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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz
Capítulo 12, Página 11
Dorothy
went
to
work
meekly,
with
her
mind
made
up
to
work
as
hard
as
she
could;
for
she
was
glad
the
Wicked
Witch
had
decided
not
to
kill
her.
With
Dorothy
hard
at
work,
the
Witch
thought
she
would
go
into
the
courtyard
and
harness
the
Cowardly
Lion
like
a
horse;
it
would
amuse
her,
she
was
sure,
to
make
him
draw
her
chariot
whenever
she
wished
to
go
to
drive.
But
as
she
opened
the
gate
the
Lion
gave
a
loud
roar
and
bounded
at
her
so
fiercely
that
the
Witch
was
afraid,
and
ran
out
and
shut
the
gate
again.
“If
I
cannot
harness
you,”
said
the
Witch
to
the
Lion,
speaking
through
the
bars
of
the
gate,
“I
can
starve
you.
You
shall
have
nothing
to
eat
until
you
do
as
I
wish.”
So
after
that
she
took
no
food
to
the
imprisoned
Lion;
but
every
day
she
came
to
the
gate
at
noon
and
asked,
“Are
you
ready
to
be
harnessed
like
a
horse?”
And
the
Lion
would
answer,
“No.
If
you
come
in
this
yard,
I
will
bite
you.”
The
reason
the
Lion
did
not
have
to
do
as
the
Witch
wished
was
that
every
night,
while
the
woman
was
asleep,
Dorothy
carried
him
food
from
the
cupboard.
After
he
had
eaten
he
would
lie
down
on
his
bed
of
straw,
and
Dorothy
would
lie
beside
him
and
put
her
head
on
his
soft,
shaggy
mane,
while
they
talked
of
their
troubles
and
tried
to
plan
some
way
to
escape.
But
they
could
find
no
way
to
get
out
of
the
castle,
for
it
was
constantly
guarded
by
the
yellow
Winkies,
who
were
the
slaves
of
the
Wicked
Witch
and
too
afraid
of
her
not
to
do
as
she
told
them.
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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz — B2 Inglés | Cuentana