书城外语澳大利亚学生文学读本(套装1-6册)
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第108章 第四册(44)

Janet.-Yes, ma"am; at once, ma"am. (She goes out.)Dramatized from David Copperfield, a novel by Charles DickensAuthor.-Charles Dickens (1812-1870) was one of the most famous of English novelists. He was a poor boy and self-educated. As a youth he became a lawyer"s clerk, then a journalist. His keen observation and wide sympathy made him popular as a novelist. Among his works are David Copperfield, Oliver Twist, A Tale of Two Cities, The Pickwick Papers, Bleak House, Little Dorrit, The Old Curiosity Shop, Barnaby Rudge, Our Mutual Friend, Great Expectations, Edwin Drood, Martin Chuzzlewit. Sketches by Boz, A Christmas Carol, A Child"s History of England.

General Notes.-The scene is laid at Dover, in England. David is an orphan boy who has walked from London to visit his Aunt Betsey. Read the whole book. What kind of woman is Aunt Betsey, as revealed in the play? Why did she think so highly of Mr. Dick? Write an imaginary letter from Aunt Betsey to David"s step-father.

Lesson 62

THE NIGHT WIND

Have you ever heard the wind go "Yooooo"?

" Tis a pitiful sound to hear!

It seems to chill you through and through With a strange and speechless fear.

" Tis the voice of the night that broods outsideWhen folk should be asleep,

And many and many"s the time I"ve cried To the darkness brooding far and wide Over the land and the deep:

"Whom do you want, O lonely night, That you wail the long hours through?"And the night would say in its ghostly way: "Yoooooooo !

Yoooooooo ! Yoooooooo !"

My mother told me long ago (When I was a little lad)That, when the night went wailing so, Somebody had been bad;And then, when I was snug in bed, Whither I had been sent,With the blankets pulled up round my head,

I"d think of what my mother said,

And wonder what boy she meant! And, "Who"s been bad to-day?" I"d ask Of the wind that hoarsely blew,And the voice would say in its meaningful way: "Yoooooooo !

Yoooooooo ! Yoooooooo !"

That this was true I must allow-

You"ll not believe it, though!

Yes, though I"m quite a model now,

I was not always so.

And if you doubt what things I say Suppose you make the test;Suppose, when you"ve been bad some day

And up to bed are sent away From mother and the rest-Suppose you ask, "Who has been bad?"

And then you"ll hear what"s true:

For the wind will moan in its ruefullest tone: "Yoooooooo!

Yoooooooo!

Yoooooooo!"

Eugene Field

Author.-Eugene Field (1850-1895), an American writer, is one of the best-loved writers of poetry for children. Born at Saint Louis, he had a college education and then visited Europe. On his return he became a noted journalist. In 1922 a statue of Eugene Field was erected in Lincoln Park, Chicago; it was paid for mainly by the contributions of pennies from school children in the United States.

General Notes.-When saying the poem, mind you imitate the eeriewail of the wind blowing round the corners of a house. Don"t say it too loudly. Divide the class into three parts, and let each part speak a verse; the whole class can join in the wind"s reply.

Do you know any other poems by Eugene Field?

Lesson 63

The AusTrAliAn

E swings his axe in the golden morn; The blade bites clean and free;The trees must fall ere the land be ploughed,And an axeman strong is he. He drives his plough through the yellow mould;The share cuts clean and free;

The soil must break ere the seed be sown, And a ploughman strong is he.

Drawn by Mervyn H.Timmings With a tireless band sows he."He sows the seed in the furrowed field;

With a tireless hand sows he;