时间:2018-12-31 作者:英语课 分类:2 Surprise Island 奇异岛


英语课

Jessie was not the first one to wake up the next day. At six o’clock, Henry went very quietly to her “room” and opened the swinging door to let Watch out. The dog came very quietly and followed Henry as he walked out of the barn 1 to the spring. Henry stood still and looked around. He was right. It was just as he thought last night. There was a garden, with rows and rows of vegetables in it.



“I wonder if this garden belongs to Captain Daniel,” thought Henry.



Then he heard a little noise, and turned around. A young man was coming toward 2 him. His head was down as he walked. Henry looked at him carefully. Henry thought the man looked very sad, but he forgot that when the stranger looked up and smiled.



“I’m Joe,” he said. “I’m the handy 3 man. How do you like your garden?”



“Mine? Is it mine?” asked Henry.



“Yes. There are two gardens on this island. One belongs to Captain Daniel and this one is yours.”



“How did that happen?” asked Henry. “I just got here.”



“Well, your grandfather knew that you would rather plant it yourself. If you did, it would be too late to start planting when you got out of school. So he told Captain Daniel to plant it, and he said you would weed and look after the garden when you came.”



“I will,” said Henry, opening one of the peas 4. “These are big enough to eat now.”



“Yes,” said Joe. “The peas are just right, but nothing else will be ready until later.”



“Haven’t you ever eaten tiny vegetables? We did once,” said Henry. “We pulled them because there were too many of them in the garden. It makes me hungry when I remember how good they were. The girls make such good things to eat out of almost nothing.”



The other children appeared at just that minute. But it was Benny who spoke 5 first. “Hello, Joe,” he said. “You look just like Joe. Is this your garden?”



“No,” said Joe, laughing. “It’s yours.”



“Oh, no, it isn’t,” said Benny.



“It is ours, Benny,” said Henry. “Joe and Captain Daniel started it for us, and you may help me weed it.”



“Not now,” said Benny. “I want my breakfast.”



“We’ll eat soon,” said Jessie, smiling at Joe. “This is Violet 6, and I’m Jessie.”



Joe said, “Yes, Captain Daniel told me all your names. I feel as if I knew you all.”



“Oh, look,” cried Benny. “Peas! I’d like peas for dinner!”



“Our dinner is all planned then,” said Jessie. “We’ll have peas, and everyone will help pick and shell 7 them.”



They walked slowly back to the barn, leaving Joe at the woodpile.



“He’s nice, isn’t he?” said Violet, as they walked along. They all agreed that he was.



After the four bowls and the bread and milk were set on the table, the children sat down carefully on the packing boxes. Then Jessie said, “I think that after breakfast we’d better make a plan for the summer. Every day we must go swimming, and every day we must cook something at noon. After dinner we must either make something or go exploring.”



“Make something, such as a dish cupboard, I suppose,” said Henry, looking at Violet.



“That’s not a bad idea, Henry!” cried Violet.



“I will make you a cupboard this very day,” said Henry.



“Let’s wash the dishes and pick the peas now,” said Jessie. “Henry can make the dish cupboard while we shell the peas. We’ll take the dishpan to hold them.”



On the way to the spring with their bowls and the dishpan, they passed Joe at the woodpile.



“Henry,” called Joe, stopping his work, “did you know that Captain Daniel goes over to the mainland 8 every morning for groceries 9? If you need any groceries, you may leave your order on a piece of paper in the box on the dock 10. Captain Daniel will bring your order back to the island before dinner.”



“Oh, how nice,” said Jessie. “I was wondering what to do about milk. Ours is almost gone.”



“Just write what you want and I will take it down now,” said Joe. “Here is my pen.”



Jessie and Henry sat down facing each other on rocks to think.



“We must have butter for the peas,” said Jessie, writing it down on a piece of paper from Joe’s pocket.



“We want bread and four bottles of milk every day all summer,” said Henry.



“Sugar,” called Benny. “And some dog bread for Watch.”



“Good!” said Henry. “I almost forgot Watch.”



“I want to go with Joe and see the little box,” said Benny, taking Joe’s hand.



“Let him go,” said Violet. “I’ll wash his bowl for him, and we can pick peas without him.”



Then the older children set to work. They picked enough for dinner, but lots of peas were left



“Enough for two more dinners,” said Henry, very pleased, “and more will grow. Now I will start that cupboard while you girls shell the peas.



“How many places will you need to put things, Jessie?”



“One shelf for spoons and things,” said Jessie.



“And one shelf for dishes,” said Violet.



“And one shelf for pans 11 and kettles,” said Jessie, “and an extra shelf for groceries.”



The two girls sat in the open door of the barn shelling 13 peas. Henry began to build the cupboard.



“What time shall we go swimming?” asked Jessie.



“We could go in right before lunch,” said Henry. “Or if you were too busy cooking, we could swim before breakfast, and maybe again at four o’clock.”



“Fine,” said Jessie. “Before breakfast when we feel like it—four o’clock when we don’t. Maybe both and go to bed at eight o’clock, or as soon as it gets dark.”



“Oh, dear! Do we all have to go to bed so early?” asked Violet.



“You’ll want to, believe me,” said Henry. “You wait and see.”



When the peas were shelled 14, Benny came running back. “It’s a big box, Violet,” he said, “and it has a little door, and it will hold lots of bottles of milk and everything. I like to open the door and take out the things.”



“What did you take out?” asked Violet.



“Oh, Captain Daniel let me take out some letters and packages,” answered Benny.



“Maybe you’d like to do that every day, Benny,” said Henry. “You may take the order down to the box. Then you may get the groceries and letters when they come.”



“I’d like to do that,” said Benny. “Captain Daniel was there and he said he’s bringing our groceries soon. Then I can open the little door and get them.”



“That’s fine,” said Henry. He was glad to please Benny and get a little work done at the same time. “Come and hold this door for me, will you?”



“Oh, our cupboard has doors!” said Violet. She watched Henry put two pieces of heavy cloth on the doors so that they would open and shut.



The morning passed very quickly. Jessie lighted the little stove, boiled some water in the kettle 12, and put in the peas. When they were done, she added 15 some salt, and filled four dishes with peas. On the top of each dish she put a piece of butter. There was no need to call anyone, for the whole family and the dog stood watching her.



“Oh, boy!” cried Henry, as he began to eat.



“Oh, boy!” cried Benny.



Violet said nothing, but when her first dish was empty she passed it for more.



“This is what I like,” said Jessie. “Everything seems better when we have to work to get it.”



It was fun to put white paper in the new dish cupboard and find the best places for each cup and bowl. And at one o’clock the barn was once more in order, the cupboard was shut, and the four children and their dog were ready to explore the island.



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。
prep.对于,关于,接近,将近,向,朝
  • Suddenly I saw a tall figure approaching toward the policeman.突然间我看到一个高大的身影朝警察靠近。
  • Upon seeing her,I smiled and ran toward her. 看到她我笑了,并跑了过去。
adj.方便的;手边的,近便的;手巧的
  • A few more traveler's checks may come in handy on holiday.多带几张旅行支票,度假时会有用的。
  • She is a handy girl who can turn her hand to anything.她是个心灵手巧的姑娘。
豌豆
  • My little sister picked up many green peas in the field. 小妹从田野里拾到许多豌豆。
  • The twin brothers are as like as two peas. 那两个兄弟毫无二致。
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说
  • They sourced the spoke nuts from our company.他们的轮辐螺帽是从我们公司获得的。
  • The spokes of a wheel are the bars that connect the outer ring to the centre.辐条是轮子上连接外圈与中心的条棒。
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.贝壳,壳,外形;v.去壳,脱落;n.[计算机] DOS命令:安装备用的COMMAND.COM文件,并改变环境尺寸
  • Please shell some peanuts for the cake.请为做点心剥点胡花生。
  • This kind of beetles have hard shell.这类甲虫有坚硬的外壳。
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.食品,杂货;杂货业( grocery的名词复数 );杂货店;杂品
  • Hi, Al. I see you're buying the groceries today. 你好,Al.我今天看见你买杂货了。 来自超越目标英语 第3册
  • She ordered her groceries by phone and never left the house. 她用电话定购食品,一步也没离开那座房子。 来自辞典例句
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.平底锅( pan的名词复数 );(天平的)秤盘;马桶;盘状凹地(尤指盆地)
  • Pots, pans, kettles and mops are kitchen utensils. 锅、盘、壶及拖把是厨房用具。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • She clashed these pans down on the floor. 她将这些盘子哗啦一声摔在地上。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
n.(浇水用的)水壶;水壶,水锅
  • The kettle is boiling.水壶里的水开了。
  • She put the kettle on the gas stove.她将水壶放在煤气炉上。
n.去壳,去皮;皮磨;拾贝壳
  • We suffered weeks of heavy shelling. 我们遭受了几星期的密集炮击。
  • Whole neighbourhoods have been squashed flat by shelling. 整个小区已被炮弹夷为平地。 来自辞典例句
adj.有壳的,带壳的,脱壳的
  • She shelled and ate a few nuts. 她剥了几个坚果吃了。 来自辞典例句
  • He shelled out a lot to get that typewriter. 他花了不少钱买那台打字机。 来自辞典例句
adj.更多的,附加的,额外的
  • They have added a new scene at the beginning.在开头他们又增加了一场戏。
  • The pop music added to our enjoyment of the film.片中的流行音乐使我们对这部电影更加喜爱。
学英语单词
According to the Custom of Port
action spot
Anotis
armogenesis
asparagus filicinus ham.
auto call
barrel antenna
batch-processing environment
bid welcome to
brucellar pneumonia
call packing
catia
chaetodon kleinii
chafingly
Chinaman
clinogram
collapsing liner
complement-fixing antigen
consumer sales resistance
cotage
cracked rice grains
crossbar automatic telephone system
crupel
defensive mechanism
domain of a function
dompnation
double-cropping
doubletop pk.
dumbreck
earth reflect
employee rating
engleson
enoy
ETAC
facundity
flamenco dancer
gassest
glycophosphoglyceride
gorringe
grass
grisly
have a good idea of
hawe-bake
high-resolution surface composition mapping radiometer (hrscmr)
historical geomorphology
house of correction
kittels
lasitter
legal cessions
load-out system
low velocity scanning
maln
memory buffer
microcomputer on a chip
modified Mercalli intensity scale
municipal traffic
myasthenic pseudoparalysis
national union of teachers (nut)
nonhorse
oscillating movement
overcalculates
Pauline
Pearl Mae Bailey
pectoraliss
perdurabo
pitcher's arm fault
polymorphonucleate
preciously
protoxylem
pump load-drop cavitation
quick-references
rabbit punch
range circuit
Rastovac
regular maintenance of buildings and structures
respond type-out key
Rohrsen
roller bearing cup
Sanborn County
scurrilities
self face
shadow-test
sheng nus
silver-bearing copper
single-phase condenser motor
sociofugal
SSPX
stainless-steel fibre
step cutting
substitute flag signal
superdemocracy
tail-wagging
Tapuri
tax-residents
thrombopenia
toreroes
tremains
trust company
tuned radio-frequency transformer
type ga(u)ge
Wal-Mart effect
wilhem