小学英语英语故事童话故事Godfather’SPicture_Book干爸爸的画册.doc
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
6 0人已下载
| 下载 | 加入VIP,免费下载 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 小学英语 英语 故事 童话故事 Godfather SPicture_Book 爸爸 画册
- 资源描述:
-
1、GodfatherSPicture-Book干爸爸的画册Godfather could tell stories, so many of them and such long ones, and he could cut out paper figures and draw pictures. When it was nearly Christmas he would bring out a scrapbook with clean white pages, and on these he pasted pictures cut out of books and newspapers; and
2、 if there werent enough for the story he was going to tell, he drew them himself. When I was a little boy I got several of these picture books, but the prettiest of them all was the one from that memorable year when gas replaced the old oil lamps in Copenhagen - and that was the inscription written
3、on the first page.We must take great care of this book, said Father and Mother, and only bring it out on important occasions.But Godfather had written on the cover: If you should tear the book, thats not a great wrong; Other little friends have done worse for ever so long.Best of all were the times
4、when Godfather himself showed the book, read the verses and other writings in it, and told many things besides; then the story would become a very real one.On the first page was a picture from The Flying Post, showing Copenhagen with its Round Tower and Our Ladys Church. On its left was pasted an ol
5、d lantern, on which was written, Train oil, and on the right was a chandelier, with Gas written on it.See, thats the title page, said Godfather. Thats the beginning of the story youre going to hear. It could also be given as an entire play, if one could perform it. Train Oil and Gas; or , The Life a
6、nd Times of Copenhagen. Thats a very good title! At the bottom of the page is still another little picture; its quite hard to understand, so Ill explain it to you. That is a hell horse. He shouldnt have come until the end of the book, but he has run on ahead to say that neither the beginning, nor th
7、e middle, nor the end is any good; he could have done it much better - if he could have done it at all. The hell horse, you see, stands hitched all day in the newspaper, and walks on the columns, they say. But in the evening he slips out, stations himself outside the poets door, and neighs, so that
8、the man inside will instantly die; but he wont die if theres any real life in him.The hell horse is usually a poor creature who cant understand himself and cant earn a living, and he gets his air and food by going around and neighing. I am certain that he doesnt like Godfathers picture book, but in
9、spite of that, it may be worth at least the paper its written on.Now thats the first page of the book; thats the title page.It was the very last evening on which the oil lamps were to be lighted; the town had gas, and it was so bright that the old street lamps seemed quite lost in it.I was in the st
10、reet myself that evening, said Godfather. The people were walking about, looking at the old and the new lighting. There were a great many people and twice as many legs as heads. The watchmen stood around sadly, for they didnt know how soon they would be dismissed, like the oil lamps. They could reme
11、mber so far back, but dared not think forward. They had so many memories of quiet evenings and dark nights. I leaned up against a lamppost, continued Godfather, and there was a great spluttering in the oil and the wick. I could hear what the lamp said, and you shall hear it, too. Weve done the best
12、we could, said the lamp. We were good enough for our time, and have lighted up joy and sorrow; we have lived through many wonderful things; you might say we have been the night eyes of Copenhagen. Now let new lights take our place and take over our duties; but how many years theyll shine, and what t
13、hey will light up, remain to be seen! Indeed, they shine a little stronger than we old fellows, but thats nothing; when youre molded like a gas chandelier, and have the connections they have, the one pours into the other. They have pipes going in all directions and can get strength from both inside
14、the town and outside it. But each one of us oil lamps shines because of what he has in himself, and not because of any family connections. We and our ancestors have lighted Copenhagen from olden times, from immeasurably long ago. But since this is now the last evening that well stand and shine in th
15、e second row, so to speak, in the street here along with you, you shining comrades, we wont sulk or be envious. No, far from it; well be happy and good-natured. We are the old sentinels, being relieved by new guards in better uniforms than ours. Well tell you what our family, way back to great-great
16、-great-grandmother lantern, has seen and experienced - the whole history of Copenhagen. May you and your successors, right down to the last gas chandelier, experience and be able to relate such wonderful things as we can, when you get your discharge someday. And youll get it!You may be sure of that!
17、 People are certain to find a better light than gas. Ive heard a student say that theres a possibility they may someday burn sea water! When the lamp said these words, the wick spluttered, as if it had water in it already.Godfather had listened closely, thought it over, and decided it was an excelle
18、nt idea of the old lantern, on this evening of the change from oil to gas, to tell and display the whole history of Copenhagen.You mustnt let a good idea slip, said Godfather. I took it at once, went home, and made this picture book for you. It goes even farther back in time than the lamps could go.
19、 Heres the book, and heres the story!COPENHAGENS LIFE AND TIMESIt begins in darkness, on a coal-black page - thats the Dark Ages.Now lets turn the page, said Godfather. Do you see the picture? Only the wild sea and the swelling northeast wind, driving heavy ice floes before it. Theres no one out sai
20、ling on them, only great stone blocks, which rolled down onto the ice from the mountains of Norway. The north wind blows the ice away; he wants to show the German mountains what rocks are found up in the North. The ice floes are already down in the sound, off the coast of Zealand, where Copenhagen n
21、ow stands; but there was no Copenhagen there then. There were great sandbanks under the water, and the ice floes with the big boulders struck against one of these. Then the whole ice field stuck so fast that the northeast wind couldnt move it again, and so he became as furious as could be and pronou
22、nced a curse on the sandbank, the Thieves ground, as he called it. He swore that if ever it should rise above the surface of the sea, thieves and robbers would live there, and the gallows and wheel be raised on it.But while he cursed and swore this way, the sun came out, and those bright and gentle
23、spirits, the children of light, swayed an swung in its beams; they danced over the ice floes until they melted, and the great boulders sank to the sandy bottom of the sea. Sun scum! said the northeast wind. Is that friendship and kinship? Ill remember and take revenge for that. Now I pronounce a cur
24、se! We pronounce a blessing! sang the children of light. The sandbank will rise, and we shall guard it. Truth, goodness, and beauty shall dwell there! Stuff and nonsense! said the northeast wind.You see, the lantern knew nothing of all this and therefore couldnt tell about it, said Godfather. But I
25、know it, and its very important to the life and times of Copenhagen.Now well turn the page, said Godfather. Years have passed, and the sandbank has lifted itself; a sea gull has settled on the biggest rock, which has jutted out of water. You can see it in the picture. Years and years have passed.The
26、 sea cast up dead fish onto the shore. Tough lyme grass sprang up, withered, rotted, and fertilized the soil; many different kinds of grasses and plants followed, until the bank became a green island. There the vikings landed, for there was level ground for fighting and good anchorage beside the isl
27、and off the coast of Zealand.I think the first oil lamp was lit to cook fish over, and there were plenty of fishes here. The herring swam through the sound in great shoals; it was hard to force a boat through them. They glittered in the water as if there were lightning down there, and shone in the d
28、epths like the northern lights. The sound had a wealth of fishes; therefore houses were built on the coast of Zealand, with walls of oak and roofs of bark - there were trees enough for that purpose. Ships anchored in the harbor, oil lamps hanging from swaying ropes, and the northeast wind blew and s
29、ang, O-out! If a lantern glimmered on the island it was a thieves lantern, for smugglers and thieves plied their trade on Thieves Island. I believe that all the evil I wished for is coming, said the northeast wind. Soon the tree will come, from which I can shake the fruit.And here is the tree, said
30、Godfather. Do you see the gallows on Thieves Island? Robbers and murderers hang there in iron chains, exactly as they hung in those days. The wind blew until it rattled the long skeletons, but the moon shone down on them as serenely as it now shines on a country dance. The sun also shone down pleasa
31、ntly, crumbling away the dangling skeletons, and from the sunbeams the children of light sang, We know it! We know it! Here it shall be beautiful in the days to come; here it shall be good and splendid! Chicken prattle! said the northeast wind.Now well turn the page, said Godfather.The bells were ri
32、nging in the town of Roskilde, where Bishop Absalon lived. He could both read his Bible and wield his sword; he had power and will. He wished to protect from assault the busy fishermen at the harbor, whose town had grown until it was now a market town. He sprinkled the unhallowed ground with holy wa
33、ter; thus, Thieves Island received the mark of honor. Masons and carpenters set to work on it; at the Bishops command, a building grew up, and the sunbeams kissed the red walls as they rose. There stood the house of Axel: The castle, with its towers, so stately and high, Had balconies and stairs up
34、to the sky Booo! Whooo! The northeast wind huffed and puffed, But the castle stood unyielding, unruffed.And outside it lay The Haven, the merchants harbor: Mermaids bower amid seas of sheen, Built beside groves of green.The foreigners came there and bought the wealth of fish, and built shops and hou
35、ses with bladders for windowpanes, as glass was too expensive. Warehouses followed, with gables and windlasses. See the old fellows sitting there in the shops - they dare not marry; they trade in ginger and pepper, the pebersvende.The northeast wind whistled through the streets and lanes, sending th
36、e dust flying and tearing off a thatched roof. Cows and pigs wandered about in the street ditch. I shall tame and subdue them! said the northeast wind. Ill whistle around the houses and around Axels house! I cant fail! They call it Gallows Castle on Thieves Island.Then Godfather showed a picture of
37、it, which he himself had drawn. On the wall were rows of stakes, and on every stake was the head of a captured pirate showing its teeth.That really happened, said Godfather. And its worth hearing and worth knowing about.Bishop Absalon was in his bath, and through the thin walls he heard the arrival
38、of a ship of freebooters. He instantly sprang out of the bath and into his ship, blew his horn, and his crew assembled. The arrows shot into the backs of the robbers as they rowed desperately to escape. The arrows pierced into their hands, and there was no time to pull them out. Bishop Absalon caugh
39、t everyone and cut their heads off, and every head was set up on the outer wall of the castle. The northeast wind blew with puffed-out cheeks - with bad weather in his jaw, as the sailors say. Ill stretch myself, said the wind. Here Ill lie down and look the whole matter over.It rested for hours, th
40、en blew for days. Years went past.The watchman appeared on the castle tower; he looked to the east, the west, the north, and the south. You can see it there in the picture, said Godfather, pointing it out. You can see him there, but Ill tell you what he saw.There is open water from the wall of Stejl
41、eborg right out to Kjge Bay, and a broad channel over to the coast of Zealand. In front of Serritslev and Solberg Meadows, with their large villages, the new town, with its gabled timber houses, is growing up more and more. There are entire streets for shoemakers and tailors, for grocers and beer se
42、llers; there is a market place and there is a guildhall, and near the shore, where there was once an island, stands the splendid Church of St. Nicolaus. It has an immensely high tower and spire; how it is reflected in the clear water! Near this is Our Ladys Church, where Masses are sung, where incen
43、se gives out its fragrance and wax candles burn. The merchants haven is now the Bishops town; the Bishop of Roskilde rules and reigns there.Bishop Erlandsen sits in Axels house. There is good cooking in the kitchen; ale and claret are served to the sound of fiddles and kettledrums. Burning candles a
44、nd lamps make the castle shine as if it were a lantern for the whole country and kingdom. The northeast wind whistles around the tower and walls, but they stand firmly. The northeast wind swoops around the western fortification of the town - only an old wooden fence - but it holds up well. Christoph
45、er I, King of Denmark, stands outside it; the rebels have beaten him at Skelskr, so he seeks shelter in the Bishops town.The wind whistles, and says, like the Bishop, Keep out! Keep out! The gate is shut to you!It is a time of trouble, dismal days, when every man is his own master. The Holstein bann
46、er waves from the castle tower. There is want and woe, for it is the night of anguish. War and the black death stalk the land in the pitch-dark night - but then comes Valdemar Atterdag. Now the Bishops town is the Kings town. It has gabled houses and narrow streets, watchmen and a town hall, and a p
47、ermanent gallows by the west port. No man from out of town can be hanged on it; you must be a citizen to be allowed to dangle there, to get so high as to see Kjge and the hens of Kjge. Thats a lovely gallows, says the northeast wind. The beautiful is growing! And it whistles and whoops.And from Germ
48、any blew trouble and want.The Hanseatic merchants came, continued Godfather, from warehouse and counter, the rich traders of Rostock, Lbeck, and Bremen. They wanted to seize more than the golden goose from Valdemars Tower; they had more power in the town of the Danish King than the Danish King himse
49、lf. They came in armed ships, and no one was prepared. And King Eric had no desire to fight with his German kinsfolk; they were too many and too strong. So King Eric and all his courtiers escaped through the west port to the town of Sor, to the quiet lake and green forests, to the song of love and t
50、he clang of goblets.But there was one left behind in Copenhagen, a kingly heart and a kingly mind. Do you see this picture here, this young woman, so fine and tender, with sea-blue eyes and yellow hair? It is the Queen of Denmark, Philippa, the English princess. She stayed in the distracted city, wh
51、ere the townspeople swarmed in panic in the narrow lanes and streets with steep stairs, sheds, and shops of lath and plaster. With the courage of a man, she summoned townspeople and peasants, to inspire and encourage them. They fitted out the ships and garrisoned the blockhouses; they fired with the
52、ir carbines; there were fire and smoke and lightness of spirit - our Lord will never forsake Denmark! The sun shone into all hearts, and in all eyes was the bright gladness of victory. Blessed be Philippa! Blessed she was in hut and in house; and blessed she was in the Kings castle, where she nursed
53、 the wounded and the sick. I have clipped a wreath and laid it around this picture, said Godfather. Blessed be Queen Philippa!Now we spring forward for years, said Godfather, and Copenhagen springs with us. King Christian I has been to Rome to receive the Popes blessing and has been greeted with hon
54、or and homage on the long journey. Here at home he is building a hall of red brick; there shall be learning there, displaying itself in Latin. The poor mans children, from plow and workshop, can also come there, to live upon alms, to attain the long black gown, and sing before the doors of citizens.
55、Near the hall of learning, where everything is in Latin, is a little house where Danish rules, in language and in customs. There is beer soup for early breakfast, and dinner is at ten oclock in the morning. The sun shines through small panes onto cupboards and bookcases; on the shelves are written t
56、reasures - Master Mikkels Rosary and Godly Comedies, Henrik Harpestrengs Leech-book, and Denmarks Rhyming Chronicle by Brother Niels of Sor. Every Danish man should know these, says the master of the house, and he is the one to make them known. He is the Dutchman, Gotfred van Gehmen, Denmarks first
57、printer, who practices the divine black art of printing. And the books enter the castle of the King and the houses of the citizens. Proverbs and songs are given immortality. Things that men dare not say either in sorrow or in joy are sung by the Bird of Folklore, allegorically and yet clearly. For i
58、t flies free and wide through the common mans room and the knightly castle; it sits and twitters like a falcon on the hand of the noble lady; it steals in like a tiny mouse and squeaks in the dungeon of the enslaved peasant. Merely words - all of it! says the sharp northeast wind. Its the spring! sa
59、y the sunbeams. See how the green buds are peeping out!Now well turn more pages in our picture book, said Godfather.How radiant Copenhagen is! There are tournaments and sports and splendid processions! Look at the gallant knights in armor and the noble ladies in silk and gold! King Hans gives his da
60、ughter, Elizabeth, to the Elector of Brandenburg. How young she is, and how happy she is! She is treading on velvet; there is a whole future in her thoughts - a future of domestic happiness. Close beside her is her royal brother, Prince Christian, with the melancholy eyes and the hot, passionate blo
61、od. He is beloved by the commoners, for he knows their burdens; in his thoughts he has the poor mans future. God alone decides our fate!Now well turn another leaf in the picture book, said Godfather. The wind blows sharply and sings of the sharp sword and this difficult time of trouble.It is an icy-
62、cold day in mid-April. Why is the crowd gathering outside the castle and before the old customhouse, where the Kings ship lies with its sails and banners? People are crowded in the windows and on the roofs. There are sorrow and trouble, expectation and anxiety. They look toward the castle, now so st
63、ill and empty, but where formerly there were torch dances in the gilded halls; they look at the balcony from which King Christian so often gazed out over the court bridge and down the narrow court-bridge street to his dovelet, the little Dutch girl he brought from the town of Bergen. The shutters ar
64、e bolted. As the crowd gazed toward the castle, the gate is opened and the drawbridge is let down. There comes King Christian with his faithful wife, Elizabeth; she will not forsake her royal lord, now when he is so hard pressed.There is fire in his blood and fire in his thoughts; he has wished to b
65、reak with the olden times, to strike off the peasants yoke, to do good to the commoners, to clip the wings of the greedy hawks, but they have been too much for him. He leaves his country and his kingdom, to win allies and friends for himself abroad. His wife and loyal men go with him. Every eye is m
66、oist in this hour of parting.Voices are blended in the song of time, against him and for him a three-part choir.Listen to the words of the nobles; they are written and printed: Woe to you, Christian the Wicked! The blood that poured out in the market place of Stockholm cries aloud and curses you!And
67、 the monks cry echoes the same refrain: Be you cast off by God and by us! You have called hither the Lutheran doctrine; you have given it church and pulpit and bid the tongue of the Devil speak out! Woe to you, Christian the Wicked!But the peasants and commoners weep: Christian, beloved of the peopl
68、e! No longer may the peasant be sold like cattle or exchanged for a hunting hound! That law shall bear you witness! But the words of the poor man are only chaff before the wind.Now the ship sails past the castle, and the commoners line the ramparts, so that they may once more see the royal galley sa
69、il. The time is long; the time is hard. Trust neither in friends nor in kinsmen!Uncle Frederick in the Castle of Kiel would like to be King of Denmark. King Frederick is before Copenhagen. See the picture here - The Faithful Copenhagen. Coal-black clouds are around it - in picture after picture; jus
70、t look at each of them! It is all a resounding picture; it resounds still in song and story - those heavy, hard, and bitter times during the long procession of years.How did it go with that wandering bird, King Christian? The birds have sung about it, and they fly far over distant lands and seas.Ear
71、ly in the spring the stork came from the south, across the land of Germany; it had seen what I will tell you now. I saw the fugitive King Christian crossing a heather - grown moor; he met a wretched cart drawn by only one horse. A woman sat in it, his sister, the Countess of Brandenburg. Faithful to
72、 the Lutheran religion, she had been exiled by her husband. And so on that dark heath the exiled children of a king met. The time is hard; the time is long. Trust neither friend nor kinsman!The swallow came from Snderborg Castle with a sad song, King Christian is betrayed! He sits in the dungeon tow
73、er, deep as a well; his heavy steps wear tracks in the stone floor, and his fingers leave their marks in the hard marble. Oh, what sorrow ever found such vent As that in the furrows of the stone?The fish eagle has come from the tossing sea, which is open and free. A ship flies over it, bearing the b
74、rave Sren Norby from Fyn. Fortune is with him - but fortune is as changeable as wind and weather.In Jutland and Fyn the crows and ravens scream, We seek spoil! It is grand! Caw, caw! Here lie the bodies of horses and of men, too! It is a time of trouble; it is during the Count of Oldenburgs war. The
75、 peasant raises his club and the townsman his knife, and loudly they shout, We shall slay the wolves and leave no cub of them alive! Clouds of smoke roll up from the burning towns.King Christian is a prisoner in Snderborg Castle; he cannot escape or see the bitter distress of Copenhagen. On the Nort
展开阅读全文
课堂库(九科星学科网)所有资源均是用户自行上传分享,仅供网友学习交流,未经上传用户书面授权,请勿作他用。
链接地址:https://www.ketangku.com/wenku/file-376126.html


鄂教版七年级语文下册第8课《诗两首》精题精练.doc
