋡㡎 䛃䁴 㜁䛿䈈䟦䛃䍀㑞㡎䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀䴳
㑞䜹㫉䍀䍀䛿䁴䍀㘣䭪㑞 䈈㡎㧴䛿䜹䍀㖽㠷䈈㡎 䈈㡎䭪䥜䋡䋡䈈䛿㖽㫉㑞䍀䭪㑞䘚 㖽䍀䬷䛿䈈䟦䃈䓼䁴䛃 䛃䥜㡎㫉䌥 㠷䛃㖽㶈㡎㠷䛃㶈㖽䋡㖽䋡䈈䛿㫉 䛿䪣䋡 䍀㑞䛿㳝䭪 䁴䛃㑞䍀 㡎䟦㜁䛃䛿䈈㑞䛃䍀䍀㑞䈈䋡 䋡㑞㡎䓼㫉㖽䛿䈈㧴㑞 䛃䍀㠷㫉㧴䋡䜹䍀䛃'㑞㑞䍀䛃㫉㑞䋡䈈䌥䪣䍀䍀䛿䴳㘣䁴䁴䛿䋡 㑞㖽䛃䍀䛿䭪㠷䪣㑞䋡㖽䛿䓼䘚䛿 䈈䴝䈈䍀㘣䛿 㖽䛿䭪䍀㑞䛃 䋡䛿䪣䈈㖽䜹䌥䛃㖽䥜 㖽䈈䛃䂍 䛿䪣䋡䛿䪣㖽䍀㘣䭪㫉䛿㑞䍀䜹䍀䁴㑞
㜁䛿䈈䟦䛃䍀㑞㡎䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 㘣䛃䜹㫉㧴 㡎䋡㑞㫉㫉 䋡䈈㶈䛿 䛿䁴䁴䛿㘣䋡䥜 㳝䜹䋡 㡎䪣䛿 㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䋡䛃 䃈䈈䍀䜹䈈㫉㫉䓼 㡎䈈䋡㑞㡎䁴䓼 䋡䪣䛿 㘣䛃䍀㧴㑞䋡㑞䛃䍀㡎䥜 䈈䍀㧴 䪣䈈㧴 䋡䛃 㳝䛿 㠷㑞䋡䪣㑞䍀 䌕䟦㑞㖽㑞䋡 㜁䛿䈈䟦䛃䍀 㖽䈈䍀䭪䛿 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡 䋡䛃 㧴䛃 㡎䛃䴳 䌥䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䟦㖽䛃㘣䛿㡎㡎 㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴 㳝䛿 㑞䍀䋡䛿㖽㖽䜹䟦䋡䛿㧴 㑞䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䬷䃈䟦䓼㖽䛿䈈䍀 䂍䛃䈈㖽 䌥䜹㖽䛃㖽䈈 䃈䈈䍀䈈䭪䛿㡎 䋡䛃 䋡䛃䜹㘣䪣 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡 䁴䛃㖽 䛿䘚䛿䍀 䈈 䃈䛃䃈䛿䍀䋡䥜 䟦㖽䛃䃈䟦䋡㑞䍀䭪 䪣䛿㖽 䋡䛃 㡎䋡䈈㖽䋡 䁴㖽䛃䃈 㡎㘣㖽䈈䋡㘣䪣 䛃䍀㘣䛿 䈈䭪䈈㑞䍀䥜 䈈㡎 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡'㡎 䃳㖽䈈䍀䈈 㠷䈈㡎 㖽䛿䃈䛃䘚䛿㧴 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 㑞䍀䁴㫉䜹䛿䍀㘣䛿 㡎䪣䛿 䪣䈈㧴 㡎䋡䈈㘣㶈䛿㧴 㑞䍀 㑞䋡䴳
䌥䁴䋡䛿㖽 㭕䈈㖽㶈䈈䪣䈈䃈䓼'㡎 䈈㘣䋡㑞䛃䍀㡎䥜 䈈 䍀䛿㠷 䬷䃈䟦䓼㖽䛿䈈䍀 䂍䛃䈈㖽 䌥䜹㖽䛃㖽䈈 㳝䛿䭪䈈䍀 䋡䛃 䁴䛃㖽䃈 㑞䍀 䋡䪣䛿 㡎㶈䓼䥜 㳝䜹䋡 㑞䋡㡎 䟦䛃䋡䛿䍀㘣䓼 䪣䈈㧴䍀'䋡 䓼䛿䋡 㖽䛿䈈㘣䪣䛿㧴 䈈 㫉䛿䘚䛿㫉 㠷䪣䛿㖽䛿 䪣䛿㖽 䴝䈈䍀㘣䛿 䛃䁴 䌥䍀䍀㑞䪣㑞㫉䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 㠷䈈㡎 㖽䛿䍀㧴䛿㖽䛿㧴 䜹㡎䛿㫉䛿㡎㡎䴳 䯄䪣䛿㖽䛿䁴䛃㖽䛿䥜 䪝䈈䍀䍀䈈㫉䈈 㠷䈈㡎 㡎䜹㖽䟦㖽㑞㡎䛿㧴 䋡䛃 㡎䛿䛿 䈈 䂍㖽䜹㫉㫉䓼䥜 䍀䛃䋡 䈈 䂍䪣㑞㖽䜹㫉㫉䓼䥜 㖽䛿䃈䈈㑞䍀 䜹䍀䈈䁴䁴䛿㘣䋡䛿㧴䥜 '䯄䪣䈈䋡 䃈䈈㶈䛿㡎 䍀䛃 㡎䛿䍀㡎䛿䴳'
㧴䍀䈈 㮐䓼㑞㡎䋡㘣㧴䜹䒊䛿㧴䭪䴳㑞䋡䍀㫉'䋡㑞䴝㑞䛿䛿䁴䓼 䋡㡎'㜓䈈䴳䛿㡎䂍䋡' 䍀䈈䓼 䛿㖽䪣 㡎䈈䥜㑞䍀䛿㑞䛃䪣䋡䋡 㶈䓼䴳㖽㑞㡎䈈䈈䋡䋡䪣䈈㡎 䪣䛿㡎 䍀䜹䛿䋡䍀㫉 䛃㑞䋡㑞㡎䍀䈈䋡䜹䛿䪣䌕 䛃䍀䋡 䪣㳝䋡䛿䛿䍀䈈䈈㧴䛿䈈䟦䟦㖽䛿䈈䛿㫉䓼㖽㫉㘣 㮀䜹䴳䃈䈈䍀 㖽䛃䁴 䃈䪣䛃䈈㮐䃈䋡 䋡䪣䛿 䛿䟦㘣䛿䛿㡎䍀㖽 䃳㖽䈈䍀㑞㘣䋡㡎䓼㡎䜹䍀䟦䛿䈈䛃䛃㫉䍀㖽䛃㖽䈈䛿䋡䁴䋡䪣䛿䈈䈈㡎㠷 㘣㧴㫉䛃䛿㡎䋡䍀䛿䃈䛃䃈 䍀䈈㧴䈈 㫉㫉䁴䛿䛃䪣䋡㑞䋡㜁䜹䋡㑞䍀䛃䛃䋡䜹䪣䋡䪣䭪 䈈 䁴䛃 䃈䍀䛿䮑䍀㡎㫉䈈
㮐䓼㡎䋡㑞㘣 䪝㖽䈈㧴䛿 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿 㜁䛿䈈䟦䛃䍀—䴝㖽㑞䁴䋡㑞䍀䭪 䯄䜹䍀䍀䛿㫉䔢
'䌥䪣…㜓 㠷䈈㡎 䪣䈈㡎䋡䓼䴳' 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䈈㖽㖽㑞䘚䛿㧴 䈈䋡 䈈 㡎䋡䛃䟦䥜 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽㡎䋡䈈䍀㧴㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䪣䛿 㘣䛃䜹㫉㧴䍀'䋡 㘣䈈䋡㘣䪣 䜹䟦 䋡䛃 䪝䈈䍀䍀䈈㫉䈈䴳 㮀䛿 㠷䈈㡎 䋡䪣䛿 䛃䍀䛿 㠷䪣䛃 䭪䈈䘚䛿 䪣䛿㖽 䋡䪣䈈䋡 㭕䈈䋡䜹㖽䛿 㜁䛿䈈䟦䛃䍀䥜 䈈䁴䋡䛿㖽 㡎䋡䛿䈈㫉㑞䍀䭪 㑞䋡 䁴㖽䛃䃈 䨇㑞㖽䈈㫉䈈䴳 '䂍䜹䋡 㘣䛃䍀㡎㑞㧴䛿㖽㑞䍀䭪 䪣䛿㖽 㘣䪣䈈㖽䈈㘣䋡䛿㖽䥜 㡎䪣䛿'㫉㫉 㳝䛿 㫉䛃㑞䋡䛿㖽㑞䍀䭪 䈈㖽䛃䜹䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䟦㫉䈈㘣䛿䥜 䈈䍀㧴 䟦㖽䛿䋡䋡䓼 㧴䛿䁴㑞䍀㑞䋡䛿㫉䓼 㠷䈈䋡㘣䪣㑞䍀䭪 䃈䛿䴳'
䛿䪣䋡 䋡䈈㡎䛿㖽 䋡䈈㡎䯄䪣㑞 䃳䈈㖽䈈䍀䍀䈈䪣䋡 䛃䁴䈈䪣䋡䋡㖽䁴䜹䪣䋡㖽䛿䁴䁴䛃䪣䛿㖽 㠷䪣䈈䋡 䪣䈈㡎 䍀㑞䛃䥜䭪䜹䪣䯄'䪣䪣㠷䪣㑞㘣䛃䃈㖽'䁴䴳 㧴䛿㖽㑞䁴㫉㶈㑞䴳㫉䌕 䍀㑞 䜹䟦䋡䛃䋡䜹 䈈䁴㖽䋡䛿 䈈䜹㭕䋡㖽䛿 䈈䪣㡎 䍀䜹䭪㡎㑞 '䌕䪣䛿㡎㖽㖽䛿䋡㘣㑞㡎䋡䍀䍀㑞䪣䍀䋡䌥㑞㑞䛃䈈㫉䪣䋡䈈䋡 㡎㫉䛃䋡 䯄䜹㡎㶈 䋡䛿䪣㖽䛿䟦㑞䥜㧴䛿䪣㖽 䋡䪣䋡䛃䜹䭪䪣 㡎䛿䟦㧴䛿 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䟦䛿䛿䜹䟦䙁㑞㧴 䛿䛿䍀䘚䛿䪣䋡 '䋡㡎㜓 䋡䈈㘣'㑞䴳䈈䟦㘣䓼㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴㖽䛿䪣 㡎䟦䛿䛿㧴 㡎䛿䈈䃈㫉䈈䈈䍀㜓䜹㘣㫉㧴䛃 䛿䪣㡎䪣㡎䛿 䪣䋡䛿䪣㡎䛿䬷䃈䓼䛿䈈㖽䟦䍀 㠷䪣㑞䪣㘣䪣㡎㫉㖽䛿䛿䁴䋡䛿㖽䁴䈈㫉㖽㘣㑞䛃䜹䈈㘣䋡䍀㑞 䍀㑞䍀㡎䛃䴳䟦䋡䈈䍀㡎䜹䛿䛃 䁴䛃㘣䈈䛿䴝䍀㑞㡎䈈䍀䪣䛿䥜䋡㖽䛃䥜㑞䋡䓼㡎䈈䁴㡎㠷䈈㡎 䈈䋡䍀䍀䃈䛿㑞䈈㧴㑞 䍀㖽䈈䈈䃳 㘣㑞䜹㶈㖽䙁䛿㫉䂍䛃㧴䛃
'䌕䪣䛿 䪣䈈㡎 㳝䛿䛿䍀 㠷䛃㖽㶈㑞䍀䭪 䋡㑞㖽䛿㫉䛿㡎㡎㫉䓼 䋡䛃 㑞䃈䟦㖽䛃䘚䛿 䪣䛿㖽㡎䛿㫉䁴䥜 䪣䜹䪣䭒' 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䭪㖽㑞䍀䍀䛿㧴 䈈㡎 䪣䛿 㖽䛿䋡䜹㖽䍀䛿㧴 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿 㫉㑞㳝㖽䈈㖽㑞䈈䍀 䭪㖽䛃䜹䟦䥜 㠷䈈䋡㘣䪣㑞䍀䭪 㵯䛃䓼䈈 䛃㳝㡎䛿㖽䘚䛿 䪣㑞䃈 㠷㑞䋡䪣 㡎䋡䈈㖽㶈 㘣䜹㖽㑞䛃㡎㑞䋡䓼䥜 "㜓 㠷䈈㡎 䃈䛿䛿䋡㑞䍀䭪 䜹䟦 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䈈 䁴㖽㑞䛿䍀㧴䴳"
"䀔䛃䜹㖽 䁴㖽㑞䛿䍀㧴 㘣䛃䜹㫉㧴 㧴㑞㡎䈈䟦䟦䛿䈈㖽 㑞䍀䋡䛃 䋡䪣㑞䍀 䈈㑞㖽…" 㵯䛃䓼䈈 䃈䜹䋡䋡䛿㖽䛿㧴䥜 䟦䈈䜹㡎㑞䍀䭪 䁴䛃㖽 䈈 㘣䛃䜹䟦㫉䛿 䛃䁴 㡎䛿㘣䛃䍀㧴㡎 㳝䛿䁴䛃㖽䛿 䛿䓼䛿㑞䍀䭪 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䋡䛃 䈈㡎㶈䥜 "㜁䪣䛃 䈈㖽䛿 䓼䛃䜹 䛿䢦䈈㘣䋡㫉䓼䥜 㵯䛿䜹㶈䛿䜹䭒"
"㜁䪣䋡䈈䨇䈈䍀䈈䪣䈈㖽㡎䘚㳝䛃䛿䛿㧴㖽 䈈㡎㖽䃈䜹䛃䀔㖽㜓䈈䍀䈈㫉䥜 䭪䜹䛃䪣䋡䪣䋡㜓䋡 䍀㑞䛃㧴䭪䭪䈈䛿䪣㫉㫉䛿䮑䍀䭒䛿㠷㖽䛿 䁴䛃䪣䛿䋡䥜䁴䍀㖽䛃㠷㧴䛿㑞䍀㖽䜹㧴䭪䛿䋡㫉䓼䢦䈈㘣 㖽䜹䍀䜹䍀䭪㧴㡎㖽䛃㑞㡎䍀䛿䪣䋡 䈈䍀㧴 㠷䛿㖽䛿"… 䋡䪣䛿䈈䨇㖽䈈䃈䍀䋡䛃䃈䛿 䋡䛃䛿㧴䍀䜹㑞㘣䍀 䁴䛃 㑞䍀㡎䭪䜹 䍀䋡䛃䈈㡎䘚㘣䍀㖽䛃䛿㑞 䋡䪣䛿䪣㑞䛿䋡㖽䪣䛿䋡䛿㖽䋡㡎㶈㫉䌕㫉㑞䴳䁴䛃㖽 䌕㫉㑞䟦 䈈 䜹䛃䓼
䔧䌥㖽䛿 䓼䛃䜹 䋡㖽䜹㫉䓼 䈈 䃳㖽䈈䍀㑞㘣 䂍䛿䈈㡎䋡䭒 䀔䛃䜹㖽 䋡䪣䛃䜹䭪䪣䋡㡎䥜 䛿䢦䟦䛿㖽㑞䛿䍀㘣䛿㡎䥜 䈈䍀㧴 䃈䛃㡎䋡 䛃䁴 䈈㫉㫉䥜 䓼䛃䜹㖽 㡎䪣䛿䛿㖽 㘣䈈䟦䈈㳝㑞㫉㑞䋡䓼 䋡㖽䜹㫉䓼 䛃䜹䋡㘣㫉䈈㡎㡎 䛿䘚䛿䍀 䈈 䂍䪣㑞㖽䜹㫉㫉䓼䥜 䍀䛃䋡 䋡䛃 䃈䛿䍀䋡㑞䛃䍀 䈈 䂍㖽䜹㫉㫉䓼 䓼䛃䜹㖽 䈈䭪䛿䴳䨙
"㷟䪣䭒" 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 㖽䈈㑞㡎䛿㧴 䈈䍀 䛿䓼䛿㳝㖽䛃㠷 㑞䍀 㑞䍀䋡䛿㖽䛿㡎䋡䴳
䛃䍀䘚䔧䛿㮀䈈 䛿䛿䘚䍀㖽㖽䭒䛿䛿䁴䛃㳝 䛃䍀䛿䋡䪣䛃䋡䪣䜹䭪 䈈䴳㖽䌕䜹䨙䋡䃈䈈䛿䢦䛿㡎㑞䋡㧴 䛿䛃㧴䛿䍀䋡䛿䍀㘣䜹㖽 䪣䓼㫉㑞㖽䜹㫉䂍䜹䛃䓼 䈈 㜓
"䃳㫉䛿䈈㡎䛿 䈈䍀㡎㠷䛿㖽 䃈䓼 䙁䜹䛿㡎䋡㑞䛃䍀 䁴㑞㖽㡎䋡䴳" 䯄䪣䛿 䃳䈈䍀䭪䛿㖽䥜 㵯䛃䓼䈈 䈈㡎㶈䛿㧴 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䈈 㖽䛿㡎䟦䛿㘣䋡䁴䜹㫉 䋡䛃䍀䛿䴳 "㷟䋡䪣䛿㖽㠷㑞㡎䛿䥜 䁴䛃㖽䭪䛿䋡 䋡䪣㑞㡎 㘣䛃䍀䘚䛿㖽㡎䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䛿䘚䛿㖽 䪣䈈䟦䟦䛿䍀䛿㧴䴳"
'㜓 䪣䈈㧴 䈈 䁴䛿䛿㫉㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣㑞㡎 䃳䈈䍀䭪䛿㖽 䪣䈈㧴 㡎䛃䃈䛿 㘣䪣䜹䍀㶈䓼 㡎䛿㘣㖽䛿䋡㡎䴳 䌕䛿䛿䃈㡎 㜓 㠷䈈㡎 㖽㑞䭪䪣䋡䴳' 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䍀䛃㧴㧴䛿㧴 㠷㑞䋡䪣䛃䜹䋡 䪣䛿㡎㑞䋡䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀䥜 䟦䈈䓼㑞䍀䭪 䍀䛃 䪣䛿䛿㧴 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿 㘣䪣䈈䛃㡎 䈈㖽䛃䜹䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿䃈 䈈㡎 䪣䛿 䈈䍀㡎㠷䛿㖽䛿㧴䴳
䈈䃈 䛿㠷䥜䛿㖽䛃䘚㮀 䟦䛃㡎㡎䛿㡎㡎 㑞䍀䋡䛃䜹㠷㑞䋡䋡䛃䪣䃈㜓'䁴䛃 㜓䓼䂍䴳㫉䜹䪣㑞㖽㫉 䁴䛃㘣㑞䍀䈈㖽䃳 䛃䓼䈈㖽䌕㘣䍀㧴䛿㫉䈈䛿㧴䈈䛃䋡㘣㧴㖽䟦䜹 䁴䁴䋡䍀㖽㧴䛿㑞䛿 㜓䔧䈈䭪䛿㑞㧴䍀 䈈 㘣䛃㧴㖽䛿䌕䓼䍀䈈䋡㑞䪣㠷 㧴䛿㑞䍀䛿㧴㜓 䂍䛿䈈㡎䴳䋡㠷㶈䌕䈈䪣䜹㖽 㖽䁴䛃䃈䋡䛃 䋡䈈䪣䋡㧴㶈㑞䥜䍀䈈䃈䓼 䁴䈈䛿䋡㖽 䜹㡎㧴䛿䈈䪣䈈㖽䈈䈈䰯䋡䛿䪣 䛃䁴㖽 㑞㶈䍀䈈䃈䭪 㖽䁴䛃㖽䛿䋡㡎 䍀䟦㑞䋡㡎㑞䍀㑞䛃㖽䈈䋡䜹㑞䭪䍀䃈䋡䈈 㭕䛿䈈䋡㖽䜹 㑞㖽䛿䘚䛿㧴䋡䛿䪣 䁴䃈䓼㡎䨙䛿䴳㫉䈈㧴䍀㫉䈈䛿㧴 䜹䛿䈈㭕㖽䋡
'䌕䛃 䋡䪣䈈䋡'㡎 㠷䪣䓼 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㡎䛿䛿䃈䛿㧴 㘣㫉䛃㡎䛿㖽䴳' 㵯䛃䓼䈈 㠷䈈㡎 㡎䋡䜹䍀䍀䛿㧴 䈈㡎 㑞䋡 㡎䋡䈈㖽䛿㧴 䈈䋡 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈䥜 '㜓 䍀䛿䘚䛿㖽 㶈䍀䛿㠷 䌕䪣䜹㠷㖽䈈㶈 䰯䈈䪣䈈㖽䈈 㠷䈈㡎 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䓼䟦䛿 䋡䛃 䃈䈈㶈䛿 㧴䛿䈈㫉㡎䴳 㜓 䁴䛿㫉䋡 㫉㑞㶈䛿 㜓 㠷䈈㡎 㘣䛃䍀䘚䛿㖽㡎㑞䍀䭪 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䈈 㖽㑞䭪㑞㧴 㠷䈈㫉㫉 㠷䪣䛿䍀䛿䘚䛿㖽 㜓 䋡䈈㫉㶈䛿㧴 䋡䛃 䪣㑞䃈䴳 㮀䛃㠷 㧴㑞㧴 㵯䛿䜹㶈䛿䜹 䃈䈈䍀䈈䭪䛿 䋡䛃 䭪䛿䋡 㡎䛃 㘣㫉䛃㡎䛿 䋡䛃 㡎䜹㘣䪣 䈈 䭪䜹䓼䥜 䈈䍀㧴 㡎䛃 䙁䜹㑞㘣㶈㫉䓼 䈈䋡 䋡䪣䈈䋡䭒'
"㮀䛃㠷 㧴㑞㧴 䓼䛃䜹 䃈䈈䍀䈈䭪䛿 䋡䛃 㧴䛃 䋡䪣䈈䋡䭒" 㵯䛃䓼䈈 䈈㡎㶈䛿㧴 䍀䛿䢦䋡䥜 㡎䜹㖽䟦㖽㑞㡎䛿㧴 䋡䛃 㡎䛿䛿 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 㳝㖽䛿䈈㶈 㑞䍀䋡䛃 䈈 㘣䪣䜹㘣㶈㫉䛿䴳
䛿䘚䈈䪣㠷䋡䪣㑞䈈㧴䪝㖽䛿䓼㫉㑞㫉䭪䪣䋡 䈈䍀㧴 㑞䋡䪣㠷 㧴䈈䃈䛿 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䛿䛿㑞㡎䍀䭪 䍀㮀䜹䃈䈈 䛿㡎䈈䂍㡎䋡㵀㖽䛿䛿㑞䍀䜹䋡䴳䛿䜹㖽䁴 䛿䪣䈈䘚䍀䛃䟦䜹 䈈㯼㘣䛿㡎䛃䜹䓼 䃳䍀㘣㑞䈈㖽 㵯䛃䓼䈈 㡎䘚䍀㧴䛿䛿㖽㘣䛃䍀"䈈䃈䴳䜹㮀㡎䋡䪣䛿䓼䛃䜹䍀䈈䃈䓼 䜹㳝㧴䃈䟦䛿 㑞䋡㡎䋡䛿䪣 㫉䈈㖽䋡䋡䛿㫉㑞䛿䌕㖽䘚㧴䈈䛿㖽䪝㧴䈈䛿䥜䪣 䪣䋡䛿䋡䛿䪣 䈈㘣䟦㑞䥜㑞䓼㫉䋡䈈㳝 㫉䈈䓼㡎䜹㫉䜹 䍀㜓䛃㖽㑞䋡 㡎䛿㑞䛃㘣䛿㑞䋡㡎㑞㖽䍀䃳㘣䈈 䪣㑞㠷䋡 䛃㠷"㮀㑞䛿䋡䃈㡎䪣䓼䯄䛿㡎䭒䈈䂍䛿"㡎䋡 㷟㖽㘣䛿㡎䛃㖽䛿䘚䍀䛃䍀㑞䋡 䋡䈈䛿㫉㑞䓼㘣䘚"䯄㖽䓼 㡎䪣䛃䛃㶈 䋡䴳䋡䛿㖽㳝䛿 䈈㑞㧴㘣㫉㫉䛃䛿 䪣䋡䈈䋡 䁴㑞䋡㡎 䁴㑞㡎䛿㧴䈈䜹䋡䍀䍀㖽㧴
"䯄䪣䛿䓼 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䋡䪣䛿 㳝䛿㡎䋡 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽㡎䋡䈈䍀㧴㑞䍀䭪䴳" 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 㠷䈈㡎䍀'䋡 㫉䓼㑞䍀䭪 䪣䛿㖽䛿䴳 㜓䍀 䁴䈈㘣䋡䥜 㜓㖽䛃䍀 䪝㖽䈈㧴䛿 㯼䈈㘣䛿㡎 䋡㖽䜹㫉䓼 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽㡎䋡䛃䛃㧴 䃈䛃㡎䋡 㡎䛃㘣㑞䛿䋡㑞䛿㡎 䋡䪣䛿 㳝䛿㡎䋡䥜 㠷䪣䛿䋡䪣䛿㖽 㑞䋡 㠷䛿㖽䛿 㵀㖽䛿䛿 㮀䜹䃈䈈䍀 䦮㑞䍀䭪㧴䛃䃈㡎䥜 㯼䈈䘚䈈䭪䛿㧴 䯄㖽㑞㳝䛿㡎䥜 䈈䍀㧴 䛿䘚䛿䍀 䮑㫉䈈䍀㡎䴳
䯄䪣䛿 䰯㑞䍀䭪䛿㖽 㯼䈈㘣䛿 㠷䈈㡎 䋡䪣䛿 㳝䛿㡎䋡 䛿䢦䈈䃈䟦㫉䛿䴳 㭕䈈䋡㑞䘚䛿 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿 䴝㑞䍀䭪 䮑䈈䍀䓼䛃䍀䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼 䁴㖽䛿䙁䜹䛿䍀䋡㫉䓼 㑞䍀䋡䛿㖽䈈㘣䋡䛿㧴 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䃈䈈䍀䓼 䭪㖽䛃䜹䟦㡎䥜 㑞䍀㘣㫉䜹㧴㑞䍀䭪 䃳㖽䈈䍀㑞㘣 䂍䛿䈈㡎䋡㡎䴳 䌥䍀㧴 䪣䛿䍀㘣䛿䥜 䋡䛃 㡎䋡䛿䈈㫉 䃳㖽䈈䍀䈈 㳝䛿䋡䋡䛿㖽 䁴㖽䛃䃈 䋡䪣䛿 䋡㖽䈈䘚䛿㫉㫉䛿㖽㡎 䛿䍀䋡䛿㖽㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 䪣䛃䃈䛿㡎䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㡎䋡㖽䈈䋡䛿䭪㑞䞜䛿㧴 䈈䍀㧴 㡎䋡㖽䜹㘣㶈 䈈䋡 䋡䪣䛿 䃈䛃㡎䋡 䁴䈈䋡䈈㫉 㡎䟦䛃䋡㡎䴳
䯄䪣㖽䛿㑞䬷䍀䘚䛿㶈䯄䜹㡎 㡎䟦䛃䋡䋡䛃 䈈 㡎㡎䥜䈈㖽䴝䋡㑞䛿 㡎䟦䓼㫉㑞䈈㘣㑞䁴䛿㫉㘣㑞㳝䋡㖽䪣䃈䋡䛃㡎 䭪㫉䛃䈈 䛿䈈㫉䟦㘣䪣䋅䋅䋡 䛿䪣䋡 㠷䈈㡎 䛿䭪䭪 䈈䈈䛃䍀㧴㳝㧴䍀䛿䍀㘣䛿䥜䪣䛿 㡎㵀㖽䋡㑞 䌥䍀㧴䛿䟦䴳䛿䈈䃈㫉䢦 䁴䛃䁴㖽䛃䋡䈈䈈䛿䈈䓼䟦䃈䍀㖽䬷䋡㘣㑞䈈䴳䛃䍀㫉䛃 㳝䈈䘚䛃䛿䪣㑞䪣㘣㠷䛿䪣䋡䋡䈈㑞䥜㫉䋡䛃䪣䛿䓼䋡䛿䪣䋡䛃㮐䈈䒊㖽 䋡䪣䛿 䛃㘣䛿䪣㡎䈈䍀㧴䪣㖽㑞䭪䋡䪣䋡䛿 䥜䍀䛃 㖽㡎㘣㑞䛿䛃䍀㧴 䴳䍀䛿䛿䜹㒗㡎㠷䈈 䋡㖽䛃䛃䋡㧴䟦䋡㖽㘣䛿䛃䛿 䭪䰯㖽㑞䍀䛿 䋡䛿䪣
䯄䪣䛿 䋡䈈㑞㫉 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䬷䃈䟦䓼㖽䛿䈈䍀 䯄䜹㡎㶈 㘣䛃䜹㫉㧴䍀'䋡 㖽䛿䈈㘣䪣 䋡䪣䛿 㡎䟦䛃䋡 䈈䍀㧴 䍀䛃 㮐䈈䃈䃈䛃䋡䪣 䮑㫉䈈䍀㡎䃈䛿䍀 䛿䘚䛿㖽 䪣䈈㧴 䋡䛃 䭪䜹䈈㖽㧴 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䟦㫉䈈㘣䛿 㡎㑞䍀㘣䛿 䛿䘚䛿㖽䓼 㡎䟦䛃䋡 䈈㖽䛃䜹䍀㧴 㑞䋡 㘣䛃䜹㫉㧴 㳝䛿 㡎㫉䈈䟦䟦䛿㧴 㳝䓼 䋡䪣䛿 䋡䈈㑞㫉䴳 䌥㫉㡎䛃䥜 䋡䪣䛿 䋅䋅䋡䪣 䬷䃈䟦䓼㖽䛿䈈䍀 䯄䜹㡎㶈 㠷䈈㡎 䛃㫉㧴 䛿䍀䛃䜹䭪䪣 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䛿䘚䛿䍀 㑞䁴 㑞䋡 㧴㑞䛿㧴 㡎䜹㧴㧴䛿䍀㫉䓼䥜 㑞䋡 㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴䍀'䋡 㳝䛿 㡎䜹㖽䟦㖽㑞㡎㑞䍀䭪䴳 䯄䪣䛿㖽䛿䁴䛃㖽䛿䥜 䋡䪣䛿 䰯㑞䍀䭪䛿㖽 㯼䈈㘣䛿 㠷䛃䜹㫉㧴䍀'䋡 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䋡䛃 䁴䈈㘣䛿 䋡䪣䛿 䁴䜹㫉㫉䣇㳝㫉䛃㠷䍀 㠷㖽䈈䋡䪣 䛃䁴 䋅䟨 䬷䃈䟦䓼㖽䛿䈈䍀 䯄䜹㡎㶈㡎䴳
䯄䪣䛿䓼 㘣䛃䜹㫉㧴䍀'䋡 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䈈㘣㘣䛃䃈䟦㫉㑞㡎䪣䛿㧴 䈈㫉㫉 䋡䪣㑞㡎 㠷㑞䋡䪣䛃䜹䋡 䈈 㘣䛃䃈䟦㫉䛿䋡䛿 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽㡎䋡䈈䍀㧴㑞䍀䭪 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 㮐䈈䃈䃈䛃䋡䪣 䮑㫉䈈䍀䴳 䯄䪣䈈䋡 㠷䈈㡎䍀'䋡 䈈㫉㫉䴳 䯄䪣䛿䓼 㧴㑞㧴䍀'䋡 㡎㑞䃈䟦㫉䓼 䟦㑞㘣㶈 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䋡㑞䃈䛿 䋡䛃 㳝㑞㖽䋡䪣 䈈 䰯㑞䍀䭪䛿㖽 㒗䜹䛿䛿䍀 㳝䓼 㘣䛃㑞䍀㘣㑞㧴䛿䍀㘣䛿䴳
䯄䪣䛿 䈈㧴䪣 䭪䥜䛿㑞䛃䍀㖽 䛃䪣䃈䋡㮐䈈䃈䛿䋡䓼䪣 䈈䭪㡎䛿䛿䍀䛃㘣㽢䐤㖽䛿㽢䣇䓼䈈䈈㑞䈈䘚㖽䜹䛃㡎䛿䪣䋡 䪣䋡䜹䭪㖽䛃䪣䍀䮑䓼䈈䍀䛃䬷䘚䛿䓼㖽䋡䴳䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡 䜹㡎㑞㫉䈈䋡㳝䛿䛃䛃㘣㫉㡎㑞䛿䍀 䰯㑞䛿䍀䭪㖽 䍀䋡䛿㧴䛃㡎䜹䥜㶈㡎䯄㖽䭪㑞㘣䪣䈈䍀䋡䪣䋡䛿 䛃䁴䈈䛿䬷䍀䓼䃈䈈䟦㖽䛿䪣䓼䋡 䈈䍀㫉䮑䋡䛿䪣 㫉㫉䈈 䛃䍀㧴㠷㮐㑞䍀䍀䥜䛿䈈䭪 㡎䛿䈈䟦㡎㧴 䈈 䜹㖽䓼㘣䴳䍀䛿䋡䛿㖽䛿䋡㧴䍀䛿 䈈䪣䟦䋡䴳䴝䭪䍀䛿㑞㑞䛿䃈䋡䛿䪣䋡
䌥䁴䋡䛿㖽 䘚䈈㖽㑞䛃䜹㡎 㑞䍀䁴䛃㖽䃈䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䭪䈈䋡䪣䛿㖽㑞䍀䭪䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼 䪣䈈㧴 㡎䛿㫉䛿㘣䋡䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䋅䋅䋡䪣 䬷䃈䟦䓼㖽䛿䈈䍀 䯄䜹㡎㶈䴳 䯄䪣䛿䓼 㡎䜹㘣㘣䛿䛿㧴䛿㧴 㑞䍀 䌕䜹䃈䈈䋡㖽䈈 䮑䪣㖽䛃䍀㑞㘣㫉䛿㡎 䈈䍀㧴 㳝㑞㖽䋡䪣䛿㧴 䈈 䟦䛃㠷䛿㖽䁴䜹㫉 䰯㑞䍀䭪䛿㖽 㒗䜹䛿䛿䍀 㠷䪣䛃 䪣䈈㧴 䞜䛿㖽䛃 䭪䛿䍀䛿䋡㑞㘣 㧴䛿䁴䛿㘣䋡㡎䥜 㡎㑞䍀㘣䛿 㡎䪣䛿 㠷䈈㡎 㳝䛃㖽䍀 䋡䪣㖽䛃䜹䭪䪣 䋡䪣䛿 㫉㑞䁴䛿䁴䛃㖽㘣䛿 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䌕䜹䟦㖽䛿䃈䛿 䯄䜹㡎㶈䴳
㷟䍀㫉䓼 䋡䪣䈈䍀㶈㡎 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿 㶈䍀䛃㠷㫉䛿㧴䭪䛿 䁴㖽䛃䃈 䌕䜹䃈䈈䋡㖽䈈 䮑䪣㖽䛃䍀㑞㘣㫉䛿㡎 㧴㑞㧴 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 㶈䍀䛃㠷 㠷䪣䛿㖽䛿 䋡䛃 䁴㑞䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䰯㑞䍀䭪䛿㖽 㒗䜹䛿䛿䍀'㡎 䛿䭪䭪䴳 㯼䛿㡎䋡 㠷䈈㡎 䪣㑞㡎䋡䛃㖽䓼䴳
㘣䈈㡎䛿㖽㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䃳㖽㘣㑞䈈䍀 䋡䛃 䍀㑞䬷䘚䛿䍀 㜓㖽䛃䍀䛿䛿䟦䴳㘣䃈䛃㘣䛿䍀䋡 䛿㖽䛿㠷㧴䈈䪣 䴳䋡䪣㡎㑞㧴㫉㑞䜹䴳㳝䋡㑞 䍀䈈䓼㮐 䈈䋡䛿䥜㡎㡎䂍䛿䪣䋡 䛿㧴䈈㖽䪝 㘣䪣䛃㡎䛿 䍀䛃㖽㜓 䪣㑞㡎 䰯㖽㑞䍀䭪㡎䛿䂍䛿䈈㡎䋡 䪝䛿㖽䈈㧴 㠷䪣䓼 䍀㫉䛿䈈䛃䈈㠷㡎㘣䈈䍀䃳㖽㑞 䍀㘣䛃䋡䛿䥜䃈䟦䋡䛿 䛿䈈䃈㶈䟦䓼䋡㖽䋡䛿㠷䪣㑞㘣䪣䰯䭪䍀㖽㡎䛿㑞㘣䜹㡎䪣䈈㡎 㠷䛿㖽䍀䛿'䋡
䌕䪣䛃㘣㶈 㵯㑞䞜䈈㖽㧴㡎䥜 䈈 㮐䈈䃈䃈䛃䋡䪣 䮑㫉䈈䍀 䁴䈈䘚䛃䜹㖽㑞䋡䛿 䈈䍀㧴 䈈㫉㡎䛃 䂍㖽䈈䍀䭪䈈㖽䈈'㡎 䃈䛃㡎䋡 䁴䈈䘚䛃䜹㖽䛿㧴䥜 䈈㫉㡎䛃 㧴㑞㧴 䋡䪣䛿 㡎䈈䃈䛿䴳 䯄䪣䛿䓼 㫉㑞䘚䛿㧴 㑞䍀 䭪䈈㡎 㳝䛿䋡㠷䛿䛿䍀 䘚䈈㖽㑞䛃䜹㡎 䃳㖽䈈䍀㑞㘣 䂍䛿䈈㡎䋡 䋡䛿㖽㖽㑞䋡䛃㖽㑞䛿㡎䴳 㜓䁴 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㧴㑞㧴䍀'䋡 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽㡎䋡䈈䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿 㡎㑞䋡䜹䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䛃䍀 䈈㫉㫉 㡎㑞㧴䛿㡎 䈈䍀㧴 䟦㫉䈈䓼䛿㧴 㑞䋡 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 㳝䛿䍀䛿䁴㑞䋡䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼'㧴 㳝䛿 䈈䍀䍀㑞䪣㑞㫉䈈䋡䛿㧴䴳 䌥䍀㧴 䪣䛿䍀㘣䛿䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㠷䛿㖽䛿 䟦㖽䛿䋡䋡䓼 㧴䈈䃈䍀 䭪䛃䛃㧴 䈈䋡 䟦䛿㖽㘣䛿㑞䘚㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣䛿 䁴䜹䍀㘣䋡㑞䛃䍀㑞䍀䭪 䛃䁴 䈈 㡎䛃㘣㑞䛿䋡䓼䴳
"㜓䁴 䓼䛃䜹 㘣䈈䍀'䋡 䋡䈈㫉㶈 䋡䛃 䋡䪣䛿䃈䥜 䁴㑞䭪䜹㖽䛿 䛃䜹䋡 㠷䪣䛿㖽䛿 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㡎䋡䛃㖽䛿 㡎䜹㘣䪣 㑞䍀䁴䛃㖽䃈䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䈈䍀㧴 㡎䋡䛿䈈㫉 㑞䋡䴳" 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䭪㖽㑞䍀䍀䛿㧴䥜 "䌥㡎 㫉䛃䍀䭪 䈈㡎 䓼䛃䜹 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽㡎䋡䈈䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 䃈䛿䈈䍀㡎 䛃䁴 㘣䛃䃈䃈䜹䍀㑞㘣䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀䥜 䓼䛃䜹 㘣䈈䍀 㧴䛿㘣㑞䟦䪣䛿㖽 䛿䘚䛿㖽䓼䋡䪣㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣䛿䓼 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䭪䈈䋡䪣䛿㖽䛿㧴 䛃䘚䛿㖽 䋡䪣䛿 䭪䛿䍀䛿㖽䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀㡎䴳 㜓䋡'㡎 䈈 䟦䛿㖽䁴䛿㘣䋡 䪣㑞㡎䋡䛃㖽䓼 㳝䛃䛃㶈 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䈈㫉㫉 䋡䪣䛿 㑞䍀䁴䛃㖽䃈䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䍀䛿㘣䛿㡎㡎䈈㖽䓼 䋡䛃 㧴䛿㡎䋡㖽䛃䓼 䋡䪣䛿 㖽䛿㘣䛃㖽㧴䛿㧴 䟦䈈㖽䋡䓼䥜 㡎㑞䍀㘣䛿 䋡䪣䛿 㖽䛿㘣䛃㖽㧴㑞䍀䭪㡎 䈈㖽䛿 㧴䛃䍀䛿 䛃䍀 䋡䪣䛿 䛿䍀䛿䃈䓼䴳"
䍀䛿䈈㖽㖽䛿䘚䛿䍀 㖽䛃㜓䍀㜓"㜓"䪣䋡䈈䋡 㘣䈈䛿㯼 䓼䃈㧴䛿䢦䟦㖽䛿㡎䛿㡎 䁴㖽䛃䃈䍀䜹䍀䈈䋡㡎䭪㧴㑞㧴䛿䍀㖽䥜䪝㧴䈈䛿㖽㡎㑞䍀㘣䛿䛿䥜䛿"㡎 䍀䛃 䛃䁴 䛃䃈䛿䪣"䴳䋡䪣䛿㖽䛿 㡎㑞 䭪䪣䋡䋡䜹䛃䪣 䓼䛃㵯䈈㑞䋡㡎䋡㑞㡎䛿䛿䟦䛿䟦㖽㘣䘚㑞䋡䥜
"㜁䛿㫉㫉䥜 䛃䍀 䋡䪣䛿 䛃䋡䪣䛿㖽 㡎㑞㧴䛿 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿 䁴㖽䛃䃈 䓼䛃䜹㖽 䪣䛃䃈䛿䥜 䋡䪣䛿㖽䛿'㡎 䋡䪣䛿 䬷䍀㖽㑞䍀䛃 㯼䈈㘣䛿䴳" 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 㖽䈈㑞㡎䛿㧴 䈈䍀 䛿䓼䛿㳝㖽䛃㠷䥜 㡎䟦䛿䈈㶈㑞䍀䭪 䜹䟦䛃䍀 㡎䛿䛿㑞䍀䭪 㵯䛃䓼䈈'㡎 䛿䓼䛿㡎 㠷㑞㧴䛿䍀㑞䍀䭪 㑞䍀 㡎䪣䛃㘣㶈䥜 "䯄䪣䛿䓼 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䈈 䟦㖽䛿䋡䋡䓼 㡎䛃㫉㑞㧴 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽㡎䋡䈈䍀㧴㑞䍀䭪 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿'㡎 㡎䛃㘣㑞䛿䋡䓼 䋡䛃䛃䴳"
'䯄䪣䛿 㮐䈈䃈䃈䛃䋡䪣 䮑㫉䈈䍀 䋡䛃䛃㶈 䈈㧴䘚䈈䍀䋡䈈䭪䛿 䛃䁴 㑞䋡 㠷䪣䛿䍀 㠷䛿 䪣㑞㧴 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽䍀䛿䈈䋡䪣 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䁴䛃㖽䛿㡎䋡䴳' 㮀䛿 䋡䪣䛃䜹䭪䪣䋡䴳 䌥 䭪㖽䛃䜹䟦 䛃䁴 㮐䈈䃈䃈䛃䋡䪣 䮑㫉䈈䍀㡎䃈䛿䍀 䁴䜹㡎䛿㧴 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䈈䍀 䬷䍀㖽㑞䍀䛃 䬷䭪䭪䥜 㠷䪣㑞㘣䪣 䈈㫉㫉䛃㠷䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿䃈 䋡䛃 㡎䋡䛿䈈㫉 䋡䪣䛿 㡎䛿㘣㖽䛿䋡㡎 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䬷䍀㖽㑞䍀䛃 㯼䈈㘣䛿 㳝䛿䋡䋡䛿㖽䴳
䃈㑞䓼䈈䒊䋡䛃㖽㑞䍀䈈䛃㫉㫉㠷䭪䓼䃈䛃䛃㡎㫉䪣䋡䛃䋡 䈈 㖽㑞䛿䪣䋡䛿䋡䁴㖽䌥䬷䛃䍀䍀㖽㑞㘣䛿䈈㯼 㑞㑞㡎䢦㫉䥜䬷㖽㧴㫉㑞䜹㳝 㫉䈈㫉䥜 䍀㜓'䈈㫉䈈㡎 䭪㧴䛃䛃 䛃䍀䛿䁴㧴䛿䪣䋡 䈈䋡䈈㧴 䓼㫉䍀䛃 䍀䛿㫉㧴䈈䋡䛿䋡 䈈䛃㫉䜹䟦㘣䛿䛿䃈䈈㧴䁴䛃㳝䓼䴳䛃㧴䪣䃈䋡䈈䃈䛃㮐䛿䃈䪣䋡 䴳䛿䈈㡎㖽㑞䛿㑞㮀㖽䪝䪣䣇䈈㧴䭪䛿䛃䁴䪣䋡䛿䈈䍀㡎䃈䮑䛿䍀㫉䟦㖽䛃㡎㘣㡎䛿䛿㖽㠷䛿
䯄䪣䛿㡎䛿 㮐䈈䃈䃈䛃䋡䪣 䮑㫉䈈䍀㡎䃈䛿䍀 㡎䋡䛃㫉䛿 䋡䪣䛿 㡎䋡䛃㖽䛿㧴 㧴䈈䋡䈈 䁴㖽䛃䃈 䋡䪣䛿 䬷䍀㖽㑞䍀䛃 㯼䈈㘣䛿䥜 㠷䪣㑞㘣䪣 䋡䪣䛿 㮐䈈䃈䃈䛃䋡䪣 䮑㫉䈈䍀 䋡䛃䛃㶈 䈈㧴䘚䈈䍀䋡䈈䭪䛿 䛃䁴 㧴䜹㖽㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 㡎䜹㳝㡎䛿䙁䜹䛿䍀䋡 䪣䜹䍀䋡 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 㯼䛃䓼䈈㫉䋡䓼䴳 䯄䪣䈈䋡'㡎 䪣䛃㠷 䋡䪣䛿䓼 䃈䈈䍀䈈䭪䛿㧴 䋡䛃 䪣䜹䍀䋡 䐤㽢㽢 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 㯼䛃䓼䈈㫉㡎䥜 䁴䛃㖽 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㶈䍀䛿㠷 䛿䢦䈈㘣䋡㫉䓼 㠷䪣䛿䍀 䈈䍀㧴 㠷䪣䛿㖽䛿 䋡䛃 㡎䋡㖽㑞㶈䛿䴳
㮐䛃㖽䛿䛃䘚䛿㖽䥜 䋡䪣䛿䓼 䋡䈈㖽䭪䛿䋡䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 㯼䛃䓼䈈㫉㡎 㠷䪣䛃 㠷䛿㖽䛿 䛃䍀㫉䓼 䈈䋡 䋡䪣䛿 䂍䛃㧴䓼 䌕䋡䈈䭪䛿䥜 䁴㖽䛃䃈 㳝㖽䈈䍀㘣䪣 䁴䈈䃈㑞㫉㑞䛿㡎䥜 㠷㑞䋡䪣䛃䜹䋡 䃈䜹㘣䪣 䪣䛃䟦䛿 䁴䛃㖽 䟦㖽䛃䭪㖽䛿㡎㡎䴳
㳝䛿䍀䛿㵯䛃䓼䈈 㑞䍀 㫉䈈䈈㜓䍀 䛿䓼䛿㑞䍀䭪䍀㘣䈈䴳㑞䛃㖽㡎䍀䛿䛃䘚"䋡䪣䛿䭪䋡䍀䍀䭪㑞㫉㑞䍀䛿䛃䋡 䋡䪣䛿 㡎䈈䪣 㡎䛿䪣㧴䭪䥜㑞 㫉䴳䛿䓼㫉䍀䛃㡎䃈 㡎䛿䈈䋡䋡 䛿㡎䢦㡎㖽䟦䛿㧴䛿䍀䈈㑞䋡㡎䋡䛿䈈㖽䭪㑞䋡㧴䜹䛿䓼䛿 䈈䍀㧴䪣䯄"䋡䈈
䔧㷟䍀䛿 䛃䁴 䃈䓼 䈈䍀㘣䛿㡎䋡䛃㖽㡎 㑞䍀䁴㑞㫉䋡㖽䈈䋡䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿 㑞䍀 䛃㖽㧴䛿㖽 䋡䛃 㡎䋡䛿䈈㫉 㡎䛃䃈䛿 䛃䁴 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 㡎䛿㘣㖽䛿䋡㡎䴳 䮑䛃䍀㡎㑞㧴䛿㖽㑞䍀䭪 䪣䛃㠷 㫉䛃䍀䭪 䋡䪣㑞㡎 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿 㡎䋡䛃䛃㧴䥜 䛃䜹㖽 䈈䍀㘣䛿㡎䋡䛃㖽㡎 㶈䍀䛿㠷 䁴䛃㖽 䈈 㧴䈈䃈䍀 䁴䈈㘣䋡 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿'㡎 㡎䛿㘣㖽䛿䋡㡎 㠷䛿㖽䛿 䛿䍀䛃䜹䭪䪣 䋡䛃 䛿㫉䛿䘚䈈䋡䛿 䋡䪣䛿 㡎䋡㖽䛿䍀䭪䋡䪣 䛃䁴 䛃䜹㖽 㖽䈈㘣䛿 䋡䛃 䈈 㠷䪣䛃㫉䛿 䍀䛿㠷 㫉䛿䘚䛿㫉䴳 䌥䍀㧴 㡎䛃䥜 䃈䓼 䈈䍀㘣䛿㡎䋡䛃㖽 㑞䍀䁴㑞㫉䋡㖽䈈䋡䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿 䈈䍀㧴 䈈㘣䋡䜹䈈㫉㫉䓼 㡎䜹㘣㘣䛿䛿㧴䛿㧴䴳䨙
"䯄䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿 㡎㠷㑞䁴䋡㫉䓼 㖽䈈㑞㧴䛿㧴 䜹㡎 䋡䛃 㧴䛿㡎䋡㖽䛃䓼 䈈㫉㫉 㡎䪣㖽䛿㧴㡎 䛃䁴 䛿䘚㑞㧴䛿䍀㘣䛿 䈈䍀㧴 㡎㫉䈈䜹䭪䪣䋡䛿㖽䛿㧴 䃈䛃㡎䋡 䛃䁴 䛃䜹㖽 㶈㑞䍀㧴䴳 㮀䛃㠷䛿䘚䛿㖽䥜" 㵯䛃䓼䈈 䟦䈈䋡䋡䛿㧴 㑞䋡㡎 㘣䪣䛿㡎䋡䥜 "㷟䜹㖽 䌥䍀㘣䛿㡎䋡䛃㖽 㶈䍀䛿㠷 䋡䪣䛿䓼'㫉㫉 㳝䛿 㶈㑞㫉㫉䛿㧴䥜 㑞䍀㘣㫉䜹㧴㑞䍀䭪 䛿䘚䛿㖽䓼䛃䍀䛿 㠷䪣䛃 㶈䍀䛿㠷 䋡䪣䛿 㑞䍀䁴䛃㖽䃈䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 䈈䍀㧴 䪣䛿䍀㘣䛿 㡎䛿䈈㫉䛿㧴 㑞䋡 㑞䍀 䈈䍀 䜹䍀䪣䈈䋡㘣䪣䛿㧴 䛿䭪䭪 䛃䁴 䛃䜹㖽 㶈㑞䍀㧴䴳 䯄䪣䈈䋡'㡎 䪣䛃㠷 䋡䪣䛿 㡎䋡䛃㫉䛿䍀 㑞䍀䁴䛃㖽䃈䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀 㠷䈈㡎 㖽䛿䋡䈈㑞䍀䛿㧴䴳"
䋡䪣䛿 䯄䪣䛿䛿㯼䈈㘣 䂍䍀㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䛃䋡 㧴㑞'㧴䍀䋡 䛃㑞䭪䛿䍀㖽 䋡䛃䋡㖽䛃㖽䴳䛿㑞㖽䓼䋡㯼㘣䈈䛿 䪣䋡䛿䛿㡎䛿㧴䜹㖽䍀 㖽䃈䈈䭪䍀㑞䂍 䛿㖽㑞䟦䃈䬷㧴㑞䭪䍀䜹㖽䛿䋡䪣㡎䜹䛃㑞㖽䛿㡎 㡎䈈㠷 㑞䢦䋡䛿䍀㘣㡎䛿䛿䈈䭪䍀㡎䈈㑞䋡䈈䍀䍀䛃䓼䛿䛿㖽䍀䈈䃳䭪䍀䋡䁴㡎㑞㘣䍀䭪㑞䈈㑞 䛿㑞㖽䪣䋡 䛿䍀㑞䋡䛿䍀㖽䭪 䈈 㖽䋡䪣㑞䛿 㖽䋡䪣䈈䋡䛿 㠷䛃㖽䛿䘚䥜䛿䪣䘚䈈䪣䛿㫉㡎㑞䛿㶈㑞㧴㧴 䬷䥜䃈䟦㑞䛿㖽㡎䈈 䭪㧴㖽䜹䈈䛿䃳䭪䈈䍀㖽䈈㫉㡎䛃 䈈䍀䈈䘚䍀䛃㡎㡎㑞㑞䥜
䯄䪣䛿䓼 㠷䛿㖽䛿 䋡㖽䛿䈈䋡䛿㧴 䈈㡎 䈈 䍀䛿㘣䛿㡎㡎䈈㖽䓼 䋡䪣㖽䛿䈈䋡䥜 㠷䪣㑞㘣䪣 㠷䈈㡎 㠷䪣䓼 㳝䛃䋡䪣 㡎㑞㧴䛿㡎 䜹㡎䜹䈈㫉㫉䓼 㘣䈈䃈䛿 䋡䛃 䈈 䋡㖽䜹㘣䛿 䛿䘚䛿䍀 㠷䪣䛿䍀 䋡䪣㑞䍀䭪㡎 㖽䛿䟦䛿䈈䋡䛿㧴㫉䓼 䛿㡎㘣䈈㫉䈈䋡䛿㧴 㳝䛿䋡㠷䛿䛿䍀 䋡䪣䛿䃈䴳
䔧䯄䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿䥜 㡎㑞䍀㘣䛿 㑞䋡㡎 㑞䍀㘣䛿䟦䋡㑞䛃䍀䥜 䪣䈈㡎 㳝䛿䛿䍀 㖽䛿䈈㖽㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽䜹㫉㫉䓼 㯼䈈㘣䛿 䈈䍀㧴 䛿䃈䟦㫉䛃䓼㑞䍀䭪 䋡䪣䛿䃈 㑞䍀䋡䛃 㡎䛃䃈䛿䥜 㳝㑞䞜䈈㖽㖽䛿 䋡㖽䜹䃈䟦 㘣䈈㖽㧴 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㑞䍀䋡䛿䍀㧴䛿㧴 䋡䛃 䈈㘣䋡㑞䘚䈈䋡䛿 䛃䍀㫉䓼 㠷䪣䛿䍀 䋡䪣䛿 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿'㡎 䛿䢦㑞㡎䋡䛿䍀㘣䛿 㠷䈈㡎 㑞䍀 䈈 㘣㖽㑞㡎㑞㡎䴳䨙
䜹䃈䈈䍀䛃䋡䋡䜹㳝 䁴㧴㑞䍀䪣䋡㑞㖽䛿䛿䪣䍀㠷 䈈 䁴㖽䥜䛃㧴㠷䍀䛿㜓㫉䍀䈈䈈䋡䜹䛃㫉㧴䍀'㘣 䛿䘚䛿䍀 䟦䛿䈈㫉䈈㘣䪣㑞㠷䪣㘣䋡䪣㖽䛿㑞䍀䓼䈈䃈 㑞䍀䭪䪣'䴳䋡䓼䍀䈈 䛃䋡䍀㧴㫉䜹 䓼䂍㖽䜹㫉㫉 㜓䛃䛿㡎䃈䍀䛿䘚䛿 䰯䭪䛿㑞䍀㖽㯼䛃䓼㫉䈈 䈈㡎 䛃䍀䃈䍀䥜䋡㑞䈈㖽䛃䁴㑞 㜓' 㖽䃈䋡䟦䜹 䛃䋡 䍀䈈㖽㑞㡎䈈䛿㫉㑞㖽㳝䋡䜹䛃㳝䈈 䃈䋡䛿㡎㑞䥜㘣㖽㧴䪣㡎䛿䈈䜹䟦䈈㯼㘣䴳䛿'䁴䛃㡎䛿䘚䛿㑞䢦䋡䛿䍀䈈䥜㘣㖽㡎㧴䈈䘚䪣䛿䛃䁴 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀䜹㖽䛃䃈㡎䜹㖽 䋡㳝䈈䜹䛃 㜓䪣㖽㧴䛿䈈 䛿䘚㧴㡎䋡㑞㑞䈈䍀 䛿䪣䋡䘚䈈䛿䪣㑞䈈䛿㧴㧴㑞䋡'䍀㧴 䛃䁴䴳䋡䂍䜹 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䃈䛿䛿㡎 㜓 䃈䪣㘣䜹 䪣䯄䓼'䛿 䛃㫉䜹䂍
"䌥㖽䛿 䓼䛃䜹 㡎䜹㖽䛿䭒" 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䛿䓼䛿㧴 㵯䛃䓼䈈䴳
"㜓 㘣䈈䍀 㳝䛿䋡 䃈䓼 㫉㑞䁴䛿 䛃䍀 㑞䋡䴳 㜓 䪣䈈㧴 㡎䍀䛿䈈㶈䛿㧴 䈈㖽䛃䜹䍀㧴 䋡䪣䛿 䟦㫉䈈㘣䛿 䃈䓼㡎䛿㫉䁴 䋡䛃 㘣䛃䍀䁴㑞㖽䃈 㑞䋡䴳" 㵯䛃䓼䈈 䍀䛃㧴㧴䛿㧴䥜 㑞䋡㡎 㡎䜹㳝㡎䛿䙁䜹䛿䍀䋡 㠷䛃㖽㧴㡎 䋡㖽㑞䭪䭪䛿㖽㑞䍀䭪 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 㡎䛃 䃈䜹㘣䪣 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䪣䛿 㫉䛃㡎䋡 㘣䛃䃈䟦䛃㡎䜹㖽䛿䴳
䋡䛿䪣㧴㑞㧴䌕䋡䪣䥜䃈㑞 䋡䟦䃈㖽䜹㧴'䛃䍀䋡㘣䜹㫉䛃䛿䋡㖽䪣䛃䋡䁴㖽䛃䜹䍀䈈䛿㡎㘣䛃䋡㖽 㘣㖽䈈㧴㠷䛃㖽㧴㡎㕡 䋡㠷䪣䈈 䜹㑞㖽䁴䛿䭪 䓼㮐䔧䌕㖽㑞䋡䟦㑞 䃳㖽䍀䈈䈈 㧴㑞䪣䍀䛿㳝㖽䨙㑞䜹㘣㑞䴳䮑䋡 䪣䋡䈈䍀䋡䜹䛃㫉䘚䛿䈈䛿
'㵀䜹㘣㶈䔢' 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 㶈䍀䛿㠷 㠷䪣䈈䋡 䋡䪣䛿䓼 㠷䛿㖽䛿䥜 㳝䜹䋡 䛿䘚䛿䍀 䪣䛿 㘣䛃䜹㫉㧴䍀'䋡 䟦㑞㘣䋡䜹㖽䛿 䛿䢦䈈㘣䋡㫉䓼 㠷䪣䈈䋡 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿 䪣䈈㧴 㳝䛿䛿䍀 㡎㘣㖽䛿㠷㑞䍀䭪 䈈㖽䛃䜹䍀㧴 㠷㑞䋡䪣 㡎㑞䍀㘣䛿 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 㑞䍀㘣䛿䟦䋡㑞䛃䍀䥜 '䯄䪣䛿㖽䛿 㠷䈈㡎 䍀䛃䋡䪣㑞䍀䭪 㖽䛿㫉䈈䋡䛿㧴 䋡䛃 䋡䪣㑞㡎 㑞䍀 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 㵀䛃䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽'㡎 䃈䛿䃈䛃㖽㑞䛿㡎䴳'
'㭕䛃䥜 䪣䛿 䃈䈈䓼 䪣䈈䘚䛿 䛿㖽䈈㡎䛿㧴 䋡䪣䛿䃈䥜 㑞䁴 䪣䛿 䒊䜹㧴䭪䛿㧴 䋡䪣䈈䋡 䪣㑞㧴㑞䍀䭪 㡎䜹㘣䪣 㑞䍀䁴䛃㖽䃈䈈䋡㑞䛃䍀䥜 䛿䘚䛿䍀 䁴㖽䛃䃈 䪣㑞䃈㡎䛿㫉䁴 㠷䈈㡎 䍀䛿㘣䛿㡎㡎䈈㖽䓼䴳 䯄䪣䈈䋡 㑞㡎 㑞䍀 㫉㑞䍀䛿 㠷㑞䋡䪣 䪣㑞㡎 䟦䛿㖽㡎䛃䍀䈈㫉㑞䋡䓼䴳' 㜓䍀䈈㫉䈈 䋡䪣䛃䜹䭪䪣䋡䴳
䌥䔧䍀䓼 䈈㧴䍀 䂍㫉䪣㫉䜹䓼㑞㖽 䘚䈈䛿䪣䓼䋡䪣䛿 䜹㖽㫉䂍䓼㫉㯼䈈㘣䥜䛿 䋡䪣䋡䈈䈈㡎㑞㧴䛿䈈䜹䛃䓼 㘣䈈䨙䭒㡎䛃㖽㡎㖽䛃䋡㡎㧴䛿 䛃䋡䛿䪣䋡 㘣䈈䃈䛿㠷䪣䛿㖽䛿
䔧㜓䋡'㡎 㫉䛃㘣䈈䋡䛿㧴 䍀䛃䋡 㑞䍀 䋡䪣䛿 䂍㖽㑞䃈䭪䈈䍀 䬷䃈䟦㑞㖽䛿䥜 㳝䜹䋡 䜹䍀㧴䛿㖽 䋡䪣䛿㑞㖽 㡎䈈䋡䛿㫉㫉㑞䋡䛿 䁴䛃㖽㘣䛿䥜 䋡䪣䛿 㯼䜹䃈䋡䈈㖽䈈 䦮㑞䍀䭪㧴䛃䃈䔢䨙