小学英语 英语故事(童话故事)Anne Lisbeth 安妮莉斯贝.doc
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1、AnneLisbeth安妮莉斯贝Anne Lisbeths complexion was like peaches and cream; her eyes were bright, her teeth shiny white; she was young, gay, and beautiful to look upon; her steps were light and her mind was even lighter. What would come of all this? That awful brat, people said about her baby; and indeed h
2、e wasnt pretty, so he was left with the ditchdiggers wife.Anne Lisbeth went into service in the Counts castle. There she sat in a magnificent room, dressed in silk and velvet; not a breath of wind was allowed to blow on her nor anyone to speak a harsh word to her. She was nurse to the Counts child,
3、who was as beloved as a prince, beautiful as an angel. How she loved him!Her own child was provided for in the ditchdiggers house, where his wifes temper boiled over more often than her pot. Sometimes the child was left alone all day long, and cried; but what nobody hears doesnt bother anyone! He cr
4、ied himself to sleep, and in sleep there is neither hunger nor thirst; sleep is such a good invention!Ill weeds grow fast, says the proverb, and Anne Lisbeths boy did indeed shoot up rapidly. It was as if he had taken root in the ditchdiggers household; his mother had paid for his upbringing and con
5、sidered herself well rid of him. She was a city lady now, was well provided for, and whenever she went out she was beautifully dressed; but she never went to see her son at the ditchdiggers; that was too far from the city, and there was no reason for her to go there, anyway; the boy was theirs, and
6、now, they decided, it was time for him to earn his keep; so he found work tending Mads Jensens red cow.The watchdog at Blegdam Manor sits proudly on top of its house in the sunshine, barking at passers-by, but in rainy weather it lies, warm and dry, inside its kennel. Anne Lisbeths boy sat at the ed
7、ge of a ditch in the sunshine, whittling sticks or watching three blossoming strawberry plants; he hoped they would soon turn into berries - that was his happiest thought - but the berries never ripened. Through sunshine or showers he sat there; he was often soaked to the skin, but the cold wind soo
8、n dried his clothes on his body. Whenever he went to the farmyard he received only kicks and cuffs and was called stupid and ugly; he was used to that - nobody loved him.How did Anne Lisbeths boy get along? How could he under such circumstances? It was his fate never to be loved.At last he was liter
9、ally pushed off the earth and sent to sea in a wretched little sailing vessel. Here he took the helm while the skipper drank - a frostbitten, shabby-looking little boy, and always hungry! One would think he never had enough to eat, and that really was the case.It was late in the autumn, wet, raw, st
10、ormy weather, with a wind that cut through the warmest clothing, especially out at sea. A miserable little vessel with one sail drove on before the wind; it had a crew of two men, or rather a man and a half - the skipper and his boy. All day the light had been no brighter than twilight; now it grew
11、still darker and it was bitterly cold. The skipper brought forth a bottle and a glass and took a swallow to warm himself up; the top of the glass was whole, but its foot had been broken off, so instead it had a little piece of wood, painted blue, to stand on. A drink is a great comfort, and two are
12、even better. The boy was at the helm, holding it with rough, tarred hands, a wretched, shrinking form with unkempt hair; it was the ditchdiggers boy, registered in the parish records as the son of Anne Lisbeth.The wind drove the ship hard before it; the sail bellied out before the power of the wind;
13、 it was rough and wet everywhere, and it might soon be even worse. Stop! What was that? What crashed? What sprang up? What grasped the little vessel? The boat whirled around. Was it a waterspout or a tidal wave? The boy at the helm screamed, Lord Jesus, save us! The vessel had struck on a great rock
14、, and it sank like a waterlogged old shoe in a duckpond; sank with man and mouse, as the saying goes; there were mice on board, but only a man and a half - the skipper and the ditchdiggers boy. No one saw it, save the screaming gulls above and the darting fishes beneath, and these hardly saw it clea
15、rly, for they fled in terror when the water poured into the doomed vessel. There it lay, scarcely a fathom below the water, and the two were drowned and forgotten. Only the glass was left, for the blue wooden block kept it afloat, and it drifted onto the shore. Where and when? That is of no conseque
16、nce. That old broken glass had been useful, and had been loved, too, in a way; which Anne Lisbeths son had never been. However, in the kingdom of heaven no soul shall ever have cause to sigh, Never loved!Anne Lisbeth meanwhile had been living for several years in a large town; she was addressed as m
17、adam and always held herself very proudly when she spoke of olden times, of the times when she rode in a carriage and talked with countesses and baronesses. And she talked of her foster child, that sweetest of little angels, and how he had loved her and she had loved him, how they had kissed and car
18、essed each other, for he was her pride and joy. Now he was tall, fourteen years old, a bright, beautiful boy. She hadnt seen him since the time she carried him in her arms; for many years she had not been at the Counts castle, which was a long journey away.But I must find a way to get there someday,
19、 said Anne Lisbeth. I must see my sweet young count again. He must be missing me, and loving me as he did when his angelic little arms clung around my neck and he said, Ann-Lis, as sweet as a violin. Ah, yes, I must make short work of it and see him again!So she made the long trip, partly on foot an
20、d partly by wagon. The castle was as magnificent and the gardens as lovely as ever, but the servants were all new to her, and not one of them knew Anne Lisbeth or what she had once meant there. But the Countess would tell them, she thought, and her own boy; how she longed for him!Now Anne Lisbeth wa
21、s finally here, but they kept her waiting a long time. At last, just before the household went to dinner, she was called in. The Countess spoke to her very courteously and promised that after dinner she should see her beloved boy. So she had to wait for another summons.How tall, thin, and lanky he h
22、ad grown, but he still had his beautiful eyes and angelic mouth; and he looked straight at her without a word. Certainly he had no recollection of her. He turned to go, but she caught his hand and pressed it to her lips. All right, he said, thats enough, and then he left the room.The ungrateful youn
23、g nobleman, whom she had loved above all on earth and had made the pride of her life!So Anne Lisbeth left the castle and made her way homeward along the highway. She was very sorrowful; he had been so cold and strange to her, without a word or thought for her, he whom she had once carried in her arm
24、s night and day and always had carried in her heart.Then a huge black raven flew down and alighted on the road just in front of her and croaked again and again. Oh, what bird of ill omen are you? she said.As she passed the ditchdiggers house, his wife was standing in the doorway, and they spoke to o
25、ne another.How robust you look! said the ditchdiggers wife. You are plump and stout! Everything must be going well with you.Pretty well, replied Anne Lisbeth.The boat went down with them, said the ditchdiggers wife. Skipper Lars and your boy were both drowned. So that ends that. But I hoped that the
26、 boy would have lived to help me out from time to time with a little money; he hasnt cost you anything for a long while, you know, Anne Lisbeth.Drowned, are they? repeated Anne Lisbeth, and then said nothing more on that subject.Anne Lisbeth was heartsick because the young count wouldnt speak to her
27、, she who loved him so and had taken that long trip to see him; the journey had also been expensive. The pleasure it had brought her was little indeed. But she didnt say a word about it; she wouldnt lighten her mind by talking about it to the ditchdiggers wife, who might think she was no longer welc
28、ome at the Counts castle. While they were talking, the raven again flew screaming over her head. That ugly black thing! said Anne Lisbeth. Thats the second time its frightened me today!She had brought some coffee beans and chicory with her; it would be a kindness to the ditchdiggers wife to give the
29、se to her and share a cup with her. While the old woman went to make the coffee Anne Lisbeth sat down and soon fell asleep.Strangely enough, she dreamed of one whom she had never seen in her dreams before - her own child, who in that very house had hungered and wept, who had been kicked about in hea
30、t and cold, and who now lay deep below the sea, the good Lord only knew where. She dreamed that even as she sat there waiting for the coffee and smelling the fragrance drifting in to her from the kitchen, a shining little angel, beautiful as the young count, stood in the doorway and spoke to her.The
31、 end of the world is come, said the little angel. Hold fast to me, for you are still my mother! You have an angel in paradise. Hold fast to me! Then he took hold of her, and at that very moment there came a tremendous crash, as though the whole world were bursting into pieces, and as the angel rose
32、in the air, holding her tightly by her sleeves, she felt herself lifted from the ground. But then something heavy clung to her feet and dragged her down; it was as if a hundred other women were holding tightly to her, screaming, If you are to be saved, we must be saved, too! Hold fast! Hold fast! An
33、d then they all clung to her. The weight was too heavy; ritsch, ratsch! - her sleeves were split, and she fell down in terror - and awoke.Her head was so dizzy she nearly fell off the chair where she was sitting. She could not understand her dream clearly, but she felt it foretold evil for her.They
34、had their coffee and talked for a while. Then Anne Lisbeth walked on to the nearest village, where she was to meet the carrier and drive home with him that evening. But when she got there, the carrier told her he couldnt start until the following evening. She thought it over - what it would cost her
35、 to stay there, the length of the distance home, and realized that if she went along the seashore instead of by road, it would be nearly two miles shorter; it was clear weather and the moon was at the full. And so Anne Lisbeth decided to go at once; she could be home the next day.The sun had set, th
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