【英文读物】Told by Uncle Remus.docx
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1、【英文读物】Told by Uncle RemusTOLD BY UNCLE REMUS THE REASON WHY The main reason why Uncle Remus retired from business as a story-teller was because the little boy to whom he had told his tales grew to be a very big boy, and grew and grew till he couldnt grow any bigger. Meanwhile, his father and mother
2、moved to Atlanta, and lived there for several years. Uncle Remus moved with them, but he soon grew tired of the dubious ways of city life, and one day he told his Miss Sally that if she didnt mind he was going back to the plantation where he could get a breath of fresh air. He was overjoyed when the
3、 lady told him that they were all going back as soon as the son married. As this event was to occur in the course of a few weeks, Uncle Remus decided to wait for the rest of the family. The wedding came off, and4 then the father and mother returned to the plantation, and made their home there, much
4、to the delight of the old negro. In course of time, the man who had been the little boy for ever so long came to have a little boy of his own, and then it happened in the most natural way in the world that the little boys little boy fell under the spell of Uncle Remus, who was still hale and hearty
5、in spite of his age. This latest little boy was frailer and quieter than his father had been; indeed, he was fragile, and had hardly any color in his face. But he was a beautiful child, too beautiful for a boy. He had large, dreamy eyes, and the quaintest little ways that ever were seen; and he was
6、polite and thoughtful of others. He was very choice in the use of words, and talked as if he had picked his language out of a book. He was a source of perpetual wonder to Uncle Remus; indeed, he was the wonder of wonders, and the old negro had a way of watching him curiously. Sometimes, as the resul
7、t of this investigation, which was continuous, Uncle Remus would shake his head and5 chuckle; at other times, he would shake his head and sigh. This little boy was not like the other little boy. He was more like a girl in his refinement; all the boyishness had been taken out of him by that mysteriou
8、s course of discipline that some mothers know how to apply. He seemed to belong to a different ageto a different time; just how or why, it would be impossible to say. Still, the fact was so plain that any one old enough and wise enough to compare the two little boysone the father of the othercould n
9、ot fail to see the difference; and it was a difference not wholly on the surface. Miss Sally, the grandmother, could see it, and Uncle Remus could see it; but for all the rest the tendencies and characteristics of this later little boy were a matter of course. “Miss Sally,” said Uncle Remus, a few d
10、ays after the arrival of the little boy and his mother, “what dey gwineter do wid dat chile? What dey gwineter make out n im?” “Im sure I dont know,” she replied. “A grandmother doesnt count for much these days6 unless there is illness. She is everything for a few hours, and then she is nothing.” Th
11、ere was no bitterness in the ladys tone, but there was plenty of feelingfeeling that only a grandmother can appreciate and understand. “I speck dats so,” Uncle Remus remarked; “an a ole nigger dat oughter been dead long ago, by good rights, dont count no time an nowhar. But its a pitya mighty pity.”
12、 “What is a pity?” the lady inquired, though she knew full well what was in the old negros mind. “I cant tell you, maam, an twouldnt be my place ter tell you ef I could; but dar tis, an you cant rub it out. I see it, but I cant say it; I knows it, but I cant show you how ter put yo finger on it; yit
13、 its dar ef Im name Remus.” The grandmother sat silent so long, and gazed at the old negro so seriously, that he became restive. He placed the weight of his body first on one foot and then on the other, and finally struck blindly at some imaginary object with the end of his walking-cane. 7 “I hope y
14、ou aint mad wid me, Miss Sally,” he said. “With you?” she cried. “Why” She was sitting in an easy-chair on the back porch, where the warmth of the sun could reach her, but she rose suddenly and went into the house. She made a noise with her throat as she went, so that Uncle Remus thought she was lau
15、ghing, and chuckled in response, though he felt little like chuckling. As a matter of fact, if his Miss Sally had remained on the porch one moment longer she would have burst into tears. She went in the house, however, and was able to restrain herself. The little boy caught at the skirt of her dress
16、, saying: “Grandmother, you have been sitting in the sun, and your face is red. Mother never allows me to sit in the sun for fear I will freckle. Father says a few freckles would help me, but mother says they would be shocking.” Uncle Remus received his dinner from the big house that day, and by tha
17、t token he knew that his Miss Sally was very well pleased with him. The dinner was brought on a waiter by a strapping8 black girl, with a saucy smile and ivory-white teeth. She was a favorite with Uncle Remus, because she was full of fun. “I dunner how come de white folks treat you better dan dey do
18、es de balance un us,” she declared, as she sat the waiter on the small pine table and removed the snowy napkin with which it was covered. “I know it aint on count er yo beauty, kaze yo aint no purtier dan what I is,” she went on, tossing her head and showing her white teeth. Uncle Remus looked all a
19、round on the floor, pretending to be looking for some weapon that would be immediately available. Finding none, he turned with a terrible make-believe frown, and pointed his forefinger at the girl, who was now as far as the door, her white teeth gleaming as she laughed. “Mark my words,” he said sole
20、mnly; “ef I dont brain you befo de weeks out itll be bekaze you done been gobbled up by de Unkollopsanall.” The girl stopped laughing instantly, and became serious. The threats of age have a meaning that all the gaiety of youth cannot overcome.9 The gray hair of Uncle Remus, his impersonation of wra
21、th, his forefinger held up in warning, made his threat so uncanny that the girl shivered in spite of the fact that she thought he was joking. Let age shake a finger at you, and you feel that there is something serious behind the gesture. Now, Miss Sally had taken advantage of the opportunity to send
22、 the grandchild with the girl; she was anxious that he should make the acquaintance of Uncle Remus, and have instilled into his mind the quaint humor that she knew would remain with him all his life, and become a fragrant memory when he grew old. But the later little boy was very shy, and when he sa
23、w the terrible frown and the threatening gesture with which Uncle Remus had greeted the girl, he shrank back in a corner, seeing which the old negro began to laugh. It was not a genuine laugh, but it was so well done that it answered every purpose. “I dont see nothin ter laugh at,” remarked the girl
24、, and with that she flirted out. Uncle Remus turned to the little boy. “Honey,10 you look so much like Brer Rabbit dat I bleeze ter laugh. Long at fust, I had a notion dat you mought be Mr. Cricket. But youer too big fer dat, an den you aint got no elbows in yo legs. An den I knowd twuz Brer Rabbit
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