Book 2 4. PRAIRIE DAY Little House On The Prairie By Laura Ingalls Wilder

prairie day

soft wickerings were close to laura’s

ear

and grain rattled into the feed box

paw was giving pat and patty their

breakfasts

back pet don’t be greedy he said

you know it’s patty’s turn pet stamped

her foot and knickered

now patty keep your own end of the box

said paw

this is for pet then a little squeal

from patty

got nipped didn’t jeff paul said and

serve you right i told you to eat your

own corn

mary and laura looked at each other and

laughed

they could smell bacon and coffee

and hear pancakes sizzling and they

scrambled out of bed

mary could dress herself all but the

middle button

laura buttoned that one for her then

mary button laura

all the way up the back they washed

their hands and faces in the tin wash

basin on the wagon step

ma combed every snarl out of their hair

while paul brought fresh water from the

creek

then they sat on the clean grass and ate

pancakes and bacon

and molasses from the tin plates in

their laps

all around them shadows were moving over

the waving grasses while the sun rose

meadowlarks were springing straight up

from the billows of grass into the high

clear sky

singing as they went small pearly clouds

drifted in the immense blueness overhead

in all the weed tops tiny birds were

swinging and

singing in tiny voices paul said they

were dick sizzles

dicky dicky laura called back to them

dickie bird eat your breakfast laura

ma said you must mind your manners even

if we are a hundred miles from anywhere

paul said mildly it’s only 40 miles to

independence caroline

and no doubt there’s a neighbor so

nearer than that

40 miles then ma agreed but whether or

no it isn’t good manners to sing at

table

or when you’re eating she added because

there was no table

there was only the enormous empty

prairie

with grasses blowing and waves of light

and shadow across it

and the great blue sky above it and

birds flying up from it

and singing with joy because the sun was

rising

and on the whole enormous prairie there

was no sign that

any other human being had ever been

there

in all that space of land and sky stood

the lonely small

covered wagon and close to it said paw

and ma

and laura and mary and baby carrie

eating their breakfasts

the mustangs munched their corn and

jack sat still trying hard not to beg

laura was not allowed to feed him while

she ate but she saved bits for him

and mom made a big pancake for him of

the last of the batter

rabbits were everywhere in the grass and

thousands of prairie chickens but jack

could not hunt his breakfast that day

paul was going hunting and jack must

guard the camp

first paw put pat and patty on their

picket lines

then he took the wooden tub from the

side of the wagon

and filled it with water from the creek

maul was going to do the washing

then paul stuck his sharp hatchet in his

belt

he hung his powder horn beside the

hatchet he

put the patch box and the bullet pouch

in his pocket

and he took his gun on his arm he said

to ma

take your time caroline we won’t move

the wagon till we want to

we’ve got all the time there is

he went away for a little while they

could see the upper part of him above

the tall grasses

going away and growing smaller then he

went out of sight

and the prairie was empty

mary and laura washed the dishes while

ma made the beds in the wagon

they put the clean dishes neatly in

their box

they picked up every scattered twig and

put it in the fire

they stacked the wood against a wagon

wheel

then everything about the camp was tidy

ma brought the wooden panicking of soft

soap from the wagon

she kilted up her skirts and rolled up

her sleeves

and she knelt by the tub on the grass

she washed sheets and pillowcases

and white under things she washed

dresses and

shirts and she rinsed them in clear

water

and spread them on the clean grass to

dry in the sun

mary and laura were exploring they must

not go

far from the wagon but it was fun to run

through the tall grass and the sunshine

and the wind

huge rabbits bounded away before them

birds fluttered up and settled again

the tiny dickie birds were everywhere

and their tiny

nests were in the tall weeds and

everywhere

were little brown striped gophers

these little creatures looked soft as

velvet

they had bright round eyes and crinkling

noses

and wee paws they popped out of holes in

the ground

and stood up to look at mary and laura

their hind legs folded under their

haunches

their little paws folded tight to their

chests

and they looked exactly like bits of

dead wood sticking out of the ground

only their bright eyes glittered

mary and laura wanted to catch one to

take to ma

again and again they almost had one the

gopher would stand perfectly still

until you were sure you had him this

time then just as you touched him

he wasn’t there there was only his round

hole in the ground

ran and ran and couldn’t catch one

mary sat perfectly still beside a hole

waiting for one to come up

and just beyond her reach gophers

scampered merrily

and gophers set up and looked at her but

not one

ever came out of that hole

once a shadow floated across the grass

and every gopher vanished

a hawk was sailing overhead it was so

close

that laura saw its cruel round eye

turned downward to look at her

she saw its sharp beak and its savage

claws

curled ready to pounce but the hawk saw

nothing but laura and mary

and round empty holes in the ground

it sailed away looking somewhere else

for its dinner

then all the little gophers came up

again

it was nearly noon then the sun was

almost overhead

so laura and mary picked flowers from

the weeds

and they took the flowers to ma instead

of a gopher

ma was folding the dry clothes the

little panties and petticoats were

whiter than snow

warm from the sun and smelling like the

grass

ma laid them in the wagon and took the

flowers

she admired equally the flowers that

laura gave her

and the flowers that mary gave her and

she put them together in a tin cup full

of water

she set them on the wagon step to make

the camp pretty

then she split two cold corn cakes and

spread them with molasses

she gave one to mary and one to laura

that was their dinner and it was

very good where is a peppu small

laura asked don’t speak with your mouth

full laura

said ma so laura chewed

and swallowed and she said i want to see

a papoose

mercy honest moss said whatever makes

you want to see

indians we will see enough of them

more than we want to i wouldn’t wonder

they wouldn’t hurt us

would they mary asked mary was always

good

she never spoke with her mouth full no

ma said don’t get such an idea into your

head

why don’t you like indian’s ma laura

asked

and she caught a drip of molasses with

her tongue

i just don’t like them and don’t lick

your fingers laura

said ma this is indian country isn’t it

lara said what did we come to their

country for if you don’t like them

ma said she didn’t know whether this was

indian country or not

she didn’t know where the kansas line

was but whether or no

the indians would not be here long paul

had word from a man in washington

that the indian territory would be open

to settlement soon

it might already be open to settlement

they could not know because washington

was so far away

then ma took the sat iron out of the

wagon and heated it by the fire

she sprinkled a dress for mary and a

dress for laura

and a little dress for baby carrie and

her own sprigged calico

she spread a blanket and a sheet on the

wagon seat

and she ironed the dresses

baby carrie slept in the wagon

laura and mary and jack lay on the shady

grass beside it because now the sunshine

was

hot jack’s mouth was open and his red

tongue hung out

his eyes blinked sleepily ma

hum softly to herself while the iron

smoothed all the wrinkles out of the

little dresses

all around them to the very edge of the

world

there was nothing but grasses waving in

the wind

far overhead a few white puffs of clouds

sailed in the thin blue air

laura was very happy

the wind sang a low rustling song in the

grass

grasshoppers rasping quivered up from

all the immense prairie

a buzzing came faintly from all the

trees in the creek bottoms

but all these sounds made a great warm

happy

silence laura had never seen a place she

liked

so much as this place

she didn’t know she’d gone to sleep

until she woke up

jack was on his feet wagging his stump

tail

the sun was low and paul was coming

across the prairie

laura jumped up and ran and his long

shadow stretched to meet her in the

waving grasses

he held up the game in his hand for her

to see he had a rabbit

the largest rabbit she had ever seen and

two plump prairie hens

lara jumped up and down and clapped her

hands and squealed

then she caught hold of his other sleeve

and hippity-hopped through the tall

grasses beside him

this country’s cram jammed with game he

told her

i saw 50 deer if i saw one an antelope

squirrels rabbits birds of all kinds

the creek’s full of fish he said to my

i tell you caroline there’s everything

we want here we can live like

kings that was a wonderful supper

they sat by the campfire and ate the

tender savory flavory meat till they

could eat

no more when at last laura sat down her

plate

she sighed with contentment she didn’t

want anything more in the world

the last color was fading from the

enormous sky and

all the level land was shadowy the

warmth of the fire was pleasant because

the night wind was cool

phoebe birds called sadly from the woods

down by the creek for a little while

a mockingbird sang then the stars came

out

and the birds were still softly pause

fiddle saying in the starlight

sometimes he sang a little and sometimes

the fiddle sang alone

sweet and thin and far away the fiddle

went on singing

[Music]

none

[Music]

the large bright stars hung down from

the sky

lower and lower they came quivering with

music

laura gasped and mark came quickly

what is it laura she asked and laura

whispered

the stars were singing

you’ve been asleep ma said it’s only the

fiddle

and it’s time little girls were in bed

she undressed laura in the firelight and

put her nightgown on

and tied her nightcap and tucked her

into bed

but the fiddle was still singing in the

starlight

the night was full of music and laura

was sure that part of it came from the

great

bright stars swinging so low above the

[Music]

prairie

草原日

柔软的柳条靠近劳拉的

耳朵

,谷物嘎嘎作响地进入饲料箱

爪子正在给帕蒂和帕蒂送回他们的

早餐

宠物不要贪心 他说

你知道该轮到帕蒂

了 盒子里的

爪子说

这是给宠物的,然后帕蒂的一点尖叫声

被咬住了,杰夫保罗不是说过要

为你服务吗?我告诉你吃你

自己的玉米

玛丽,劳拉看着对方

笑了,

他们能闻到培根和咖啡的味道

听到煎饼咝咝作响,他们

从床上爬起来,

玛丽可以自己穿衣服,但

中间的纽扣

劳拉为她扣上那个纽扣,然后

玛丽纽扣劳拉

一直到后面,他们在马车台阶上

的锡制洗手盆里洗手和洗脸

妈妈梳理头发上的每一个咆哮,

而保罗从

小溪里取淡水,

然后他们坐在干净的草地上,

吃着他们腿上锡盘里的煎饼、培根和糖蜜

当太阳升起时,草甸正在摇曳的草丛上移动,草甸云雀正

从草丛中直冲

云霄,飞向晴朗的天空,它们边走边唱着珍珠般的小云朵

飘荡在头顶

上所有杂草顶部的巨大蓝色中,小鸟在

摆动和

歌唱 保罗用很小的声音说他们

是迪克

嘶嘶作响 迪基迪基劳拉叫他们回来

迪基鸟吃你的早餐 劳拉妈妈

即使我们离任何地方都有一百英里,你也必须注意你的举止

保罗温和地说到独立卡罗琳只有40英里

,没有 怀疑有没有

比那 40 英里更近的邻居,

然后妈妈同意了,但

不管在餐桌上唱歌

或吃饭时是否不礼貌,她补充说,因为

没有桌子

,只有巨大的空旷

草原

,草丛飞扬 光影的波涛

掠过它

,它头顶上蔚蓝的天空,

鸟儿从它上面飞来

,欢快地歌唱,因为太阳正在

升起。 整个大草原

没有任何迹象表明

在这片土地和天空中曾经有任何其他人曾经站在那辆

孤独的

小马车上,靠近它说爪子

、妈妈和劳拉、玛丽和婴儿嘉莉

在吃他们的

早餐野马 吃着他们的玉米,

杰克仍然坐着努力不求

劳拉在她吃饭的时候不允许喂他,

但她为他留了一些东西

,妈妈为他做了一个大煎饼,

最后一只面糊

兔子在草丛中随处可见,

成千上万的兔子 草原鸡,但杰克

那天不能打他的早餐,

保罗要去打猎,杰克必须

守卫营地。

第一只爪子把帕特和帕蒂放在他们的

纠察线上,

然后他从马车的一侧拿起木桶

,装满水

克里克摩尔正要洗衣服,

然后保罗把锋利的斧头插在

腰带上,

他把火药喇叭挂在斧头旁边,

把补丁盒和子弹袋

放在口袋里

,他拿起了 他胳膊上拿着枪,他对我说

,慢慢

来,卡罗琳,我们不会

移动马车,除非我们愿意

草渐渐远去,越来越小,然后他

就消失了

,草原空无一人,

玛丽和劳拉洗碗,

妈妈在马车上铺床,

他们把干净的盘子整齐地

放在盒子

里,捡起每根散落的树枝,

把它放好 在火里,

他们把木头堆在马车的

车轮上,

然后营地里的一切都

收拾干净了。妈妈从马车里拿来了木头惊慌失措的软肥皂她撩起裙子,卷起袖子

,她跪在浴缸旁她洗过的草地上

床单和枕套

和白色的东西她洗过

衣服和

衬衫,然后用清水冲洗干净,

然后将它们铺在干净

的草地上晒干 奔跑

穿过高高的草丛,阳光

和风,

巨大的兔子在它们面前

飞奔而去 像天鹅绒一样柔软

它们有明亮的圆眼睛和皱巴巴的

鼻子

和小爪子它们从地上的洞里钻

出来站起来看着玛丽和劳拉

它们的后腿折叠在

臀部下面

它们的小爪子紧紧地折叠在

胸前

,它们看起来完全一样 就像

从地上伸出的枯木

碎片 只有他们明亮的眼睛闪闪发光

玛丽和劳拉

一次又一次地想抓到一只带给妈妈 他们几乎有一只

地鼠会完全静止不动,

直到你确定这次你有他

当你碰他的时候,

他并不在那里,只有他

在地上的圆洞

跑来跑去,抓不住一个

坐在旁边的玛丽 每个洞都

在等着一个人上来

,就在她够不着的地方

太近了

,劳拉看到它残忍的圆眼睛

向下看她,

她看到它尖尖的喙和野蛮的

爪子

卷曲准备扑上去,但鹰只看到

劳拉和玛丽,

以及地面上的圆形空洞,

它扬帆远去,望着某个地方 否则

吃晚饭

然后所有的小地鼠又来了

内裤和衬裙比

阳光晒得暖和的雪还要白,闻起来像

草。

妈妈把它们放在马车里,拿着

她同样欣赏的花,

劳拉给她的花

玛丽送给她的鲜花,

她把它们放在一个装满水的锡杯里

放在马车台阶上,

让营地变得漂亮,

然后她把两个冷玉米饼

分开,撒上糖蜜

,一个给玛丽,一个给玛丽 对劳拉来说

,那是他们的晚餐,

非常好,小劳拉在哪里

问,不要用嘴说话,

劳拉

说妈妈,所以劳拉咀嚼

和吞咽,她说我想看

一个papoose

怜悯诚实的苔藓说什么让

你 想见

印度人,我们会看到

比我们想要的更多的人,我不奇怪

他们不会伤害我们,

如果他们玛丽问玛丽总是

很好,

她从不满嘴说话,妈妈

说不要这样 想法进入你的

脑海

你为什么不喜欢印度的 ma laura

她,她用舌头接了一滴糖浆

说如果你不这样做我们来他们的

国家做什么 不喜欢他们,

妈妈说她不知道这是

不是印度国家,

她不知道堪萨斯线在哪里,

印第安人是否不会在这里很久,保罗

从华盛顿的一个男人

那里得知印度领土

很快就可以定居了

它可能已经可以定居了,

他们不知道,因为

华盛顿太远了,

然后妈妈把熨斗从

马车里拿出来,用火加热,

她给玛丽

穿了一件衣服,给劳拉穿了一件衣服

还有一件小裙子给小嘉莉和

她自己的小花布

很热 杰克张着嘴 红色的

舌头伸出来

他的眼睛困倦地眨着 妈妈

轻轻地自言自语,而熨斗

抚平了

他们周围小裙子上的所有皱纹,直到

世界的

尽头 w 因为只有草在

远处随风飘扬 几朵白色的云朵

在稀薄的蓝色空气中航行

劳拉很

高兴 风在草丛中唱出低沉的歌声

蚱蜢

从无垠的草原上颤抖起来

隐约传来嗡嗡声

小溪底部的所有树木,

但所有这些声音都制造了一种温暖而

快乐的

寂静,劳拉从未见过一个她

如此喜欢的地方

,直到她醒来才知道她已经睡着

杰克已经站起来了 摇着他的树桩

尾巴太阳很低,保罗正

穿过大草原

劳拉跳起来奔跑,他长长的

影子伸到

摇曳的草丛中迎接她

他举起手中的游戏让

她看到他有一只

最大的兔子 她见过的兔子和

两只胖乎乎的草原母鸡

劳拉上下跳来跳去,拍手尖叫,然后她抓住他的另一个袖子,嬉皮士

在他身边的高草丛中跳来跳去

这个国家的补习班 d with game 他

告诉她

我看到了 50 只鹿 如果我看到一只羚羊

松鼠 兔子 各种鸟类

小溪里满是鱼 他对我说

我告诉你 Caroline 这里有

我们想要的一切 我们可以像国王一样生活

那是一顿美妙的晚餐

他们坐在篝火旁,吃着

鲜嫩可口的肉,直到他们

不能再吃下去

了。当劳拉坐下她的

盘子时,

她满足地叹了口气,她

在这个世界上不再想要任何东西了,

最后的颜色正在从

巨大的天空褪去,

所有平坦的土地都是阴暗

的 火的温暖是愉快的,

因为夜风很凉爽

菲比鸟在小溪边的树林里悲伤地叫

了一会儿,

一只知更鸟在歌唱,然后星星

出来了

,鸟儿还在轻轻地停顿

小提琴 在星光中说

有时他轻唱

有时小提琴独唱

又甜又瘦 远方 小提琴

继续唱

[音乐]

没有

[音乐

] 大颗明亮的星星

从s上垂下来 ky

越来越低 他们随着音乐颤抖着来了

劳拉喘着粗气 马克很快

就来了 劳拉 她问劳拉

低声说

星星在歌唱

你已经睡着了 妈妈说这只是

小提琴 小女孩们该上床睡觉了

她脱了衣服 劳拉 在火光下

穿上睡衣

,系上睡帽,把她

塞进床上,

但小提琴仍在

星光下唱歌

【音乐】

草原