登陆注册
8066500000039

第39章 THE BOBOLINK

1.The happiest bird of our spring,however,and one that rivals the European lark in my estimation,is the boblincoln,or bobolink as he is commonly called. He arrives at that choice portion of our year which,in this latitude,answers tthe deion of the month of May soften given by the poets. With us it begins about the middle of May,and lasts until nearly the middle of June. Earlier than this,winter is apt treturn on its traces,and tblight the opening beauties of the year;and later than this,begin the parching,and panting,and dissolving heats of summer. But in this genial interval,Nature is in all her freshness and fragrance: "the rains are over and gone,the flowers appear upon the earth,the time of the singing of birds is come,and the voice of the turtle is heard in the land."

2.The trees are now in their fullest foliage and brightest verdure;the woods are gay with the clustered flowers of the laurel;the air is perfumed with the sweetbrier and the wild rose;the meadows are enameled1 with clover blossoms;while the young apple,peach,and the plum begin tswell,and the cherry tglow among the green leaves.

3.This is the chosen season of revelry of the bobolink. He comes amid the pomp and fragrance of the season;his life seems all sensibility2 and enjoyment,all song and sunshine. He is tbe found in the soft bosoms of the freshest and sweetest meadows,and is most in song when the clover is in blossom. He perches on the topmost1Enameled,coated with a smooth,glossy surface. 2 Sensibility,feeling.twig of a tree,or on some long,flaunting weed,and,as he rises and sinks with the breeze,pours forth a succession of rich,tinkling notes,crowding one upon another,like the outpouring melody of the skylark,and possessing the same rapturous character.

4.Sometimes he pitches from the summit of a tree,begins his song as soon as he gets upon the wing,and flutters tremulously down tthe earth,as if overcome with ecstasy at his own music. Sometimes he is in pursuit of his mate;always in full song,as if he would win her by his melody;and always with the same appearance of intoxication and delight. Of all the birds of our groves and meadows,the bobolink was the envy of my boyhood. He crossed my path in the sweetest weather,and the sweetest season of the year,when all nature called tthe fields,and the rural feeling throbbed in every bosom;but when I,luckless urchin! was doomed tbe mewed1 up,during the live-long day,in a schoolroom.

5.It seemed as if the little varlet2 mocked at me as he flew by infull song,and sought ttaunt me with his happier lot. Oh,how I envied him! Nlessons,ntask,nschool;nothing but holiday,frolic,green fields,and fine weather. Had I been then more versed3 in poetry,I might have addressed him in the words of Logan4 tthe cuckoo:"Sweet bird,thy bower is ever green,Thy sky is ever clear;Thou hast nsorrow in thy song,Nwinter in thy year."Oh. could I fly,I'd fly with thee!1Mewed,shut up. 2 Varlet,a rascal.3Versed,familiar,practiced.4John Logan (b. 1748,d.1788). A Scotch writer of note. His writings include dramas,poetry,history,and essays.We'd make,with joyful wing,Our annual visit o'er the globe,Companions of the spring."

6.Further observation and experience have given me a different idea of this feathered voluptuary1,which I will venture timpart for the benefit of my young readers,whmay regard him with the same unqualified envy and admiration which I once indulged. I have shown him only as I saw him at first,in what I may call the poetical part of his career,when he,in a manner,devoted himself telegant pursuits and enjoyments,and was a bird of music,and song,and taste,and sensibility,and refinement. While this lasted he was sacred from injury;the very schoolboy would not fling a stone at him,and the merest rustic would pause tlisten this strain.

7.But mark the difference. As the year advances,as the clover blossoms disappear,and the spring fades intsummer,he gradually gives up his elegant tastes and habits,doffs his poetical suit of black,assumes a russet,dusty garb,and sinks tthe gross enjoyment of common vulgar birds. His notes nlonger vibrate on the ear;he is stuffing himself with the seeds of the tall weeds on which he lately swung and chanted smelodiously. He has become a bon vivant2,a gourmand3: with him now there is nothing like the "joys of the table." In a little while he grows tired of plain,homely fare,and is off on a gastronomic4 tour in quest of foreign luxuries.

8.We next hear of him,with myriads of his kind,banqueting among the reeds of the Delaware,and grown corpulent5with good feeding. He has changed his name in traveling. Boblincoln nmore,he is the reedbird now,the much-sought-for tidbit of Pennsylvanian1Voluptuary,one whmakes his bodily enjoyment his chief object. 2Bon vivant,one whlives well.3Gourmand,a glutton.4Gastronomic,relating tthe science of good eating. 5 Corpulent,fleshy,fat.epicures1,the rival in unlucky fame of the ortolan2! Wherever he goes,pop! pop! pop! every rusty firelock in the country is blazing away. He sees his companions falling by thousands around him. Does he take warning and reform? Alas! not he. Again he wings his flight. The rice swamps of the south invite him. He gorges himself among them almost tbursting;he can scarcely fly for corpulency. He has once more changed his name,and is now the famous ricebird of the Carolinas. Last stage of his career: behold him spitted with dozens of his corpulent companions,and served up,a vaunted3 dish,on some southern table.

9.Such is the story of the bobolink;once spiritual,musical,admired,the joy of the meadows,and the favorite bird of spring ;finally,a gross little sensualist,whexpiates4 his sensuality in the larder5. His story contains a moral worthy the attention of all little birds and little boys;warning them tkeep tthose refined and intellectual pursuits which raised him tshigh a pitch of popularity during the early part of his career,but teschew6 all tendency tthat gross and dissipated indulgence which brought this mistaken little bird tan untimely end.1Epicure,one whindulges in the luxuries of the table.2The ortolan is a small bird,abundant in southern Europe,Cyprus,and Japan. It is fattened for the table,and is considered a great delicacy.3Vaunted,boasted.4Expiates,atones for. 5 Larder,a pantry.6Eschew,tshun.

同类推荐
  • 英国学生文学读本4册

    英国学生文学读本4册

    《西方家庭学校原版教材与经典读本?英国学生文学读本(第4册)》以英文原版形式出版,图文并茂。编写体例统一严谨,包括生词、课文、语音、拼读练习、词汇解释等,同时还附加了单词拓展练习,《西方家庭学校原版教材与经典读本?英国学生文学读本(第4册)》是一套完整的英语学习教材。这些选文,体现了英国丰富的历史文化知识和西方国家的道德价值观念。
  • 人生处处充满选择

    人生处处充满选择

    精选名人经典演讲:本书精选奥巴马、乔布斯、马克伯格、J.K.罗琳等现当代名人演讲,他们现身说法,通俗易懂地讲述了他们在人生中的选择与处世之道,给人以极大的启示和借鉴意义。过去的选择造就了你现在的一切,现在的选择就是你未来的命运。如果你知道去哪儿,全世界都会为你让路。
  • 不可不知的欧洲100所名校

    不可不知的欧洲100所名校

    本书从历史等其他角度发掘欧洲每一所名校的创立,同时传播了这些一流大学的教育精神。通过图片和文字结合来介绍名校的各自特色,让广大读者了解欧洲名校的情况,让国内的大学可以吸收经验,同时为学生出国留学铺一条捷径。
  • 那些激励你前行的声音

    那些激励你前行的声音

    人生来有许多事情不平等,但这不代表挣扎和改变没有意义。无论何时,努力都是从狭隘的生活中跳出、从荒芜的环境中离开的一条最行之有效的路径。乔布斯、比尔盖茨、乔丹、奥巴马……他们用人生最好的年华做抵押,去实现那个说出来被人嘲笑的梦想。《那些激励你前行的声音》以中英双语对照的形式,精选智者哲人、商界精英和文体明星等各类名人的经典演讲佳作,这些演讲,或激情澎湃、或慷慨陈词、或说理生动、或娓娓道来,读来令人回肠荡气。阅读这些演说可以让你最直接地贴近成功人士的思想,获取成长与成功的基石,同时也能在阅读中学习英语,以期能够为读者呈现纯正地道的英语并学习。
热门推荐
  • 兵之终曲

    兵之终曲

    一部军事幻想类小说,剧中主要讲述一位浪荡子在爷爷的捆绑下,送进以“先锋营”为番号组建的多国联合敢死队,登陆《利瓦法》第二生命星球为故事开端,绘画出一百四十多名精锐中的精锐,兵者!在利瓦法与外星生命物种的激情碰撞,而身为列兵的莫言,没有经过血洗礼的他,一路走向兵之王者的路上,会经历多少生死考验?只是当他回过头来,对着已经移民到利瓦法快乐的地球人说:“你们走过的每一个地方,都印着我,和我的战友们的战斗足迹!”
  • 灵异少女搭档

    灵异少女搭档

    一个以科技为主的数据化世界(时数大陆)中,法术只存在于故事之中。但是蓝月雅然不认为如此,携小妹一起寻找传说中的法术。最终,成为了灵异师。(本文纯属虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合。本文不牵涉任何有关风水、玄术本文已弃
  • 绝世十弟子

    绝世十弟子

    天下动乱,时势造英雄,强者辈出,万族林立。问世间谁能登临巅峰,谁能主沉浮?绝世十人,自那红尘中历练而出,一切拉开序幕。。。。
  • 王阳明心学

    王阳明心学

    王阳明,是中国历史上没有争议的立德、立功、立言三不朽的圣人,是曾国藩、梁启超、伊藤博文、稻盛和夫等中外名人共同的心灵导师。王阳明创立了解决一切心灵问题的利器——“阳明心学”。穿越时空,让我们与这位圣哲对话,聆听王阳明的思想,以此来净化我们的心灵,塑造成功心理与高尚人格。
  • 隐藏的旋律

    隐藏的旋律

    《隐藏的旋律》是作者阿拉提·阿斯木直接用汉语创作的中篇小说集,作者运用高超的文字技巧、深厚的文学功底、饱满的思想情感,表现出了当代维吾尔族的生活百态,并通过对各色人物性格及心理方面的深入刻画,从中抒发了作者对人生、爱情及命运的理解与感慨。
  • 每夜讲鬼故事

    每夜讲鬼故事

    不同的主角故事,鬼故事展开了。鬼是存在的?你相信么?
  • 皇室复兴

    皇室复兴

    一夜之间,一个古老的国度覆灭;时隔两年,两个流亡的少年为光复帝国而踏上征途;荟荟众生,看他们如何独树一帜,力挽狂潮......时来运转,最终的结果谁也不可能知道,或许他们会成功光复帝国;或许等待着他们的是无尽的追杀;又或许,他们只会名满天下?!(人心都是肉长的,但他们也是最恐怖的,有了他们,你就有了一切。)
  • 上古世纪之探索

    上古世纪之探索

    两千年前,诸神之力再现,原大陆毁于一旦。两千年后,一个心怀热血的少年再度启程,探寻着世界的秘密。……………………………………………………………………没玩过上古世纪,对上古世纪这款游戏我还有很多的不了解,写的不好勿怪。
  • 灰姑娘,你还好吗

    灰姑娘,你还好吗

    再次遇到,忘了怎么微笑,是不是该说一句,灰姑娘,你还好吗?
  • 训世评话

    训世评话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。