小学英语 英语故事(童话故事)The Shirt Collar 衬衫领子

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1、TheShirtCollar衬衫领子There was once a perfect gentleman whose whole household goods consisted of one bootjack and a comb. But he also had one of the most remarkable shirt collars in the world. Ill tell you a story about it.When the shirt collar had passed his prime he turned his thoughts to marriage. I

2、n the fullness of time he went to the wash, and there he met with a garter.My! said the collar, anyone so slender, so tender, so neat and nice as you are, I never did see. May I know your name?No, said the garter. I wont tell you.Then at least tell me where you live? asked the collar.But the garter

3、was so modest that she couldnt bring herself to answer such an embarrassing question.I believe you are a girdle, said the collar. A sort of underneath girdle. And I dare say youre as useful as you are beautiful, my pretty little dear.I forbid you to speak to me, said the garter. Im sure I havent giv

4、en you the slightest encouragement.Your beauty is every encouragement, said the collar.Kindly keep away from me, said the garter. You look too masculine.Oh, Im a perfect gentleman, said the collar. Ive a bootjack and a comb to prove it.This wasnt true at all, for they belonged to his master, but he

5、liked to boast.Please dont come so close, said the garter. Im not used to such behaviour.Prude! the collar called her as they took him from the washtub. They starched him, hung him over a chair back in the sun, and then stretched him out on an ironing board. There he met with a sadiron.My dear lady,

6、 said the collar, you adorable widow woman, the closer you come the warmer I feel. Im a changed collar since I met you, without a wrinkle left in me. You burn clear through me. Oh, wont you be mine?Rag! said the sadiron, as she flattened him out, for she went her way like a railway engine pulling ca

7、rs down a track. Rag! was what she said.The collar was the worse for wear at the edges, so the scissors were called for to trim him.Oh, said the collar, you must be a ballet dancer. How straight you stretch your legs out. Such a graceful performance! No one can do that like you.Im well aware of it,

8、said the scissors.You deserve to be no less than a countess, said the collar. All I have to offer is my perfect gentleman, bootjack and comb. Oh, if only I had an earldom.I do believe hes daring to propose, said the scissors. She cut him so furiously that he never recovered.Now I shall have to ask t

9、he comb, said the collar. My dear, how remarkably well youve kept your teeth. Have you ever thought of getting engaged?Why, of course, said the comb. I am engaged-to the bootjack.Engaged! the collar exclaimed. Now that there was no one left for him to court, the collar pretended that he had never me

10、ant to marry.Time passed and the collar went his way to the bin in a paper mill, where the rags kept company according to rank, the fine rags in one bin, the coarse in another, just as it is in the world. They all gossiped aplenty but the collar chattered the most, for he was an awful braggart.Ive h

11、ad sweethearts by the dozen, he told them. Ladies never would leave me alone, and you cant blame them; for I was such a perfect gentleman, stiff with starch, and with a bootjack and comb to spare. You should have seen me then. You should have seen me unbend.Ill never forget my first love-such a char

12、ming little girdle, so slender and tender. She threw herself into a tub of water, all for the love of me. Then there was the widow, glowing to get me, but I jilted her and let her cool off. And there was the ballet dancer, whose mark I bear to this day. What a fiery creature she was! And even my com

13、b fell so hard in love with me that she lost all her teeth when I left her. Yes, indeed, I have plenty on my conscience. But the garter-I mean the girdle - who drowned herself in the wash tub, is the one I feel most badly about. Oh, I have a black record, and its high time I turned into spotless whi

14、te paper.And thats exactly what happened. All the rags were made into paper, and the collar became the page you see, the very paper on which this story is printed. That was because he boasted so outrageously about things that never had happened. So lets be careful to behave we better than he did, for you never can tell. Some day we may end up in the rag bag, and be made into white paper on which the whole story of our life is printed in full detail. Then wed have to turn tattletale on ourselves, just as the shirt collar has done.

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