【英文读物】Another Brownie Book.docx
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1、【英文读物】Another Brownie BookTHE BROWNIES SNOW MAN. When snowdrifts blocked the country roads,And trees were bending with their loads,The wind grew mild which had been raw, And winter yielded to a thaw;That night the Brownies stood to stareIn wonder on the village square.Said one, This plot where drift
2、s now rollSeems like an acre from the Pole. I have a scheme which nothing lacks:Now while the snow so closely packs,And may be molded in the hand,Well build a statue tall and grandWhich here shall stand at morning prime,To be the wonder of the time.Another cried, That suits us all. To work let every
3、 member fall.When once the task we undertakeBe sure no dwarfish man well make; But one that proudly may look downOn half the buildings in the town.I know the place where builders keepTheir benches while the snow is deep;The poles, and ladders too, are there, To use when working high in air.While som
4、e for these with me will fly,Let some their hands to snow apply,And not a feature of the manShall be neglected in our plan. You know the night, some time ago,We tramped so far through drifted snowTo ornament with quaint designThe windows of a mansion fine;And how, on lengthy ladders thereAnd scaffol
5、d swinging in the air, We worked our brushes with a willFrom icy cap to window-sill,And made the people, great and small,Believe Jack Frost had done it all?To-night well work as well, and showA grand result before we go. The snow that night was at its best,And held its shape however pressed;Like dou
6、gh beneath the bakers handIt seemed to answer each demand.The rolls, when tumbled to and fro,Increased with every turning, so First like a cushion on they sped,Then like a pillow, next, a bed,Until the snow, adhering there,Would leave the grass or pebbles bare.As higher blocks of snow were laidStill
7、 higher scaffolding was made,And ladders brought to use insteadOf those too short to reach the head.4Thus grew the form from hour to hour;For Brownies hands have wondrous power,And let them turn to what they will Surprising work will follow still.Some shaped the legs or smoothed the waist,Some saw p
8、lump arms were rightly placed;5The head was fixed with proper pose,Well fashioned were both ears and nose.So close thronged Brownies high and low,A looker-on would hardly knowWhat plan or shape the busy bandOf cunning Brownies had in hand. But plan they had, and deftness too,As well was seen when th
9、ey were through.The rounded form and manly portShowed modeling of rarest sort, While charcoal eyes, so well designedThey seemed to read the very mind,Long icicles for beard and hair,Were last affixed with taste and care.And when the poles around the baseHad been returned each to its place,And every
10、ladder, bench, and boardThey had in use, again was stored,The Brownies stood around awhileTo gaze upon their work and smile.Each points at head, or hand, or toe, His special handiwork to show.In truth, they had good reason thereWith joy and pride to stand and stare,And contemplate the object whiteWh
11、ich loomed above to such a height, And not unlike some hero old,For courage famed, or action bold,With finger pointed out, as though,To indicate the coming foe. But morning light soon came to chaseThe Brownies to their hiding-place.And children on their way to schoolForgot their lessons and the rule
12、While gazing on the statue tallThat seemed to guard the County Hall.And after drifts had left the square,When roads and shingle-roofs were bare,The Brownies statue, like a tower,Still bravely faced both wind and showerThough sinking slowly all the while,And losing corpulence and style,Till gardeners
13、, on the first of May,With shovels pitched the man away.THE BROWNIES IN THE ACADEMY. The Brownies once with capers spryTo an Academy drew nigh,Which, founded by a generous hand,Spread light and learning through the land.The students, by ambition fired,And men of science had retired;So Brownies, thro
14、ugh their mystic power,Now took advantage of the hour.A battery was soon displayed,And strange experiments were made;Electric currents were applied To meadow-frogs they found inside,Which sage professors, nights and days,Had gathered up, in various ways.To making pills some turned the mind,While som
15、e to Dentistry inclined,And aching teeth, both small and large,Were there extracted free of charge. More gazed where phrenologic chartsShowed heads partitioned off in parts.Said one: Let others knowledge gainThrough which to conquer ache and pain,But by these charts Ill do my bestTo learn where Fanc
16、y makes her nest.Another cried, as he surveyedThe bumps that were so well arrayed:These heads exhibit, full and clear, Which one to love and whom to fear;Who is with noble thoughts inspired,And who with hate or envy fired;The man as timid as the hare,The man destructive as the bear.While choosing pa
17、rtners, one may findIt well to keep these charts in mind. A microscope at length, they found;And next, the Brownies gathered roundA stereopticon machineThat cast its rays upon a screen.A thousand times it magnified,Till, stretching out on every side, An object large and larger spread,And filled the
18、gazing group with dread.The locust, beetle, and the beeSoon gained proportions strange to see,And seemed like monsters close at handTo put an end to all the band. Ere long a door was open swung,To show some skeletons that hungFrom hook and peg, which caused a shoutOf fear to rise from those about.Sa
19、id one: Thus Science works its wayThrough old remains from day to day;And those who during life could findNo time, perhaps, to aid mankind,May, after all, in some such placeFor years assist the human raceBy giving students, as you see,Some knowledge of Anatomy.At other times, all breathless groupedO
20、er crucibles, the Brownies stooped To separate, with greatest skill,The grains which cure from those that kill;While burning acids, blazes blue,And odors strong confused the crew.Cried one: Through trials hard to bear,The student must himself prepare,Though mixing paint, or mixing pillOr mixing phra
21、ses, if you willNo careless study satisfies If one would to distinction rise;The minds that shed from pole to poleThe light of years, as round we roll,Are first enriched through patient toil,And kindled by the midnight oil. Thus, spicing logic with a joke,They chatted on till morning broke;And then
22、with wild and rapid raceThe Brownie band forsook the place.THE BROWNIES IN THE ORCHARD. THE autumn nights began to fillThe mind with thoughts of winter chill,When Brownies in an orchard met,Where ripened fruit was hanging yet.Said one, The apples here, indeed, Must now be mellow to the seed;And, ere
23、 another night, should beRemoved at once from every tree.For any evening now may callThe frost to nip and ruin all.Another quickly answer made:This man is scarcely worthy aid;Tis said his harsh and cruel sway Has turned his childrens love away.If frost should paint his orchard white.It matters not w
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