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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz
Capítulo 13, Página 2
The
Winkies
lifted
him
tenderly
in
their
arms,
and
carried
him
back
to
the
Yellow
Castle
again,
Dorothy
shedding
a
few
tears
by
the
way
at
the
sad
plight
of
her
old
friend,
and
the
Lion
looking
sober
and
sorry.
When
they
reached
the
castle
Dorothy
said
to
the
Winkies:
“Are
any
of
your
people
tinsmiths?”
“Oh,
yes.
Some
of
us
are
very
good
tinsmiths,”
they
told
her.
“Then
bring
them
to
me,”
she
said.
And
when
the
tinsmiths
came,
bringing
with
them
all
their
tools
in
baskets,
she
inquired,
“Can
you
straighten
out
those
dents
in
the
Tin
Woodman,
and
bend
him
back
into
shape
again,
and
solder
him
together
where
he
is
broken?”
The
tinsmiths
looked
the
Woodman
over
carefully
and
then
answered
that
they
thought
they
could
mend
him
so
he
would
be
as
good
as
ever.
So
they
set
to
work
in
one
of
the
big
yellow
rooms
of
the
castle
and
worked
for
three
days
and
four
nights,
hammering
and
twisting
and
bending
and
soldering
and
polishing
and
pounding
at
the
legs
and
body
and
head
of
the
Tin
Woodman,
until
at
last
he
was
straightened
out
into
his
old
form,
and
his
joints
worked
as
well
as
ever.
To
be
sure,
there
were
several
patches
on
him,
but
the
tinsmiths
did
a
good
job,
and
as
the
Woodman
was
not
a
vain
man
he
did
not
mind
the
patches
at
all.
When,
at
last,
he
walked
into
Dorothy’s
room
and
thanked
her
for
rescuing
him,
he
was
so
pleased
that
he
wept
tears
of
joy,
and
Dorothy
had
to
wipe
every
tear
carefully
from
his
face
with
her
apron,
so
his
joints
would
not
be
rusted.
At
the
same
time
her
own
tears
fell
thick
and
fast
at
the
joy
of
meeting
her
old
friend
again,
and
these
tears
did
not
need
to
be
wiped
away.
As
for
the
Lion,
he
wiped
his
eyes
so
often
with
the
tip
of
his
tail
that
it
became
quite
wet,
and
he
was
obliged
to
go
out
into
the
courtyard
and
hold
it
in
the
sun
till
it
dried.
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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz — B2 Inglés | Cuentana