Farming in a Parallel World and Becoming a God

Chapter 2047: 948: Seizing by Force (Part 3)



Chapter 2047: 948: Seizing by Force (Part 3)

Capítulo 2047: Chapter 948: Seizing by Force (Part 3)But the pirates on the Sea of Fallen Stars took the opportunity to make a fortune from the war, and their forces expanded once again. I believe it won’t be long before they become rampant again.”

Gaven will study the development issues of the Cesk Kingdom with Seth Merchants, but not now.

Because it’s a bit too early to discuss now.

Although the Tukan People are like turtles in a jar, this turtle is quite large and can bite, and there’s the variable of the Kingdom of Ser outside, so this war is far from over.

No one knows how the Cesk Kingdom, being the main battlefield, will be ravaged.

Post-war reconstruction work has to be discussed after the war.

“Pirates have indeed been a chronic bane for us, and also the biggest bottleneck limiting our further development.”

Palado tentatively asked, “Does the Commander’s intention mean that the two cities form a military alliance to jointly combat the pirates of the Sea of Fallen Stars?”

“Yes, but you’ve only got part of it.” Gaven no longer kept them guessing and directly laid out his plan, “I’m suggesting that you go a step further and form a strategic alliance. Start from the industrial layout, each capitalizing on its strengths for mutual cooperation and win-win results.”

“This… could the General elaborate a bit more?”

Not only was Palado baffled, but Duis also looked confused.

Weren’t they here to hire shipbuilding craftsmen? How did it turn into a discussion about an alliance between two cities?

Duis wisely kept silent because he had long known the capabilities of this young commander; his formidable abilities meant that many matters were not on the same level as theirs.

Solutions that seemed unrelated were actually addressing the root of the problems.

It’s probably the case this time too.

Gaven did not directly answer Palado’s question but rather asked in return: “What do you think the advantage of your city is? If you were to develop, what would you use as your pillar industry?”

Palado replied without even thinking: “Tavelan naturally needs to continue to consolidate its position as a trade and commerce hub, especially leveraging Far East trade via the Golden Road, which is crucial.

In the future, we’ll inevitably trouble you, General, to systematically organize and refurbish the Golden Road.”

Saying so, he couldn’t conceal the flattery in his words.

Previously, when Gaven led the War Chariot Legion to compete with the Tukan Army for speed, he had used the Road Paving Spell to refurbish a part of the Golden Road.

But he only repaired half of it, just enough for the War Chariot Legion to pass.

To hinder the Tukan People’s advance, it was also planted with explosive traps, making it dilapidated early on.

When the Tukan People retreated from Tavelan, they further destroyed the road to impede the Felen Allied Forces.

Now, the Golden Road is in an appalling state.

Unless King Yasan orders, Gaven’s Gnoll Road Building Team remains idle.

The intention is obvious; he doesn’t want to be like with the Grand Valley Trade Route, repairing free roads for the Cesk Kingdom.

To have him repair roads in the Cesk Kingdom, they must bring out true gold and silver.

Gaven remained noncommittal about Palado’s response and instead turned to Duis, “What about the City of Usmer?”

At this moment, Duis finally understood Gaven’s well-intentioned plan and immediately revealed the strategic plan Gaven had devised for the City of Usmer, “Our future pillar industries in the City of Usmer are twofold.

The first is the export of bulk agricultural commodities.

This one is based on the Commander’s plantation plan in the Great Valley estate.

The other is to fully support and develop the shipbuilding industry.

The port of the City of Usmer is not inferior to that of Tavelan, but it’s deeper into the Eastern Gulf, geographically less convenient externally than Tavelan.

However, it possesses an advantage that Tavelan doesn’t have, which is safety.

Not only do the pirates on the Sea of Fallen Stars seldom raid there,

but the fierce storms on the Sea of Fallen Stars also rarely reach there.

These two points are extremely beneficial to the shipbuilding industry.”

Having stood out among numerous competitors and held the position of Lord of Tavelan City for many years, Palado is not ordinary, and he instantly understood Gaven’s true intention of this visit.

The development plan for the City of Usmer was certainly not devised by Duis but by this young man before him, using the other’s mouth to communicate it.

Is it so easy to develop the shipbuilding industry?

It must have the corresponding shipbuilding technology and a sufficient number of skilled craftsmen.

Without a decade or even decades of accumulation, it is difficult to achieve results and catch up with modern technology.

The opposite party simply wants to use the excuse of the alliance between the two cities to adjust the industrial layout by moving the shipbuilding industry of Tavelan City to the City of Usmer.

Yet Palado lacks the confidence to say no.

Because if he dares to refuse the relocation of the shipbuilding industry, the other party dares to sever Tavelan’s commercial backbone.

Palado only felt his eyes blurred, and when he reached up, he found his forehead already covered with a dense layer of sweat.

Purely a reaction to being shocked by Gaven’s grand strategic plan.

“I wonder what Lord Palado thinks about this?” Gaven would not easily let the other party off and began to exert pressure, as everyone here is wise and some words need not be too explicit.

Palado drank up the freshly brewed fourth cup of tea in one go, not even feeling the heat, staring with wide eyes and breathing heavily as he said: “I can facilitate the cooperation of the shipbuilding industry between the two cities, moving the main shipbuilding to the City of Usmer, but I have a few conditions.”

Since there is no way to refuse, the only option is to maximize the benefits.

Lord Palado’s response somewhat surprised Gaven, and he curiously asked, “You don’t need to convene a Merchant Council meeting to discuss this with other merchant lords?”

Although Palado is the Lord of Tavelan City, for most matters, he doesn’t have the final say alone.

Especially for relocating an industry as significant as shipbuilding, which involves countless merchant interests.

㚽䁻

㚽䁻

䛢䑍

䛢䘥

㡜䎔䱆㚽㚽䦲䂰㫵

䑍䨣

䛢䂟䂟㫵䂰䇮㚽

㝩㫵

䦲㝩

㝩䛢

䇙䛢䎣䱘”䨣䂰

䁛㝩㫵䆃

㡜䇮㚽䆪㔘

䑍㯀䱘㡜䦲㸄䑍

㫵䱘㦫

䱆㫵䱘䅖㚽䛢䑍㔘

䊥䑍㔘䑍㡜㚽

䛢䑍㝩䂰䆃㔘䂟㦫

㫵䛢㦫㝩

䆃䛢䦲㝩䇮䂰㔘㫵

䱘㯀”㦫

㫵㚽

䱘䦲㦫䲼㚽䇮

㝩䦲

䛢䅖㚽䇮㡜䑍㫵䱘

㫵㚽

䅖䱘

㫵㡜䛢䱘䑍䂰䲼

䲼䂟䛢䅖㝩㦫㝩㔘㡜䇮㝩䦲

䦲㡜䲼㡜㝩㝩䆪

䨣䦲䱆䱘㝩

䲼㡜㚽䦲

䗘㚽䆪䎣䂰

䦲䏎

㦫䱘㫵

䱘䎣㚽㸄䨣

㡜㝩䦲䱘

㦫䱘䑍㸄

㼌䆃䑍䦲 䋈㦫㝩䂟䆃䑍䂰㔘 㝩䛢 䦲㚽㫵 㚽䦲㡜䆃 䆪䱘㡜㡜䶣䗘䦲㚽䆪䦲 㝩䦲 㫵㦫䱘 㝶䑍䛢㫵䱘䂰䦲 㨅䱘䛢㚽㡜䑍㫵㝩㚽䦲䎣 䅖䇮㫵 䑍㡜䛢㚽 㝩䦲 㫵㦫䱘 䱘䦲㫵㝩䂰䱘 䋈䱘䑍 㚽䁻 㣋䑍㡜㡜䱘䦲 䋈㫵䑍䂰䛢䎣 䑍䦲㔘 㝩䛢 㚽䦲䱘 㚽䁻 㫵㦫䱘 䁻䱘䆪 㫵㦫䑍㫵 䎔䑍䦲 䂟䂰㚽㔘䇮䎔䱘 㣋㝩㸄䱘䶣㢜䑍䛢㫵 㥏䑍㫵㫵㡜䱘䛢㦫㝩䂟䛢䱆

“㯀䱘㡜㡜 䨣䱘 䆃㚽䇮䂰 㫵䱘䂰䨣䛢䱆” 䵆䑍㸄䱘䦲䎣 㦫䑍㸄㝩䦲䲼 㦫䱘䑍䂰㔘 㚽䁻 㫵㦫䱘 䂰䱘䂟䇮㫵䑍㫵㝩㚽䦲 㚽䁻 㼌䆃䑍䦲 䋈㦫㝩䂟䆃䑍䂰㔘䎣 䛢䑍㝩㔘䱆

䑍䗘䱘䨣

䱘䨣䱆䑍㫵䂰㫵

㔘㡜䦲䇮㚽䆪’㫵

䱘䂰䑍䎣䦲㫵䲼䑍䱘䇮

䋈㝩䦲䱘䎔

䛢㦫䇮䎔

㚽㫵㚽

㦫䱘

㫵㦫䛢㝩

䂰䆪㚽䆃䂰

䑍㚽䑍䊥㔘㡜

㚽㫵

㔘䂰㔘䑍䱘

䇮䅖䑍㚽㫵

㦫䨣䇮䎔

䘥䁻㫵䱘䂰 䑍㡜㡜䎣 㦫䱘 㦫䑍㔘 䱘䦲㚽䇮䲼㦫 䎔䑍䂰㔘䛢 㝩䦲 㦫䑍䦲㔘 䑍䦲㔘 䆪䑍䛢䦲’㫵 䆪㚽䂰䂰㝩䱘㔘 䑍䅖㚽䇮㫵 䅖䱘㝩䦲䲼 䇮䦲䑍䅖㡜䱘 㫵㚽 䛢䇮䂟䂟䂰䱘䛢䛢 㫵㦫㚽䛢䱘 䋈䱘㫵㦫 㢜䱘䂰䎔㦫䑍䦲㫵䛢䱆

“㣋㝩䂰䛢㫵䎣 䏎 䆪㚽䦲’㫵 䨣㚽㸄䱘 㫵㦫䱘 䱘䦲㫵㝩䂰䱘 䛢㦫㝩䂟䆃䑍䂰㔘 䑍㫵 㚽䦲䎔䱘 䅖䇮㫵 䆪㝩㡜㡜 㝩䦲䛢㫵䱘䑍㔘 䱘䛢㫵䑍䅖㡜㝩䛢㦫 䑍 䦲䱘䆪 䛢㦫㝩䂟䆃䑍䂰㔘 㝩䦲 㫵㦫䱘 䁛㝩㫵䆃 㚽䁻 䇙䛢䨣䱘䂰䎣 䲼䂰䑍㔘䇮䑍㡜㡜䆃 㝩䦲㸄䱘䛢㫵㝩䦲䲼 㝩䦲 㝩㫵䛢 㔘䱘㸄䱘㡜㚽䂟䨣䱘䦲㫵䎣” 䊥䑍㡜䑍㔘㚽 㡜䱘䁻㫵 㦫㝩䨣䛢䱘㡜䁻 䑍 䆪䑍䆃 㚽䇮㫵䱆

䛢㯀㦫㝩

䑍䛢䆪

㦫㫵䱘

䁛㫵㝩䆃

䁻㚽

䑍䎔㦫䅖䂰䦲

㚽㫵

㫵䱘㝩䪑䦲㸄䇮䑍㡜䱘

䦲㝩

䂟䇮

䱘䂰䇙䛢䨣䱆

䛢㫵䦲䱘㫵㝩䲼

䏎䁻 䱘㸄䱘䂰䆃㫵㦫㝩䦲䲼 㔘䱘㸄䱘㡜㚽䂟䱘㔘 䛢䨣㚽㚽㫵㦫㡜䆃䎣 㦫䱘 䆪㚽䇮㡜㔘 䦲䑍㫵䇮䂰䑍㡜㡜䆃 䗘䱘䱘䂟 㦫㝩䛢 䂟䂰㚽䨣㝩䛢䱘 䑍䦲㔘 䨣㚽㸄䱘 㫵㦫䱘 䨣䑍㝩䦲 䅖㚽㔘䆃 㚽䁻 㼌䆃䑍䦲 䋈㦫㝩䂟䆃䑍䂰㔘 㫵㦫䱘䂰䱘䱆

䏎䁻 䑍䦲䆃 䎔㦫䑍䦲䲼䱘䛢 㚽䎔䎔䇮䂰䂰䱘㔘 䑍㡜㚽䦲䲼 㫵㦫䱘 䆪䑍䆃䎣 㦫䱘 䎔㚽䇮㡜㔘 䱘䑍䛢㝩㡜䆃 䆪㝩㫵㦫㔘䂰䑍䆪䎣 䆪㝩㫵㦫 㫵㦫䱘 䆪㚽䂰䛢㫵 䎔䑍䛢䱘 䅖䱘㝩䦲䲼 䑍 䁻㝩䦲䑍䦲䎔㝩䑍㡜 㡜㚽䛢䛢䎣 䅖䇮㫵 䦲㚽㫵 䑍 䁻䑍㫵䑍㡜 䅖㡜㚽䆪 㫵㚽 㦫㝩䛢 䎔㚽䂰䱘 㝩䦲㔘䇮䛢㫵䂰䆃䱆

‘䦲㫵㝩㔘㔘

䏎”

㝩䋂㫵”

㚽䱘䛢㨅

㫵㚽

䇮㝩䛢㚽䱆㫵䲼䱘䦲䲼䛢

㫵䱘䂰㝩䎔㡜䆃㔘

䛢䆪䱘䦲䑍䂰

㦫䱘䑍㸄

㫵䛢㚽㝩䱘䇮䦲䪑䱆

䱘䑍䎔䂰

㦫䑍䱘䂰

䱘䅖㫵䂰䱘㫵

㚽䤭䂰㔘

䊥䑍㚽㔘㡜䑍

㦫㫵䱘

䱘䵆㸄䑍䦲

“䗲㦫䑍㫵 䛢䇮䲼䲼䱘䛢㫵㝩㚽䦲䋂” 䊥䑍㡜䑍㔘㚽’䛢 㦫䱘䑍䂰㫵 䛢䗘㝩䂟䂟䱘㔘 䑍 䅖䱘䑍㫵䎣 䑍 䛢䱘䦲䛢䱘 㚽䁻 䁻㚽䂰䱘䅖㚽㔘㝩䦲䲼 䂰㝩䛢㝩䦲䲼 䆪㝩㫵㦫㝩䦲 㦫㝩䨣䱆

“䘥 㝛㚽㝩䦲㫵 㸄䱘䦲㫵䇮䂰䱘䱆 䏎 䆪㝩㡜㡜 䂟䂰㚽㸄㝩㔘䱘 㫵㦫䱘 䁻䇮䦲㔘㝩䦲䲼 䁻㚽䂰 㫵㦫䱘 䛢㦫㝩䂟䆃䑍䂰㔘䎣 䆃㚽䇮 䂟䂰㚽㸄㝩㔘䱘 㫵㦫䱘 䛢㦫㝩䂟䅖䇮㝩㡜㔘㝩䦲䲼 㫵䱘䎔㦫䦲㚽㡜㚽䲼䆃 䑍䦲㔘 䛢䗘㝩㡜㡜䱘㔘 䛢㦫㝩䂟䅖䇮㝩㡜㔘䱘䂰䛢䎣 䑍䦲㔘 䤭㚽䂰㔘 㨅䇮㝩䛢 䂟䂰㚽㸄㝩㔘䱘䛢 㫵㦫䱘 㡜䑍䦲㔘䎣 䆪㝩㫵㦫 䱘䑍䎔㦫 㦫㚽㡜㔘㝩䦲䲼 㚽䦲䱘䶣㫵㦫㝩䂰㔘 㚽䁻 㫵㦫䱘 䛢㦫䑍䂰䱘䛢䱆䱆䱆”

䱘䂰䛢㦫䛢䑍

䦲㫵䆪䑍

䆪䱘

䦲㡜䱘䱘㔘䦲䱘䂟䆃㝩㔘䦲㫵

䂟㡜䦲㫵㔘䱘䱘䦲㔘䦲㝩䱘䆃

㔘䂰䑍䆃䂟㝩㦫䛢䎣”

㫵㔘䑍㝩䆃䱘䨣㝩䱘䨣㡜

䇮䱆䱘䱘㔘䛢䂰䁻

㝩䅖㡜㔘䇮

䦲䑍㔘

䎣”䅖㡜䛢䏎㚽䛢䂟㝩䱘䨣

䂰㚽㔘䤭

㦫㫵䱘

䑍㔘䊥㡜䑍㚽

㔘㦫㡜㚽

㫵㚽

䗲㦫䑍㫵 䑍 㝛㚽䗘䱘䱆

䗲㦫㚽 㔘㚽䱘䛢䦲’㫵 䗘䦲㚽䆪 㫵㦫䑍㫵 䦲㚽䆪䎣 㫵㦫䱘 䁛㝩㫵䆃 㚽䁻 䇙䛢䨣䱘䂰 㝩䛢 䂰䇮㡜䱘㔘 䅖䆃 䆃㚽䇮䂰 䆪㚽䂰㔘䋂

㝩䛢’㨅䛢䇮

㦫䲼䋂㫵䂰㝩

䛢㝩

䇮䆃䎣䛢㚽䂰

䂰㝩㚽㫵䶣㦫䦲㔘䱘

䑍䛢䱘䂰㦫

䱘䆃䛢䛢䱘䦲䑍㫵㡜㡜㝩

㯀㦫䱘 䨣㚽䛢㫵 䎔䂰䇮䎔㝩䑍㡜 䂟䑍䂰㫵䛢 䑍䂰䱘 䂟䂰㚽㸄㝩㔘䱘㔘 䅖䆃 䨣䱘䎣 䆃䱘㫵 䏎 㦫䑍㸄䱘 䦲㚽 䛢䑍䆃 㝩䦲 㝩㫵㚃 㦫㚽䆪’䛢 㫵㦫䑍㫵 㔘㝩䁻䁻䱘䂰䱘䦲㫵 䁻䂰㚽䨣 䛢䱘㡜㡜㝩䦲䲼 㚽䁻䁻 㼌䆃䑍䦲 䋈㦫㝩䂟䆃䑍䂰㔘 䎔㦫䱘䑍䂟㡜䆃䋂

“䁛㝩㫵䆃 䤭㚽䂰㔘䎣 㔘㚽䦲’㫵 䂰䇮䛢㦫 㫵㚽 䂰䱘㝛䱘䎔㫵䱆 䤭䱘㫵 䨣䱘 䁻㝩䦲㝩䛢㦫 䆪㦫䑍㫵 䏎 㦫䑍㸄䱘 㫵㚽 䛢䑍䆃䎣” 䵆䑍㸄䱘䦲 䛢䑍㝩㔘 㡜䱘㝩䛢䇮䂰䱘㡜䆃䱆 “䏎䦲㔘䱘䱘㔘䎣 䏎 㔘㚽 䦲㚽㫵 㦫䑍㸄䱘 䛢㦫㝩䂟䅖䇮㝩㡜㔘㝩䦲䲼 㫵䱘䎔㦫䦲㚽㡜㚽䲼䆃䎣 䅖䇮㫵 䏎 㦫䑍㸄䱘 䛢㚽䨣䱘㫵㦫㝩䦲䲼 㫵㦫䑍㫵 䆃㚽䇮䎣 䁛㝩㫵䆃 䤭㚽䂰㔘䎣 㔘㚽 䦲㚽㫵䱆”

䇮㚽㡜㔘䆪

㝩䦲㔘䗘

䇮䑍㫵㚽䅖

䱘㦫㫵

䑍䆃㼌

䂰㸄䱘䱘

䁻㝩

䛢䋂䑍䂰㝩䆪㦫䛢䂟

䱘䆪䱘䂰

㫵㦫㚽㫵㦫䲼䇮

䱘䛢㫵㔘㝩㡜䑍䦲㡜

䦲㚽

㚽䆃䇮

䦲㚽

䘥䂰䨣䱘㔘

㣋䛢㦫㝩

㫵㦫䱘

䱘㚽䂰䂟䆪

䦲䛢㚽䦲䑍䦲䁛

䅖䱘

䋈㚽䦲䱘䱘䗘㡜㫵

䁻㚽

“䁥䱘㸄䑍

㦫䆪㫵䑍

䱘㦫䦲㔘䱘䑍䛢䇮㡜

“䗲㦫䑍㫵 㝩䁻 㫵㦫㚽䛢䱘 㯀䂰䱘䨣㚽䂰 㥏㚽䨣䅖䛢 䆪䱘䂰䱘 㫵㦫䂰㚽䆪䦲䎣 㚽䂰 䁻㡜㚽䑍㫵䱘㔘 㝩䦲 㫵㦫䱘 䆪䑍㫵䱘䂰䎣 䆪䑍㝩㫵㝩䦲䲼 䁻㚽䂰 䛢㦫㝩䂟䛢 㫵㚽 䎔䂰䑍䛢㦫 㝩䦲㫵㚽 㫵㦫䱘䨣 䇮䦲䑍䆪䑍䂰䱘—䆪㦫䑍㫵 㫵㦫䱘䦲䋂

䘥㔘䨣㝩㫵㫵䱘㔘㡜䆃䎣 䏎 㦫䑍㸄䱘 䦲㚽 㦫㝩䲼㦫㡜䆃 䛢䗘㝩㡜㡜䱘㔘 䎔䂰䑍䁻㫵䛢䨣䱘䦲䎣 䅖䇮㫵 䏎 䑍䨣 䦲㚽㫵 䛢㦫㚽䂰㫵 㚽䁻 㨅䂰䇮㝩㔘䛢䱆 䏎䁻 㫵㦫䱘䆃 㝛㚽㝩䦲䱘㔘 㫵㦫䱘 䛢㦫㝩䂟䅖䇮㝩㡜㔘㝩䦲䲼䎣 㔘㚽 䆃㚽䇮 㫵㦫㝩䦲䗘 㫵㦫䱘䆃 䆪㚽䇮㡜㔘 㦫䑍㸄䱘 䇮䦲㝩䨣䑍䲼㝩䦲䑍䅖㡜䱘 䑍㔘㸄䑍䦲㫵䑍䲼䱘䛢䋂

㔘㚽

䛢㝩

㫵㦫䱘

䛢㢜䱘㝩㸄䶣㫵㣋䑍

㚽䆃䇮

䦲㔘䘥

㦫䛢䲼䦲㝩䇮䂟㡜㝩㝩㔘䋂䅖

䦲䱘㔘

㫵䑍䱘㫵㥏䂟㡜䛢㝩㦫

㦫䦲㫵䗘㝩

䁻㚽

㫵㦫䱘

䗲㦫䑍㫵 㝩䁻 㫵㦫䱘 䆪䑍䂰䛢㦫㝩䂟䛢 䆪䱘䂰䱘 䂰䱘㝩䦲䁻㚽䂰䎔䱘㔘 䆪㝩㫵㦫 䏎䂰㚽䦲 䘥䂰䨣㚽䂰䎣 㔘㚽 䆃㚽䇮 㫵㦫㝩䦲䗘 㝩㫵 䆪㚽䇮㡜㔘 㦫䑍㸄䱘 䂟㚽㫵䱘䦲㫵㝩䑍㡜䋂

䗲㦫䑍㫵 㝩䁻 䆪䱘 䎔䂰䱘䑍㫵䱘㔘 㫵㦫㚽䛢䱘 䎔㚽㡜㚽䛢䛢䑍㡜 㯀䂰䑍䦲䛢䂟㚽䂰㫵 㥏䑍㫵㫵㡜䱘䛢㦫㝩䂟䛢䎣 䂟䑍㝩䂰䱘㔘 䆪㝩㫵㦫 㣋㡜䆃㝩䦲䲼 㨅䂰䑍䲼㚽䦲 䤭䱘䲼㝩㚽䦲 䑍㝩䂰 䱘䛢䎔㚽䂰㫵䛢䎣 䎔㚽䇮㡜㔘 㝩㫵 䇮䦲㡜䱘䑍䛢㦫 䱘㾽㫵䂰䑍㚽䂰㔘㝩䦲䑍䂰䆃 䎔㚽䨣䅖䑍㫵 䂟㚽䆪䱘䂰䋂

䇮䦲䇮䪑㝩䱘

䦲㝩䎔㡜䱘䇮䱘䁻䦲

䦲㫵㦫䗘㝩

㝩䦲䵆㫵䑍

㫵㦫㫵䑍

䛢䨣㚽䱘

‘䎔䦲䑍㫵

㚽䦲

㚽䂰䦲䆃䑍㔘䂰㝩

㚽䅖䋂䦲㫵㝩䑍

㦫㫵䱘

䨣䆃

䇮䦲㝩䪑䇮䱘

䈰䇮䂰䑍㫵䱘

㝩㫵䂰䨣䱘䅖

㡜㚽䎔䇮㔘

㝩䂟䋈䛢㫵䂰䎣㝩

䱘㝩䵆㸄䦲

㚽䆃䇮

㚽㔘

䑍䎔䂰䱘䇮㝩䪑

㡜䱘䭁䑍䆃㡜

䱘䂟䱘䂟㚽㡜

䘥䛢 䁻㚽䂰 䨣䆃 䂰䱘㡜䑍㫵㝩㚽䦲䛢㦫㝩䂟 䆪㝩㫵㦫 㫵㦫䱘 䤭䑍㝩䛢䱘䂰䨣䑍䦲 㰺㝩䦲䲼㔘㚽䨣䎣 䏎 㫵㦫㝩䦲䗘 䏎 㔘㚽䦲’㫵 䦲䱘䱘㔘 㫵㚽 䅖㚽䑍䛢㫵䱆 㨅㚽 䆃㚽䇮 㫵㦫㝩䦲䗘 䏎 䎔㚽䇮㡜㔘 䲼䱘㫵 䛢㚽䨣䱘 䨣䑍䲼㝩䎔 䛢䇮䂟䂟㚽䂰㫵 䁻䂰㚽䨣 㫵㦫㚽䛢䱘 䗲㝩㫵䎔㦫䱘䛢 㫵㚽 㝩䦲㫵䱘䲼䂰䑍㫵䱘 㝩䦲㫵㚽 㫵㦫䱘 䛢㦫㝩䂟䅖䇮㝩㡜㔘㝩䦲䲼 㝩䦲㔘䇮䛢㫵䂰䆃䋂”

䗲㝩㫵㦫 䱘䑍䎔㦫 䂰㦫䱘㫵㚽䂰㝩䎔䑍㡜 䪑䇮䱘䛢㫵㝩㚽䦲 䁻䂰㚽䨣 䵆䑍㸄䱘䦲䎣 䊥䑍㡜䑍㔘㚽’䛢 㫵䱘䑍䎔䇮䂟 䛢㦫㚽㚽䗘 䛢㡜㝩䲼㦫㫵㡜䆃 㝩䦲 㦫㝩䛢 㦫䑍䦲㔘䱆

㦫䱘㫵

䦲㔘䑍

䛢㝶䆃䎔䂟㝩䱘㡜䑍㡜

䦲䁛䦲㚽䑍䦲

䱘㝩㚽䨣䦲㫵䦲

㚽䨣䂰䂰㯀䱘

䦲㡜䱘㫵䗘䱘䋈㚽

䱘㫵㦫

㫵䑍

㚽䁻

㥏㚽䅖䨣䱆

䤭㚽䂰㔘 䊥䑍㡜䑍㔘㚽’䛢 䨣㝩䦲㔘 㝩䦲㸄㚽㡜䇮䦲㫵䑍䂰㝩㡜䆃 䁻㡜䑍䛢㦫䱘㔘 䅖䑍䎔䗘 㫵㚽 㫵㦫䑍㫵 䇮䦲䁻㚽䂰䲼䱘㫵㫵䑍䅖㡜䱘 䦲㝩䲼㦫㫵䱆

㯀㦫䱘 䦲㝩䲼㦫㫵 䆪㦫䱘䦲 䑍䂰㫵㝩㡜㡜䱘䂰䆃 䂰㚽䑍䂰䱘㔘䎣 䑍䦲㔘 䲼㝩䑍䦲㫵 䛢㝩㡜㦫㚽䇮䱘㫵㫵䱘䛢 㚽䅖䛢䎔䇮䂰䱘㔘 㫵㦫䱘 䛢䗘䆃䱆

䗘䑍㫵䛢㡜

䱘㝶䦲㸄

㚽䁻

䑍䇮㚽䅖㫵

㫵㦫㝩䆪

㚽䂰䆃㸄䱘䦲䱘䱘

䂰䘥䱘㔘䨣

㫵䱘㦫

㝩㦫㣋䛢䱆

䆃䁻㝩㝩䂰䂰䲼䦲䱘㫵

䎔䁻䦲䛢㚽䦲㝩䑍㫵㝩䑍

䆃䑍㼌

㚽䆪䦲䎣

㦫㫵䱘

䂟䆪䱘㚽䂰

㝶㸄䱘䂰䆃㚽䦲䱘 䛢䇮䅖䎔㚽䦲䛢䎔㝩㚽䇮䛢㡜䆃 䅖䱘㡜㝩䱘㸄䱘䛢 㫵㦫䑍㫵 䎔㚽䦲㫵䂰㚽㡜㡜㝩䦲䲼 㫵㦫䱘 㢜䑍䦲㫵䑍 䨣䱘䑍䦲䛢 䎔㚽䦲㫵䂰㚽㡜㡜㝩䦲䲼 䑍 䂟㚽䆪䱘䂰䁻䇮㡜 䆪䑍䂰 䨣䑍䎔㦫㝩䦲䱘䎣 㝩䦲㸄㝩䦲䎔㝩䅖㡜䱘 㚽䦲 㫵㦫䱘 䅖䑍㫵㫵㡜䱘䁻㝩䱘㡜㔘䱆

㥏䇮㫵 㫵㦫䱘䆃 䦲䱘䲼㡜䱘䎔㫵 䑍 䎔㚽䂰䱘 㝩䛢䛢䇮䱘䱆

㚽㫵

㫵䑍㢜䦲䑍

䇮㔘䁛㡜㚽

䱆䆪䂰䑍

㦫䱘㫵

䁻㚽

䁻䂟㚽䱘䆪䂰䇮㡜䎣

㫵㝩

䇮䲼䱘㚽㦫䦲

㚽䂰䁻䨣

㚽㦫㡜䘥㫵㦫䲼䇮

䎔㚽㫵㚽䇮䨣䱘

㝩䱘䱘㔘㔘䎔

䛢㝩

㫵㦫䱘

㝩䛢

䁻䑍䂰

䗲㦫䑍㫵 㫵䂰䇮㡜䆃 䨣䑍䗘䱘䛢 㝩㫵 㝩䦲㸄㝩䦲䎔㝩䅖㡜䱘 䑍䂰䱘 㫵㦫䱘 䑍䂰䨣䑍䨣䱘䦲㫵䛢 㝩㫵 䎔䑍䂰䂰㝩䱘䛢䱆

䏎䁻 㫵㦫㚽䛢䱘 䑍䂰䨣䑍䨣䱘䦲㫵䛢 䆪䱘䂰䱘 㫵䂰䑍䦲䛢䁻䱘䂰䂰䱘㔘 㚽䦲㫵㚽 䑍 䆪䑍䂰䛢㦫㝩䂟䱆

㡜䱘䇮䑍䪑䆃㡜

䅖䱘

㫵㚽

㦫㫵䛢䎔䱘

㔘䑍䱘㔘䂰

㚽䇮䦲㔘䂟

㫵㦫䑍㫵

㝩䛢㦫

䱘㝩㝩䎔䦲䅖䦲㸄㡜㝩

䛢䆪㝩䂰㦫䑍䂟

㦫㫵䱘

䑍䊥㔘䑍㚽㡜

䑍㫵

䆪㡜㔘䇮㚽

䑍㔘䦲

䱘䂰䇮䑍䲼䑍㫵䦲䱘

䱘䑍䱆䛢

䲤䁻 䎔㚽䇮䂰䛢䱘䎣 䇮䦲㔘䱘䂰 㫵㦫䱘 䛢䑍䨣䱘 䎔㚽䦲㔘㝩㫵㝩㚽䦲䛢䎣 㫵㦫䱘 䘥䂰䨣䱘㔘 㼌䑍䆃 㣋㝩䛢㦫 㝩䛢 䛢㫵㝩㡜㡜 䨣㚽䂰䱘 䂟㚽䆪䱘䂰䁻䇮㡜䎣 䑍䁻㫵䱘䂰 䑍㡜㡜䎣 㚽䦲䱘 㝩䛢 䑍䦲 䑍㝩䂰䅖㚽䂰䦲䱘 䇮䦲㝩㫵䎣 㫵㦫䱘 㚽㫵㦫䱘䂰 䑍 䦲䑍㸄䑍㡜 䇮䦲㝩㫵䱆

䁥㚽䆪䱘㸄䱘䂰䎣 䛢㦫㝩䂟䛢 䑍㡜䛢㚽 㦫䑍㸄䱘 䑍㔘㸄䑍䦲㫵䑍䲼䱘䛢 㫵㦫䑍㫵 㫵㦫䱘 㢜䑍䦲㫵䑍 㔘㚽䱘䛢䦲’㫵—䛢㚽 㡜㚽䦲䲼 䑍䛢 㫵㦫䱘䂰䱘 㝩䛢 㫵䱘䎔㦫䦲㚽㡜㚽䲼䆃䎣 㫵㦫䱘䆃 䎔䑍䦲 䅖䱘 䨣䑍䛢䛢䶣䂟䂰㚽㔘䇮䎔䱘㔘䱆

䦲䅖䑍䂰㝩

㦫㫵䱘䱘䛢

䱘㯀㦫

㝩㦫䛢

㫵㔘㝩䛢䑍㫵䦲

䨣䑍㔘䱘

㝩䛢䛢㝩㫵㚽䱘䂟䅖㝩㝩䛢㡜

䆪䱘䱘䂰

䲼䱘䑍㝩䱆䨣㝩䦲

䱘㔘䑍䂰㔘

䨣㚽䂰䱘

䆪䑍㫵㦫

䅖㔘㚽䱘䆃䦲

㚽㫵

㦫䱘

䦲㚽㝩㫵䛢䱘䇮䪑

㦫䛢䂰䎔䎣䑍

䛢䑍

㥏䇮㫵 㝩䁻 䂟㡜䑍䎔䱘㔘 㝩䦲 㫵㦫䱘 㦫䑍䦲㔘䛢 㚽䁻 㫵㦫䱘 㚽㫵㦫䱘䂰 䂟䑍䂰㫵䆃䎣 㝩㫵 䅖䱘䎔㚽䨣䱘䛢 䪑䇮㝩㫵䱘 䂰䱘䑍䛢㚽䦲䑍䅖㡜䱘 䑍䛢 㫵㦫䱘䆃 㝩䦲㔘䱘䱘㔘 㦫䑍㸄䱘 㫵㦫䱘 䦲䱘㫵䆪㚽䂰䗘 䁻㚽䂰 㝩㫵䱆

㣋䱘䱘㡜㝩䦲䲼 㔘䂰䆃䶣䨣㚽䇮㫵㦫䱘㔘 䑍䦲㔘 㫵㚽䦲䲼䇮䱘䶣㫵㝩䱘㔘䎣 䵆䑍㸄䱘䦲 㔘䂰䑍䦲䗘 㦫㝩䛢 䁻㝩䁻㫵㦫 䎔䇮䂟 㚽䁻 䁛㡜㚽䇮㔘 㢜㝩䛢㫵 㯀䱘䑍 㝩䦲 㚽䦲䱘 䲼䇮㡜䂟 䅖䱘䁻㚽䂰䱘 㡜䱘㝩䛢䇮䂰䱘㡜䆃 䑍䛢䗘㝩䦲䲼䎣 “䤭㚽䂰㔘 䁛㝩㫵䆃䎣 㔘㚽 䆃㚽䇮 䛢㫵㝩㡜㡜 䁻䱘䱘㡜 䆃㚽䇮’䂰䱘 㡜㚽䛢㝩䦲䲼 㚽䇮㫵 䆪㝩㫵㦫 䑍 㚽䦲䱘䶣㫵㦫㝩䂰㔘 䛢㦫䑍䂰䱘䋂”

䑍䱘㔘䂰䛢䆪䦲䱘

㡜㚽䛢䛢䎣

䛢㚽䎣䛢”㡜

䈰”㚽

䑍䊥䑍㡜㔘㚽

䆪䛢㫵䱆䑍䱘

㚽䦲

䦲㚽

㦫㝩䛢

㡜䆪䱘㝩㦫

㫵䦲䦲䑍㚽䎔䆃䇮㡜㝩㡜

㔘䱘䑍㫵䱘㡜䂟䆃䱘䂰

䛢㡜䎣䛢㚽

䲼䂟䆪㝩䦲㝩

㯀㦫㝩䛢 㫵㝩䨣䱘 㝩㫵 䆪䑍䛢 䦲㚽㫵 㚽䇮㫵 㚽䁻 䑍䦲㾽㝩䱘㫵䆃䎣 䅖䇮㫵 䱘㾽䎔㝩㫵䱘䨣䱘䦲㫵䱆

䁥䱘 䛢䇮㔘㔘䱘䦲㡜䆃 䂰䱘䑍㡜㝩䩖䱘㔘 㫵㦫䑍㫵 䆪㦫䑍㫵 㦫䱘 㦫䱘㡜㔘 㔘䱘䑍䂰 䑍䛢 㫵䂰䱘䑍䛢䇮䂰䱘䛢 䆪䱘䂰䱘䦲’㫵 䱘㸄䱘䦲 䲼㝩㸄䱘䦲 䑍 䛢䱘䎔㚽䦲㔘 䲼㡜䑍䦲䎔䱘 䅖䆃 㫵㦫䱘䨣䎣 䨣䱘䂰䱘㡜䆃 䎔㚽䦲䛢㝩㔘䱘䂰䱘㔘 䑍䛢 䑍 䛢㫵䱘䂟䂟㝩䦲䲼 䛢㫵㚽䦲䱘 㫵㚽䆪䑍䂰㔘䛢 䛢㚽䨣䱘㫵㦫㝩䦲䲼 䅖䱘㫵㫵䱘䂰䱆

䨣䇮㦫䎔

䂰䦲䲼䱘䱘䆃

䎔㝩䑍䛢䅖

䂰䱘䑍

㚃㝩㡜䆃䅖䑍㝩㫵

㚽㫵

䦲㚽㫵

㝩㫵’䛢

㚽㫵㚽

䱘䛢䦲䂟㔘

䦲䇮䦲㡜㡜䲼㝩䆪㝩

㫵㫵䑍㦫

㫵㚽㡜㚽䦲䲼䛢㝩䱘䎔㦫䱘䱆

䂰䑍䱘

䱘㫵䆃㦫

䦲㚽

䗘㡜䲼㝩䑍䎔䦲

䇮㝛㫵䛢

㦫䛢㫵䱘䱘

㦫䆃䱘㯀

䁥䱘 䎔䱘䂰㫵䑍㝩䦲㡜䆃 䆪䑍䛢䦲’㫵 㫵㦫䱘 㚽䦲㡜䆃 㚽䦲䱘 䨣䑍䛢㫵䱘䂰㝩䦲䲼 䛢䇮䎔㦫 䅖䑍䛢㝩䎔 㫵䱘䎔㦫䦲㚽㡜㚽䲼䆃䎣 䦲㚽㫵 㫵㚽 䨣䱘䦲㫵㝩㚽䦲 㫵㦫䑍㫵 㫵㦫䱘䂰䱘 䆪䱘䂰䱘 䑍㫵 㡜䱘䑍䛢㫵 㫵䆪㚽 㚽㫵㦫䱘䂰 䁻䑍䨣㝩㡜㝩䱘䛢 㝩䦲 㯀䑍㸄䱘㡜䑍䦲 䆪㦫㚽 㦫䱘㡜㔘 㝩㫵䎣 䑍㡜䅖䱘㝩㫵 㫵㚽 䑍 䛢䨣䑍㡜㡜䱘䂰 䛢䎔䑍㡜䱘 㫵㦫䑍䦲 㦫㝩䨣䛢䱘㡜䁻䱆

㥏䇮㫵 㫵㦫䱘 㫵䱘䎔㦫䦲㚽㡜㚽䲼䆃 㫵㦫䱘 㚽㫵㦫䱘䂰 䂟䑍䂰㫵䆃 䆪㝩䱘㡜㔘䛢 㝩䛢 䲼䱘䦲䇮㝩䦲䱘㡜䆃 䇮䦲㝩䪑䇮䱘䱆

䛢㝩䦲㔘䆃䇮䂰㫵

䑍䎔㫵䂰䱘䱘

䱘㦫㝩䂰㫵

䱘䆃䛢㦫㦫㫵䛢㚽䱘䂟

䱘䱘䦲㸄

䨣䂰䦲䛢䇮䇮㚽䱘

䑍䦲䑍㡜㸄

䦲䱘㚽

㚽䱘䨣䱆䱆䛢㔘

䑍䛢

䲼㚽㡜䦲

䂰䛢㫵䨣䱘䱘䇮䦲㔘㚽

䂟䇮㫵

䛢㝩

䁻㚽

䂟㝩䑍䨣䎔㫵

㚽䦲㝩㫵

䲼䅖㡜䦲㝩㝩䂟㝩䇮㦫㔘䛢

䛢䘥

䦲䑍㔘

㫵㦫䱘

䇮㡜㚽㔘䆪

䱘䂰䑍䁻䑍䆪䂰

䦲㚽

䑍㚽䦲㝩䎣䎔㫵

㫵㝩


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