时间:2018-12-31 作者:英语课 分类:3 黄色小屋的秘密 The Yellow House Mys


英语课



The children were lonesome after the wedding. They longed so much for Joe and Alice. But just then the mystery of the little yellow house began.



Supper was over. Warm air was blowing through the open windows, and birds were singing their evening songs.



As Mr. Alden sat down in his easy chair, he said with a pleasant smile, “Isn’t it time to think about summer plans?”



Henry looked at his grandfather.



“Grandfather,” he said, “do you mind if I ask you something?”



“No, of course not,” said Mr. Alden. “Ask anything you like.”



“You may not think it is polite,” said Henry slowly.



“But what is a grandfather for?” asked Mr. Alden, winking 2 at Benny. “I know you are very polite to me always. Go ahead and don’t be afraid.”



“Well,” said Henry, “do you remember last fall I asked you why we never went into the little yellow house on Surprise Island? You looked very cross for a minute, and Jessie and I were sure we had hurt your feelings.”



Jessie went on, “Don’t you remember? You said, ‘That’s another story.’”



“Oh, I remember all right,” said Mr. Alden. “I never could forget that.” He looked from one face to another. “If you four children will come over here and sit down on the floor, I’ll tell you all about it. I guess the time has come when you ought to know.”



Mr. Alden waited until they were ready to listen, and then he began.



“You know I told you my father built the barn 3 on Surprise Island for his best race horses? And that the man who took care of the horses built the little yellow house for himself?



“The man’s name was Bill. He was about thirty years old then and so was I. I loved Bill very much. He took fine care of the race horses, and he lived in the little yellow house with his good wife.”



“Race horses!” cried Benny. “Did they race?”



“Yes, they raced while my father was living. My father was your great-grandfather, you know. Bill loved the horses, and he was a good, kind man. But I must tell you he was weak.”



“Not very strong, you mean?” said Benny.



“No, Benny,” said Mr. Alden sadly. “I don’t mean that at all. He was a very strong man. He could lift the boat. I mean he had a weak will. Anybody could tell him what to do.” Mr. Alden stopped.



“Don’t tell us, if you don’t want to!” begged Jessie.



“Yes, I want to tell you now. I’m afraid Bill was a coward 4. He would do anything his brother Sam told him. His brother had some bad friends.”



The children were suddenly very quiet. They knew that this was a sad story for their grandfather to tell.



“Let me go and get Watch, please!” cried Benny. “I’ll be right back.”



Everyone had to smile as Benny disappeared into the kitchen. They knew that Benny always wanted the dog when things did not go just right. He came back at once with Watch running after him.



“Lie down, old fellow,” said Henry. Watch lay down beside Benny and put his head on his paws 5.



“Well, one evening,” Mr. Alden went on, “Bill’s wife, Margaret, noticed that Bill seemed to have something on his mind. He would not talk about it. After she had gone to bed, she heard a queer 6 grating noise in the front room where Bill was. She got up and went to see what he was doing.



“There he sat, reading the paper. The noise had stopped. He asked her what she wanted and she told him about the queer noise. He said it must have been the waves on the rocks.



“But it wasn’t waves, and Margaret knew it. She began to be very much worried. She went back to bed and pretended 7 to be asleep, and the noise began again.”



“Didn’t she ever find out what it was?” asked Benny.



“No, Benny, she never did. To this day, nobody knows what Bill was doing in that front room. This went on for two nights. The next night Margaret smelled something queer. She thought it might be paint. But when she came out, Bill was not painting. He was reading.”



“Then one night he went out to the barn to see the horses, and he never came back.”



“Never came back?” asked Violet 8.



“No. Margaret waited an hour. Then she took a light and went out to look for him. He had given the horses water, but he had left the barn door open. The rowboat was gone. Then Margaret telephoned to me. I got up and dressed and found a policeman. Captain Daniel took us over to the island in another boat. But of course it was dark and we couldn’t find a thing.”



“No clues 10?” said Benny.



“That’s right—no clues,” said Mr. Alden. “Next day the island was full of policemen. They looked under the barn, under the dock 11, all through the woods. But they couldn’t find Bill. They found Bill’s rowboat a few days later. It was tied up at another dock about a mile away on the mainland 12.”



“Did they radio the news?” asked Benny. “And get the F.B.I. men?”



“Oh, think, Benny!” said Henry. “There weren’t any radios then.”



“Oh, I forgot that,” said Benny. “But at last they found him, didn’t they?”



“No, they never found Bill.” Mr. Alden stopped and then went on again.



“Margaret thought the clues were the queer smell and the grating noise in the front room. So the police went all over the little yellow house. They thought they might find a letter. Margaret thought she had seen Bill reading one.”



“You mean maybe a letter frightened Bill?” said Henry.



“Yes, that’s right. But they never found one. They took up the rugs 13. They hunted all through the desk. They even went down the chimney 14 with a light.”



“Did they take up the floor boards?” asked Henry.



“No, they didn’t take them up. But they looked at every board in the house. There was dust between every two boards.”



“Why didn’t they put a notice in the newspapers?” asked Violet.



“They did. We had a notice in the paper every day for two years. But nothing ever came of it.”



“I’m so sorry for Margaret,” said Violet. “She must be old now.”



“Yes, my dear,” said her grandfather with a smile. “She seems old to you, I know.”



“Seems old?” said Violet. “Do I know her?”



“Yes, you all know her very well,” said Mr. Alden. “She is Mrs. McGregor.”



“Mrs. McGregor!” shouted all the children. They could not believe it. For Mrs. McGregor had taken care of them, and listened to their troubles ever since they had come to live with their grandfather. They could not think of her as young, or as anyone in a mystery.



At last Henry said, “I suppose she couldn’t live alone on the island, and so Great-grandfather gave her a home here?”



“That’s right. He asked her to come here to live with us as our housekeeper 15, and the next year he died. She has lived here ever since. We never talk about Bill now, and nobody has ever been inside the yellow house since that time.”



“It’s such a lovely little house!” cried Jessie. “It’s too bad it’s such a sad place and nobody can live there.”



Henry sat up and put his hand on his grandfather’s knee.



“Grandfather!” he said, “couldn’t we go into the little yellow house? I do wish you’d let us. Just let us look around. We might find something.”



Mr. Alden looked at Henry and smiled. “You’re a good boy, Henry. But do you really think you could find anything when the police couldn’t?”



“No, I suppose not,” said Henry.



But just the same, all the children kept looking at their grandfather.



Suddenly he leaned 16 forward. “Do you really want to go?” he asked.



“Oh, yes!” they all answered.



“Well, all right. You may go. You may hunt around all you like, and see what you can find.”



Then Benny said, “I don’t want to go.”



“You don’t want to go!” shouted Henry. “Why not?”



“Well, I think it would be mean to go without Joe and Alice,” said Benny. “They won’t come home from their wedding trip for two weeks.”



“Is that all?” cried Jessie. “You scared me, Benny. I thought you really didn’t want to go.”



“We’d all like to wait,” said Violet. “It will be much more fun if Joe and Alice go with us.”



“Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we found something? Some clue 9?” cried Henry.



“Yes, it would,” said Mr. Alden. “But I don’t think you will. Don’t talk about this to Mrs. McGregor yet, will you?”



“We won’t,” promised Henry. “Look, Benny, you won’t tell, will you?”



“I never tell secrets, do I?” asked Benny. “I never told where Joe and Alice went on their wedding trip, did I?”



“Do you know?” asked Henry, in great surprise.



“Of course I do.”



“You do?” said Mr. Alden. “I don’t know myself. Nobody told me.”



“They told me I could tell you two days after the wedding. That’s right now.”



“Well, where did they go?” cried Jessie.



“They went to our barn on Surprise Island,” said Benny. “That was another surprise, because they are so near, and everyone thinks they are far away.”



“Just think of that! Our very own barn where we stayed last summer!” cried Jessie.



“That’s right,” said Benny. He was delighted to surprise even his grandfather.



“Well,” said Henry, “now I can hardly wait for them to come home.”



“I shan’t sleep a wink 1 tonight,” said Jessie. “I shall be thinking of Joe and Alice, and the little yellow house.”



They all expected to stay awake all night, but they were soon all sleeping quietly, even Watch.



n.眨眼,使眼色,瞬间;v.眨眼,使眼色,闪烁
  • He tipped me the wink not to buy at that price.他眨眼暗示我按那个价格就不要买。
  • The satellite disappeared in a wink.瞬息之间,那颗卫星就消失了。
n.瞬眼,目语v.使眼色( wink的现在分词 );递眼色(表示友好或高兴等);(指光)闪烁;闪亮
  • Anyone can do it; it's as easy as winking. 这谁都办得到,简直易如反掌。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
  • The stars were winking in the clear sky. 星星在明亮的天空中闪烁。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.谷仓,饲料仓,牲口棚
  • That big building is a barn for keeping the grain.那幢大房子是存放粮食的谷仓。
  • The cows were driven into the barn.牛被赶进了牲口棚。
n.懦夫,胆小鬼
  • The newspapers had unjustly labelled him as a coward.那家报纸不公正地称他为懦夫。
  • I was basically a dreadful coward.从根本上说,我非常胆小怕事。
n.爪子( paw的名词复数 );手
  • Take your filthy paws off me! 把你的脏手从我身上拿开!
  • Take your dirty little paws off me! 别用你的小黑手抓着我。 来自《简明英汉词典》
adj.奇怪的,异常的,不舒服的,眩晕的
  • I heard some queer footsteps.我听到某种可疑的脚步声。
  • She has been queer lately.她最近身体不舒服。
adj.假装的;徒有外表的;传说的;号称的v.假装( pretend的过去式和过去分词 );伪装;(尤指儿童)(在游戏中)装扮;自诩
  • He pretended that resigning was part of his long-term career strategy. 他假装辞职是他长远事业规划的一部分。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • He politely pretended not to have heard this remark. 他有礼貌地假装没有听到这句话。 来自《简明英汉词典》
adj.紫色的;n.紫罗兰
  • She likes to wear violet dresses.他喜欢穿紫色的衣服。
  • Violet is the color of wisdom,peace and strength.紫色是智慧的,和平的和力量的颜色。
n.线索;提示;词语
  • She will clue you in about this.她将为你提供这方面情况。
  • No clue to his whereabouts has been found.至今没有找到有关他行踪的线索。
n.线索( clue的名词复数 );提示;(帮助警方破案的)线索;(纵横填字谜、游戏或问题的)提示词语
  • The police think the videotape may hold some vital clues to the identity of the killer. 警方认为那盘录像带可能录有能确认凶手身份的一些重要线索。
  • contextual clues to the meaning 上下文提供的理解其含义的线索
n.码头;被告席;vt.使(船)进港;扣;vi.进港
  • We took the children to the dock to see the ships.我们带孩子们到码头去看轮船。
  • The corrupt official stood in the dock.那贪官站在被告席上。
n.大陆,本土
  • The new bridge will link the island to the mainland.新的桥梁将把该岛与大陆连接在一起。
  • Hong Kong's prosperity relies heavily on mainland.香港的繁荣在很大程度上依赖于大陆。
n.小块地毯( rug的名词复数 )
  • rugs handmade by local craftsmen 由当地工艺师手工制作的小地毯
  • Try to avoid colours that jar when choosing curtains and rugs. 选择窗帘和地毯时,尽量避免颜色不调和。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.烟囱,烟筒;玻璃罩
  • The chimney blew out a cloud of black smoke.烟囱里喷出一团黑烟。
  • His father is a chimney sweeper.他的父亲是一位扫烟囱的工人。
n.管理家务的主妇,女管家
  • A spotless stove told us that his mother is a diligent housekeeper.炉子清洁无瑕就表明他母亲是个勤劳的主妇。
  • She is an economical housekeeper and feeds her family cheaply.她节约持家,一家人吃得很省。
v.(使)倾斜,屈身( lean的过去式和过去分词 );倚;依赖;使斜靠
  • He leaned forward, his hands clasped tightly together. 他俯身向前,双手十字交错地紧握着。
  • He leaned back, exulting at the success of his plan. 他向后一靠,为自己计划成功而得意扬扬。
学英语单词
2-propanone
all-trades
Amalphitan Code
arithmetic underflow
backsies
brises-soleil
broda
buttress-root
captive firing
cathode-biased flip-flop
change-manager
clinocephalism
Control character.
coupling knuckle pin
cutawi machine
d.v
dbrc data-sharing control
dentin matrix
devotional
distractingly
dual indicator
efficiency of feedlot gain
endorsors
Fastnachtsspiel
Fintona
fluorophytosterol
give something one's best shot
glass resistor
glossolysis
gorilla gorilla beringeis
herocane
high quality training
ICP (integrated circuit package)
in a string
ink surface tension
joint variation
K'elafo
kindredship
lace
lignum benedictum
made myself understood
mamma's
marchandise
Marmesine
mattlis
menemsha
minieres
minocycline
molecular radius
multiplicative variation
nazarbaev
o-aminophenol sulfate
oulette
perthiocyanogen
pettitts
Philos. Rev.
photoplastic recording
plain friction bearing
PNAB
polyamorist
polysaccharoses
population gradation
postburnout heat transfer
prefield
pseudohibernation
Pulvinaria camellicola
scenopinids
sectoral supporting services
self-convergent CRT
several-seeded
showing over
side reaction coefficient
silicon planet
smilesmirk
soft switching
solid rolled centre
spark plug pliers
spoon feed
St. Johns River
starus
stepped arch
stern tube packing gland
stoker coal
straight low
subsea template
subsequent settlement
Sulci cerebrales
systemic herbicide
tall drink of water
Tang ware
Tawfīqīyah
theorem of polyhedron
thethy
thousand-years
threatening question
tibetan terriers
tonalpohualli
transliterates
wakon
wave penetration
Weber-number
worthly