關於兒童英語故事文章

  英語故事閱讀對豐富小學生的語言知識和提高語言素養有著積極的意義,同時也是非常適合小學生的一種學習渠道。小編分享,希望可以幫助大家!

  :The Conceited Wagner

  Richard Wagner was an undersized little man, with a head too big for his body -- a sickly little man. His nerves were bad. And he had delusions of grandeur.

  He was a monster of conceit. Never for one minute did helook at the world or at people, except in relation to himself. He was not only the most important person in the world, to himself; in his own eyes he was the only person who existed. He believed himself to be one of the greatest dramatists in the world, one of the greatest thinkers, and one of the greatest composers. To hearhim talk, he was Shakespeare, and Beethoven, and Plato , rolledinto one. And you would have had no difficulty in hearing himtalk. He was one of the most exhausting conversationalists thatever lived. An evening with him was an evening spent in listeningto amonologue. Sometimes he was brilliant; sometimes he wasmaddeningly tiresome. But whether he was being brilliant ordull, he had one sole topic of conversation:himself. What hethought and what he did.

  He had a mania for being in the right. The slightest hint of disagreement, from anyone, on the most trivial point, was enough to set him off on a harangue that might last for hours, inwhich he proved himself right in so many ways, and with suchexhausting volubility, that in the end his hearer, stunned anddeafened, would agree with him, for the sake of peace.

  :A Beautiful Flower

  This happened many summers ago. There was a young flower in a desert where was always dried and sad-looking. It was growing by itself, enjoying everyday and saying to the Sun "When shall I be grown up?" And the Sun would say "Be patient. Each time I touch you, you grow a little." And she was so pleased because she would have a chance to bring beauty to this corner of sand, and this is all she wanted to do-bring a little bit of beauty to this world.

  One day, the hunter came by and stepped on her. She was going to die and she felt so sad, not because she was dying, but because she had no chance to bring a little bit of beauty to this corner of the desert.

  The Great Spirit saw her and was listening "Indeed" he said "She should be living." And he reached down and touched her and gave her life. And she grew up to be a beautiful flower, and this corner of the desert became so beautiful because of her.

  :The ploughman,the ass and the ox

  A ploughman yoked his ox and his ass together, and set to work to plough his field. It was a poor makeshift of a team, but it was the best he could do, as he had but a single ox, At the end of the day, when the beasts were loosed from the yoke, the ass said to the ox, "Well, we've had a hard day: which of us is to carry the master home?" The ox looked surprised at the question. "Why," said he, "you, to be sure, as usual."

  農夫給他的公牛和驢一起套上牛軛,然後趕著它們下地犁田。 這是一個糟糕的臨時組合,但農夫已經盡力了,因為他只有一頭公牛。幹了一天活後,牲口被主人從牛軛裡解放出來,驢對牛說:“我們可是度過了艱難的一天,我們兩個當中,誰載著主人回家呢?” 聽了驢的話,牛似乎很驚訝,“怎麼這麼問呢,”他說,”當然是你,像往常一樣。”

  :The Story of the Husband and the Parrot

  A good man had a beautiful wife, whom he loved passionately1, and never left if possible. One day, when he was obliged by important business to go away from her, he went to a place where all kinds of birds are sold and bought a parrot. This parrot not only spoke2 well, but it had the gift of telling all that had been done before it. He brought it home in a cage, and asked his wife to put it in her room, and take great care of it while he was away. Then he departed. On his return he asked the parrot what had happened during his absence, and the parrot told him some things which made him scold his wife.

  She thought that one of her slaves must have been telling tales of her, but they told her it was the parrot, and she resolved to revenge***報仇*** herself on him.

  When her husband next went away for one day, she told on slave to turn under the bird's cage a hand-mill; another to throw water down from above the cage, and a third to take a mirror and turn it in front of its eyes, from left to right by the light of a candle. The slaves did this for part of the night, and did it very well.

  The next day when the husband came back he asked the parrot what he had seen. The bird replied, "My good master, the lightning, thunder and rain disturbed me so much all night long, that I cannot tell you what I have suffered."

  The husband, who knew that it had neither rained nor thundered in the night, was convinced that the parrot was not speaking the truth, so he took him out of the cage and threw him so roughly on the ground that he killed him. Nevertheless he was sorry afterwards, for he found that the parrot had spoken the truth.

  "When the Greek king," said the fisherman to the genius, "had finished the story of the parrot, he added to the vizir, "And so, vizir, I shall not listen to you, and I shall take care of the physician, in case I repent as the husband did when he had killed the parrot." But thevizir***元首,高官*** was determined. "Sire," he replied, "the death of the parrot was nothing. But when it is a question of the life of a king it is better to sacrifice the innocent than save the guilty. It is no uncertain thing, however. The physician, Douban, wishes to assassinate you. My zeal prompts me to disclose this to your Majesty. If I am wrong, I deserve to be punished as a vizir was once punished." "What had the vizir done," said the Greek king, "tomerit***值得*** the punishment?" "I will tell your Majesty, if you will do me the honour to listen," answered the vizir."