翻訳と辞書
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・ The Day Will Come
・ The Day Will Dawn
・ The Day You Come
・ The Day You Went Away
・ The Day's Parade
・ The Day Before
・ The Day Before (EP)
・ The Day Before I Met You
・ The Day Before Spring
・ The Day Before Sunday
・ The Day Before the Revolution
・ The Day Before the Wedding
・ The Day Before You Came
・ The Day Begins
・ The Day Book
The Day Boy and the Night Girl
・ The Day Britain Stopped
・ The Day Christ Died
・ The Day Dragged On
・ The Day Dream (painting)
・ The Day Emily Married
・ The Day Everything Became Isolated and Destroyed
・ The Day Everything Became Nothing
・ The Day Finger Pickers Took Over the World
・ The Day Has Come
・ The Day He Arrives
・ The Day He Himself Shall Wipe My Tears Away
・ The Day Hell Broke Loose 2
・ The Day Hell Broke Loose 3
・ The Day Hell Broke Loose at Sicard Hollow


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The Day Boy and the Night Girl : ウィキペディア英語版
The Day Boy and the Night Girl

''The Day Boy and Night Girl'', also referred to as ''The Romance of Photogen and Nycteris'', is an 1882 fairy tale novel by George MacDonald. A version of this story appeared in ''Harper's Young People'' as a series beginning on 2 December 1879 and completing on 6 January 1880.〔Project Gutenberg〕
==Plot==
''The Day Boy and the Night Girl'' begins by telling of a witch named Watho who, in her pursuit of complete knowledge, undertook an experiment to mold two people from birth by strictly controlling their environments.
Watho convinced two expectant mothers to visit her castle. Lady Aurora (whose ambassador husband was away on business) was given spacious, sunlit rooms to stay in; she gave birth to a boy. The witch promptly whisked him away, sending his mother back to her home burdened with the lie that her son had died shortly after birth. The other woman (who had recently been widowed and become blind) Watho settled in windowless, tomblike chambers elsewhere in the castle. Vesper died in childbirth, leaving her daughter to the witch’s keeping.
Watho did everything in her power to ensure that the boy Photogen grew up strong, able, and fearless. However, her foremost concern regarding the boy was that he should never see the night. Watho desired the opposite for the girl Nycteris, who knew no other world than the stony chambers she had been born in and no other light than that provided by the single dim lamp.
It came about that Nycteris, in her sixteenth year, found her way out of these chambers into a night lit by a full-moon. Nycteris was filled with wonder at this glorious new light and the rest of nature; she returned to her rooms before daybreak, desiring to see the outdoors again and not wanting to spoil her chance by arousing Watho’s suspicions. Around the same time, Photogen (who spent his days hunting) one morning spied a big cat of some sort slinking off to the forest and took it in his mind to hunt this skilled hunter. As the sun went down, Photogen left to hunt the nocturnal beast, violating the witch’s constraint. Once darkness fell, Photogen was beset with terror. He came across Nycteris in one of her outings, and gathered some measure of comfort from the strange girl’s calm. She agreed to watch over him while he slept, and so it was that she was for the first time yet outdoors when the sun rose. Photogen regained his courage immediately; assuring Nycteris that there was now nothing to fear, he went on his way, despite her terrified pleas that he stay and protect her from the blinding light.
Photogen (wishing to prove his courage) stayed up for another night, only to experience similar results. Photogen and Nycteris eventually learned to use their strengths to bear the other up through their weakness. In this way they were able to defeat the witch Watho. Photogen and Nycteris married; they continued to rely on and rejoice in each other’s strengths, to the point that Photogen came to prefer the night and Nycteris the day.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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