分类: 英语点滴 |
Chapter
10
Day after day
the spider waited, head-down, for an idea to come to her. Hour by
hour she sat motionless, deep in thought. Having promised Wilbur
that she would save his life, she was determined to keep her
promise.
Finally, one morning toward the middle of July, the idea came.
“Why, how perfectly simple!” she said to herself. “The way to
save Wilbur’s life is to play a trick on Zuckerman. If I can fool
a bug,” thought Charlotte, “I can surely fool a man. People are
not as smart as bugs.”
Wilbur walked into his yard just at that moment.
“What are you thinking about, Charlotte?” he asked.
“I was just thinking,” said the spider, “that people are
very gullible.”
“What does ‘gullible’ mean?”
“Easy to fool,” said Charlotte.
“That’s a mercy,” replied Wilbur, and he lay down in the
shade of his fence and went fast asleep. The spider, however,
stayed wide awake, gazing affectionately at him and making plans
for his future. Summer was half gone. She knew she didn’t have
much time.
That morning, just as Wilbur fell asleep, Avery Arable wandered
into the Zuckerman’s front yard, followed by Fern. Avery carried a
live frog in his hand. Fern had a crown of daisies in her hair. The
children ran for the kitchen.
“Just in time for a piece of blueberry pie,” said Mrs.
Zuckerman.
“Look at my frog!” said Avery, placing the frog on the
drainboard and holding out his hand for pie.
“Take that thing out of here!” said Mrs. Zuckerman.
“He’s hot,” said Fern. “He’s almost dead, that
frog.”
“He is not,” said Avery. “He lets me scratch him between the
eyes.” The frog jumped and landed in Mrs. Zuckerman’s dishpan
full of soapy water.
“You’re getting your pie on you,” said Fern. “Can I look
for eggs in the henhouse, Aunt Edith?”
“Run outdoors, both of you! And don’t bother the
hens!”
“It’s getting all over everything,” shouted Fern. “His pie
is all over his front.”
“Come on, frog!” cried Avery. He scooped up his frog. The fog
kicked, splashing soapy water onto the blueberry pie.
“Another crisis!” groaned Fern.
“Let’s swing in the swing!” said Avery.
Mr. Zuckerman had the best swing in the county. It was a single
long piece of heavy rope tied to the beam over the north doorway.
At the bottom end of the rope was a fat knot to sit on. It was
arranged so that you could swing without being pushed. You climbed
a ladder to the hayloft. Then, holding the rope, you stood at the
edge and looked down, and were scared and dizzy. Then you straddled
the knot, so that it acted as a seat. Then you got up all your
nerve, took a deep breath, and jumped. For a second you seemed to
be falling to the barn floor far below, but then suddenly the rope
would begin to catch you, and you would sail through the barn door
going a mile a minute, with the wind whistling in your eyes and
ears and hair. Then you would zoom upward into the sky, and look up
at the clouds, and the rope would twist and you would twist and
turn with the rope. Then you would drop down, down, down out of the
sky and come sailing back into the barn almost into the hayloft,
then sail out again (not quite so far this time), then in again
(not quite so high), then out again, then in again, then out, then
in; and then you’d jump off and fall down and let somebody else
try it.
Mothers for miles around worried about Zuckerman’s swing. They
feared some child would fall off. But no child ever did. Children
almost always hang onto things tighter than their parents think
they will.
Avery put the frog in his pocket and climbed to the hayloft.
“The last time I swang in this swing, I almost crashed into a barn
swallow,” he yelled.
“Take that frog out!” ordered Fern.
Avery straddled the rope and jumped. He sailed out through the
door, frog and all, and into the sky, frog and all. Then he sailed
back into the barn.
“Your tongue is purple!” screamed Fern.
“So is yours!” cried Avery, sailing out again with the
frog.
“I have hay inside my dress! It itches!” called Fern.
“Scratch it!” yelled Avery, as he sailed back.
“It’s my turn,” said Fern. “Jump off!”
“Fern’s got the itch1” sang Avery.
When he jumped
off, he threw the swing up to his sister. She shut her eyes tight
and jumped. She felt the dizzy drop, then the supporting lift of
the swing. When she opened her eyes she was looking up into the
blue sky and was about to fly back through the door.
They took turns for and hour.
When the children grew tired of swinging, they went down toward
the pasture and picked wild raspberries and ate them. Their tongues
turned from purple to red. Fern bit into a raspberry that had a
bad-tasting bug inside it, and got discouraged. Avery found and
empty candy box and put his frog in it. The frog seemed tired after
his morning in the swing. The children walked slowly up toward the
barn. They, too, were tired and hardly had energy enough to
walk.
“Let’s build a tree house,” suggested Avery. “I want to
live in a tree, with my frog.”
“I’m going to visit Wilbur,” Fern announced.
They climbed the fence into the lane and walked lazily toward
the pigpen. Wilbur heard them coming and got up.
Avery noticed the spider web, and , coming closer, he saw
Charlotte.
“Hey, look at that big spider!” he said. “It’s
tremendous.”
“Leave it alone!” commanded Fern. “You’ve got a
frog—isn’t that enough?”
“That’s a fine spider and I’m going to capture it,” said
Avery. He took the cover off the candy box. Then he picked up a
stick. “I’m going to knock that old spider into this box,” he
said.
Wilbur’s heart almost stopped when he saw what was going on.
This might be the end of Charlotte if the boy succeeded in catching
her.
“You stop it, Avery!” cried Fern.
Avery put one leg over the fence of the pigpen. He was just
about to raise his stick to hit Charlotte when he lost his balance.
He swayed and toppled and landed on the edge of Wilbur’s trough.
The trough tipped up and then came down with a slap. The goose egg
was right underneath. There was a dull explosion as the egg broke,
and then a horrible smell.
Fern screamed. Avery jumped to his feet. The air was filled
with the terrible gases and smells from the rotten egg. Templeton,
who had been resting in his home, scuttled away into the
barn.
“Good night!” screamed Avery. “Good night! What a stink!
Let’s get out of here!”
Fern was crying. She held her nose and ran toward the house.
Avery ran after her, holding his nose. Charlotte felt greatly
relieved to see him go. It had been a narrow escape.
Later on that morning, the animals came up from the
pasture—the sheep, the lambs, the gander, the goose, and the seven
goslings. There were many complaints about the awful smell, and
Wilbur had to tell the story over and over again, of how the Arable
boy had tried to capture Charlotte, and how the smell of the broken
egg drove him away just in time. “It was that rotten goose egg
that saved charlotte’s life,” said Wilbur.
The goose was proud of her share in the adventure. “I’m
delighted that the egg never hatched,” she gabbled.
Templeton, of course, was miserable over the loss of his
beloved egg. But he couldn’t resist boasting. “It pays to save
things,” he said in his surly voice. “A rat never knows when
something is going to come in handy. I never throw anything
away.
“Well,” said one of the lambs, “this whole business is all
well and good for Charlotte, but what about the rest of us? The
smell is unbearable. Who wants to live in a barn that is perfumed
with rotten egg?”
“Don’t worry, you’ll get used to it,” said Templeton. He
sat up and pulled wisely at his long whiskers, then crept away to
pay a visit to the dump.
When Lurvy showed up at lunchtime carrying a pail of food for
Wilbur, he stopped short a few paces from the pigpen. He sniffed
the air and made a face.
“What in thunder?” he said. Setting the pail down, he picked
up the stick that Avery had dropped and pried the trough up.
“Rats!” he said. “Fhew! I might a’known a rat would make a nest
under this trough. How I hate a rat!”
And Lurvy dragged Wilbur’s trough across the yard and kicked
some dirt into the rat’s nest, burying the broken egg and all
Templeton’s other possessions. Then he picked up the pail. Wilbur
stood in the trough, drooling with hunger. Lurvy poured. The slops
ran creamily down around the pig’s eyes and ears. Wilbur grunted.
He gulped and sucked, making swishing and swooshing noises, anxious
to get everything at once. It was a delicious meal—skim milk,
wheat middlings, leftover pancakes, half a doughnut, the rind of a
summer squash, two pieces of stale toast, a third of a gingersnap,
a fish tail, one orange peel, several noodles from a noodle soup,
the scum off a cup of cocoa, an ancient jelly roll, a strip of
paper from the lining of the garbage pail, and a spoonful of
raspberry jello.
Wilbur ate heartily. He planned to leave half a noodle and a
few drops of milk for Templeton. Then he remembered that the rat
had been useful in saving Charlotte’s life, and that
Charlotte was trying to save his life. So he left a whole noodle,
instead of a half.
Now that the broken egg was buried, the air cleared and the
barn smelled good again. The afternoon passed, and evening came.
Shadows lengthened. The cool and kindly breath of evening entered
through doors and windows. Astride her web, Charlotte sat moodily
eating a horsefly and thinking about the future. After a while she
bestirred herself.
She descended to the center of the web and there she began to
cut some of her lines. She worked slowly but steadily while the
other creatures drowsed. None of the others, not even the goose,
noticed that she was at work. Deep in his soft bed, Wilbur snoozed.
Over in their favorite corner, the goslings whistled a night
song.
Charlotte tore quite a section out of her web, leaving an open
space in the middle. Then she started weaving something to take the
place of the threads she had removed. When Templeton got back from
the dump, around midnight, the spider was still at work.