小学英语英语故事(童话故事)TheSnowMan雪人
有关冬的诗句
The Snow Man 雪人
"It's so bitterly cold that my whole body crackles!" said the Snow Man. "This wind can really blow life into you! And how that glaring thing up there glares at me!" He meant the sun; it was just tting. "She won't make me blink; I'll hold onto the pieces."
"The pieces" were two large triangular pieces of tile, which he had for eyes. His mouth was part of an old rake, hence he had teeth. He had been born amid the triumphant shouts of the boys, and welcomed by the jingling of sleigh bells and the cracking of whips from the passing sleighs.
The sun went down, and the full moon ro, big and round, bright and beautiful, in the clear blue sky.
"Here she comes again from the other side," said the Snow Man, for he thought it was the sun showing itlf again. "Ah, I've cured her of staring, all right. Now let her hang up there a
波尔顿nd shine so that I can e mylf. If I only knew how to move from this place - I'd like so much to move! If I could, I'd slide along there on the ice, the way I e the boys slide, but I don't know how to run."
"Away! Away!" barked the old Watchdog. He was quite hoar from the time when he was a hou dog lying under the stove. "The sun will teach you how to run. I saw your predecessor last winter, and before that his predecessor. Away! Away! And away they all go!"
"I don't understand you, friend," said the Snow Man. "Is that thing up there going to teach me to run?" He meant the moon. "Why, she was running the last time I saw her a little while ago, and now she comes sneaking back from the other side." "You don't know anything at all," replied the Watchdog. "But then, of cour, you've just been put together. The one you are looking at now is called the moon, and the one who went away was the sun. She will come again tomorrow, and she will teach you to run down into the ditch. We're going to have a change of weather soon; I can feel it in my left hind leg; I have a pain in it. The weather's going to change."
含月的古诗"I don't understand him," said the Snow Man to himlf, "but I have a feeling he's talking about something unpleasant. The one that stared at me and went away, whom he called the sun, is no friend of mine either, I can feel that."
外委"Away! Away!" barked the Watchdog, and then he walked around three times and crept into his kennel to sleep.
The weather really did change. Early next morning a thick, damp mist lay over the whole countryside. At dawn a wind ro; it was icy cold. The frost t in hard, but when the sun ro, what a beautiful sight it was! The trees and bushes were covered with hoarfrost and looked like a forest of white coral, while every twig emed smothered with glittering white flowers. The enormously many delicate branches that are concealed by the leaves in summer now appeared, every single one of them, and made a gleaming white lacework, so snowy white that a white radiance emed to spring from every bough. The birch waved in the wind, as if it had life, like the rest of the trees in the summer. It was all wonderfully beautiful. And when the sun came out, how it all glittered and sparkled, as if everything had been strewn with diamond
dust, and big diamonds had been sprinkled on the snowy carpet of the earth; or one could also imagine that countless little lights were gleaming, brighter even than the snow itlf.
"It's wonderfully beautiful!" said a young girl, who had come out into the garden with a young man. They stopped near the Snow Man and gazed at the flashing trees. "Summer can't show us a lovelier sight!" she said, and her eyes sparkled with delight. "And we can't have a fellow like this in the summertime, either," the young man agreed, as he pointed to the Snow Man. "He's splendid."
迎元宵大相径庭近义词The young girl laughed, nodded to the Snow Man, and then danced over the snow with her friend - over snow that crackled under their feet as though they were walking on starch.当夏
"Who were tho two?" asked the Snow Man of the Watchdog. "You've been around this yard longer than I have. Do you know them?"
"Of cour I know them," said the Watchdog. "She pets me, and he once threw me a meat bone. I don't bite tho two."
"But what are they suppod to be?" asked the Snow Man. "Sweethearts!" replied the Watchdog. "They'll go to move into the same kennel someday and gnaw the same bone together. Away! Away!"
"But are they as important as you and I?" asked the Snow Man.
校点"Why, they are members of the master's family," said the Watchdog. "People certainly don't know very much if they were only born yesterday; I can tell that from you. Now I have age and knowledge. I know everybody here in the hou, and I know a time when I didn't have to stand out here in the cold, fastened to a chain. Away! Away!" "The cold is lovely," said the Snow Man. "But tell me, tell me. Only don't rattle that chain; it makes me shiver inside when you do that."