小学英语英语故事童话故事TheOldStreetLamp老路灯.doc
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1、TheOldStreetLamp老路灯Have you ever heard the story of the old street lamp? It is not really very amusing, but one can bear to hear it once, anyway. There was once a respectable old street lamp who had performed his duties faithfully and well for many years; but now had been declared to be too old-fash
2、ioned. This was the last evening that it would hang from the lamppost and illuminate the street; and he felt like a ballerina who was dancing for the last time and knew that tomorrow she would be a has-been. The lamp was very frightened of the coming day, for he had been told that he would be inspec
3、ted by the six and thirty men of the town council. They were to decide whether the lamp was fit for further service and, if so, what kind. They might suggest that he be hung over one of the lesser bridges, or be sold to a factory, or condemned altogether, which meant that he would be melted down. Th
4、en he would be made into something else, of course; but what worried him was that he did not know whether he would then be able to recall that he had been a street lamp. No matter what happened to him, one thing was certain: tomorrow he would be separated from the night watchman and his wife, and th
5、at was a tragedy, for he considered them to be his family. He had been hung on his lamppost the very year that the man became a night watchman. His wife had been young and snobbish. She would look at the street lamp at night but she wouldnt so much as glance at it in daylight. During recent years, h
6、owever, when all three of them-the night watchman, his wife, and the street lamp-had grown old, the wife had taken care of the lamp: polished it and filled it with oil. The old couple were an honest pair who had never cheated the lamp out of a single drop of oil. This was to be the last night that t
7、he old lamp would shine down upon the pavement. Tomorrow it would be taken to a room in the town hall. These two facts made the lamp feel so sad that he flickered. Other thoughts came: memories of all he had seen. He had cast his light upon many a curious sight and had seen more than all the six and
8、 thirty men of the town council put together. But the old lamp would never have expressed such a thought out loud, for he had the greatest respect for the authorities. It is always pleasant for the old to reminisce, and each time the lamp remembered something different, the flame inside him seemed t
9、o grow brighter. They will remember me as I remember them, thought the lamp. Many years ago there was a young man who stood right under me and opened a letter. It had been written on pink stationery and the handwriting was a womans. He read it twice; then he kissed it. His eyes when he looked up at
10、me said, I am the happiest of all men. He had received a love letter from the girl he loved; and only he and I knew it. I remember another pair of eyes.-How strangely ones thoughts can jump!-There had been a funeral. Someone who had lived in this street had died: a young, rich woman. The hearse had
11、been drawn by four black horses and the coffin had been covered with flowers. The mourners had walked behind it carrying torches, which had outshone my light. But when the procession had passed and I thought the street was deserted once more, I suddenly noticed someone standing right under me and we
12、eping. I shall never forget those sorrow-filled eyes that stared right into me. Such were the thoughts-the memories-of the old street lamp as it shone for the last time. A sentry who is to be relieved of his duty is allowed to exchange at least a few words with the man who will take his place. But t
13、he lamp did not even know who his successor would be, so he would not be able to give him a bit of advice about the wind, and tell him from which corner it usually blew; or the moon, and explain how it shone upon the sidewalk.Down in the gutter there were three who were ready to take over the job of
14、 lighting up the street as soon as it became vacant; and thinking that the lamp could appoint his own successor, they presented them selves to him. The first was a rotten herring head, which can shine in the dark, as you know. It pointed out that his appointment would mean a great saving in oil. The
15、 second was an old piece of dry rotten wood. It can also glow and that a lot brighter than an old codfish, as it said itself. Besides, it was the last piece of a tree that had been the pride of a whole forest. The third was a glowworm. The old street lamp could not imagine where it could have come f
16、rom, but there it was shining like the others. The herring head and the piece of old, dry, rotten wood claimed that the worm did not glow all the time but only when it had fits, which ought to disqualify it.The old lamp tried to explain to them that none of them had sufficient light to become a stre
17、et lamp. But none of the three would believe that; and when they were told that the lamp could not, in any case, appoint his own successor, they all declared that this was good news, for-as they all agreed-the old lamp was too senile to make such an important decision.Just then the wind came around
18、the corner and whistled through the cowl of the lamp. Whats this I hear about your leaving us tomorrow? Will this be the last evening that I shall find you here? Well, let me give you a farewell present, since we must part. I shall blow your brain clean of all cobwebs, so that you will not only be a
19、ble to remember everything you have ever heard or seen, but you will be able to see clearly anything that is told or read aloud in your presence, as well.What a marvelous gift! said the old lamp. If only I am not melted down.It hasnt happened yet, replied the wind. And now Ill blow on your memory. I
20、f you can get a few more presents like mine, your retirement and old age will be a pleasure.But what if I am melted down? sighed the lamp. Can you ensure my memory then too?Be reasonable, old lamp, said the wind, and blew with all its might. Just then the moon came out from behind a cloud. What will
21、 you give the old lamp? asked the wind.Me? I will give him nothing, said the moon. I am on the decline; besides, the lamp has never shone for me, though I have shone for him. And the moon hid behind the clouds because it hated anyone who made demands on it. A drop of water fell upon the cowl. It ann
22、ounced that it had been sent by the gray clouds above and that it brought a valuable gift. Now that I am inside of you, you can rust into dust in one night-any night that you choose, even tonight. The lamp thought that a very poor present and the wind agreed with him. Hasnt anyone anything better to
23、 offer . . . anything better to offer? screeched the wind as loudly as it could. A shooting star fell from the sky, making an arch of fire.What was that? shouted the herring head. I think a star fell right down into the old lamp! Well, if the office is being sought by those of such high rank, the re
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