时间:2019-02-07 作者:英语课 分类:阅读空间


英语课

   Every afternoon, as the children were coming back from school, they used to go and play in the giant's garden.


  It was a beautiful large garden. Beautiful flowers grew in the grass. There were twelve fruit trees. In the spring the fruit trees were covered with red and white flowers, and later in the year they bore rich fruit. The birds sang in the trees so sweetly that sometimes the children stopped their games and listened to them. "How happy we are here!" they cried to each other.
  One day the giant came back. He had been away for seven years. When he arrived, he saw the children playing in his garden. "What are you doing here?" he cried in a very loud voice. The children ran away.
  "My own garden is my own garden," said the giant. "I will allow no one to play in it but myself. "So he built a high wall round it and put up a notice: Keep out. He was a very selfish 1 giant.
  So the children had nowhere to play. They tried to play on the road, but the road was dusty 2 and full of hard stone, and they did not like it. They wandered round the high walls when their lessons were finished and talked about the beautiful garden inside. "How happy we were there!" they said to each other.
  The spring came, and there were flowers and little birds all over the country. But in the garden of the Selfish Giant it was till winter the birds did not like to sing in it because there were no children, and the trees forgot to bear flowers. Snow covered up the grass, and ice covered all the trees with silver. The north wind came, and driving rain.
  "I can't understand why the spring is so late in coming," said the Selfish Giant as he sat at the window of his house and looked out at his cold white garden. "I hope that there will be a change in the weather."
  But the spring never came, nor the summer. When there was golden 3 fruit in every other garden, there was no fruit in the the giant's garden. It was always winter there with the north wind, and snow, and ice, and driving rain.
  The giant was lying in bed one morning when he heard some beautiful music. It was a little bird singing outside his window. It was so long since he had heard the song of a bird that it seemed to him the most beautiful music in the world. Then the north wind and the rain stopped.
  "I believe that spring has come at last!" said the giant. He jumped out of bed and looked out.
  What did he see?
  He saw a most wonderful sight. The children had come in though a hole in the wall and were sitting in the branches of the trees. There was a little child in every tree that he could see. The trees were so glad to have the children back that they had covered themselves with flowers: the birds were flying about and singing with joy, and flowers were looking up through the green grass.
  A little boy was standing 4 in the farthest corner of the garden. He was so small that he could not reach up to the branches of the tree, but was wandering round it and weeping 5. That tree was still covered with ice and snow.
  "How selfish I have been!" said the giant. "Now I know why the spring would not come here. I'll put the little boy on the top of the tree. Then I'll pull down the wall and my garden shall be a children's playground for ever." He was really sorry for what he had done.
  So he went down: he opened the door very quietly, and went out into the garden. But, when the children saw him, they were afraid and ran away. Only the little boy did not run: his eyes were so full of tears that he did not see the giant coming. The giant came quietly behind him. He took the little boy gently in his hand and put him up into the tree. Then the tree was suddenly covered with flowers, and the birds came and sang in it, and the little boy put his arms round the giant's neck and kissed him.
  The other children saw that giant was not bad and selfish now, so they came running back.
  "It's your garden now, little children," said the giant, and he pulled down the wall.
  When the people were going along the road to the town, they found the giant playing with the children in the most beautiful garden they had ever seen.
  The children played all day, and in the evening they came to the giant to say goodbye to him.
  "But where is your little friend?" he said. "Where is the little boy I put in the tree?" The giant loved him best because the little boy had kissed him.
  "We don't know," answered the children. "he has gone away."
  "You must tell him to come tomorrow, he must come tomorrow." "We don't know where he lives. We had never seen him before." The giant felt very sad.
  Every afternoon when school ended, the children came and played with the giant. But the little boy whom the giant loved was never seen again. The giant was very kind to all the children, but he did want to see his first little friend. "How much I would like to see him!" he said.
  Years went by, and the giant became very old and weak. He could not play in the garden now; so he sat in a big chair and watched the children at their games and looked at his beautiful garden. "I have many beautiful flowers," he said, "but the children are the most beautiful flowers of all."
  One morning, when he was dressing 6 himself, he looked out of the window. He did not hate the winter now, because he knew that the spring was sleeping and the flowers were resting: he knew that they would come again.
  Suddenly he rubbed his eyes; he looked again at the wonderful sight! In the farthest corner of the garden there was a tree quite covered with beautiful white flowers. Its branches were golden, and silver fruit hung down from them. And the little boy whom he loved was standing under the tree.
  He ran out into the garden: he hurried across the grass and came near the child. When he came quite close, his face became red with anger and he said, "Who has dared 7 to wound 8 you?" There were marks on the child's hands, and on the little feet.
  "Who had dared to wound you?" cried the giant. "Tell me and I will take my sword 9 and kill him!"
  "No," said the child, "These are the wounds 10 of love."
  "Who are you?" said the giant. He was afraid, and knelt 11 before the little child.
  "You once let me play in your garden," said the child. "Today you'll come with me into my garden in heaven."
  When the children came into the garden on that afternoon, they found the giant lying dead under the tree, covered with white flowers.

adj.自私的,利己主义的,自我中心的
  • You must learn to share and not be so selfish.你一定要学会与他人分享,不要那么自私。
  • She is a selfish person.她是一个自私自利的人。
adj.积满灰尘的;无聊的,含糊的,粉末状的
  • He was pulling dead roots from the dusty earth.他正在从土中拔出枯死的根茎。
  • One spring it was very windy and dusty here.有一年春天这里风沙很大。
adj.金的,含金的,可贵的,金色的,贵重的,繁盛的
  • My teacher is an Englishman with golden hair.我的老师是一个金黄色头发的英国人。
  • It's a balmy evening,the golden time for lovers.这是一个暖和的夜晚,是恋人们的黄金时光。
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的
  • After the earthquake only a few houses were left standing.地震过后只有几幢房屋还立着。
  • They're standing out against any change in the law.他们坚决反对对法律做任何修改。
n.(食物)调料;包扎伤口的用品,敷料
  • Don't spend such a lot of time in dressing yourself.别花那么多时间来打扮自己。
  • The children enjoy dressing up in mother's old clothes.孩子们喜欢穿上妈妈旧时的衣服玩。
v.敢( dare的过去式和过去分词 );敢做;激(某人做某事);问(某人)有没有胆量(做某事)
  • She said it as loudly as she dared. 她壮着胆子大声说了出来。
  • I wouldn't have dared to defy my teachers. 我可不敢不听老师的话。
n.创伤,伤口,伤疤,伤害,痛苦;vt.伤害,损害,使受伤;vi.打伤,伤害;wind的过去式和过去分词
  • There was a gush of blood from the wound.血从伤口流出。
  • The nurse gently mopped the blood from the wound.护士轻轻地抹去伤口上的血。
n.剑,刀剑,武力,杀戮
  • The soldier cut at his enemy with his sword.那位士兵用自己的剑向敌人砍去。
  • With a sweep of his sword he cut through the rope.他用剑一挥把绳子砍断了。
n.创伤( wound的名词复数 );伤口;伤痕;(心灵上的)伤v.使受伤,伤害( wound的第三人称单数 );使(心灵)受伤,伤感情;偷盗( swipe的过去式和过去分词 );卷绕
  • It took a long time for the wounds to heal. 伤口过了很长时间才愈合。
  • They've been trying hard to lick their wounds these years. 这几年,他们一直在努力求得失败后的复原。 来自《简明英汉词典》
v.跪( kneel的过去式和过去分词 );(kneel的过去式与过去分词)
  • They knelt down and prayed. 他们跪下来祷告。
  • She knelt in supplication. 她跪地祷求。
标签: Selfish Giant
学英语单词
absenteeists
acid eructation
activated scale
adradial cushion
air ball
all in the eye
anastasios
anti-foam additive
Asola
ASTME
bilingualizing
Bocas del Dragón(Dragon's Mouths)
Bushfired
cajun-french
canaille
ccds
cisterna fossae lateralis cerebri
commode handle
Cuddebackville
currant bun
de escalate
dewan
Dick. Law.
eddy effect
electrode press
emergency power shut off
faradised
feedbacked
feel ill at ease
fernier
fertilizer distributor with oscillating spout
field wire
fore peak pump
fore-break distance of warehouse
fried ox tongue
Galapagoan
gardaine
Gettiered
glandulae prostata anterior
greengaga
grub
gunshots
Henry's melanin reaction
homogeneity postulate
horsehair lamp brush
ignition bar
inhibition effect
input leakage
interpreter job control statement
keep down
Kirklareli
Kǔmsan-ri
legionary ant
lobi medius prostatae
loganville
lundblad
magnetic variation chart
magnicaudate
mechanical draft wet cooling tower
Musquodoboit
Māwiyah
Nacebe
O'Connor, Thomas Power
oligoacene
oscillating force
overtime service
parepochism
partial report procedure
pebble-dash plaster
Pitou Township
play second fiddle to
polyamine group
pressure-gradiant microphone
prismatic diopter
provisorily
puff-pastries
reduced moment of inertia
relic coiling (darlington 1935)
s market
scanning pencil of light
Schisandra incarnata
sebaceous hyperplasia
seneyt
sensillum trichodeum
sleeve Pekingese
smoking gun
software trade
St Ex
struma fibrosa
sweetcorns
tearup
tezosentan
thio-acids
tunnellite
two-direction thrust bearing
tyre
voiced speech sound
wedge type
weik
wire nippers
yarf
ZYM