[转载]《巨人的花园》拓展阅读:自私的巨人王尔德 英原文
2011-08-14 08:52阅读:
【
英文原文】Every
afternoon,
as
the
children
were
coming
back
from
school,
they
used
to
go
and
play
in
the
giant's
garden.
It
was
a
beautiful
large
garden.
Beautiful
flowers
grew
in
the
grass.
There
were
twelve
fruit
trees.
In
the
spring
the
fruit
trees
were
covered
with
red
and
white
flowers,
and
later
in
the
year
they
bore
rich
fruit.
The
birds
sang
in
the
trees
so
sweetly
that
sometimes
the
children
stopped
their
games
and
listened
to
them.
'How
happy
we
are
here!'
they
cried
to
each
other.
One
day
the
br>giant came back. He had
been away for seven years.
When he arrived, he saw
the children playing in his
garden. 'What are you doing
here?' he cried in a very
loud voice. The children ran
away.
'My own garden is my own
garden,' said the giant. 'I
will allow no one to play
in it but myself. 'So he
built a high wall round
it and put up a notice:
Keep out. He was a very
selfish giant.
So the children had nowhere to
play. They tried to play
on the road, but the road
was dusty and full of
hard stone, and they did
not like it. They wandered
round the high walls when
their lessons were finished and
talked about the beautiful
garden inside. 'How happy we
were there!' they said to
each other.
The spring came, and there were
flowers and little birds all
over the country. But in
the garden of the Selfish
Giant it was till winter
the birds did not like to
sing in it because there
were no children, and the
trees forgot to bear flowers.
Snow covered up the grass,
and ice covered all the
trees with silver. The north
wind came, and driving
rain.
'I can't understand why the
spring is so late in
coming,' said the Selfish Giant
as he sat at the window
of his house and looked
out at his cold white
garden. 'I hope that there
will be a change in the
weather.'
But the spring never came, nor
the summer. When there was
golden fruit in every other
garden, there was no fruit
in the the giant's garden.
It was always winter there
with the north wind, and
snow, and ice, and driving
rain.
The giant was lying in bed
one morning when he heard
some beautiful music. It was
a little bird singing outside
his window. It was so
long since he had heard
the song of a bird that
it seemed to him the most
beautiful music in the world.
Then the north wind and
the rain stopped.
'I believe that spring has come
at last!' said the giant.
He jumped out of bed and
looked out.
What did he see?
He saw a most wonderful sight.
The children had come in
though a hole in the wall
and were sitting in the
branches of the trees. There
was a little child in
every tree that he could
see. The trees were so
glad to have the children
back that they had covered
themselves with flowers: the
birds were flying about and
singing with joy, and flowers
were looking up through the
green grass.
A little boy was standing in
the farthest corner of the
garden. He was so small
that he could not reach
up to the branches of the
tree, but was wandering round
it and weeping. That tree
was still covered with ice
and snow.
'How selfish I have been!' said
the giant. 'Now I know
why the spring would not
come here. I'll put the
little boy on the top of
the tree. Then I'll pull
down the wall and my
garden shall be a children's
playground for ever.' He was
really sorry for what he
had done.
So he went down: he opened
the door very quietly, and
went out into the garden.
But, when the children saw
him, they were afraid and
ran away. Only the little
boy did not run: his eyes
were so full of tears
that he did not see the
giant coming. The giant came
quietly behind him. He took
the little boy gently in
his hand and put him up
into the tree. Then the
tree was suddenly covered with
flowers, and the birds came
and sang in it, and the
little boy put his arms
round the giant's neck and
kissed him.
The other children saw that
giant was not bad and
selfish now, so they came
running back.
'It's your garden now, little
children,' said the giant, and
he pulled down the wall.
When the people were going along
the road to the town,
they found the giant playing
with the children in the
most beautiful garden they had
ever seen.
The children played all day, and
in the evening they came
to the giant to say
goodbye to him.
'But where is your little
friend?' he said. 'Where is
the little boy I put in
the tree?' The giant loved
him best because the little
boy had kissed him.
'We don't know,' answered the
children. 'he has gone
away.'
'You must tell him to come
tomorrow, he must come
tomorrow.' 'We don't know where
he lives. We had never
seen him before.' The giant
felt very sad.
Every afternoon when school ended,
the children came and played
with the giant. But the
little boy whom the giant
loved was never seen again.
The giant was very kind
to all the children, but
he did want to see his
first little friend. 'How much
I would like to see him!'
he said.
Years went by, and the giant
became very old and weak.
He could not play in the
garden now; so he sat in
a big chair and watched
the children at their games
and looked at his beautiful
garden. 'I have many beautiful
flowers,' he said, 'but the
children are the most beautiful
flowers of all.'
One morning, when he was
dressing himself, he looked out
of the window. He did not
hate the winter now, because
he knew that the spring
was sleeping and the flowers
were resting: he knew that
they would come again.
Suddenly he rubbed his eyes; he
looked again at the wonderful
sight! In the farthest corner
of the garden there was a
tree quite covered with
beautiful white flowers. Its
branches were golden, and silver
fruit hung down from them.
And the little boy whom
he loved was standing under
the tree.
He ran out into the garden:
he hurried across the grass
and came near the child.
When he came quite close,
his face became red with
anger and he said, 'Who
has dared to wound you?'
There were marks on the
child's hands, and on the
little feet.
'Who had dared to wound you?'
cried the giant. 'Tell me
and I will take my sword
and kill him!'
'No,' said the child, 'These are
the wounds of love.'
'Who are you?' said the giant.
He was afraid, and knelt
before the little child.
'You once let me play in
your garden,' said the child.
'Today you'll come with me
into my garden in heaven.'
When the children came into the
garden on that afternoon, they
found the giant lying dead
under the tree, covered with
white flowers.