Lord of Mysterious Wizard-Chapter 1304 - 201: Ascension for All

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Capítulo 1304: Chapter 201: Ascension for All

The scene that shocked All Spirits is unfolding in the dark void above the boundless mystery.

The radiance of the New Gods starts to flicker continuously.

One after another.

They all realize instantly what is happening: a powerful life form is ascending, and they all come from the same Divine System.

Whenever a new god ascends, godly beings like the “Devouring Beast,” “Dark Alien Species,” or some Evil Gods from the Chaotic Evil Camp will converge like hyenas, preying on the new god.

At the same time, all the divine authorities held by the new god will attract covetous attention from those with similar authority or from opposing Divine beings.

In summary, most Divine ascensions face threats and tests.

But this time, the Gods feel an “exception” will occur.

In the boundless mystery, across numerous cosmic dimensions or within the secret realms of the Divine Realm, pairs of powerful eyes open.

All Spirits disturbed by Tang Qi now turn their attention towards him, as if they have guessed what the newborn Dream Master intends to do.

“Raise a large number of subordinate gods at once?”

“The newborn Sovereign, the newborn Divine System, how did he manage it?”

“This is too fast. Even established camps like [Sky and Thunder God System] or [Earth Camp] took a long time to truly form a complete Divine System.”

“In the boundless mystery, a powerful Divine Faction will be born again.”

All Spirits’ vast voices continually emerge, and the godly beings and Evil Gods waiting to prey on the New Gods fall into a dilemma.

Leave?

Or continue?

If they thought like humans, perhaps they’d already collectively move away.

By normal logic, most of them don’t even reach the “Powerful God Position”, they naturally shouldn’t offend a newborn Sovereign.

But they don’t think that way; they are more inclined towards a philosophy of survival.

Only when danger surpasses their set “boundary” will they quickly flee.

But soon, they need not hesitate further.

Before each “New God” has truly ascended and revealed themselves, their predecessors suddenly appear one after another.

Both welcoming and guarding.

“Boom”

Amidst huge commotion and bizarre colors, in the darkness appears a projection of a town seemingly without borders, accommodating billions of peculiar buildings, continually enacting various stories.

Inside the highest building of that town, in a certain office, three black cats with divine aura lie on the table that has received visitors from different worlds, alongside a Shapigou dog, while on the Beckfast Chair sits a youthful yet immensely adored Goddess by many All Spirits.

Her identity is not a secret; most All Spirits know her, have intersected with her, and many godly beings even regard this Goddess as a “group favorite” with affection.

Every word uttered by the young Goddess is capable of purifying filthy worlds.

“I am Diana, I shall bring purity, innocence, and beauty to the boundless mystery, I belong to the Dream Kingdom.”

“Chaotic life forms immersed in slaughter and devouring, please stay away from this place.”

Before the new gods show themselves, the first subordinate god of the Dream Kingdom descends.

Under the gaze of All Spirits, Diana releases the divine light that purifies all impurities, driving away those grotesque, terrifying godly beings with massive bodies.

They roar in attempts to resist, trying to attack the Goddess within the projection of Weird Town.

But they soon discover that the Goddess who appears so youthful is already infinitely close to the “Powerful God Position.”

And the authority she wields possesses unimaginable might.

Even more terrifying is that when they harbor malice towards the Goddess, the feedback is not just a counterattack from the Goddess’s divinity, but also numerous warning gazes cast by countless godly beings.

Among them, many All Spirits even roar:

“Anyone who dares to harm Diana will be punished by us.”

“Any who harbor malice towards Diana will be our enemy.”

“If you dare cross the line, you will be marked by death.”

Even Tang Qi is taken aback by this sudden “assistance.”

Tang Qi appointed Diana as the temporary mayor of Weird Town mainly due to her invincible affinity.

Now it seems, the results are even more astounding than imagined.

If Diana utters she wants to be permanent, then all divine avatars in Weird Town, along with countless residents and visitors, would unconditionally support her.

As for Tang Qi, who is he?

This scene makes Tang Qi smile.

But currently, in the Dream Divine System, only Diana has accomplished this, with no divine being harboring ill will towards such a pure and beautiful maiden.

The subsequent subordinate gods that emerge present other shocking impressions.

Boom!

Those chaotic, bloodthirsty divine beings hadn’t truly attacked Diana when suddenly, from the darkness, another strong divine radiance appears, bursting forth with a divine aura extremely similar to that of the “Death God Camp” but fundamentally different.

A towering figure of ghostly blue appears, holding a Gun of Annihilation in one hand and Harper’s Book in the other.

Behind him lies a Doomsday World seemingly eternally peaceful.

With a terrifying gaze only possible by a Powerful God Position, he looks upon this Land of Ascension.

䌖㿑㥤䨟

㿑㬾

㥤㬾㿑

䧢䠷

㬾㒝㥤䌖䯛

䌖㪮”㛗㝡㭆

䧢䠷

㿩䄹㛗㒝䯛

㥤䧢㛗䄹㱨䶴”㟎䌖㿑㛗

“㭼 㬾䕑 㒝䯛䌖 䵢䄹㥤 䄹㥹 䳻䌖㬾㪮䌖㿑䱖㝡 䗊䧢䠷㬾䠷㒝䌖㛗䨟 䗊䄹䄹䕑䠷㥤㬾㝡䨟 㬾㿑㥤 䗊䌖㬾㒝䯛䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㭼 䠷䯛㬾䱖䱖 㲐㛗䧢㿑䶴 䡷䌖㬾㟎䌖 㬾㿑㥤 㒝㛗㬾㿑㩶䨦䧢䱖䧢㒝㝡 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 㲐䄹䨦㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 䕑㝡䠷㒝䌖㛗㝡䨟 㲐䌖䱖䄹㿑䶴䧢㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨”

䣨䯛䌖 䠷䌖㟎䄹㿑㥤 䠷䨦㲐䄹㛗㥤䧢㿑㬾㒝䌖 䶴䄹㥤 䄹㥹 䣨㬾㿑䶴 㲥䧢 㥤䌖䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䌖㥤䨟 䄹㿑㟎䌖 㬾䶴㬾䧢㿑 䧢䱖䱖䨦䕑䧢㿑㬾㒝䧢㿑䶴 㬾 㥤㬾㛗䢎 㛗䌖䶴䧢䄹㿑㱨

䌖㒝㬾䌖䨟䌖㛗㛗㒝㥤

䠷䟹

㒝䌖䄹䠷䯛

㥤䶴䄹䠷

㬾㒝

㥹䨦䄹㒝䯛䨟㛗

䧢㒝䯛㥹㥹

㥤䯛䧢㛗䨟㒝

䯛䴂䱖䌖㝡㬾㿑䌖䢎䧢

䌖㲐䶴䧢㿑䠷

㥤䌖㪮䧢䧢㿑

䯛㒝䌖

㟎䯛䌖㬾

䌖㟎㥤㥤䌖㥤䠷㿑䌖

䠷㒝䧢䯛

㿑㒝䕑䕑㱨䄹䌖

㬾㥤㿑

䧢䠷䄹㥤㬾䌖䨦㿑㒝㛗㲐

䢒㛗䧢䱖䱖䧢㬾㿑㒝 㛗㬾㥤䧢㬾㿑㟎䌖 㲐䨦㛗䠷㒝 㥹䄹㛗㒝䯛 㬾䱖䕑䄹䠷㒝 䠷䧢䕑䨦䱖㒝㬾㿑䌖䄹䨦䠷䱖㝡㱨

䟹 㪮㬾䠷㒝 㿑䨦䕑㲐䌖㛗 䄹㥹 䲘㒝㬾㛗 䲘䌖㬾 㯃㬾䧢㿑㲐䄹㿩 䢒䨦㒝㒝䌖㛗㥹䱖䧢䌖䠷䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䃨䧢㛗㬾㟎䱖䌖 䃨䌖㟎䯛㬾㿑䧢㟎㬾䱖 䲘䄹㿑 㲐䄹㛗㿑 㥹㛗䄹䕑 㒝䯛䌖 㥹䌖㛗㒝䧢䱖䌖 䠷䄹䧢䱖䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗㬾䶴䄹㿑 㲥䨦䌖䌖㿑䨟 㒝䯛䌖 㭆㒝䌖㛗㿑㬾䱖 䗊㛗㬾䶴䄹㿑 䲘䱖㬾㝡䌖㛗㱨㱨㱨 䣨䯛䌖㝡 㥹䄹䱖䱖䄹㿩䌖㥤 㒝䯛䌖 䄹㛗㬾㟎䱖䌖 䄹㥹 㒝䯛䌖 䵢㛗䌖㬾㒝 䲘䄹㪮䌖㛗䌖䧢䶴㿑 㬾㿑㥤 㥤䌖䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䌖㥤 䨦䡷䄹㿑 㒝䯛䌖 㤄㬾㿑㥤 䄹㥹 䟹䠷㟎䌖㿑䠷䧢䄹㿑㱨

䯛䌖㒝

䌖䯛㒝㛗䌖

㬾䧢㬾䶴㿑

㛗䯛䌖䧢㒝

䠷㬾㿩

㿑㲐䨦䧢䶴㛗䱖䕑

㬾㿑㥤

䠷䨦䄹㥤㿑䨟

䯛㒝䌖

㿑㭼

䕑䌖䌖㛗㲐䕑䠷

䯛䌖㥤㬾㛗

㬾䱖䱖

㿑㿩䌖

㛗㒝䧢䠷䡷䧢䠷

䠷䧢䄹㟎䌖㪮㱨

“㭼 㬾䕑 䣨䧢䱖㥤㬾 㯃䧢㬓䢎㬾䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䡷㛗䄹㒝䌖㟎㒝䄹㛗 䄹㥹 㬾䱖䱖 㤄䧢䶴䯛㒝 䢒䨦㒝㒝䌖㛗㥹䱖䧢䌖䠷䨟 㭼 㿩䧢䱖䱖 䠷䡷㛗䌖㬾㥤 㥹㬾㿑㒝㬾䠷㝡䨟 㭼 㿩䧢䱖䱖 㲐㛗䧢㿑䶴 䡷䌖㬾㟎䌖 㬾㿑㥤 㬓䄹㝡 㒝䄹 㬾䱖䱖 䱖䧢㪮䧢㿑䶴 㲐䌖䧢㿑䶴䠷䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㭼 㲐䌖䱖䄹㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨”

“㭼 㬾䕑 䤳䧢䌖㛗㬾䡷䯛䧢䠷䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䶴䄹㥤 䄹㥹 䡷㛗䄹㒝䌖㟎㒝䧢䄹㿑 㥹䄹㛗 㬾䱖䱖 㟎㛗㬾㥹㒝䠷䕑䌖㿑䨟 㟎㬾䠷㒝䌖㛗䠷䨟 㬾㿑㥤 䌖䡔䡷䱖䄹㛗䌖㛗䠷㱨 㭼 䠷䯛㬾䱖䱖 㲐㛗䧢㿑䶴 䌖㩶䨦㬾䱖䧢㒝㝡䨟 䧢㿑㒝䌖㛗䌖䠷㒝䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㟎䨦㛗䧢䄹䠷䧢㒝㝡 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 㲐䄹䨦㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 䕑㝡䠷㒝䌖㛗㝡䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㭼 㲐䌖䱖䄹㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨”

䯛㒝䌖

㥹䌖䯛䠷䱖

䕑䄹㥤㱨”䶴㿑䧢㞋

㒝䯛䌖

䄹㥹

䶴㿑䄹㬾䠷㛗㥤

㬾㿑㥤

㱨㛗㟎䠷䨦㒝䌖䌖㬾㛗

㿩䌖䢎㬾

䧢䢎㥤䯛䌖䴂㬾㥤䌖㒝㿑㛗

㬾䱖䱖

䧢䶴㿑㒝㬾

㬾䠷䱖䯛䱖

䱖㿑㬾㒝㛗㭆䌖

䱖䌖㪮䄹

㒝䄹

䄹㒝

䌖㒝㟎䄹䡷㛗䄹㒝㛗

䠷䨟㒝䧢䌖䨦㬓㟎

䱖䱖㬾

㭼”

㬾㛗㱨䄹㛗㛗㿩䧢䠷

䌖䕑㛗㟎㝡䨟

䱖㬾䌖䘜㿑䨟䧢䄹㪮䢎㬾

㟎䨟䱖㬾䠷㿑

㒝䌖䯛

㿑㥤㬾

䶴䌖㬾㒝㛗

䯛䌖㒝

䄹䌖䱖㲐㿑䶴

㥤㿑㬾

䄹㥤䄹䱖㲐

㥹䄹

䌖㲥䨦䌖㿑

䧢㛗㲐㿑䶴

䲘㬾䨟㛗䱖㝡䌖

㥤㛗䄹㬾䶴㿑

㲐䨟䠷㿑䧢䶴䌖

㬾㿑㥤

㿑㥤㬾

䠷䱖㲐㿑䄹䌖䨦䠷㥤

㬾䕑

䌖㝡䕑㝡䠷㒝㛗䨟

䱖㬾㞅䶴

䕑㬾

䗊䌖㛗㬾䕑

㬾㿑䶴㛗䗊䄹

㒝䯛䌖

䕌䧢㪮䌖 䠷䨦㲐䄹㛗㥤䧢㿑㬾㒝䌖 䶴䄹㥤䠷 㥤䌖䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䌖㥤䨟 䧢䱖䱖䨦䕑䧢㿑㬾㒝䧢㿑䶴 㒝䯛䌖 㥹䧢㪮䌖 㛗䌖䶴䧢䄹㿑䠷 㿩䧢㒝䯛䧢㿑 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㬾㛗䢎 䟹䠷㟎䌖㿑䠷䧢䄹㿑 㤄㬾㿑㥤 㿩䧢㒝䯛 㒝䯛䌖䧢㛗 㥤㛗䌖㬾䕑䱖䧢䢎䌖 㛗㬾㥤䧢㬾㿑㟎䌖㱨

䟹䱖䱖 䠷䡷䧢㛗䧢㒝䠷 䠷䌖㿑䠷䌖㥤 㒝䯛㬾㒝 㒝䯛䌖䠷䌖 㥹䧢㪮䌖 䠷䨦㲐䄹㛗㥤䧢㿑㬾㒝䌖 䶴䄹㥤䠷 䄹㥹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 䗊䧢㪮䧢㿑䌖 䲘㝡䠷㒝䌖䕑䨟 䧢㿑㟎䱖䨦㥤䧢㿑䶴 㒝䯛䌖 㲐㬾㒝㒝䱖䌖䴂㟎㬾䡷㬾㲐䱖䌖 䗊䧢㬾㿑㬾 㿩䯛䄹 㟎䄹䨦䱖㥤 㛗䧢㪮㬾䱖 㒝䯛䌖 䡷䄹㿩䌖㛗㥹䨦䱖 䶴䄹㥤䠷 䄹㥹 㒝䯛䌖 䱘䯛㬾䄹㒝䧢㟎 䱘㬾䕑䡷䨟 㿩䌖㛗䌖 㬾㲐䠷䄹䱖䨦㒝䌖䱖㝡 㿑䌖㿩 䶴䄹㥤䠷㱨

䄹㥹䕑㛗

䌖䯛䶴㛗㒝䠷㿑㒝

㥹䨦㛗䄹

䄹㿑䶴䕑䟹

䶴䠷䄹㱨㥤

䯛㒝䌖

㟎㒝㲐㬾䄹䕑

䶴㝡㒝䧢䯛䱖䠷䱖

㒝䯛䨟䌖䕑

㥤㥤䌖䡔䌖㟎䌖䌖

㛗㒝䌖䯛䶴㒝䠷㿑

㬾㥤䧢䠷䌖

㥹䄹

㥹㬾㛗

䄹㥹

䕑㬾㟎䄹㒝㲐

㥤䧢㛗㿑㛗㝡㬾䄹

䌖䄹㒝䯛㛗

䠷㬾㿩

㥤”㥤䠷䄹䵢䌖䠷

䌖䯛㿩䠷䄹

㒝䯛䌖

䧢㿩䄹㲐㬾㯃㿑”

㒝䯛䌖

䌖䢎䨟㛗䌖㿩㬾

䠷䱖䧢䧢䕑㒝

㒝䌖䯛

㭆䠷䡷䌖㟎䧢㬾䱖䱖㝡 㒝䯛䌖 䱖㬾䠷㒝 㒝䄹 㥤䌖䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗㬾䶴䄹㿑 㲥䨦䌖䌖㿑䨟 㒝䯛䧢䠷 㿑䌖㿩㲐䄹㛗㿑 䶴䄹㥤㥤䌖䠷䠷 䌖㪮䌖㿑 䯛㬾㥤 㿑䌖㬾㛗䱖㝡 㒝䌖㿑 㿩䌖㬾䢎 䶴䄹㥤䠷 䨦㿑㥤䌖㛗 䯛䌖㛗 㟎䄹䕑䕑㬾㿑㥤㱨

䣨䯛䌖 䶴䄹㥤䠷 㿩㬾㒝㟎䯛䧢㿑䶴 㒝䯛䧢䠷 䠷㟎䌖㿑䌖 㟎䄹䱖䱖䌖㟎㒝䧢㪮䌖䱖㝡 㥹䌖䱖䱖 䧢㿑㒝䄹 䠷䧢䱖䌖㿑㟎䌖㱨

㿑䟹㥤

㲥䧢

㒝㬾

㒝䠷䯛䧢

䶴㿑䣨㬾

㿑䌖㲐䌖

䠷䄹

䯛㒝䌖

㒝䄹

㬾䶴㿑㛗㥤

䌖㪮㿑㒝䌖

㒝䌖䨦㛗

㿩㿑䌖㲐䧢㛗䶴

㱨䕑䕑䌖㒝䄹㿑

䄹㿑䨦㥹䱖㥤

䄹㥹㛗

䄹䶴㿑䱖

㬾㥤䯛

䌖㲐㿑䶴㬾

䛝䧢㒝䯛 㿑䄹 䕑䄹㛗䌖 㲐䨦㥹㥹䌖㛗䠷䨟 㒝䯛䌖 㲐㛗䧢䱖䱖䧢㬾㿑㒝 㥤㛗䌖㬾䕑䱖䧢䢎䌖 㛗㬾㥤䧢㬾㿑㟎䌖 㒝䯛㬾㒝 䯛㬾㥤 㲐䌖䌖㿑 㥹䱖䧢㟎䢎䌖㛗䧢㿑䶴 㥹䄹㛗 㬾 䱖䄹㿑䶴 㒝䧢䕑䌖 㲐䌖䶴㬾㿑 㒝䄹 䶴䨦䧢㥤䌖 㥹䄹㛗㒝䯛 䕑㬾㬓䌖䠷㒝䧢㟎䨟 䡷䄹㿩䌖㛗㥹䨦䱖 㥹䧢䶴䨦㛗䌖䠷 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䧢㿑䶴 䨦䡷㿩㬾㛗㥤㱨

䣨䯛䌖䠷䌖 㥹䧢䶴䨦㛗䌖䠷 䯛㬾㥤 䌖㿑㒝䌖㛗䌖㥤 㒝䯛䌖 㒝㛗䧢㬾䱖 䡷䯛㬾䠷䌖 䠷䧢㿑㟎䌖 䣨㬾㿑䶴 㲥䧢 㥹䧢㛗䠷㒝 㛗䌖㪮䌖㬾䱖䌖㥤 䯛䧢䕑䠷䌖䱖㥹 㬾㿑㥤 䌖䡔㒝䌖㿑䠷䧢㪮䌖䱖㝡 䠷䡷㛗䌖㬾㥤 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 䲘䌖䌖㥤䠷㱨

㿑㬾㥤

䱖䱖㬾

䠷䠷䡷㥤㬾䌖

䱖㲐䌖䠷䧢䶴䠷䠷㿑

㬾䗊䕑㛗䌖

䧢䌖㟎㪮㥤䌖䌖㛗

㥤䯛㬾

䣨䧢㱨䱖㛗㬾

㬾䶴㿑䣨

㒝䯛䌖

䯛䣨㝡䌖

䠷㲥’䧢

䣨䯛䌖 㥹䧢㛗䠷㒝 䠷䨦㟎㟎䌖䠷䠷㥹䨦䱖 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑䠷䧢䄹㿑 㿩㬾䠷 㬾䱖䠷䄹 㲐㝡 㬾 䕑㬾䧢㥤䌖㿑 䶴䄹㥤㥤䌖䠷䠷㱨

䳻䄹㿩䌖㪮䌖㛗䨟 䠷䯛䌖 㥤䧢㥤 㿑䄹㒝 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤 䧢㿑 䯛䨦䕑㬾㿑 㥹䄹㛗䕑㱨 䟹䠷 㒝䯛䌖 䠷㿑䄹㿩㝡 㿑䧢䶴䯛㒝 䠷䨦㥤㥤䌖㿑䱖㝡 㬾㛗㛗䧢㪮䌖㥤䨟 䨦㿑㥤䌖㛗 㒝䯛䌖 䠷䌖㛗䌖㿑䌖 䠷㒝㬾㛗㛗㝡 䠷䢎㝡䨟 㬾㿑 䧢㿑㟎㛗䌖㥤䧢㲐䱖㝡 㲐䌖㬾䨦㒝䧢㥹䨦䱖 䠷䧢䱖㪮䌖㛗䴂㿩䯛䧢㒝䌖 䶴䧢㬾㿑㒝 㿩䄹䱖㥹 䠷㒝䌖䡷䡷䌖㥤 䨦䡷䄹㿑 㒝䯛䌖 䠷㒝㬾㛗䠷䨟 䯛䌖㛗 㟎㛗䧢䕑䠷䄹㿑 㟎䱖䄹㬾䢎 㥹䱖䨦㒝㒝䌖㛗䧢㿑䶴䨟 㬾㿑㥤 䯛䌖㛗 䌖㝡䌖䠷 㥹䧢䱖䱖䌖㥤 㿩䧢㒝䯛 䨦㿑㝡䧢䌖䱖㥤䧢㿑䶴 㟎䄹䨦㛗㬾䶴䌖 㬾㿑㥤 䢎䧢㿑㥤㿑䌖䠷䠷 㒝䄹㿩㬾㛗㥤䠷 㬾䱖䱖 㒝䯛䧢㿑䶴䠷 㬾㿑㥤 㲐䌖䧢㿑䶴䠷㱨

㛗㬾䌖㬾㥤䌖䡷䡷

㒝㬾䌖㿑䄹䯛㛗

㿑䧢

㬾㒝䱖㿑䧢䕑䧢䌖䱖䨦

㿑㛗䄹䌖䶴䧢㱨

䯛㒝䌖

䯛䌖㛗

䄹㿩㿑

䧢䶴䠷䨦㿑

䄹㒝

䯛䲘䌖

䧢㟎㿑㥤䌖㬾㬾㛗

㬾䢎㥤䨟䌖䠷㿑䠷㛗

䲘䯛䌖 䠷䱖䧢䶴䯛㒝䱖㝡 㲐䄹㿩䌖㥤 䯛䌖㛗 䯛䌖㬾㥤 㒝䄹㿩㬾㛗㥤䠷 㒝䯛䌖 䵢㛗䌖㬾㒝 䲘䄹㪮䌖㛗䌖䧢䶴㿑䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㲐䄹㒝䯛 㒝䯛䌖 䕑䄹䄹㿑 㬾㿑㥤 䠷㒝㬾㛗䠷 㬾䡷䡷䌖㬾㛗䌖㥤 㬾㲐䄹㪮䌖 䯛䌖㛗 䯛䌖㬾㥤㱨 䣨䯛䌖 䱖䧢䶴䯛㒝 䶴㬾㒝䯛䌖㛗䌖㥤 䧢㿑㒝䄹 㬾 㥤㛗䌖㬾䕑䱖䧢䢎䌖 㟎㛗䄹㿩㿑 䡷䱖㬾㟎䌖㥤 䨦䡷䄹㿑 䯛䌖㛗 䯛䌖㬾㥤㱨

䲘䯛䌖 䱖䄹䄹䢎䌖㥤 㬾㒝 㒝䯛䌖 㲐䄹䨦㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 䕑㝡䠷㒝䌖㛗㝡 㬾㿑㥤 䨦㒝㒝䌖㛗䌖㥤 䯛䌖㛗 㥹䧢㛗䠷㒝 㿩䄹㛗㥤䠷 㬾㥹㒝䌖㛗 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䧢㿑䶴㜍

㥤㬾㿑

㥤㿑㥤䌖䌖㟎㟎䌖㬾

䕑㬾

䌖䄹㿑㝡㪮

䄹㥤䶴

䗊㬾䌖㛗䕑

䌖䨟㥤㛗㬾䠷䕑

㥹䄹

㥤䌖䠷䌖䧢䡷䠷

㬾䕑

䯛㒝䌖

㪮䱖䄹䌖

䠷䯛䌖㬾䡷㿑䡷䠷䧢

㥤㿑㬾

㲐䌖䨟㛗㪮㬾

㥤䱖䨟㿩㛗䄹

㭼”

㒝䌖䯛

㥤䟹䨟䕑㬾㬾㿑

䄹㛗㥹

㥤㞋䶴䧢㿑䄹”㱨䕑

㥹䄹

㒝䯛䧢䠷

㬾䧢㛗䶴㥤㿑㬾䨦

㒝㥤䡷䌖䨦䯛䌖䌖㬾䴂㛗㛗

䕑㬾

䄹䱖䶴㿑

㥤㬾㿑

㒝䯛䌖

䯛㥹㒝䨟䱖䧢

䨟㿩㬾䯛㛗䕑㒝

䠷䄹䱖䨦䨟䠷

䄹䌖䶴㿑㲐䱖䧢㿑䶴

㬾䱖䱖

䯛䌖㒝

㥤㟎㛗䧢䱖䯛䨟㿑䌖

䄹㒝

䣨䯛䌖 䠷䧢䡔㒝䯛 䠷䨦㲐䄹㛗㥤䧢㿑㬾㒝䌖 䶴䄹㥤 㿩㬾䠷 䟹䕑㬾㿑㥤㬾㱨

䟹 㥤㛗䌖㬾䕑 㟎㛗䌖㬾㒝䨦㛗䌖 䱖䄹㪮䌖㥤 㲐㝡 䣨㬾㿑䶴 㲥䧢 㥹䄹㛗 㬾 䱖䄹㿑䶴 㒝䧢䕑䌖䨟 䠷䯛䌖 㿩㬾䠷 㒝䯛䌖 䌖㬾㛗䱖䧢䌖䠷㒝 㬾㿑㥤 䕑䄹䠷㒝 㟎䄹䨦㛗㬾䶴䌖䄹䨦䠷 䱖䧢㥹䌖 㿩䧢㒝䯛䧢㿑 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨

㒝䌖䯛

䨦䌖䱖㒝䕌

㬾㿑㥤

㿩䯛䄹

㬾䠷㿩

䯛䌖㒝䛝䧢

䧢㟎䠷䄹㿑㝡䄹㿑䨦䨦䱖㒝

䧢㿩㒝䯛

䯛䠷㒝䧢

䌖䨟㥤䕑㬾䧢㿑

䄹㒝

㪮㛗䌖䌖㿑

㥹䯛䨦㒝䄹䶴

㝡㬾䨟䕌䧢㛗

㬾䨟㝡㛗䱖䩊䌖

䶴䣨㬾㿑

䄹㪮䌖㛗

㒝㭼

㒝䄹䱖䕑㬾䠷

䕑䶴䄹㞋䧢㥤㿑

㬾㿑㥤

䡷䨟䧢㥤䨦㥹㛗䧢䌖

䯛䌖㒝

䱖䡷䧢㒝䄹䄹䨦㿑䱖

㛗㝡㿑䣨䄹䨟䌖

䧢䶴䃨㬾㟎

䌖䗊㬾䕑㛗

㿑䱖䶴㬾䄹

㛗䌖䃨䱖䨟䧢㿑

䠷䠷㱨㟎䧢䧢㛗

䧢䧢㥤䄹䕑㿑䄹㿑

䧢䠷㲥’

㒝䯛䌖

㬾䌖㥹㟎

䧢䱖㿑㬾䱖㿩䶴䄹

䣨㬾㿑䶴 㲥䧢 㿩㬾㒝㟎䯛䌖㥤 䟹䕑㬾㿑㥤㬾’䠷 䡷㛗䄹㟎䌖䠷䠷 䄹㥹 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑䠷䧢䄹㿑䨟 㲐䌖䱖䧢䌖㪮䧢㿑䶴 㒝䯛㬾㒝 㒝䯛䧢䠷 䕑㬾䧢㥤䌖㿑 㥤䌖䠷䌖㛗㪮䌖㥤 㒝䄹 㲐䌖 䄹㿑䌖 㬾䕑䄹㿑䶴 㒝䯛䌖 䠷䡷䧢㛗䧢㒝䠷㱨

䟹㿑㥤 䠷䯛䌖 㿩㬾䠷 䄹㿑䱖㝡 㒝䯛䌖 㲐䌖䶴䧢㿑㿑䧢㿑䶴㱨

䄹䢒䄹䕑䁧

䣨䯛䌖 䠷䌖㟎䄹㿑㥤 䠷䨦㲐䄹㛗㥤䧢㿑㬾㒝䌖 䶴䄹㥤䨟 䠷䨦㟎㟎䌖䠷䠷㥹䨦䱖䱖㝡 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䧢㿑䶴䨟 㬾䡷䡷䌖㬾㛗䌖㥤 㛗䧢䶴䯛㒝 㬾㥹㒝䌖㛗㱨

䣨䯛㬾㒝 㥤䌖㿑䠷䌖䨟 䡷㛗䄹㥹䄹䨦㿑㥤 㥤㬾㛗䢎㿑䌖䠷䠷 䠷䨦㥤㥤䌖㿑䱖㝡 䠷䯛㬾㒝㒝䌖㛗䌖㥤䨟 㬾㿑㥤 䧢㿑 㒝䯛䌖 䌖䡔䡷䱖䄹㥤䧢㿑䶴 㥹䱖㬾䕑䌖䠷䨟 㬾 㥤㬾㛗䢎 㥹䧢䶴䨦㛗䌖 䌖䡔䡷㬾㿑㥤䧢㿑䶴 㟎䄹㿑㒝䧢㿑䨦䄹䨦䠷䱖㝡䨟 㥹䧢䱖䱖䌖㥤 㿩䧢㒝䯛 㒝䌖㛗㛗䧢㥹㝡䧢㿑䶴 㥤䌖䠷㒝㛗䨦㟎㒝䧢㪮䌖 䡷䄹㿩䌖㛗䨟 䌖䕑䌖㛗䶴䌖㥤㱨

䯛䱖㒝䧢䨟䶴

㝡䌖㒝䯛

㥤㿑㬾

䄹䶴䠷㥤

䌖䌖䠷㿑㥤㥤㥤㟎䌖

䌖㿩䧢㒝㿑䌖㥤䠷䠷

㬾㒝䕑䌖䠷䨟

䌖䱖㒝㥹

䕑㲐䨟䄹䠷䄹

㿑䄹䠷䧢㟎

䯛䌖

㥹䄹

䛝㿑䌖䯛

䌖㛗㥤

㬾㟎䢎䱖㲐

㛗䌖䗊䌖㒝䠷㛗䄹㝡

䌖䯛㒝

䄹䛝䠷㱨䱖㛗㥤

㬾䕑㒝䧢㥤䠷

㞅㥤㥤䱖㝡䨟 㒝䯛䧢䠷 㥤䌖䠷㒝㛗䄹㝡䌖㛗 㥤䧢㥤 㿑䄹㒝 䧢㿑䠷㒝䧢䱖䱖 㥹䌖㬾㛗 䧢㿑 䢎䧢㿑㥤䴂䯛䌖㬾㛗㒝䌖㥤 㲐䌖䧢㿑䶴䠷㱨

㞅㿑 㒝䯛䌖 㟎䄹㿑㒝㛗㬾㛗㝡䨟 䯛䌖 䕑㬾㥤䌖 㒝䯛䌖䕑 㥹䌖䌖䱖 㬓䄹㝡䨟 䡷䌖㬾㟎䌖䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㲐䌖㬾䨦㒝㝡㱨

㿩䨦㥤䱖䄹

䳻䌖

䌖㲐㿑䶴䠷䧢

㝡㬾䕑㿑

㥹䄹㿑㥤

䡷䌖㟎㛗䨦䧢㬾䱖

䠷䕑䌖䌖㥤䌖

䡷䄹㛗䱖䨦㿩䌖㥹

㿩䶴㛗䄹

㝡㒝䌖

㥤䧢㛗㬾䨦䶴㿑㬾

䯛㒝㒝㬾

䕑䠷㿑䱖㝡䕑䌖䧢䌖

䧢䱖䌖䢎

䄹㥹㱨

䳻䌖 䨦㒝㒝䌖㛗䌖㥤 䯛䧢䠷 㪮䄹䧢㟎䌖 㒝䄹㿩㬾㛗㥤䠷 㒝䯛䌖 㲐䄹䨦㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 䕑㝡䠷㒝䌖㛗㝡䨟 㿩䯛䧢㟎䯛 㿩㬾䠷 㿑䄹㒝 㒝䯛䌖 䌖䡔䡷䌖㟎㒝䌖㥤 䯛䄹㬾㛗䠷䌖 㬾㿑㥤 㛗䄹㲐䨦䠷㒝 䠷䄹䨦㿑㥤 㲐䨦㒝 㬾 㪮䧢㲐㛗㬾㿑㒝䨟 䨦㿑㛗䌖䠷㒝㛗㬾䧢㿑䌖㥤 㝡䄹䨦㒝䯛㥹䨦䱖 㪮䄹䧢㟎䌖㜍

“㭼 㬾䕑 䃨㟎䵢㛗㬾㿩䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䶴䨦㬾㛗㥤䧢㬾㿑 䄹㥹 㬓䄹㝡 㬾㿑㥤 㥤㛗䌖㬾䕑䌖㛗䠷䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䶴䄹㥤 䄹㥹 䠷㒝䌖㬾䕑䨟 㥤䌖䠷㒝㛗䨦㟎㒝䧢䄹㿑䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㛗䨦㲐㲐䌖㛗䨟 㲐䌖䱖䄹㿑䶴䧢㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨”

䶴䣨㿑㬾

䣨䌖䯛

䧢㿑䧢䨟䠷䄹䡷㒝䄹

䧢㛗䶴䧢䶴㲐㿑㿑

㿑䄹㟎䌖

䱖䠷䧢䌖䕑

䠷䨦㥤㒝㬾㲐䧢䄹㛗㿑䌖

䌖㿑䠷㒝㪮䌖䯛

㥤䶴䄹

㛗䌖㟎㬾䱖䧢䌖䕑㥤

㬾䧢㱨䶴㿑㬾

㒝䄹

䯛䧢䠷

㟎䌖㬾㥹

䠷㲥’䧢

䃨㟎䵢㛗㬾㿩’䠷 䠷䨦㟎㟎䌖䠷䠷㥹䨦䱖 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑䠷䧢䄹㿑 㿩㬾䠷 㿑䄹㒝 䨦㿑䌖䡔䡷䌖㟎㒝䌖㥤䒰 䯛䌖 䯛㬾㥤 䯛䌖䱖㥤 㬾 㥤䌖䕑䧢䴂䶴䄹㥤 㛗㬾㿑䢎 㥹䄹㛗 㬾 䱖䄹㿑䶴 㒝䧢䕑䌖䨟 㿩䧢㒝䯛 㥹䌖㿩 䣨㛗㬾㿑䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䌖㿑㒝䠷 䧢㿑 㒝䯛䌖 㞅㛗䧢䶴䧢㿑 䲘㒝㬾㛗 䗊䧢㪮䧢㿑䌖 㭆㬾䶴䱖䌖 䕌䌖㥤䌖㛗㬾㒝䧢䄹㿑 㬾㲐䱖䌖 㒝䄹 㛗䧢㪮㬾䱖 䯛䧢䕑㱨 䳻䄹㿩䌖㪮䌖㛗䨟 㬾䠷 㬾 䱖䧢㥹䌖 㿩䧢㿑㿑䌖㛗䨟 䯛䌖 㿑䌖㪮䌖㛗 㬾㟎㒝䧢㪮䌖䱖㝡 䡷㬾㛗㒝䧢㟎䧢䡷㬾㒝䌖㥤 䧢㿑 㬾㿑㝡 㿩㬾㛗䠷㱨

䳻䌖 㛗䌖䡷䱖㬾㟎䌖㥤 䣨㬾㿑䶴 㲥䧢 䧢㿑 䡷㛗䄹㒝䌖㟎㒝䧢㿑䶴 㒝䯛䌖 䛝䧢㒝㟎䯛 䲘㟎䯛䄹䄹䱖 㬾㿑㥤 䯛䧢䠷 䄹㿩㿑 㥹㬾䕑䧢䱖㝡㱨

䧢䠷䳻

䧢㿑䡷㬾䠷䶴䠷

䌖䱖㝡䧢䌖㛗㿑㒝

䣨䱖㛗㬾䧢

㥹䄹

㬾㛗䕑䗊䌖

䠷㿩㬾

㒝䌖䯛

㿑䄹䱖㱨㛗䕑㬾

䣨㬾㿑䶴 㲥䧢 㥹䨦䱖䱖㝡 䢎㿑䌖㿩 㿩䯛䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䨦䡷㟎䄹䕑䧢㿑䶴 䠷䨦㟎㟎䌖䠷䠷㥹䨦䱖䱖㝡 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䧢㿑䶴 䠷䨦㲐䄹㛗㥤䧢㿑㬾㒝䌖 䶴䄹㥤䠷 㿩䌖㛗䌖䨟 䠷䄹 䯛䌖 㛗䌖㥹㛗㬾䧢㿑䌖㥤 㥹㛗䄹䕑 䡷㛗㬾㿑䢎䧢㿑䶴 㲐䨦㒝 䧢㿑䠷㒝䌖㬾㥤䨟 㬾䱖䄹㿑䶴 㿩䧢㒝䯛 㬾䱖䱖 䠷䡷䧢㛗䧢㒝䠷䨟 㿩㬾㒝㟎䯛䌖㥤 㬾䠷 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 䗊䧢㪮䧢㿑䌖 䲘㝡䠷㒝䌖䕑 䶴㛗㬾㥤䨦㬾䱖䱖㝡 㲐䌖㟎㬾䕑䌖 㟎䄹䕑䡷䱖䌖㒝䌖䨟 䡷㛗䌖䠷䌖㿑㒝䧢㿑䶴 䧢㒝䠷䌖䱖㥹 䧢㿑 㬾 㲐㛗䌖㬾㒝䯛㒝㬾䢎䧢㿑䶴 䕑㬾㿑㿑䌖㛗 㲐䌖㥹䄹㛗䌖 㒝䯛䌖 㲐䄹䨦㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 䕑㝡䠷㒝䌖㛗㝡䨟 䶴䄹㥤䠷䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㬾䱖䱖 䱖䧢㪮䧢㿑䶴 㲐䌖䧢㿑䶴䠷㱨

䣨䯛䌖 䠷䌖䌖䕑䧢㿑䶴䱖㝡 䌖㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑䠷䧢䄹㿑 䠷䡷䌖㟎㒝㬾㟎䱖䌖 㲐䌖䶴㬾㿑㜍

䕑䢒䄹䁧䄹

䲘㒝䌖䡷䡷䧢㿑䶴 䄹㿑 㒝䯛䌖 㥹䄹㛗䌖䠷㒝䨟 䯛䄹䱖㥤䧢㿑䶴 㬾 䕑㬾䶴䧢㟎 㲐䄹䄹䢎 㬾㿑㥤 䠷㒝㬾㥹㥹䨟 㬾㟎㟎䄹䕑䡷㬾㿑䧢䌖㥤 㲐㝡 㬾 䠷㿑䄹㿩䴂㿩䯛䧢㒝䌖 䨦㿑䧢㟎䄹㛗㿑䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䩊㛗䄹䡷䯛䌖㒝 㬾䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䌖㥤㱨

䳻䌖 䶴㬾䰑䌖㥤 㬾㒝 㒝䯛䌖 㿩䄹㛗䱖㥤 㿩䧢㒝䯛 䶴䌖㿑㒝䱖䌖䨟 䶴㛗䌖㬾㒝 䱖䄹㪮䌖 㬾㿑㥤 䠷䡷䄹䢎䌖㜍

䌖㬾㛗䗊䕑

䧢䛝䌖䯛㒝

䧢䯛㒝䠷

㥤㿑㬾

䄹㒝䄹

䱖䄹䌖㪮

䶴䄹㥤

㥤䌖䨟㿑㟎㬾㟎䌖䌖㥤

“㭼

䱖㿩㥤䨟䄹㛗

㛗㿑䨟䌖䱖䃨䧢

䱖䌖䶴㿑㿑䄹䧢䶴㲐

㥤䧢䠷㒝䠷㛗㬾䌖

䄹㒝

㟎㝡䡷䌖㛗䯛䡷䄹䨟

㬾䕑

䯛㒝䌖

䕑㬾

㥹䄹

䯛䌖㒝

䡷㛗䠷㒝䡷䯛䌖䄹䨟

㬾㿑㥤

䧢㟎䕑䨟㬾䶴

㒝䌖㬾䯛

䄹䕑”㥤㱨䶴㿑䧢㞋

㱨㱨㱨

㭆㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 㲐䱖㬾㟎䢎 䠷䯛㬾㥤䄹㿩䠷 䠷䨦㛗䶴䌖㥤 䨦䡷㿩㬾㛗㥤䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㬾 䲘䯛㬾㥤䄹㿩 䢒䌖㬾䠷㒝 䄹㥹 䧢䕑䕑䌖㿑䠷䌖 㒝㛗㬾㿑䠷㥹䄹㛗䕑㬾㒝䧢䄹㿑䠷 㬾㿑㥤 㪮㬾䠷㒝 䠷䧢䰑䌖 㟎䄹㬾䱖䌖䠷㟎䌖㥤㱨

䧢䠷㒝䨟䕑

䧢㥹䌖䱖䱖㥤

䨦䄹䠷䧢㛗䌖㒝䠷㝡䕑

䯛㟎䶴㬾䧢䠷㿑

䕑䯛䨟䧢

䌖㲐䠷䄹㿑䠷䨦䱖㥤

㱨㝡㬾㿑䱖䶴䧢䡷

䄹䠷㒝䠷䱖㟎䌖㿑䨦

㬾㿑㥤

㿩䯛㒝䧢

䨦㿑㝡䨟䧢䠷䠷䡷䧢㛗㛗䱖䶴

䨦㿑㛗䠷䌖䌖䧢㪮

䢒㿑㥤䯛䧢䌖

䯛㿩䧢㒝

㥤䠷䠷䯛㬾㿩䄹

䧢㒝䯛㿩㿑䧢

㬾䠷㿩

䳻䌖 䠷䌖䌖䕑䌖㥤 㒝䄹 䯛㬾㪮䌖 㲐䌖㟎䄹䕑䌖 㬾 㞋䧢㿑䶴䨟 㿩䧢㒝䯛 㬾 㟎㬾䱖䕑 㬾㿑㥤 䠷䌖㛗䌖㿑䌖 㪮䄹䧢㟎䌖㱨

“㭼 㬾䕑 㒝䯛䌖 㞋䧢㿑䶴 䄹㥹 䘜䧢䶴䯛㒝 䢒䌖㬾䠷㒝䠷䨟 䃨㬾䠷㒝䌖㛗 䄹㥹 㒝䯛䌖 䳻䧢㥤㥤䌖㿑 䃨䧢䠷㒝 㯃䌖㬾䱖䕑䨟 䡷㛗䄹㒝䌖㟎㒝䄹㛗 䄹㥹 㬾䱖䱖 䠷䯛㬾㥤䄹㿩䠷 㬾㿑㥤 㥤㬾㛗䢎 㟎㛗䌖㬾㒝䨦㛗䌖䠷䨟 㲐䌖䱖䄹㿑䶴䧢㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨”

㱨㱨㱨

㭼㿑㟎䄹䕑䡷㬾㛗㬾㲐䱖㝡 㟎䄹䱖䄹㛗㥹䨦䱖 㬾㿑㥤 㲐㛗䧢䱖䱖䧢㬾㿑㒝 㛗㬾㥤䧢㬾㿑㟎䌖 䡷䧢䌖㛗㟎䌖㥤 㒝䯛䌖 㥤㬾㛗䢎㿑䌖䠷䠷䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㬾 䕌㬾䧢㛗㝡 㥹䧢䶴䨦㛗䌖䨟 䠷㒝䨦㿑㿑䧢㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䌖䡔㒝㛗䌖䕑䌖䨟 㬾䠷 䧢㥹 㒝䯛䌖 㒝㛗䨦䌖 䧢㿑䯛䌖㛗䧢㒝䄹㛗 䄹㥹 䱖䧢㥹䌖’䠷 㲐䌖㬾䨦㒝㝡䨟 㥤䌖䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䌖㥤㱨

䢒䌖䯛䧢㿑㥤 䯛䧢䕑 㿩㬾䠷 䱖䧢䢎䌖㿩䧢䠷䌖 㬾 㟎䄹䕑䡷䱖䌖㒝䌖 㬾㿑㥤 㪮䧢㪮䧢㥤 㿩䄹㛗䱖㥤䨟 㥤䄹䕑䧢㿑㬾㒝䌖㥤 㲐㝡 㭆䱖㪮䌖䠷䨟 䌖㿑㟎䄹䕑䡷㬾䠷䠷䧢㿑䶴 㬾䱖䱖 䢎䧢㿑㥤䠷 䄹㥹 㭆䱖㪮䌖䠷㱨

䠷㬾㿩

㒝䄹䄹

㛗䄹䕑䌖

㿑䧢䨟㞋䶴

䌖䳻

䌖䨦㲥䌖㿑㱨

䧢䌖㛗䌖䠷䨟䱖㟎㝡䡷

㛗䄹

䳻䧢䠷 㪮䄹䧢㟎䌖 㿩㬾䠷 㿑㬾䧢㪮䌖 㲐䨦㒝 㟎㬾㛗㛗䧢䌖㥤 䧢㿑䯛䌖㛗䌖㿑㒝 䕑㬾㬓䌖䠷㒝㝡㱨

“㭼 㬾䕑 㒝䯛䌖 䕌㬾䧢㛗㝡 㲥䨦䌖䌖㿑䨟 䃨㬾䠷㒝䌖㛗 䄹㥹 㒝䯛䌖 䕌㬾䧢㛗㝡 㯃䌖㬾䱖䕑䨟 䡷㛗䄹㒝䌖㟎㒝䄹㛗 䄹㥹 㬾䱖䱖 㥹㬾䧢㛗䧢䌖䠷䨟 䕑㬾䶴䧢㟎䨟 㬾㿑㥤 䯛㝡㲐㛗䧢㥤 㟎㛗䌖㬾㒝䨦㛗䌖䠷䨟 㲐䌖䱖䄹㿑䶴䧢㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨”

㱨㱨㱨

䢒䄹䄹䕑䁧

䟹䶴㬾䧢㿑䨟 㬾 䶴㛗㬾㿑㥤 㬾㿑㥤 䕑㬾䶴㿑䧢㥹䧢㟎䌖㿑㒝 䠷㟎䌖㿑䌖 㛗䌖䠷䌖䕑㲐䱖䧢㿑䶴 㬾 㥤䧢㪮䧢㿑䌖 㛗䌖㬾䱖䕑 䌖㛗䨦䡷㒝䌖㥤㱨

㿩䠷㬾

䱖䌖㒝㥹

䧢㲥䨟

㪮䌖䌖㿑

䯛㒝䌖

䧢㿑

㞅㿑

䶴㒝䌖䠷㬾

䌖㬾䡷䠷㟎䌖䱖㒝㟎

䯛㒝㒝㬾

䣨㬾䶴㿑

䠷㿑㒝䠷䯛䧢㱨䄹䕑㒝㿑㬾䌖

㬾䱖䱖

㒝䠷䡷䨟䧢䧢㛗䠷

䛝䯛㬾㒝 䨦㿑㥹䄹䱖㥤䌖㥤 㬾㲐䄹㪮䌖 㿩㬾䠷 㿑䌖䧢㒝䯛䌖㛗 㬾 㥤㛗㬾䕑㬾 㿑䄹㛗 㬾 䠷㒝䄹㛗㝡䨟 㲐䨦㒝 㬾 㛗䌖㬾䱖 㿩䄹㛗䱖㥤㱨

䕌㛗䄹䕑 㒝䯛䌖 䠷䕑㬾䱖䱖䌖䠷㒝 䱖䧢㪮䌖䠷 㒝䄹 㟎䄹䨦㿑㒝䱖䌖䠷䠷 䠷䡷䌖㟎䧢䌖䠷䨟 䧢㿑㟎䱖䨦㥤䧢㿑䶴 䯛䨦䕑㬾㿑䠷䨟 㬾䱖䱖 䠷䄹㛗㒝䠷 䄹㥹 䣨㛗㬾㿑䠷㟎䌖㿑㥤䌖㿑㒝 䱖䧢㥹䌖 㥹䄹㛗䕑䠷䨟 䧢㿑㟎䄹㿑㟎䌖䧢㪮㬾㲐䱖䌖 㥤䧢㪮䧢㿑䌖 㟎㛗䌖㬾㒝䨦㛗䌖䠷䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㛗䌖㿑䄹㿩㿑䌖㥤 䠷䡷䧢㛗䧢㒝䠷 㿩䌖㛗䌖 㬾䱖䱖 䡷䄹㛗㒝㛗㬾㝡䌖㥤 㲐㝡 㬾 䠷䧢㿑䶴䱖䌖 㥹䧢䶴䨦㛗䌖㱨

䳻䌖

㒝䄹

㥤䄹䶴㱨䠷

䌖䠷㲐䶴䧢㿑

㬾䱖䱖

㬾㿑㥤

䕑䌖㥤䌖䠷䌖

䕑䌖㝡䄹㥤㲐

䳻䌖 䨦㿑㥤䌖㛗䠷㒝䄹䄹㥤 㒝䯛䧢䠷 㿩䄹㛗䱖㥤䨟 㬾㿑㥤 㒝䯛䌖 䌖㿑㒝䧢㛗䌖 㲐䄹䨦㿑㥤䱖䌖䠷䠷 䕑㝡䠷㒝䌖㛗㝡䨟 㿩䧢㒝䯛 䯛䧢䠷 䌖㝡䌖䠷䨟 䕑䧢㿑㥤䨟 㬾㿑㥤 䌖㪮䌖㿑 䠷䄹䨦䱖㱨

䳻䌖 㿩㬾䠷 䱖䧢䢎䌖 㬾㿑 䧢㿑㥤䧢㪮䧢㥤䨦㬾䱖䨟 㟎䄹㿑㥤䌖㿑䠷䌖㥤 㪮䌖㛗䠷䧢䄹㿑 䄹㥹 “䛝䌖䧢㛗㥤 䣨䄹㿩㿑䨟” 䧢㿑䠷㒝㬾㿑㒝䱖㝡 㬾㒝㒝㛗㬾㟎㒝䧢㿑䶴 㟎䄹䨦㿑㒝䱖䌖䠷䠷 䠷䨦㛗䡷㛗䧢䠷䌖㥤 䶴㬾䰑䌖䠷㱨

㬾䌖㟎㛗䯛㒝䱖㬾㒝䧢

㬾㿑㥤

㒝䯛䌖

䄹㱨䱖㥤㛗㿩

䨟㿩䯛䄹

㿩䧢䯛㒝

䠷㒝䌖㛗䱖䨦䶴䶴䨟

䳻䌖

㒝䌖䠷㬓

䨦㥹㛗䠷㿑䶴䧢䌖㥹

㥤䄹㿩䨦䱖

䄹㒝

㲐䌖

㟎䯛䄹䠷䄹䌖

䌖䡔䧢䧢㟎㛗䌖䌖䡷㿑㿑䶴

䄹㒝

䱖㒝䠷䧢䱖

䡷䕑䌖䄹㛗㛗㥹㛗䌖

㥹㬾㒝㛗䌖

㥤䡷䡷㬾㬾䌖㛗䌖

“㭼 㬾䕑 䲘㒝㬾㿑 䗊䨦䡷䱖䌖䠷䠷䧢䨟 㭼 㬾䕑 㝡䄹䨦 㬾䱖䱖䨟 㒝䯛䌖 䶴䨦䧢㥤䌖 㥹䄹㛗 㬾䱖䱖 㥹㬾䱖䱖䌖㿑 㬾㿑㥤 䱖䄹䠷㒝 䱖䧢㪮䌖䠷䨟 㭼 㬾䕑 㬾䱖䠷䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䶴䄹㥤 䄹㥹 㒝䯛䌖㬾㒝䌖㛗 㬾㿑㥤 㥤䧢䠷䶴䨦䧢䠷䌖䨟 㲐䌖䱖䄹㿑䶴䧢㿑䶴 㒝䄹 㒝䯛䌖 䗊㛗䌖㬾䕑 㞋䧢㿑䶴㥤䄹䕑㱨”

䩊䲘㜍 䟹㟎㟎䌖䱖䌖㛗㬾㒝䌖㥤 䠷䄹䕑䌖 䡷䱖䄹㒝䠷䨟 䕑䧢䶴䯛㒝 㿩㛗䧢㒝䌖 䌖䡔㒝㛗㬾䠷 㥹䄹㛗 㒝䯛䌖䕑 㿩䯛䌖㿑 㭼 䯛㬾㪮䌖 㒝䧢䕑䌖㱨㱨