酷兔英语
第19课听力
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UNIT 19 Knight's Honor ()
Chapter 1
Shortly before daylight, Robert began to stir.
He stretched his shoulders,
feeling his bones grind against one another
as they found their normal junction.
With a great deal of effort, first his right eye,
then his left, opened against the cloak of tears and dirt
that had sealed them shut while he slept.
"I can't see," he thought.
"Have I gone blind? Are my eyes even open?
Are there bandages on them?
I can't be sure."
He touched his cheek with a forefinger,
tracing gently toward the outer edge of his left eye.
"Yes, they're wide open. They sore!"
He rubbed his eyes, loosening the clogged coarse veil,
then blinking them and effusing tears to refresh them.
A faint light penetrated the gloom.
"Where am I?" he wondered.
His faculty made him aware that,
wherever he was, he was not alone.
Something warm and soft like sponge was beside him.
And it was snoring!
He thought for a moment
and then it started to come back to him.
No, he most certainly wasn't alone!
The body next to him was that socalled colonel,
that untidy, blundering lump man
who had so very nearly gotten them both killed the previous evening.
Robert rolled away from his companion,
shrewdly lest he would disturb the man's sleep.
The curtain of darkness was lifting without restraint
and he could perceive
and acquaint himself a little more with his surroundings.
The refuge in which they were staying
he found was really quite spacious.
He felt the smooth surface of the granite against his back.
Now that he had more room, he uncoiled his raw body,
feeling his blood saturate his limbs, his trunk and his brain.
He yearned to leave this place
and the swell of flesh that continued to rumble and chew in its sleep.
"I can't do that. I have to get us out of this dilemma.
I guess I'll just wait until this bull rouses.
By then I should have a plan.
Whether he likes it or not, I am taking charge.
He must concede his authority to me.
I'm not going to let his humiliating behavior be my downfall."
He narrated to himself.
Before the colonel awakened,
Robert allowed himself the venture
of reflecting on the events of the previous day.
It was beyond his understanding
how they could have found themselves victimized so easily.
There was nothing in the dawning of yesterday
to warrant the hostile change that was to happen.
But there had been warning signs that something bad was pending.
"If only she had agreed to run away with me!"
he said to himself.
Chapter 2
The Earl of Morley was a man with ambitions.
He had a strong desire to conquer and obtain.
Once he decided he wanted something,
be it property or county maiden,
through conspiracy or erroneous plot,
he would rejoice his selfishness by whatever means necessary.
He was never shameful for his greed and being of no virtue at all.
The origin of yesterday's conflagration
was the Earl's lusty craving for the daughter of Lord Stafford.
Lady Janine, the Lord's only child,
was spending a vocation with her tutor in a village
on the edge of the Earl's extensive land
when the Earl first saw her.
Her beauty did not escape him,
and he immediately began to pursue her,
shrewdly immersing himself into her company.
He also flattered her every chance he got.
Lady Janine, a haughty young woman,
was indifferent to his unwelcome courtship.
Not a man to take rejection lightly,
the Earl's initial response normally would have been simply
to kidnap the object of his passion.
This time, however, he made a resolution that
he coveted more than just a casual companionship with the young lady.
He wanted her to be obedient, to accept him as her husband.
With this in mind, and following the rules of social custom of the day,
he sent an agent, a monk from the monastery near the village,
to her father to relay his message and act on his behalf.
As a sign of good faith, the monk was to present the lady
with a ring in which was set a ruby of huge proportions.
The monk arrived at the castle in simplicity
only to be met by Lady Janine's father.
Lord Stafford, being a straightforward man,
did not disguise his feelings.
"To prompt matters, and to assure you
there is no doubt in my daughter's mind
that the Earl's propositions are to no success,
please tell him that I will never consent to a union between them.
He is unfit for my daughter.
She despises him! Tell him to forget this ridiculous show.
He has sent you on a fool's mission."
Touching the brim of his hat in farewell,
the depressed monk turned around
and returned to give Lord Stafford's response to the Earl.
How was he going to tell him that
this unsuccessful attempt was unlikely to be reversed?
How was he going to elude punishment?
The Earl was sure to show his scorn
and hatred by dismissing him from the estate.
Chapter 3
"Sire," the monk stammered,
"I fear Lord Stafford has refused your suit."
"What, exactly, were his words?" demanded the Earl in torrent.
"Has he merely deferred his decision
or has he taken a resolute declaration?"
"Sire, I am certain he will not change his mind.
It seems his daughter would prefer to take another as her husband."
The Earl scorned at this suggestion.
"She is but a girl, and has had no experience,
nor, I am told, has she any suitors.
I like young and beautiful women. I will have her!"
The monk was sent back to the monastery to resume his preaching,
an act that greatly surprised him
as he had expected to be doomed or suffer ejection from the estate.
He wondered what the Earl's next approach would be
and sincerely hoped his cooperation was at an end.
For a time, a state of desolation descended the Earl's very being.
He spent hours on end despising himself for being such a fool,
neither eating nor sleeping.
Then, he became very angry.
"How dare she refuse me? I will have her!"
With this thought in mind,
he commenced to win her by evil means,
since his previously extraordinary behavior had been rejected.
And so began the complex plan
to spoil the lovely Lady Janine by violence
and then ransom her to her father for a large amount of money.
His subordinates were sent to spy on the fair maiden.
When he learned that Lady Janine's father
was to travel to another province to oversee his estates there,
leaving Lady Janine in the care of his staff,
the Earl decided to seize both the girl and the Lord's treasures.
A small village surrounded the castle. In the dead of night,
the Earl and his recruits raided
and occupied it like lightning
with little resistance from the tenants.
The following morning,
he approached the gates of the mansion of the Lord,
only to be opposed by the presence of armed guards,
fifty knights in armor.
As the Earl had not expected to find that
the castle had been keeping prepared for the assault,
he had to discard his preliminary plan
in which he would simply attack and steal.
Now he had to fight to abolish the guards.
His cap turing the village gave him a good position
and his cunning gave him the advantage.
Chapter 4
Robert gazed thoughtfully at the misty exterior
of frost icing the red and gold leaves of the maple
and walnut trees situated on the hillside across from the ridge
where the mouth of the cave is located.
His thoughts took him back to his first sight of Janine.
The son of a servant,
Robert was employed by Lord Stafford as a stable boy.
His duties included clearing the animal
dirt out of the canals behind the horses,
putting fresh straw in the stalls,
and preparing and watering the horses.
One day, as he was cleaning the horse stable,
a girl about his own age appeared in the doorway.
"My father said I am to tell you to prepare my mount for me."
Robert was so surprised by her request;
he blushed and didn't respond immediately.
"Are you deaf?" she asked.
"No, Milady," he replied. "You startled me.
Which of these ponies is the one you prefer?"
"I don't ride a pony! I usually ride that black mare,"
she answered irritably.
"I'll have her ready in a moment, Milady."
As soon as the mare was saddled and bridled,
Janine mounted her with Robert's assistance.
She walked the mare out of the barn,
and thrust her into a gallop as soon as they were in the barnyard.
It was obvious she was a skilled rider.
Robert appraised her ability,
reassured himself that she could carry herself quite nicely on horseback,
and returned to his work.
And so their relationship began.
He soon learned that Janine was passionately impulsive,
witty, snobbish and lacks modesty,
whereas he, Robert, was calm and thrifty,
as well as totally enchanted by her.
When she discovered he was illiterate,
she taught him to read and write,
although most of his writing was difficult to read.
In return, he taught her to do mathematical operations,
something he had always done in his head
before she taught him the symbols for the numbers.
He worshipped her.
Over the next few years, their decent friendship grew,
eventually turning to love.