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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz
Capítulo 12, Página 9
“Your
commands
shall
be
obeyed,”
said
the
leader.
Then,
with
a
great
deal
of
chattering
and
noise,
the
Winged
Monkeys
flew
away
to
the
place
where
Dorothy
and
her
friends
were
walking.
Some
of
the
Monkeys
seized
the
Tin
Woodman
and
carried
him
through
the
air
until
they
were
over
a
country
thickly
covered
with
sharp
rocks.
Here
they
dropped
the
poor
Woodman,
who
fell
a
great
distance
to
the
rocks,
where
he
lay
so
battered
and
dented
that
he
could
neither
move
nor
groan.
Others
of
the
Monkeys
caught
the
Scarecrow,
and
with
their
long
fingers
pulled
all
of
the
straw
out
of
his
clothes
and
head.
They
made
his
hat
and
boots
and
clothes
into
a
small
bundle
and
threw
it
into
the
top
branches
of
a
tall
tree.
The
remaining
Monkeys
threw
pieces
of
stout
rope
around
the
Lion
and
wound
many
coils
about
his
body
and
head
and
legs,
until
he
was
unable
to
bite
or
scratch
or
struggle
in
any
way.
Then
they
lifted
him
up
and
flew
away
with
him
to
the
Witch’s
castle,
where
he
was
placed
in
a
small
yard
with
a
high
iron
fence
around
it,
so
that
he
could
not
escape.
But
Dorothy
they
did
not
harm
at
all.
She
stood,
with
Toto
in
her
arms,
watching
the
sad
fate
of
her
comrades
and
thinking
it
would
soon
be
her
turn.
The
leader
of
the
Winged
Monkeys
flew
up
to
her,
his
long,
hairy
arms
stretched
out
and
his
ugly
face
grinning
terribly;
but
he
saw
the
mark
of
the
Good
Witch’s
kiss
upon
her
forehead
and
stopped
short,
motioning
the
others
not
to
touch
her.
“We
dare
not
harm
this
little
girl,”
he
said
to
them,
“for
she
is
protected
by
the
Power
of
Good,
and
that
is
greater
than
the
Power
of
Evil.
All
we
can
do
is
to
carry
her
to
the
castle
of
the
Wicked
Witch
and
leave
her
there.”
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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz — B2 Inglés | Cuentana