Bruno Part 1
A 1.I peeped round the leg of the
chair and watched the hundreds of witches' feet walking out through the doors
of the Ballroom. 2.When they had all gone and the
place was absolutely silent, I began to move cautiously about on the floor. 3.Suddenly I remembered Bruno. 4.He must surely be around here
somewhere, too."Bruno!" I called out. 5.I wasn't seriously expecting
that I would be able to speak at all now that I had become a mouse, so I got
the shock of my life when I heard my own voice, my own perfectly normal rather
loud voice, coming out of my tiny mouth.
B 1.It was wonderful.I was thrilled.I
tried it again. 2."Bruno Jenkins, where are
you?" I called out. 3."If you can hear me, give
a shout!" 4.My voice was exactly the same
and just as loud as it had been when I was a boy. 5."Hey there, Bruno Jenkins!
" I called."Where are you?"There was no answer.
C 1.I pottered about between the
seat-legs trying to get used to being so close to the ground. 2.I decided I rather liked it.You
are probably wondering why I wasn't depressed at all. 3.I found myself thinking, What's
so wonderful about being a little boy anyway? 4.Why is that necessarily any
better than being a mouse? 5.I know that mice get hunted and
they sometimes get poisoned or caught in traps.
D 1.But little boys sometimes get
killed, too. 2.Little boys can be run over by
motor-cars or they can die of some awful illness. 3.Little boys have to go to
school.Mice don't. 4.Mice don't have to pass
exams.Mice don't have to worry about money. 5.Mice, as far as I can see, have
only two enemies, humans and cats.
E 1.My grandmother is a human, but
I know for certain that she will always love me whoever I am. 2.And she never, thank goodness,
keeps a cat. 3.When mice grow up, they don't
ever have to go to war and fight against other mice. 4.Mice, I felt pretty certain,
all like each other.People don't. 5.Yes, I told myself, I don't
think it is at all a bad thing to be a mouse. 6.I was wandering around the
Ballroom floor thinking about all this when I spotted another mouse.
F 1.It was crouching on the floor
holding a piece of bread in its front paws and nibbling away at it with great
gusto. 2.It had to be Bruno."Hello,
Bruno," I said. 3.He glanced up at me for about
two seconds, then went right on guzzling. 4."What have you
found?" I asked him."One of them dropped it," he answered. 5."It's a fish-paste
sandwich.Pretty good."
G 1.He too spoke with a perfectly
normal voice. 2.One would have expected that a
mouse (if it was going to talk at all) would do so with the smallest and
squeakiest voice you could imagine. 3.It was terrifically funny to
hear the voice of the rather loud-mouthed Bruno coming out of that tiny mouse's
throat. 4."Listen, Bruno," I
said."Now that we are both mice, I think we ought to start thinking a bit
about the future." 5.He stopped eating and stared at
me with small black eyes.
H 1."What do you mean
we?" he said. 2."The fact that you're a
mouse has nothing to do with me." 3."But you're a mouse, too,
Bruno.""Don't be a fool," he said. 4."I'm not a mouse."
"I'm afraid you are, Bruno." 5."I most certainly am
not!" he shouted. 6."Why are you insulting me?
I haven't been rude to you! Why do you call me a mouse?" 7."Don't you know what's
happened to you?" I said.
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