时间:2018-12-06 作者:英语课 分类:4 神秘农场 Mystery Ranch


英语课

Early the next morning, the four Alden children climbed into Mr. Pond’s car. He had come to take them to Stony 1 Creek 2. They were going to see the sheriff, Mr. Bates.



Mr. Pond was very quiet. He was worried about these nice children. He liked them, even though he had only known 3 them a short time. And he was worried about Jane Alden, too. He had known her for many years. He knew well enough that she had always been cross and hard to get along with. But he was very sorry for her. He didn’t want any of them to be upset by these three strange men.



They drove 4 up in front of the courthouse in Stony Creek and Mr. Pond stopped the car.



“Come right in,” called Mr. Bates. “I’m glad you came. I don’t often have so much company.”



“Hello, Bates,” said Mr. Pond. “These are the Alden children.”



“I had already guessed that,” said Mr. Bates. He took his guests to a small back room and shut the door.



They all sat down.



“Well, what brings you here?” asked Mr. Bates.



Mr. Pond said, “We came to see you about police business. There is something going on in the Alden woods. It looks as if someone has been living in an old hut 5 there.”



Mr. Bates didn’t look surprised. He just waited for Mr. Pond to go on.



“That isn’t all,” Mr. Pond said. “Three strange men tried to make Miss Jane Alden sell her ranch 6. They told her it was no good. Say, Bates, you act as if you knew something that I don’t. What do you really think about all this?” Mr. Bates just sat and smiled.



“Maybe you won’t have to worry about those men any longer,” he said. “And I don’t think anyone will be staying in that hut, either. But I’ll wait and let Mr. Carter 7 tell you all about it.”



“Mr. Carter? Who would that be?” asked Benny.



“He is a very important man,” Mr. Bates said, still smiling. “Here he comes now.”



A car stopped just behind Mr. Pond’s. A good-looking young man got out. He was very tall. He had soft brown hair. When he stood in the door, Jessie and Violet 8 looked at him with their mouths open. Then they looked at one another.



Jessie could hardly talk. “Oh, Violet,” she whispered 9, “Our Mystery Man!”



“Are you surprised?” asked Mr. Carter, laughing.



“We certainly are,” said Benny. “We thought you might be a bad man. That is, Henry thought so, anyway.”



“Benny!” Henry said, blushing 10. “I didn’t really think that, Mr. Carter. I just thought the police should—I mean—well, you were a stranger, and—”



“That’s all right, Henry,” said the Mystery Man, smiling again. “That was a smart thing to think.”



“But if you’re not a bad man, who are you?” asked Benny.



“Well, I’ve been working for you, but you didn’t know it.”



“Working for us?” asked Benny. “You don’t look like a ranch hand.”



“There are many ways to work,” Mr. Carter said. “And one of them is looking for uranium.”



“Uranium!” Jessie cried. She had finally found her voice again.



“Yes,” said Mr. Carter. “My job is to look for uranium. I found a field of it right on your ranch.”



“Do you mean that all of that Indian dust is really uranium?” asked Violet.



“It certainly is,” Mr. Carter answered, looking at all the surprised faces around him.



“But why were you looking there?” asked Violet. “And who are those three tough men?”



Mr. Carter answered slowly, “I work for a man you may have heard of. Mr. Alden of Greenfield.”



“Grandfather!” the children cried.



“Yes. Mr. Alden hired me to look for uranium for him. There is a lot of it in this part of the country. But when I found it on your ranch, I also found that someone had been there first.”



“That must be those three men!” Henry said.



“Yes. They were looking for uranium, too. But they are not honest. When they found a place that had uranium, they tried to buy the land cheap. They didn’t tell people what they had found.”



“That’s just what they tried to do to us,” Violet said.



“Yes,” Mr. Carter went on, “but Mr. Bates and I caught up with them. You won’t be bothered by them again.”



“Are they the ones who stayed in that hut on our ranch?” asked Jessie.



“Yes. But I had an eye on them. They couldn’t have hurt you,” Mr. Carter said.



Henry spoke 11 slowly, “This means 12 that the ranch is worth a lot of money, doesn’t it?”



“It certainly does,” said Mr. Carter.



“Wait till I tell Aunt Jane!” shouted Benny.



“Can we tell people?” asked Henry.



“I suppose so,” said Mr. Carter. “It is no longer a secret. I’m afraid your ranch will not be quiet much longer. Your place will soon be full of strangers. Maybe some of them will try to take rocks away from your uranium fields.” He looked worried for the first time since he had come in the door.



“What can we do?” asked Jessie. “It would be terrible to upset Aunt Jane just when she is getting better.”



“Can you help them, Mr. Pond?” asked Mr. Carter.



“No, I’m afraid not,” said Mr. Pond. “It is too big a job for me. I think the children need a smarter man than I am. And they need someone with enough money to dig 13 a mine.”



Henry said, “I think I know the very man.”



The four children shouted together, “Grandfather!”



1 stony
adj.石头的,多石头的,冷酷的,无情的
  • The ground is too dry and stony.这块地太干,而且布满了石头。
  • He listened to her story with a stony expression.他带着冷漠的表情听她讲经历。
2 creek
n.小溪,小河,小湾
  • He sprang through the creek.他跳过小河。
  • People sunbathe in the nude on the rocks above the creek.人们在露出小溪的岩石上裸体晒日光浴。
3 known
adj.大家知道的;知名的,已知的
  • He is a known artist.他是一个知名的艺术家。
  • He is known both as a painter and as a statesman.他是知名的画家及政治家。
4 drove
vbl.驾驶,drive的过去式;n.畜群
  • He drove at a speed of sixty miles per hour.他以每小时60英里的速度开车。
  • They drove foreign goods out of the market.他们把外国货驱逐出市场。
5 hut
n.棚子;简陋的小房子
  • The hut is in the midst of the forest.小屋在森林深处。
  • The poor old man lived in a little wooden hut.那个贫穷的老人住在一间小木屋内。
6 ranch
n.大牧场,大农场
  • He went to work on a ranch.他去一个大农场干活。
  • The ranch is in the middle of a large plateau.该牧场位于一个辽阔高原的中部。
7 carter
n.运货马车夫,赶大车的人;卡车司机
  • Although fatigue shows readily on Carter, he bounces back quickly. 卡特虽然容易显出疲劳的样子,但他恢复得很快。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • The carter flipped at the horse with his whip. 赶大车的人扬鞭朝着马轻轻地抽打。 来自《简明英汉词典》
8 violet
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。
9 whispered
adj.耳语的,低语的v.低声说( whisper的过去式和过去分词 );私语;小声说;私下说
  • She sidled up to me and whispered something in my ear. 她悄悄走上前来,对我耳语了几句。
  • His ill luck has been whispered about the neighborhood. 他的不幸遭遇已在邻居中传开。 来自《简明英汉词典》
10 blushing
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。
11 means
n.方法,手段,折中点,物质财富
  • That man used artful means to find out secrets.那人使用狡猾的手段获取机密。
  • We must get it done by some means or other.我们总得想办法把它干完。
12 dig
v.挖(洞,沟等);掘
  • It is difficult to dig the ground when it is frozen.地面冻住了就不易挖掘。
  • In those days we often went to dig for wild vegetables.那时候我们常常出去挖野菜。
学英语单词
abstracting process
acoustic conductivity
anxious delirium
AOG
association of flight attendants
averett
bakir
benigna
biased diode
Bishkek
boysie
brace for
Canucks
capital letters
check gauge
compulsory education law
coralsnake
counter-controlled photograph
counterbalance
coxswin's box
croaks
damage control locker
decimal floating point value
deep fade
demissa
demolition expense
direct-writing oscillograph
disconnection register
dolders
double-ended break without separation
endoproteinases
family ostreidaes
final working drawings
flood tuff
forced warm air heating
fractionalize
go head to head
golda
governor of velocity
hyperfiber
i'nt
id-ul-fitr
independent-counsel
knapsack lever-type sprayer
labor and management
let out a sigh
load-magnitude
measured lubrication
medical frequency band
Mikir Hills
molecular sieves adsorbing tower
mould(mold)
neutral absorber
owego
pathomolecular
pluvionivation
positive displacement metering valve
President George W. Bush
print statement
priori restrictions
pugged clay
Pulex cheopis
quite circular in outline
reaction cycle
Reblochons
red coloration
reflux ratio
Rhamnoliquiritin
rhombohedral hemimorphic class
roll feeder surge bin
S5
Saussurea robusta
scruffled
Scutellaria oligophlebia
single step call transfer
Slǎnic Moldova
Sommerfeld theory
speywoods
Spinagnostus
Staggergrass
standard voltage generator
stauntonia obovata hemsl.
superficial dentin caries
supplementary log book
sympathies
symphysions
table look up instruction
tender negotiation
the means of relay protection
Thetford-Mines
time-current characteristics
torn-apart
triggering energy
uniformly most accurate confidence interval
unparasitized
vas communicans
Vasvar
Vazzola
velum medullary
voluntary payment
vouchsafed
worthiness