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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz
Capítulo 19, Página 4
“Let
me
try
it
first,”
said
the
Scarecrow,
“for
it
doesn’t
hurt
me
to
get
thrown
about.”
He
walked
up
to
another
tree,
as
he
spoke,
but
its
branches
immediately
seized
him
and
tossed
him
back
again.
“This
is
strange,”
exclaimed
Dorothy.
“What
shall
we
do?”
“The
trees
seem
to
have
made
up
their
minds
to
fight
us,
and
stop
our
journey,”
remarked
the
Lion.
“I
believe
I
will
try
it
myself,”
said
the
Woodman,
and
shouldering
his
axe,
he
marched
up
to
the
first
tree
that
had
handled
the
Scarecrow
so
roughly.
When
a
big
branch
bent
down
to
seize
him
the
Woodman
chopped
at
it
so
fiercely
that
he
cut
it
in
two.
At
once
the
tree
began
shaking
all
its
branches
as
if
in
pain,
and
the
Tin
Woodman
passed
safely
under
it.
“Come
on!”
he
shouted
to
the
others.
“Be
quick!”
They
all
ran
forward
and
passed
under
the
tree
without
injury,
except
Toto,
who
was
caught
by
a
small
branch
and
shaken
until
he
howled.
But
the
Woodman
promptly
chopped
off
the
branch
and
set
the
little
dog
free.
The
other
trees
of
the
forest
did
nothing
to
keep
them
back,
so
they
made
up
their
minds
that
only
the
first
row
of
trees
could
bend
down
their
branches,
and
that
probably
these
were
the
policemen
of
the
forest,
and
given
this
wonderful
power
in
order
to
keep
strangers
out
of
it.
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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz — B2 Inglés | Cuentana