中小学英语诵读名篇(英文朗读版)

ISBN:978780688985X
作者:(美)欧•亨利
页数:336页

书籍目录

PART Ⅰ TALES
01 The Farmer and the Viper 农夫和蛇/002
02 The Fisherman and the Genie 渔夫的故事/003
03 The Emperor’s New Suit 皇帝的新装/006
04 The Ugly Duckling 丑小鸭/011
05 The Little Match-Seller 卖火柴的小女孩/021
06 Gulliver’s Travels 格列佛游记(节选)/024
07 The Happy Prince 快乐王子/031
08 The Adventure of Tom Sawyer 汤姆•索亚历险记(节选)/041
09 Little Prince 小王子(节选)/044
10 Snowdrop 白雪公主/052
PART Ⅱ ESSAYS
11 God’s Drop 神的一滴/060
12 Thinking Like a Mountain 像山那样思考/063
13 The Shores of the Cosmic Ocean 宇宙的边疆/066
14 Rural Life in England 英国乡村/072
15 Old China 古瓷器/079
16 Man Is a Thinking Reed 人是能思想的苇草/085
17 What I Have Lived For 我为什么而活着/088
18 The Essays of Montaigne 热爱生命/090
19 How the Steel Was Tempered 钢铁是怎样炼成的(节选)/092
20 Credo 信 条/094
21 I Have a Dream 我有一个梦想/097
22 Three Days to See 假如给我三天光明/102
23 Love Between Parent and Child 父母与孩子之间的爱/106
24 No Such Thing as a Dumb Question 世上没有傻问题/112
25 Of Studies 谈读书/130
26 Of Beauty 论 美/132
27 The Myth of Sisyphus 西西弗的神话/134
28 Give Me Liberty, Or Give Me Death 不自由,毋宁死/138
29 The Gettysburg Address 葛底斯堡演说/142
30 Condemning the Burning of the Winter Palace 就英法联军远征中国给巴特勒上尉的信/143
31 No News from Auschwitz 奥斯维辛没有什么新闻/145
32 The True Heroes 真正的英雄/148
33 The Diary of a Young Girl 安妮日记( 节选)/152
PART Ⅲ FICTIONS
34 The Necklace 项 链/172
35 My Uncle Jules 我的叔叔于勒/181
36 The Last Lesson 最后一课/189
37 The Man In A Case 装在套子里的人/194
38 A Chameleon 变色龙/208
39 Love of Life 热爱生命(节选)/212
40 The Old Man and the Sea 老人与海/219
41 The Last Leaf 最后的常春藤叶/232
42 The Gift Of The Magi 麦琪的礼物/239
43 The Cop And The Anthem 警察和赞美诗/245
44 The Mark on the Wall 墙上的斑点/252
45 Robinson Crusoe 鲁滨孙漂流记(节选)/261
46 Quality 品 质/266
47 “Robinson Crusoe” 读《鲁滨孙漂流记》/274
48 Hamlet 哈姆莱特/280
49 Romeo and Juliet 罗密欧与朱丽叶(节选)/292
PART Ⅳ POEMS
50 I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud 我独自漫游,犹如一朵云/300
51 Auld Lang Syne 旧日的时光/302
52 Ode To the West Wind 西风颂/304
53 To Autumn 秋 颂/308
54 On The Grasshopper And Cricket 蝈蝈与蛐蛐/310
55 When You Are Old 当你老了/311
56 The Road Not Taken 未选择的路/312
57 The Negro Speaks of Rivers 黑人谈河流/313
58 O Captain! My Captain! 啊,船长,我的船长哟!/314
59 The Arrow And The Song 箭与歌/316
60 The Albatross 信天翁/317
61 Solemn Hour 严重的时刻/318
62 The Panther 豹 子/319
63 If By Life You Were Deceived 假如生活欺骗了你/320
64 Song Of the Wave 组 歌(节选)/321
65 The Champa Flower 金色花/325

作者简介

在中小学《语文》课本,外国文学一直占有很重要的地位,我们曾经反复诵读的那些经典名篇,曾经带给我们心灵的感动、激发我们对文学的喜爱,以及对生命的思考。至今,我们也忘记不了其中的一些名篇,如《卖火柴的小女孩》、《丑小鸭》、《白雪公主》、《热爱生命》、《皇帝的新衣》、《最后一课》、《假如给我三天光明》等。
这本《中小学英语诵读名篇》从英语学习的角度,参照历年中国《语文》课本中所选的外国文学目录,共精选了65篇优秀英语文学作品的原文,并按文体分为童话、小说、随笔、诗歌四个部分,供英语学习者诵读使用。品读这些经典原作,我们会感觉它们是多么熟悉,甚至能回想起学生时代上课时的情景。为了帮助读者更好地诵读这些名篇,我们特邀美国外教全文朗读,供大家免费下载,相信对读者使用此书定有帮助。


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  •     The Fisherman and the Genie渔夫的故事There was once an old Fisherman who was very poor. He could hardly keep himself, his wife, and his three children from starving. Every morning he went out early to fish, but he had made it a rule never to cast his net more than four times a day.One day he went to the seashore before it was light. He cast his net, and then, when he thought it time, he drew it in to the shore. It was very heavy, and he was sure he had a good draught of fishes. But no! he pulled hard, and when he had his net on the beach he found he had dragged in a dead ass.He cast it a second time, and again he waited. Then he slowly drew it in, for it was very heavy. This time his hopes rose, but when the net came ashore he found it held only an old basket filled with sand and mud.Once more he threw his net. The third time never fails, he thought. Again the net came slowly ashore. But when he opened it, there was nothing in it but stones, shells, and seaweed. The poor man was sore distressed. It looked as if he should have nothing to take home to his wife and children.It was now dawn, and he stopped to say his prayers, for in the East pious men say their prayers five times a day. And after he had said his prayers he cast his net for the fourth and last time. When he had waited long enough, he drew the net in, and saw that it was very heavy.There was not a fish in the net. Instead, the Fisherman drew out a copper jar. He set it up, and the mouth of the jar was covered with a lid which was sealed with lead. He shook the jar, but could hear nothing.“At any rate,” he said to himself, “I can sell this to a coppersmith and get some money for it.” But first, though it seemed empty, he thought he would open it. So he took his knife and cut away the lead. Then he took the lid off. But he could see nothing inside. He turned the jar upside down, and tapped it on the bottom, but nothing came out. He set the jar upright again, and sat and looked at it.Soon he saw a light smoke come slowly forth. The smoke grew heavier, and thicker, so that he had to step back a few paces. It rose and spread till it shut everything out, I like a great fog. At last it had wholly left the jar and had risen into the sky. Then it gathered itself together into a solid mass, and there, before the Fisherman, stood a great giant of a Genie.“Get down on your knees,” said the Genie to the Fisherman, “for I am going to kill you.”“And why do you kill me? Did I not set you free, from the jar?”“That is the very reason I mean to kill you; but I will grant you one favor.”“And what is that?” asked the Fisherman.“I will let you choose the manner of your death. Listen, and I will tell you my story. I was one of the spirits of heaven. The great and wise Solomon bade me obey his laws. I was angry and would not. So, to punish me, he shut me up in a copper jar and sealed it with lead. Then he gave the jar to a Genie who obeyed him, and bade him cast it into the sea.“During the first hundred years that I lay on the floor of the sea, I made a promise that if any one set me free I would make him very rich. But no one came to set me free. During the second hundred years, I made a promise that if any one set me free I would show him all the treasures of the earth. But no one came to set me free. During the third hundred years. I made a promise that if any one came to set me free I would make him king over all the earth, and grant him every day any three things he might ask.“Still no one came. Then I became very angry, and as hundreds of years went by, and I still lay in the jar at the bottom of the sea, I swore a great oath that now if any one should set me free I would at once kill him, and that the only favor I would grant him would be to let him choose his manner of death. So now you have come and have set me free. You must die, but I will let you say how you shall die.”The Fisherman was in great grief. He did not care so much for himself, for he was old and poor, but he thought of his wife and children, who would be left to starve.“Alas!” he cried. “Have pity on me. If it had not been for me you would not be free.”“Make haste!” said the Genie. “Tell me how you wish to die.”When one is in such great peril his wits fly fast, and sometimes they fly into safety. The Fisherman said:—“Since I must die, I must. But before I die answer me one question.”“Ask what you will, but make haste.”“Dare you, then, swear that you really were in the jar? It is so small, and you are so vast, that the great toe of one of your feet could not be held in it.”“Verily I was in the jar. I swear it. Do you not believe it?”“No, not until I see you in the jar.”At that the Genie, to prove it, changed again into smoke. The great cloud hung over the earth, and one end of it entered the jar. Slowly the cloud descended until the sky was clear, and the last tip of the cloud was in the jar. As soon as this was done, the Fisherman clapped the lid on again, and the Genie was shut up inside.
 

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