蜗牛双语阅读
经典图书
名言金句
日常引用
站内词库
登录
蜗牛双语阅读
登录
经典图书
名言金句
日常引用
站内词库
动物庄园
|
第四章
2
/
6
Nevertheless
,
they
were
both
thoroughly
frightened
by
the
rebellion
on
Animal
Farm
,
and
very
anxious
to
prevent
their
own
animals
from
learning
too
much
about
it
.
At
first
they
pretended
to
laugh
to
scorn
the
idea
of
animals
managing
a
farm
for
themselves
.
The
whole
thing
would
be
over
in
a
fortnight
,
they
said
.
They
put
it
about
that
the
animals
on
the
Manor
Farm
(
they
insisted
on
calling
it
the
Manor
Farm
;
they
would
not
tolerate
the
name
"
Animal
Farm
")
were
perpetually
fighting
among
themselves
and
were
also
rapidly
starving
to
death
.
When
time
passed
and
the
animals
had
evidently
not
starved
to
death
,
Frederick
and
Pilkington
changed
their
tune
and
began
to
talk
of
the
terrible
wickedness
that
now
flourished
on
Animal
Farm
.
It
was
given
out
that
the
animals
there
practised
cannibalism
,
tortured
one
another
with
red-hot
horseshoes
,
and
had
their
females
in
common
.
This
was
what
came
of
rebelling
against
the
laws
of
Nature
,
Frederick
and
Pilkington
said
.
查看中文翻译
However
,
these
stories
were
never
fully
believed
.
Rumours
of
a
wonderful
farm
,
where
the
human
beings
had
been
turned
out
and
the
animals
managed
their
own
affairs
,
continued
to
circulate
in
vague
and
distorted
forms
,
and
throughout
that
year
a
wave
of
rebelliousness
ran
through
the
countryside
.
Bulls
which
had
always
been
tractable
suddenly
turned
savage
,
sheep
broke
down
hedges
and
devoured
the
clover
,
cows
kicked
the
pail
over
,
hunters
refused
their
fences
and
shot
their
riders
on
to
the
other
side
.
Above
all
,
the
tune
and
even
the
words
of
‘
Beasts
of
England
'
were
known
everywhere
.
It
had
spread
with
astonishing
speed
.
The
human
beings
could
not
contain
their
rage
when
they
heard
this
song
,
though
they
pretended
to
think
it
merely
ridiculous
.
They
could
not
understand
,
they
said
,
how
even
animals
could
bring
themselves
to
sing
such
contemptible
rubbish
.
Any
animal
caught
singing
it
was
given
a
flogging
on
the
spot
.
And
yet
the
song
was
irrepressible
.
The
blackbirds
whistled
it
in
the
hedges
,
the
pigeons
cooed
it
in
the
elms
,
it
got
into
the
din
of
the
smithies
and
the
tune
of
the
church
bells
.
And
when
the
human
beings
listened
to
it
,
they
secretly
trembled
,
hearing
in
it
a
prophecy
of
their
future
doom
.
查看中文翻译
下一章
下一页
上一页
上一章
保存书签
返回目录
动物庄园
|
第四章
2
/
6
X