の教室全集影音先锋

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      吉卜力作品合集 收录吉卜力工作室24部长片 国粤英日四语 10bit HEVC版本 增加网盘资源


      每個人心中都有一個吉蔔力,或者說每個人心中都有一個宮崎駿,我覺得有些人就是在某些地方有天賦,很奇怪,他的東西就是按照他的方式搞的,但是卻莫名符合大部分人的欣賞水平,戳到了大家的那個點,可以說吉蔔力或者說宮崎駿就是這麽一個有天賦的人,一個小女孩,一個保護她的男孩子,就構成了他的一個基本模式,別人卻學不去。還有裏面的音樂,也是非常貼切適合且感人的,就好比天空之城,這麽多年過去了,我聽了仍然很沈迷,絲毫不覺得那是上個世紀的東西。這是由一兩個核心人物主導,許多工作人員共同協作産出了許多跨時代東西的年代,未來也可能不會有這麽有質感且深入人心的大量作品了,有空靜下心來就看看吧,總會找到自己放松的一片小天地的。而且每個人總會在這些童話般的故事裏找到自己最喜歡的那個故事,就好比《千與千尋》雖然是票房之最,但我看了很多遍了,我心裏在這個合集裏它還是排不到前十,吉蔔力的好片子太多,希望你也能在裏面找到喜歡的故事。



      ----國配特效字幕來自baick@CMCT,特此鳴謝!----


      【吉卜力作品 MNHD-FRDS版本合集】片目(国粤英日四语 收录吉卜力工作室24部长片、2部短片、久石让武道馆演奏会及梦与狂想的王国):



      魯邦三世卡裏奧斯特羅城.Lupin.III.The.Castle.of.Cagliostro.1979.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.MNHD-FRDS

      風之谷.Nausicaa.Of.The.Valley.Of.The.Wind.1984.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      天空之城.Laputa.Castle.In.The.Sky.1986.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      龍貓.My.Neighbor.Totoro.1988.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      螢火蟲之墓.Grave.of.the.Fireflies.1988.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      魔女宅急便.Kiki's.Delivery.Service.1989.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      歲月的童話.Only.Yesterday.1991.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.3Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      紅豬.Porco.Rosso.1992.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      聽到濤聲.Ocean.Waves.1993.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.2Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      百變狸貓.The.Racoon.War.1994.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      側耳傾聽.Whisper.of.the.Heart.1995.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      幽灵公主.Princess Mononoke.1997.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      我的鄰居山田君.My.Neighbors.the.Yamadas.1999.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.3Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      千與千尋的神隱.Spirited.Away.2001.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      貓的報恩.The.Cat.Returns.2002.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      哈爾的移動城堡.Howl's.Moving.Castle.2004.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      地海戰記.Tales.from.Earthsea.2006.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      懸崖上的金魚公主.Ponyo.on.the.Cliff.2008.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      借東西的小人阿莉埃蒂.The.Borrower.Arrietty.2010.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.3Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      來自虞美人之坡.From.Up.on.Poppy.Hill.2011.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.3Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      起風了.The.Wind.Rises.2013.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      輝夜姬物語.The.Tale.of.Princess.Kaguya.2013.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.4Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      記憶中的瑪妮.When.Marnie.Was.There.2014.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.2Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      紅海龜.The.Red.Turtle.2016.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.MNHD-FRDS

      On.Your.Mark.1995.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.2Audio.MNHD-FRDS

      吉蔔力工作室特別短片合輯2.Ghiblies.Episode.2.2002.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.MNHD-FRDS

      久石讓在武道館.Hisaishi.Joe.in.Budoukan.2008.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.MNHD-FRDS

      夢與狂想的王國.The.Kingdom.of.Dreams.and.Madness.2013.BluRay.1080p.x265.10bit.MNHD-FRDS



      【吉蔔力工作室】:


      成立時間:1985年6月

      總部地點:東京都小金井市梶野町1丁目4番25號

      産業:動畫工作室

      産品:動畫電影、電視廣告、電視電影、寫實電影等的企劃、制作、電視遊戲

      員工數:約130人


      曆史沿革:

      1985年6月15日,制作《风之谷》的团队“トップクラフト(Top Craft)”在德间书店出资帮助下,正式转型为吉卜力株式会社(类似股份有限公司),社长由德间的社长德间康快出任,工作室实际上的负责人为Top Craft的代表取缔役(约等于董事长的职位)原彻。一开始的运作方式为,要制作作品的时候便集合制作团队,作品完成后随即解散。動畫师的酬劳是依照票房等收入采比例分配制,之后则为了培养動畫制作人材而改为固定的薪水,以作为制作高品质和稳定的作品之据点。

      1991年時由于對經營方針的意見不同,原徹辭去常務董事一職,由鈴木敏夫接任。

      1992年8月6日公司搬遷到位于東小金井的新址。

      1997年6月由于公司經營狀況開始惡化,被德間書店納入。同年的作品《幽靈公主》完成後,宮崎駿退出吉蔔力。

      1999年成爲德間書店的其中一個事業部門,同年宮崎駿以所長的身分重回吉蔔力。

      2000年時,長年支援吉蔔力工作室的財務,同時也是德間書店的社長—德間康快去世。

      2004年再次使用相同的名稱成立了株式會社。

      2005年4月脫離德間書店,成爲獨立的公司。由鈴木敏夫出任代表取締役社長,宮崎駿與史提芬·艾伯特出任公司的董事。


      名稱由來:

           “吉卜力”(Ghibli)是由宫崎骏命名,意思是在撒哈拉沙漠上季节热风。吉卜力工作室从2003年开始发行的杂志名字也叫《热风》。工作室的标志是使用他们的作品《龙猫》中的登场角色—“龙猫”(トトロ)来设计的。吉卜力的附属工作室“卡吉诺工作室(スタジオカジノ)”是以公司所在的“小金井市梶野町”的发音来命名的。


      制作團隊:


      現任成員

           米林宏昌(导演、作画) 高畑勋(演出) 百瀬义行(作画、演出) 武重洋二(美术) 吉田升(美术)宫崎吾郎(导演、宫崎骏的长男)近藤胜也(作画)男鹿和雄(美术)


      前任成員

           宫崎骏(作画、演出)原彻(制作人) 木原浩胜(制作进行) 田中荣子(前线制作人) 佐藤好春(作画) 近藤喜文(已过世,作画、演出)金田伊功(已过世,作画)安藤雅司(作画) 小西贤一(作画)山本二三(美术) 高坂希太郎(作画) 吉田健一(作画) 桑名郁朗(作画) 笹木信作(作画) 须藤典彦(演出) 大冢雅彦(演出) 宫地昌幸(演出) 细田守(监督)保田道世(色彩设计)


      配音演員

           吉卜力的動畫作品大多起用实力派的知名配音演員(日本称为“声优”)。从“红猪”开始主角的配音(CV、Character Voice)大都聘请非专业配音演員。例如《哈尔移动城堡》中的木村拓哉、《地海传说》的冈田准一。

           吉卜力動畫的一个特色就是有许多儿童角色,只要是在宫崎骏的作品中,都会起用与那个角色相同年龄的演员作为配音演員。宫崎骏表示“小孩子的声音当然是由小孩子来配音最自然”。

           此外在吉卜力制作的广告和预告片中,旁白向来都是由矢岛正明配音。


      我自己經過多次測試,都是能下載的,但是留言有說不能下載,所以增加阿裏雲盤資源。


      藍光電影下載幫助:
      1、想要轉存網盤的朋友,請點此了解網盤在線觀看教程
      2、第一時間更新的高清電影基本沒有內置字幕,請點此字幕下載
      3、根據命名,可以知道資源的來源和壓制的方法,具體參考資源格式說明
      4、一些不常見格式的藍光電影,比如.m2ts的文件,請安裝相應的播放器再進行觀看。
      5、沒有迅雷會員的朋友可以使用本站提供的破解迅雷會員下載工具,下載藍光電影的必備工具。
      6、本站大部分資源有多版本,同樣的分辨率,文件大的更清晰,請根據自己的存儲空間和網絡情況選擇。
       

      高清片源 (码率和清晰度更高,满足高清发烧友的观影需求,一般需要外挂字幕)    資源格式說明

        
      阿裏雲盤
      ‘I don’t dictate to you at all,’ he said. ‘I only remind you of Norah’s wishes.’ The bright little face turned suddenly, and its owner saw the Doctor standing near with an amused expression on his features, and, perhaps, a little moisture in his eyes. She uttered a cheery "Good-morning," to which the Doctor returned, "So much for history. Now we'll talk about whales. About ten miles out from Yokohama the party turned from the Tokaido, and took a route through the fields. They found the track rather narrow in places; and on one occasion, when they met a party in jin-riki-shas, it became necessary to step to the ground to allow the vehicles to be lifted around. Then, too, there had been a heavy rain—the storm that cut short their visit to Tokio; and in some places the road had been[Pg 164] washed out so that they were obliged to walk around the breaks. Their journey was consequently somewhat retarded; but they did not mind the detention, and had taken such an early start that they had plenty of time to reach Enoshima before dark. They met groups of Japanese peasants returning home from their work; and in every instance the latter made way for the strangers, and stood politely by the roadside as the man-power carriages went rolling by. Frank wanted to make sketches of some of the groups, and was particularly attracted by a woman who was carrying a teapot in one hand and a small roll or bundle under her other arm. By her side walked a man carrying a couple of buckets slung from a pole, after the fashion so prevalent in Japan and China. He steadied the pole with his hands, and seemed quite indifferent to the presence of the foreigners. Both were dressed in loosely fitting garments, and their feet were shod with sandals of straw. The Japanese sandal is held in place by two thongs that start from near the heel on each side and come together in front. The wearer inserts the thong between the great toe and its neighbor. When he is barefooted this operation is easily performed; and, in order to accommodate his stockinged feet to the sandal, the Japanese stocking has a separate place for the "thumb-toe," as one of them called the largest of his "foot-fingers." The foot of the Japanese stocking closely resembles the mitten of America, which young women in certain localities are said to present to discarded admirers. In a little while all was arranged to the satisfaction of everybody concerned, and our friends were installed in a Japanese inn. What they did there, and what they saw, will be made known in the next chapter. I took my weapon into my bridle-hand by the barrel and began to draw from my bosom the empty envelope addressed Coralie Rothvelt. At the same time I let my horse move forward again, while I still listened backward with my brain as busy as a mill. Was there here no hidden succor? Was that no part of Ned Ferry's plan--if the plan was his? Were those villains waiting yet, up at the ford? I could hear nothing at my back but the singing of innumerable birds. "Good-morning, Smith, who is your prisoner?" II IV "It was a characteristic of the earlier stages of the human race," said the Clockwork man, as though he were addressing a class of students upon some abstruse subject, "that they exercised the arts of legerdemain, magic, illusion and so forth, purely as forms of entertainment in their leisure hours." "There was a man," continued the Curate, in ancient-mariner-like tones, "at the Templars' Hall. I thought he was the conjurer, but he wasn't—at least, I don't think so. He did things—impossible things—" His body was scarred and disfigured, as though many surgical operations had been performed upon it. The promise thrilled on Hetty's lips. But might not this be all part of the conspiracy by which her lover's good name had terribly suffered? Perhaps later on, her testimony on this head might be all important. A quarter of an hour passed, and then a trim maid with dark short hair, and in the smart starched style peculiar to good servants, appeared. She gave one glance of indifference at Prout, and then passed down the stairs. From his window he could see the very neat figure crossing the square. "I dare say," said Lawrence, drily, "but you didn't know. There would have been another murder on your soul had it not been for my niece. Maitrank was furious. But he was a valuable ally to me, in fact I calculated on that. By his means I forced a confession from you that it was yourself who paid the rest of those notes to Isidore, and this I can prove out of your own mouth, by the production of that tuberose perfume. You were mad and desperate that night to part with the last of your store." An apprentice in entering the workshop should avoid everything tending to an appearance of fastidiousness, either of manner or dress; nothing is more repulsive to workmen, and it may be added, nothing is more out of place in a machine shop than to divide one's time between the work and an attempt to keep clean. An effort to keep as neat as the nature of the work will admit is at all times right, but to dress in clothing not appropriate, or to allow a fear of grease to interfere with the performance of work, is sure to provoke derision. We met only a few Germans on the road from Brussels to Charleroi, and found no garrison except in the townlet Hal. Very little burning had taken place on this road, but so much the more plundering and looting. A woman took us all over her house in the neighbourhood of Brussels, to show us the total wrecking. Small pieces of furniture were generally taken away, but stoves, kitcheners, and cupboards were smashed. She herself had had her face badly wounded, because she had hidden herself in the cellar when the Germans came near, and they had beaten her out of that with their rifle-butts. Many other women were treated in the same manner. "24.9.1914, In his criticism on the ideal theory, Aristotle argues that it is unproved; that the consequences to which it leads would be rejected by the idealists themselves; that it involves a needless addition to the sum of existence; that it neither explains the origin of things nor helps us to understand them, while taking away from them their substantial reality; that the Ideas are merely sensible objects hypostasised, like the anthropomorphic divinities of primitive men; that, to speak of them as patterns, in whose likeness the world was created, is a mere idle metaphor; that, even assuming the existence of such patterns, each individual must be made in the likeness, not of one, but of many ideas—a human being, for instance, must be modelled after the ideal biped and the ideal animal, as well as after the ideal man; while many of the ideas themselves, although all are supposed to exist absolutely, must be dependent on other and simpler types; finally, that, assuming an idea for every abstract relation, there must be ideas to represent the relation between every sensible object and its prototype, others for the new relations thus introduced, and so on to infinity. Such are the closing words of what was possibly Aristotle’s last work, the clear confession of his monotheistic creed. A monotheistic creed, we have said, but one so unlike all other religions, that its nature has been continually misunderstood. While some have found in it a theology like that of the Jews or of Plato or of modern Europe, others have resolved it into a vague pantheism. Among the latter we are surprised to find Sir A. Grant, a writer to whom the Aristotelian texts must be perfectly familiar both in spirit and in letter. Yet nothing can possibly be more clear and emphatic than the declarations they contain. Pantheism identifies God with the world; Aristotle separates them as pure form from form more or less alloyed with matter. Pantheism denies personality to God; Aristotle gives him unity, spirituality, self-consciousness, and happiness. If these qualities do not collectively involve personality, we should like to know what does. Need we351 remind the accomplished editor of the Nicomachean Ethics how great a place is given in that work to human self-consciousness, to waking active thought as distinguished from mere slumbering faculties or unrealised possibilities of action? And what Aristotle regarded as essential to human perfection, he would regard as still more essential to divine perfection. Finally, the God of pantheism is a general idea; the God of Aristotle is an individual. Sir A. Grant says that he (or it) is the idea of Good.247 We doubt very much whether there is a single passage in the Metaphysics to sanction such an expression. Did it occur, however, that would be no warrant for approximating the Aristotelian to the Platonic theology, in presence of such a distinct declaration as that the First Mover is both conceptually and numerically one,248 coming after repeated repudiations of the Platonic attempt to isolate ideas from the particulars in which they are immersed. Then Sir A. Grant goes on to speak of the desire felt by Nature for God as being itself God,249 and therefore involving a belief in pantheism. Such a notion is not generally called pantheism, but hylozoism, the attribution of life to matter. We have no desire, however, to quarrel about words. The philosopher who believes in the existence of a vague consciousness, a spiritual effort towards something higher diffused through nature, may, if you will, be called a pantheist, but not unless this be the only divinity he recognises. The term is altogether misleading when applied to one who also proclaims the existence of something in his opinion far higher, better and more real—a living God, who transcends Nature, and is independent of her, although she is not independent of him. said they had, and they've invited us to their dance next spring. I thought Daddy had had you come there to meet me or a surprise. [Pg 19] Another term occupying a very large place in Aristotle’s philosophy was well adapted to mediate between and eventually to unite the two speculative extremes. This was Substance; in logic the subject of predication, in metaphysics the substratum of qualities, the ο?σ?α or Being of the Ten Categories. Now First Matter might fairly claim the position of a universal subject or substance, since it was invested with every sensible quality in turn, and even, as the common element of all Forms, with every thinkable quality as well. Aristotle himself had finally pronounced for the individual compound of Form and Matter as the true substance. Yet he also speaks as if the essential definition of a thing constituted the thing itself; in which case Form alone could be the true subject; and a similar claim might be put forward on behalf of the Plotinian One.561 Quick to take it, dipping a wing and kicking rudder, the seaplane’s pilot swerved a little, leveled off, and set down in a smother of foam, and on his wing also a man climbed close to the tip! “You won’t make me believe Dick flew that-there crate,” he declared. 173 It was very short, but he held it a long time before he gave it back. "I don't know," Cairness answered, with a lightness that was anything but cheering. In April the inferior prisoners were tried in the Common Pleas. Forster, brigadier Mackintosh, and twenty of their accomplices were condemned; but Forster, Mackintosh, and some of the others, managed, like Wintoun, to escape; so that, of all the crowds of prisoners, only twenty-two in Lancashire and four in London were hanged. Bills of attainder were passed against the Lords Tullibardine, Mar, and many others who were at large. Above a thousand submitted to the king's mercy, and petitioned to be transported to America. Meanwhile the Whigs were anxious to add fresh security to their own lease of office. At the last election they had procured the return of a powerful majority; but two years out of the triennial term had expired, and they looked with apprehension to the end of the next year, when a dissolution must take place. They were aware that there were still strong plottings and secret agitations for the restoration of the banished dynasty. By both the king and his Ministers all Tories were regarded as Jacobites, and it was resolved to keep them out of office, and, as much as possible, out of Parliament. They had the power in their own hands in this Parliament, and, in order to keep it, they did not hesitate to destroy that Triennial Act for which their own party had claimed so much credit in 1694, and substitute a Septennial Act in its place. They would thereby give to their own party in Parliament more than a double term of the present legal possession of their seats. Instead of one year, they would be able to look forward four years without any fear of[33] Tory increase of power through a new election. On the 10th of April, Devonshire, Lord Steward of the Household, moved the repeal of the Triennial Act, long lauded as one of the bulwarks of our liberties, under the now convenient plea that it had been "found very grievous and burthensome, by occasioning much greater and more continued expenses in order to elections of members to serve in Parliament, and more lasting heats and animosities amongst the subjects of this realm than ever were known before the said clause was enacted." Consciousness began returning more swiftly, though the muscles were yet paralyzed. He could feel to the tips of his fingers, yet he could not move them. He began to understand the words spoken about him, and comprehend their meaning. The first sentence that filtered its way to his brain was Lieut. Bowersox's order to the regiment: missis klEgg shE cride. "Word came to Headquarters," explained the Lieutenant, "that a squad of recruits were rioting, and had killed a citizen, and I was sent down here on the run to stop it and arrest the men. This Sergeant, who seems to be in command, refuses to go with me." "'Tain't enough," answered Groundhog angrily. "Look here, Jeff Billings, I know you of old. You've played off on me before, and I won't stand no more of it. Jest bekase you've bin a Lieutenant-Colonel and me only a teamster you've played the high and mighty with me. I'm jest as good as you are any day. I wouldn't give a howl in the infernal regions for your promises. You come down now with $100 in greenbacks and I'll go along and help you all I kin. If you don't—" CHAPTER XIII. THE FIRST DAY OF THE ATLANTA CAMPAIGN. "Nope," answered Pete. "But we both got awfully scratched runnin' through that brush. Say, wasn't the way the boys jumped the works and waded into them sardines just grand?" Specification II.—That said Corp'l William I.. Elliott, Co. Q, 200th Ind. Vol. Inf., did threaten physical violence to the said Second Lieut, Adolph Steigermeyer, Second Corps, U. S. Engr's, his superior officer, and who was in the performance of his duty, contrary to the 9th Article of War, and the discipline of the Armies of the United States. This on the march of the army from Dalton, Ga., to Calhoun, Ga., and on the 16th day of May, 1864. "It is good to have," Cadnan said. He was determined to keep his end of the odd conversation up, even if it seemed to be leading nowhere. The work went on, for Cadnan as well as for the masters. Days passed and he began to improve slightly: he received no further discipline, and he was beginning to settle into a routine. Only thoughts of Dara disturbed him—those, and the presence of Marvor, who was still apparently waiting to make good his incomprehensible threat. Dodd heard the words echoing in his mind that night, and the next night, and the next. All that she had said: Yet they were safe—so far, so far. They walked toward the door now, a step at a time. Each step seemed to take an hour, a full day. Dara walked ahead, straight and tall: Cadnan caught up with her, and she put out her hand. There was no more than an instant of hesitation. He took the hand. There was a silence. This is the end. He had hit Cadnan: in those few seconds he had acted just as a good slaver was supposed to act. And that discovery shocked him: even more than his response during the attempted escape, it showed him what he had become. "Do you think it's worth while?" Benjamin occasionally stole afternoons in Rye—if he was discovered there would be furious scenes with Reuben, but he had learned cunning, and also, being of a sporting nature, was willing to take risks. Some friends of his were building a ship down at the Camber. Week by week he watched her grow, watched the good timber fill in her ribs, watched her decks spread themselves, watched her masts rise, and at last smelt the good smell of her tarring. She was a three-masted schooner, and her first voyage was to be to the Canaries. Her builders drank many a toast with Backfield's[Pg 270] truant son, who gladly risked his father's blows to be with them in their work and hearty boozing. He forgot the farmyard smells he hated in the shipyard smells he loved, and his slavery in oaths and rum—with buckets of tar and coils of rope, and rousing chanties and stories of strange ships. "Not at all, Miss Prude." The struggle was terrible; it wore him out. He fought it desperately—to neither side would he surrender an inch. Sometimes with Rose's arms about him, her soft cheek against his and her perfidy forgotten, he would be on the brink of giving her the pretty costly thing, whatever it was, that she wanted at the expense of Odiam. At others, out in his fields, or on the slope of Boarzell—half wild, half tamed—with all those unconquered regions swelling above him, he would feel that he could almost gladly lose Rose altogether, if to keep her meant the sacrifice of one jot of his ambition, one tittle of his hope. Then he would go home, and find her ogling Handshut through the window, or giving tea in her most seductive manner to some young idiot with clean hands—and round would go the wheel again—round and round.... "Kindly go at once, or I shall call someone." There were still about two hundred acres to acquire, including the Grandturzel inclosure, on which, however, he looked more hopefully than of old. He had so far subdued not more than about a hundred and forty acres—most of the northern slope of Boarzell adjoining Odiam and Totease, and also a small tract on the Flightshot side. This was not very encouraging, for it represented the labours of two-thirds of a lifetime, and at the same time left him with more than half his task still unaccomplished. If it had not been for his setback ten years ago he would now probably have over two hundred and fifty acres to his credit. But he told himself that he would progress more quickly now. Also, though he had not enlarged his boundaries during the last ten years, he had considerably improved the quality of the land within them. The first acquired parts of Boarzell were nearly as fruitful and richly cultivated as the original lands of the farm, and even the '68 ground was showing signs of coming into subjection. Once or twice Reuben caught him in the same mood, and questioned him. But David still answered: Sam obeyed; but whether owing to his trepidation or the slippery surface of the earth, he lost his footing and disappeared, uttering a cry of terror. Byles stood for an instant, irresolute whether to advance to the succour of his servitor, or leave him behind, for he apprehended that the cry would arouse the guardians of the Chase. Recollecting, however, that it would be as dangerous to abandon him as to attempt his extrication, he rushed forward to the spot where Sam had disappeared. The man had, in his fall, grasped the root of a tree from which the late heavy rains had washed the earth, and he lay suspended midway down. Byles hastily threw him a rope, with which he had intended to bind the animal on the barrow, and, with some difficulty, succeeded in dragging him up. "Hah!" interrupted Sudbury, advancing, and who had hitherto sat apart looking on at the mummery; "is it thou who presumest to approach the presence? Please your Grace, and you, noble duke," looking first at Richard and then addressing Lancaster, "he is a monk of our late abbey at Winchcombe, whom, for certain acts of rebellion to our authority, we expelled."
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