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The Last Continent

The Last Continent

Titel: The Last Continent Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Terry Pratchett
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University these days stood under a cart to do it.
    “And that jungle,” said the Senior Wrangler, sniffing. “Looks pretty damn dangerous to me. Could be anything in it. Fatal. Could be tigers and gorillas and elephants and pineapples. I wouldn’t go near it. I’m with you, Archchancellor. Better to freeze here than look some rabid man-eater in the eye.”
    Ridcully’s own eyes were burning bright. He stroked his beard thoughtfully. “Tigers, eh?” he said. Then his expression changed. “ Pineapples ?”
    “Deadly,” said the Senior Wrangler firmly. “One of them got my aunt. We couldn’t get it off her. I told her that’s not the way you’re supposed to eat them, but would she listen?”
    The Dean looked sidelong at his Archchancellor. It was the glance of a man who also didn’t want another night in a frigid bedroom and had suddenly worked out where the levers were.
    “That gets my vote, Mustrum,” he said. “Catch me going through some hole in space on to some warm beach with a sea teeming with huge fish and a jungle full of hunting trophies.” He yawned like a bad poker player. “No, it’s me for my nice freezing bed, I don’t know about you. Archchancellor?”
    “I think—” Ridcully began.
    “Yes?”
    “Clams,” said the Senior Wrangler, shaking his head. “Looks just the beach for the devils. You just ask my cousin. You’ll have to find a good medium first, though. They shouldn’t ooze green, I said. They shouldn’t bubble, I told him. But would he listen?”
    The Archchancellor was currently amongst those who wouldn’t. “You think that taking him out there would be just the thing for the Librarian, do you?” he said. “Just the tonic for the poor old chap, an hour or two under that sun?”
    “But I expect we ought to be ready to protect him, eh, Archchancellor?” the Dean said, innocently.
    “Why, yes, I really hadn’t thought of that,” said Ridcully. “Hmm, yes. Important point. Better get them to bring down my 500-pound crossbow with the armor-piercing arrows and my home taxidermy outfit. And all ten fishing rods. And all four tackle boxes. And the big set of scales.”
    “Good thinking, Archchancellor,” said the Dean. “He may want to take a swim when he’s feeling better.”
    “In that case,” said Ponder, “I think I’ll get my thaumodalite and my notebooks. It’s vital to work out where we are. It could be EcksEcksEcksEcks, I suppose. It looks very foreign.”
    “I suppose I’d better fetch my reptile press and my herbarium,” said the Chair of Indefinite Studies, who had got there eventually. “Much may be learned from the plants here, I’ll wager.”
    “I shall certainly endeavor to make a study of any primitive grass-skirted peoples hereabouts,” added the Dean, with a lawnmower look in his eyes.
    “What about you, Runes?” said Ridcully.
    “Me? Oh, er…” The Lecturer in Recent Runes looked wildly at his colleagues, who were nodding frantically at him. “Er…this would be a good time to catch up on my reading, obviously.”
    “Right,” said Ridcully. “Because we are not , and I want to make this very clear, we are not doing this in order to enjoy ourselves, is that understood?”
    “What about the Senior Wrangler?” said the Dean nastily.
    “Me? Enjoy it? There might even be prawns out there,” said the Senior Wrangler miserably.
    Ridcully hesitated. The other wizards shrugged when he glanced at them. “Look, old chap,” he said eventually, “I think I understood about the clams, and I’ve got a sort of mental picture about your granny and the pineapple—”
    “—my aunt—”
    “—your aunt and the pineapple, but…What’s deadly about prawns?”
    “Hah, see how you like a crate of them dropping off the crane on to your head,” said the Senior Wrangler. “My uncle didn’t, I can tell you!”
    “Okay, I think I understand. Important safety tip, everyone,” said Ridcully. “Avoid all crates. Understood? But we are not here on some kind of holiday! Do you all understand me?”
    “Absolutely,” said the wizards in unison.
    They all understood him.

    Rincewind awoke with a scream, to get it over with.
    Then he saw the man watching him.
    He was sitting cross-legged against the dawn. He was black. Not brown, or blue-black, but black as space. This place baked people.
    Rincewind pulled himself up and thought about reaching for his stick. And then he thought again. The man had a couple of spears stuck in the

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