Summer Holidays Part 1
A 1.The Easter holidays came and
went, and the Summer Term began at school. 2.My grandmother and I had
already planned to take our summer holiday in Norway and we talked about almost
nothing else every evening. 3.She had booked a cabin for each
of us on the boat from Newcastle to Oslo at the earliest possible moment after
my school broke up, and from Oslo she was going to take me to a place she knew
down on the south coast near Arendal where she had spent her own summer
holidays as a child nearly eighty years ago.
B 1."All day long," she
said, "my brother and I were out in the rowing-boat. 2.The whole coast is dotted with
tiny islands and there's nobody on them. 3.We used to explore them and
dive into the sea off the lovely smooth granite rocks, And sometimes on the way
out we would drop the anchor and fish for cod and whiting, and if we caught
anything we would build a fire on an island and fry the fish in a pan for our
lunch.
C 1.There is no finer fish in the
world than absolutely fresh cod." 2."What did you use for
bait, Grandmamma, when you went fishing?" 3."Mussels," she
said."Everyone uses mussels for bait in Norway. 4.And if we didn't catch any
fish, we would boil the mussels in a saucepan and eat those." 5."Were they
good?""Delicious," she said.
D 1."Cook them in sea-water
and they are tender and salty." 2."What else did you do,
Grandmamma?" 3."We used to row out and
wave to the shrimpboats on their way home, and .they would stop and give us a
handful of shrimps each. 4.The shrimps were still warm
from having been just cooked, and we would sit in the rowing-boat peeling them
and gobbling them up. 5.The head was the best
part."
E 1."The head?" I
said."You squeeze the head between your teeth and suck out the inside. 2.It's marvellous.You and I will
do all those things this summer, my darling," she said. 3."Grandmamma," I said,
"I can't wait.I simply can't wait to go." 4."Nor can I," she
said.When there were only three weeks of the Summer Term left, an awful thing
happened.
F 1.My grandmother got pneumonia. 2.She became very ill, and a
trained nurse moved into the house to look after her. 3.The doctor explained to me that
pneumonia is not normally a dangerous illness nowadays because of penicillin,
but when a person is more than eighty years old, as my grandmother was, then it
is very dangerous indeed. 4.He said he didn't even dare to
move her to hospital in her condition, so she stayed in her bedroom and I hung
about outside the door while oxygen cylinders and all sorts of other
frightening things were taken in to her.
G 1."Can I go in and see
her?" I asked."No, dear," the nurse said."Not at the
moment." 2.A fat and jolly lady called Mrs
Spring, who used to come and clean our house every day, also moved in and slept
in the house. 3.Mrs Spring looked after me and
cooked my meals. 4.I liked her very much, but she
wasn't a patch on my grandmother for telling stories. 5.One evening, about ten days
later, the doctor came downstairs and said to me, "You can go in and see
her now, but only for a short time. 6.She's been asking for
you."
H 1.I flew up the stairs and burst
into my grandmother's room and threw myself into her arms. 2."Hey there," the
nurse said."Be careful with her." 3."Will you be all right
now, Grandmamma?" I asked. 4."The worst is over,"
she said."I'll soon be up again." 5."Will she?" I said to
the nurse."Oh yes," the nurse answered, smiling. 6."She told us she simply
had to get better because she had to look after you."I gave her another
hug.
I 1."They won't let me have a
cigar," she said. 2."But you wait till they're
gone." 3."She's a tough old
bird," the nurse said. 4."We'll have her up in
another week." 5.The nurse was right. Within a
week, my grandmother was thumping around the house with her gold-topped cane
and interfering with Mrs Spring's cooking. |
Copyright © 2000-2015 陈雷英语 All Rights Reserved.
|
|
本网站所刊登的英语教学各种新闻﹑信息和各种专题专栏资料,均为陈雷英语版权所有,未经协议授权,禁止下载使用。
|
|