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Kim Rudyard Kipling
远程仓调货
其他版本:
- Paperback Book (2010) 元 73
- Paperback Book (2011) 元 83
- Paperback Book (2015) 元 102
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 108
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 108
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 108
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 108
- Paperback Book (2018) 元 114
- Paperback Book (2018) 元 114
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 114
- Paperback Book (2018) 元 115
- Paperback Book (2016) 元 119
- Paperback Book (2018) 元 120
-
Paperback BookSpanish edition(2017) 元 120
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 120
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 119
- Paperback Book (2015) 元 120
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 120
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 120
- Paperback Book (2018) 元 122
- Paperback Book (2016) 元 123
- Paperback Book (2017) 元 125
- Paperback Book (2016) 元 125
- Paperback Book (2016) 元 127
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Hardcover BookReissue edition(1995) 元 127
Kim
Rudyard Kipling
Kim, aka Kimball O'Hara, is the orphan son of a British soldier and a half-caste opium addict in India. While running free through the streets of Lahore as a child he befriends a British secret service agent. Later, attaching himself to a Tibetan Lama on a quest to be freed from the Wheel of Life, Kim becomes the Lama's disciple, but is also used by the British to carry messages to the British commander in Umballa. Kim's trip with the Lama along the Grand Trunk Road is only the first great adventure in the novel... Show Excerpt e those words were written below his signature thereon, and another his 'clearance-certificate'. The third was Kim's birth-certificate. Those things, he was used to say, in his glorious opium-hours, would yet make little Kimball a man. On no account was Kim to part with them, for they belonged to a great piece of magic - such magic as men practised over yonder behind the Museum, in the big blue-and-white Jadoo-Gher - the Magic House, as we name the Masonic Lodge. It would, he said, all come right some day, and Kim's horn would be exalted between pillars - monstrous pillars - of beauty and strength. The Colonel himself, riding on a horse, at the head of the finest Regiment in the world, would attend to Kim - little Kim that should have been better off than his father. Nine hundred first-class devils, whose God was a Red Bull on a green field, would attend to Kim, if they had not forgotten O'Hara - poor O'Hara that was gang- foreman on the Ferozepore line. Then he would weep bitterly in the broken rush c
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