小学英语 英语故事(童话故事)She Was Good for Nothing 她是一个废物.doc
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1、SheWasGoodforNothing她是一个废物The mayor was standing at his open window; he was wearing a dress shirt with a dainty breastpin in its frill. He was very well shaven, self-done, though he had cut himself slightly and had stuck a small bit of newspaper over the cut.Listen, youngster! he boomed.The youngste
2、r was none other than the washerwomans son, who respectfully took off his cap as he passed. This cap was broken at the rim, so that he could put it into his pocket. In his poor but clean and very neatly mended clothes, and his heavy wooden shoes, the boy stood as respectfully as if he were before th
3、e king.Youre a good boy, a well-behaved lad! said the Mayor. I suppose your mother is washing down at the river, and no doubt you are going to bring her what you have in your pocket. Thats an awful thing with your mother! How much have you there?A half pint, said the boy in a low, trembling voice.An
4、d this morning she had the same? continued the Mayor.No, it was yesterday! answered the boy.Two halves make a whole! She is no good! It is sad there are such people. Tell your mother she ought to be ashamed of herself. Dont you become a drunkard-but I suppose you will! Poor child! Run along now.And
5、the boy went, still holding his cap in his hand, while the wind rippled the waves of his yellow hair. He went down the street and through an alley to the river, where his mother stood at her washing stool in the water, beating the heavy linen with a wooden beater. The current was strong, for the mil
6、ls sluices were open; the bed sheet was dragged along by the stream and nearly swept away her washing stool, and the woman had all she could do to stand up against it.I was almost carried away, she said. Its a good thing youve come, for I need something to strengthen me. Its so cold in the water; Iv
7、e been standing here for six hours. Have you brought me anything?The boy drew forth a flask, and his mother put it to her lips and drank a little.Oh, that does me good! How it warms me! Its just as good as hot food, and it isnt as expensive! Drink, my boy! You look so pale, and youre freezing in you
8、r thin clothes. Remember it is autumn. Ooh, the water is cold! If only I dont get ill! But I wont. Give me a little more, and drink some yourself, but only a little drop, for you mustnt get used to it, my poor dear child!And she walked out of the water and up onto the bridge where the boy stood. The
9、 water dripped from the straw mat that she had tied around her waist and from her petticoat.I work and slave till the blood runs out at my fingernails, but I do it gladly if I can bring you up honestly, my sweet child!Just then came an elderly woman, poorly clad, lame in one leg, and with an enormou
10、sly large, false curl hanging down over one of her eyes, which was blind. This curl was supposed to hide the eye, but it only made the defect the more conspicuous. The neighbors called her limping Maren with the curl, and she was an old friend of the washerwomans.You poor thing, she cried, slaving a
11、nd toiling in the cold water! You certainly need something to warm you a little, and yet the gossips cry about the few drops you take! And soon all that the Mayor had said to the boy was repeated to his mother, for Maren had overheard it, and it had angered her to hear him talk so to the child about
12、 his own mother and the few drops she took, because on that same day the Mayor was having a big dinner party with many bottles of wine.Good wine, strong wine! Many will drink more than they should, but they dont call that drinking. They are all right, but you are good for nothing!What! Did the Mayor
13、 really say that, child? asked the laundress, her lips quivering. So you have a mother who is good for nothing! Perhaps hes right, though he shouldnt say so to a child. But I mustnt complain; good things have come to me from that house.Why, yes, you were in service there, when the Mayors parents wer
14、e alive. That was many years ago. Many bushels of salt have been eaten since then, so people may well be thirsty! laughed Maren. The big dinner today at the Mayors would have been postponed if everything hadnt been prepared. I heard the news from the porter. A letter came, an hour ago, telling them
15、that the Mayors younger brother, in Copenhagen, is dead.Dead! cried the laundress, turning as white as a ghost.What does it matter to you said Maren. Of course, you must have known him, since you worked in the house.Is he really dead? He was the best and kindest of men-indeed, there arent many like
16、him! Tears were rolling down her cheeks. Oh, my God! Everything is going around! Thats because I emptied the bottle. I couldnt stand so much. I feel so ill! And she leaned against the fence for support.Good heavens, you are ill, indeed! said Maren. Try to get over it! No, you really are sick! Id bet
17、ter get you home!But the washing there!Ill take care of that. Here, give me your arm. The boy can stay here and watch it till I come back and wash whats left. Its only a few pieces.The poor laundress legs were trembling under her. Ive stood too long in the cold water, with no food since yesterday! I
18、 have a burning fever. Oh, dear Lord Jesus, help me to get home! Oh, my poor child! And she wept.The boy cried too, as he sat alone beside the river, guarding the wet linen. The two women made their way slowly, the washerwoman dragging her shaky limbs up the little alley and through the street where
19、 the Mayor lived. Just as she reached the front of his house, she sank down on the cobblestones. A crowd gathered around her.Limping Maren ran into his yard for help. The Mayor and his guests came to the windows.Its the washerwoman! he said. Shes had a bit too much to drink; shes no good! Its a pity
20、 for that handsome boy of hers, I really like that child, but his mother is good for nothing.And the washerwoman was brought to her own humble room, where she was put to bed. Kindly Maren hastened to prepare a cup of warm ale with butter and sugar-she could think of no better medicine in such a case
21、-and then returned to the river, where, although she meant well, she did a very poor job with the washing; she only pulled the wet clothes out of the water and put them into a basket.That evening she appeared again in the washerwomans miserable room. She had begged from the Mayors cook a couple of r
22、oasted potatoes and a fine fat piece of ham for the sick woman. Maren and the boy feasted on these, but the patient was satisfied with the smell, For that was very nourishing, she said.The boy was put to bed, in the same one in which his mother slept, lying crosswise at his mothers feet, with a blan
23、ket of old blue and red carpet ends sewed together.The laundress felt a little better now; the warm ale had given her strength, and the smell of the good food had been nourishing.Thank you, my kind friend, she said to Maren, Ill tell you all about it, while the boy is asleep. Hes sleeping already; s
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