牙齿和爪子 Gabriel Ernest

歌词
Gabriel Ernest
Cunningham had spent an agreeable week in the country with his friend Van Cheele.
Now Van Cheele was driving his guest back to the station.
Cunninghamwas unusually quiet on the journey, butVan Cheele talked all the time, so hedid not notice his friend's silence.
Suddenly Cunningham spoke.
'Thereis a wild animal in your woods,' he said.
'A wild animal? A fewrabbits, perhaps. Nothingvery terrible, surely,'said Van Cheele.
Cunningham said nothing.
' What did you mean about a wild animal?'asked Van Cheele later, at the station.
'Nothing. It was myimagination. Here is the train,'said Cunningham.
That afternoon Van Cheele went for a walk through his woods.
He knew a little about plants and animals,and he enjoyed walking through the woods around his house and looking at the birds and flowers there.
He also enjoyed telling everyone about them aftefwards.
Of course,he never saw anything very surprising——until that afternoon.
During his walk Van Cheele came to a deep pool under sometall trees.
He knew it well: afterall, it was his pool.
But today, he saw a boy of about sixteen lying on a large rock beside the pool.
The boy was drying his wet, naked brown body in the sun.
His hair was wet too,and he had long, golden,wolfish eyes.
He turned those eyes towards VanCheele with a look of lazy watchfulness.
Van Cheele was surprised to see the boy.
Wheredoes this wild-looking boy come from?he thought.
Can he be the miller's son? He disappeared two months ago.
People say he fell intothe river.
It's a fast-running river,and nobody ever found his body.
Iwonder? But the miller's boy was only a young child? 'What are you doing here?asked Van Cheele.
'Enjoying the sunshine, of course,' said the boy.
'Where do you live?' 'Here, in these woods. '
You can't live in these woods.'said Van Cheele.
'They are very nice woods,'said the boy politely.
'But where do you sleep at night?' 'I don't sleep at night.
[02:42.53] That's my busiest time.
' Van Cheele began to feel cross.
What did the boy mean? 'What do you eat? heasked.
'Meat,' said the boy.
He opened his mouth, showing very white teeth.
'Meat?What kind ofmeat? 'Well, if you must know, I eat rabbits, wild birds,chickens from the farm and young sheep from the hills.
I like children when I can find them.
But they 're usually too well locked in at night.
It's two months since I tasted child meat.
' The boy is joking about the children, thought Van Cheele.
But perhaps he really is stealing animals from the woods and farms.
I must find out more about this.
Aloud he said,'You catch rabbits? You must be joking.
Our rabbits are much too fast for you.
' 'At night I hunt on four feet,'was the boy's surprising replp.
'You mean that you hunt with a dog?'guessed Van Cheele.
The boy sat up suddenly and laughed a strange, low laugh.
To Van Cheele that laugh sounded horrlbly like a growl.
'I don't think any dog would like to hunt with me,'the boy said.
'Not at night?' There is something horrible about this boy, thought Van Cheele.
I don't like the way he looks and I don't like the way he talks.
'I can't let you stay in my woods,'he said aloud.
'Very well then—shall I come and live in your house?'repliedte boy.
Van Cheele thought about his quiet, tidy house.
No, he did not want this strange, wild boy at all.
Of course, the boy was joking? but Van Cheele was not amused.
'If you don't go away,'he said, 'I shall have to call the police.
' At once the boy turned and jumped head-first into the pool.
A moment later, his shining, wet body landed half-way up the grassy bank where Van Cheele was standing.
Van Cheele stepped backwards.
His foot slipped on the wet grass and he fell.
He found himself lying on the grass with those wolfish yellow eyes uncomfortably near to his.
He felt a moment of horrible fear.
The boy laughed again,a laugh that was like the growl of a wild animal,then disapeared among the bushes.
'What an extraordinarily wild animal!'said Van Cheele as he picked himself up.
And then he remembered Cunning ham's words about a wild animal in his woods.
As he walked slowly home, Van Cheele thought about several things which had happened in and around the village recently.
Perhaps this boy knows something about them, he thought? Something has been killing rabbits and birds in the woods lately.
Something has been stealing the farmer's chickens and carrying off the young sheep fromthe hills.
Is it possible that this wildboy is hunting at night with a fast, intelligent dog?The boy talked of hunting on four feet at night?
But he also said that dogs did not like to hunt with him at night?Very strange indeed.
As Van Cheele walked along, he turned the questions over and over in his head.
Suddenly he stopped.
The miller's son! he said to himself.
The child disappeared two months ago.
Everyone thought that he had fallen into the river and been carried away.
But the child's mother did not believe this.
She said she had heard a scream—— and the scream came from the hill,a long way away from the water.
It's impossible, of course, said Van Cheele to himself.
Butthe child disappeared two months ago, and the boy talked about child meat.
He was joking, of course?but what a horrible joke!
Van Cheele usually talked to his aunt about the birds,plant sand animals he saw on his walks.
But today he said nothing.
He was an important man in his village.
If there was a thief living in his woods, he did not want anyone to know.
If people hear about the boy, he thought, perhaps they will want me to pay for their lost chickens and their disappearing sheep.
He was unusually quiet at dinner.
'What's the matter with you?'joked his aunt.
'Did you see a wolf on your walk?'
At breakfast the next morning Van Cheele realized that he still felt uncomfortable about yesterday's adventure.
I know what I' 11 do, he said to himself.
I' 11 take the train to London and I'11 go and see Cunningham.
I'11 ask him If he was joking when he said there was a wild animal in my woods.
After he had decided this,Van Cheele felt better.
He sang a happy little song as he walked to the sitting-room for his morning cigarette.
His fat old dog walked beside him.
As Van Cheele entered the sitting-room, the song died on his lips and his dog ran away with his tail between his legs.
There on the day-bed, with his hands comfortably behind his head, lay the boy from the woods.
He was drier than yesterday, but he was still naked.
'What are you doing here? asked Van Cheele angrily.
'You told me I couldn't stay in the woods,'said the boy calmly.
'But I didn't tell you to come here.
What if my aunt sees you? What will she think?'
Van Cheele hurriedly covered his unwanted guest's nakedness with a newspaper.
At that moment his aunt entered the room.
'This is a poor boy,'explained Van Cheele quickly.
'He has lost his way—and lost his memory too.
He doesn't know who he is, or where he comes from.
' Miss Van Cheele was very interested.
'Perhaps his name is on his underclothes,' she said.
'He has lost his underclothes too,'said Van Cheele.
The newspaper was slipping off the boy's naked body.
VanCheele hurried to replace it Miss Van Cheele was a kind old lady.
She felt sorry for this naked, helpless child.
'We must help him,'she said.
She sent the housekeeper to aneighbour's house to borrow some clothes.
Soon the boy was clean and tidy, and dressed in shirt,trousers and shoes.
Van Cheele thought he looked just as strange and wolfish as before.
But Miss Van Chee1e thought he was sweet.
'We must give him a name until we know who he really is,'she said.
' Gabriel Ernest, I think.
Those are nice, suitable names.
' Van Cheele agreed.
But he was not sure that the boy was a nice, suitableboy.
Van Cheele's old dog, when he saw the boy, had run away in fear and would not come back into the house.
Van Cheele decided to go and see Cunningham at once.
As he got ready to go to the station, his aunt was busily arranging a children's tea party in the church hall.
'Gabriel Ernest will help me with the little ones,'she said happily.
When Van Cheele got to London, Cunningham did not want to talk at first.
You'llthink I'm crazy,' he said.
'But what did you see?'asked Van Cheele.'
I saw something—somethingunbelievable.
On the last evening of myvisit to you I was standing half-hidden in the bushes, watchingthe sun go down.
Suddenly I noticed anaked boy.
He has been swimming in apool somewhere, I said to myself.
He was standing on the hill side and he too was watching the sun go down.
Then the sun disappeared behind the hill and its light was gone.
At the same moment a very surprising thing happened—the boy disappeared too.'
'What?He disappearedjust like that?' said Van Cheeleexcitedly.'
No. It was much morehorrible than that.
On the open hillside where the boy had been,I saw a large,blackish-grey wolf with long white teeth and yellow eyes.
You'll think I'm crazy—' But Van Cheele did not wait.
He was running towards the station as fast as he could.
He did not know what he could do.
I can't send my aunt a message, he thought.Whatcan I say?
Gabriel Ernest is a werewolf'?My aunt will think I'm joking.
I MUST get home before sundown.
He caught his train.
With painful slowness it carried him to the station a few miles from his home.
He took a taxi to his village.
'Take me to the church hall—and hurry! 'he ordered.
Thetaxi drove along the quiet country roads, and the sky turned pink and purple as the sun got lower and lower in the west.
His aunt was putting away some uneaten cakes and sandwiches when he arrived.
'Where is Gabriel Ernest?'screamed Van Cheele.
'He's taking little Jack Toop home,'said his aunt calmly.
'It was getting solate.
I didn't want to send the dear little boy home alone.
Isn't the sky beautiful this evening?'
But Van Cheele had no time to talk about the beautiful sky.
He ran like the wind down the narrow road that went to the Toops' house.
On one side was the fast-running river, on the other was the dark hillside.
In a minute I'll catch up with them,Van Cheele thought.
Then the sun went down behind the hill and the whole world became grey and cold.
Van Cheele heard a short scream of fear, and he knew he was too late.
Nobody ever saw little Jack Toop or Gabrid Ernest again.
Gabriel Ernest's clothes were found lying in the road.
'Poor littler Jack fell into the river,'said Miss Van Cheele.
'And dear Gabriel Ernest took off his clothes and jumped into the river to try to save him.
' Mrs Toop had eleven other children and did not cry too long for her lost son.
But Miss Van Cheele was terribly sad about Gabriel Ernest.
'He must have a memorial in the church,'she said.
She chose the words herself:GABRIEL ERNEST,ANUNKNOWN BOY WHO BRAVELY GAVE HIS LIFE FOR ANOTHER.
Van Cheele usually did what his aunt wanted.
Bu the refused to give any money at all for Gabriel Ernest's memorial.
专辑信息
1.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Looking-glass house
2.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记The garden of live flowers
3.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Looking-glass animals
4.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Tweedledum and Tweedledee
5.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记The White Queen
6.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Humpty Dumpty
7.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记The Lion and the Unicorn
8.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记The White Knight
9.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Queen Alice
10.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Shaking
11.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Waking
12.爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记Who dreamed it
13.圣诞欢歌Marley's ghost
14.圣诞欢歌The first of the three spirits
15.圣诞欢歌 The second of the three spirits
16.圣诞欢歌The last of the spirits
17.圣诞欢歌The end of the story
18.星际动物园You must marry me
19.星际动物园 A spaceship made of plastic
20.星际动物园 Monsters
21.星际动物园 More monsters
22.星际动物园Waiting for fifteen thousan
23.星际动物园They don't believe me
24.星际动物园 The answer is robots
25.星际动物园 An animal is made
26.星际动物园An animal is destroyed
27.星际动物园 Two of everything
28.牙齿和爪子Sredni Vashtar
29.牙齿和爪子The Story-Teller
30.牙齿和爪子 Gabriel Ernest
31.牙齿和爪子Tobermory
32.牙齿和爪子The She-Wolf
33.野性的呼唤To the north
34.野性的呼唤The law of club and tooth
35.野性的呼唤The wild animal
36.野性的呼唤The new lead-dog
37.野性的呼唤More hard work
38.野性的呼唤For the love of a man
39.野性的呼唤The call of the wild
40.诱拐David meets his uncle
41.诱拐 Kidnapped!
42.诱拐 David is alone
43.诱拐 Escape through the heather
44.诱拐 David comes home
45.秘密花园Little Miss Mary
46.秘密花园Mary in Yorkshire
47.秘密花园Finding the secret garden
48.秘密花园.Meeting ******
49.秘密花园Meeting Colin
50.秘密花园Colin is afraid
51.秘密花园Colin and the garden
52.秘密花园Mr Craven comes home
53.勃朗特一家的故事Haworth
54.勃朗特一家的故事Cowan Bridge School
55.勃朗特一家的故事The Little books
56.勃朗特一家的故事Growing up
57.勃朗特一家的故事Looking for work
58.勃朗特一家的故事Monsieur Héger and Mrs Rob
59.勃朗特一家的故事Currer, Ellis, and Acton Be
60.勃朗特一家的故事The best days, and the wors
61.勃朗特一家的故事 Arthur Nicholls
62.勃朗特一家的故事Maria
63.曾达的囚徒The Rassendylls-and the Elp
64.曾达的囚徒The King goes to his corona
65.曾达的囚徒My adventures begin
66.曾达的囚徒The colour of men's hair
67.曾达的囚徒His Majesty returns to Stre
68.曾达的囚徒An adventure with a tea-tab
69.曾达的囚徒For love of the King
70.曾达的囚徒Back to Zenda
71.曾达的囚徒News of the prisoner
72.曾达的囚徒A night outside the castle
73.曾达的囚徒A dangerous plan
74.曾达的囚徒The prisoner and the King
75.曾达的囚徒Goodbye to Ruritania
76.多里安·格雷的画像 Chapter 1
77.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 2
78.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 3
79.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 4
80.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 5
81.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 6
82.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 7
83.多里安·格雷的画像 Chapter 8
84.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 9
85.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter10
86.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 11
87.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 12
88.多里安·格雷的画像 Chapter 13
89.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 14
90.多里安·格雷的画像 Chapter 15
91.多里安·格雷的画像Chapter 16
92.多里安·格雷的画像 Chapter 17
93.风雨河岸柳The river
94.风雨河岸柳The open road
95.风雨河岸柳The Wild Wood
96.风雨河岸柳A meeting with Mr Badger
97.风雨河岸柳A lesson for Mr Toad
98.风雨河岸柳Toad's adventures
99.风雨河岸柳Return to Toad Hall
100.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 1
101.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 2
102.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 3
103.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 4
104.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 5
105.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 6
106.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 7
107.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 8
108.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 9
109.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 10
110.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 11
111.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 12
112.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 13
113.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 14
114.弗兰肯斯坦Chapter 15
115.公正Bomb
116.公正Anna
117.公正I made him happy'
118.公正Phone call
119.公正'You must believe me!'
120.公正In the tunnel
121.化学秘密A new start
122.化学秘密 At home
123.化学秘密 Rich man
124.化学秘密The seals
125.化学秘密 The new experiment
126.化学秘密The report
127.化学秘密Christine and Sinom
128.化学秘密The wedding day
129.化学秘密I don't believe you
130.化学秘密 Greenworld
131.化学秘密The public enquiry
132.化学秘密The future
133.神秘及幻想故事集The Fall of the House of Us
134.神秘及幻想故事集The Black Cat
135.神秘及幻想故事集The Masque of the Red Death
136.神秘及幻想故事集William Wilson
137.神秘及幻想故事集The Tell-Tale Heart