Great American Stories
Great American Stories
Great American Stories
Great
American
Stories i
An ESL/EFL Reader
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2017 with funding from
Kahle/Austin Foundation
https://archive.org/details/greatamericansto00drap_0
Second Edition
Great
AMERICAN
Stories i
An ESL/EFL Reader
beginning-intermediate to intermediate levels
C.G. Draper
Draper, C. G.
Great American stories : an ESL/EFL reader : beginning
-intermediate to intermediate levels / C. G. Draper,
p. cm.
ISBN 0-13-364381-6
1. English language - Textbooks for foreign speakers. 2. Short
stories, American - Adaptations. 3. Readers - United States.
I. Title.
PE1128.D675 1993
428.6'4 - dc20 92-14753
CIP
10 9 8 7
D-13-3b43fll-b
Prentice-Hall International (UK) Limited, London
Prentice-Hall of Australia Pty. Limited, Sydney
Prentice-Hall of Canada Inc. Toronto
Prentice-Hall Hispanoamericana, S.A., Mexico
Prentice-Hall of India Private Limited, New Delhi
Prentice-Hall of Japan, Inc. Tokyo
Simon 8c Schuster Asia Pte. Ltd., Singapore
Editora Prentice-Hall do Brasil, Ltda., Rio deJaneiro
CONTENTS
To the Reader iv
To the Teacher v
iv
TO THE TEACHER
V
THE GIFT OF THE MAGI
Before You Read the Story . ..
1. A Life
Read the paragraph about O. Henry on page 3. To
you, what is the most interesting thing about his life?
2. The Pictures
This story is “The Gift of the Magi.” (MAYjai) The
word “Magi” means “wise men.” The three kings on
page 7 are the Magi. Each king is carrying a gift. What
do you think these gifts are?
Look at the pictures on page 5 and page 8. The same
woman is in both pictures. Look at her face, her hair,
and her clothes. What is the same? What is different?
On page 8, the man is holding something in his
hands. What is it?
3. Thinking Ah out It. . .
“The Gift of the Magi” happens at Christmas
(December 25). In many countries, people give gifts at
this time of year. At what other times of the year do
people give gifts? When do you give gifts? Why do you
give gifts?
4. Scanning
Read the questions below. The answer to each
question can be found in the paragraph about O.
Henry on page 3. Read the paragraph quickly, looking
for the information that will answer each question.
You do not need to understand everything in the
paragraph. But you must read carefully enough to find
the answer to each question. This kind of reading to
find information is called scanning. Try to answer each
question in 30 seconds or less.
a. In what town was O. Henry born?
b. How old was he when he left school?
c. Why did he go to prison?
d. What is O. Henry famous for?
e. What is The Four Million’?
f. How old was O. Henry when he died?
2
adapted from the story by
O. HENRY
9 Ah! the next two hours flew past like summer wind.
Della shopped in many stores for the right gift for Jim.
Then she found it—a chain for his gold watch. It was a
good chain, strong and expensive. Della knew the chain
would make Jim happy. Jim had a cheap chain for his
watch, but this chain was much better. It would look good
with the gold watch. The chain cost twenty-one dollars.
Della paid for the chain, and ran home with eighty-seven
cents.
10 At seven o’clock Della made coffee and started to
cook dinner. It was almost dinner time. Jim would be home
soon. He was never late. Della heard Jim outside. She
looked in the mirror again. “Oh! I hope Jim doesn’t kill
me!” Della smiled, but her eyes were wet. “But what could I
do with only one dollar and eighty-seven cents?”
11 The door opened, and Jim came in and shut it. His
face was thin and quiet. His coat was old, and he had no
hat. He was only twenty-two. Jim stood still and looked at
Della. He didn’t speak. His eyes were strange. Della
suddenly felt afraid. She did not understand him. She
began to talk very fast. “Oh, Jim, dear, why do you look so
strange? Don’t look at me like that. I cut my hair and sold
it. I wanted to buy you a Christmas gift. It will grow again—
don’t be angry. My hair grows very fast. Say ‘Merry
Christmas,’ dear, and let’s be happy. You don’t know what
I’ve got for you—it’s beautiful.”
12 “You cut your hair?” Jim spoke slowly.
13 “I cut it and sold it,” Della answered. “Don’t you
like me now? I’m still me, aren’t I?”
14 “You say that your hair is gone?” Jim asked again.
15 “Don’t look for it, it’s gone,” Della said. “Be good
to me, because it’s Christmas. Shall we have dinner now,
Jim?
16 Jim seemed to wake up> He smiled. He took Della
in his arms.
17 Let us leave them together for a while. They are
happy, rich or poor. Do you know about the Magi? The
Magi were wise men who brought Christmas gifts to the
baby Jesus. But they could not give gifts like Jim’s and
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B. Close Reading
If the sentence is true, write “T” next to it. If it is not
true, write “F” for false. If the sentence is false, change
one word and make it true.
C. Discussion
D. Vocabulary Practice
Put the correct form of the word on the left in the blank
spaces on the right.
i
LOVE OF LIFE
Before You Read the Story. • •
1 .A Life
Read the paragraph about Jack London, the writer, on
page 15. Why do you think he wrote adventure stories?
2. The Pictures
Look closely at the pictures on pages 17, 19, 21, and
22. Without reading the story, try to answer the
questions below. If possible, do this exercise with a
classmate, and report your answers to the class.
In the first picture, is one man walking away from the
other, or toward him? Why is one man on the ground?
Describe the man’s clothes. What is he carrying?
Where are the two men? Describe the land.
In the picture on page 19, the bones of an animal are
on the ground. Why do you think the man is reaching
for the bones?
In the picture on page 22, do you think the animal is
friendly? Is the man in the picture sleeping, or dead?
In the picture on page 21, what does the man see in
the distance? What does his face tell you?
3. Thinking About It...
Tell your own story about the man in the four pictures.
Use all four pictures in your story.
4. Skimming
Sometimes we want to have a general idea about a
piece of writing before we read it carefully. This
exercise will show you one way of doing that
Read the first two sentences of each paragraph in
“Love of Life.” Take one minute (60 seconds) to do
this. This kind of fast reading for the general idea is
called skimming, Next, try to answer the following
questions. Do not look back at the story to answer
them.
a. How many men are in the story at the beginning?
b. Does the man hurt his foot or his hand?
c. Is the man hungry, or thirsty? Warm, or cold?
Sick, or well?
d. Who finally finds the man? Is he alive, or is he
dead?
14
adapted from the story by
JACK LONDON
LOVE OF LIFE
EXERCISES
A. Understanding the Main Ideas
Read the sentence (or sentences) from the story. Then
answer the question about the sentence.
B. Close Reading
Choose the right word to complete each sentence.
1. The man could not walk quickly because he hurt his
a. back
b. foot
c. hand
2. The man wanted to find the camp because of the
there.
24 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
a. gold
b. water
c. bullets and food
3. One day the man found and ate the bones of a
a. deer
b. fish
c. wolf
4. The wolf could not kill the man because the wolf, too,
was
a. hungry
b. thirsty
c. weak
5. The man found Bill’s
a. hat and gloves
b. bones and gold
c. blanket and bullets
6. The men on the ship did not take the man’s hidden
a. meat
b. blanket
c. bread
7. The men on the ship understood why the man was
always
a. hungry
b. angry
c. laughing
C. Discussion
A B
1. weak life
2. lost open
3. laugh full
4. death thin
5. follow cry
6. empty loudly
7. quietly strong
8. closed found
9. fat lead
Example:
2. The Pictures
The same woman is in the pictures on page 31 and
page 34. What is she feeling in the first picture? How
has she changed in the second?
What do you think is happening in the picture on
page 32?
28
adapted from the story by
KATE CHOPIN
Kate Chopin was born in 1851 in St.
Louis, Missouri. Her family was rich. She
married, and had six children. She lived a
family life like other rich ladies in those days.
But she was well educated and liked to read
and write. After her husband died, in 1883,
she began to write stories. She wrote a book
called The Awakening. This book, and many of
her stories, shocked her readers at that time.
She wrote about the freedom of women at a
time when most women lived only for the
family. Because the stories were so shocking,
Deople did not read them for many years after
ner death in 1904. Now Kate Chopin's writing
has been discovered again. People are
interested in her life and work.
29
30 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
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THE STORY OF AN HOUR 33
the air.
10 Slowly she became excited. Her breath came fast,
her heart beat faster. She began to see this thing. It wanted
to find her and take her. She tried to fight against it. But
she could not. Her mind was as weak as her two small white
hands. Then she stopped fighting against it. A little word
broke from her lips.
11 “Free,” she said. “Free, free, free!” The emptiness
and fear left her. Her eyes showed her excitement. Her
heart beat fast, and the blood warmed her body. A sudden
feeling ofjoy excited her.
12 She did not stop to ask if her joy was wrong. She
saw her freedom clearly. She could not stop to think of
smaller things.
13 She knew the tears would come again when she saw
her husband’s body. The kind hands, now dead and still.
The loving face, now still and gray. But she looked into the
future. She saw many long years to come that would belong
to her alone. And now she opened her arms wide to those
years in welcome.
14 There would be no one else to live for during those
years. She would live for herself alone. There would be no
strong mind above hers. Men and women always believe
they can tell others what to do and how to think. Suddenly
Louise understood that this was wrong. She could break
away and be free of it.
15 And yet, she loved him—sometimes. Often she did
not. What did love mean now? Now she understood that
freedom is stronger than love.
16 “Free! Body and mind free!” she said again.
17 Her sister Josephine was waiting outside the door.
18. “Please open the door,” Josephine cried. “You will
make yourself sick. What are you doing in there, Louise?
Please, please, let me in!”
19 “Go away. I am not sick.” No, she was drinking in
life through that open window.
20 She thought joyfully of all those days before her.
Spring days, summer days. All kinds of days that would be
her own. She began to hope life would be long. And just
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THE STORY OF AN HOUR 35
yesterday, life seemed so long!
21 After a while she got up and opened the door. Her
eyes were bright, her cheeks were red. She didn’t know how
strong and well she looked—so full of joy. They went
downstairs, where Richards was waiting.
22 A man was opening the door. It was Brently
Mallard. He was dirty, and tired. He carried a suitcase and
an umbrella. He was not killed in the train accident. He
didn’t even know there was an accident. He was surprised
at Josephine’s sudden cry. He didn’t understand why
Richards moved suddenly between them, to hide Louise
from her husband.
23 But Richards was too late.
24 When the doctors came, they said it was her weak
heart. They said she died ofjoy—ofjoy that kills.
B. Close Reading
Choose one of the two words in parentheses to make a
correct sentence.
1. Louise Mallard had a (sad / weak) heart.
36 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
C. Discussion
1. What does Louise discover about herself in this story?
2. Louise thinks, “Men and women always believe they
can tell others what to do and how to think.” Why do
you think she believes this? Do you agree with her?
How do people try to tell other people what to do and
how to think?
3. What does Louise mean when she says, “Free, free!”?
Free from what? Today, are women more free than
men, or less free? Why?
D. Vocabulary Practice
Find words or phrases in the story that mean almost the
same as the underlined words or phrases.
E. Word Forms
Put the correct form of the word on the left in the blank
spaces in the sentences on the right.
Dear Diary,
Our friend Richards brought the saddest news
today:__
Then she____
1. A Life
Read the paragraph about Edgar Allan Poe on page
41. Was Poe’s life an unhappy one?
What does the word “detective” mean? the word
“horror?”
A “tale” is a story. What does the title mean: “The Tell-
Tale Heart?”
2. The Pictures
Look at the picture on page 43. What word can you
use to describe the man’s face? There is a light shining
on the man’s face. Where is the light coming from?
What is the other man holding?
There are three policemen in the picture on page 47.
What words can you use to describe their faces? Who
are they looking at?
3. Thinking About It. . .
What do you think small children are most afraid of?
The dark? Large, strange animals? Sudden, loud
noises? Things they do not understand? Are older
people afraid of the same things? Do most people talk
easily about their fears?
4. Skimming
Take 60 seconds to skim “The Tell-Tale Heart.”
(Quickly read the first two or three sentences of each
paragraph.)
Do not look back at the story. Look at the three
groups of words below. Which group fits the general
idea you got from skimming the story—group A, B, or
C?
A B C
machine flower house
tomorrow today yesterday
study enjoy kill
new young old
thinking happy mad
noon morning midnight
40
adapted from the story by
EDGAR ALLAN POE
41
42 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
me. Someone in the next house would hear! The old man
must die! This was his hour! With a loud cry, I opened the
lantern wide. I ran into the room! The old man cried
loudly once—once only. His fear, his fear killed him! In a
second I pulled him from the bed. He lay still. I smiled a
little. Everything was all right. For some minutes, I heard
his heart beat softly. Then it stopped. I put my hand on his
body. He was cold. He was like a stone. The old man was
dead. His eye would never look upon me again!
12 And now I was very, very careful. I worked quickly
but quietly. I used a good, new knife. I cut off the old man’s
arms and legs and head. Then I took three boards from the
floor of the room. I put everything below the floor. Then I
put the boards in their place again. I cleaned the floor.
There was no blood. Nothing was wrong. I was careful’, you
see? Ha! Can you still think that I am mad?
13 I finished. It was four o’clock—still dark as
midnight. Suddenly there was a beating on the door.
Someone was there. But I went down with a happy heart. I
had nothing to fear. Nothing.
14 Three policemen came into the house. They said
that someone in the next house heard a cry. Was something
wrong? Was everyone all right?
15 “Of course,” I said. “Please come in.” I was not
nervous. I smiled at the men. I told them that the old man
was in another town. I said he was with his sister. I showed
them his money, his gold. Everything was there, in its place.
16 I brought chairs. I asked the men to sit. I sat, too. I
sat on the boards over the dead man’s body! I talked easily.
The policemen smiled.
17 But after some minutes I became tired. Perhaps I
was a little nervous. There was a low sound in my head, in
my ears. I didn’t like it. I talked more loudly, more angrily.
Then suddenly I understood. The sound was not in my
head or in my ears. It was there in the room!
18 Now I know that I became very nervous. It was a low
quick sound. It sounded like a small wooden clock! My eyes
opened wide. Could the policemen hear it? I talked in a
louder voice. But the noise did not stop. It grew! I stood up
48 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
and talked angrily, dangerously. I walked across the floor
and back again. Why wouldn’t the men leave? There was a
storm inside my head! And still the noise became louder—
louder—LOUDER! I beat my hands on the table. I said
dangerous things in a loud voice. But still the men talked
happily and smiled. Couldn’t they hear? Was it possible?
Oh, God! No, no! They heard! They knew! They laughed at
my hopes, and smiled at my fears. I knew it then and I
know it now. I couldn’t keep still! Anything was better than
their smiles and laughing! And now—again!—listen!
louder! louder! LOUDER!
19 “Stop!” I cried. “Enough! Enough! Pull up the
boards! Below the floor! Here, here!—It is the beating of
his horrible heart!”
B. Close Reading
Read the first half of a sentence in column A. Then draw
a line from it to the second half in column B that best
completes the meaning. The first one is done for you.
A B
1. The madman thought when he heard a low,
quick sound
C. Discussion
1. The old man was dead. His body, in pieces, was below
the floor. But the young man believed that he could
hear the old man’s heart beating. Why?
2. What do you think will happen to the man after the
police take him away? Should he go to prison? To a
doctor? Should he be killed?
3. Do you enjoy horror stories? Do you enjoy horror
movies? Why, or why not?
5. He said he loved the old man. The old man was kind
to him. The old man never hurt him. It was only the
old man’s eye that made him so__.
6. What really killed the old man? It wasn’t a knife. It
wasn’t even the open lantern, or the young man’s loud
cry. It was his own ___.
54
adapted from the story by
MARK TWAIN
55
56 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
I
A ll the boys in my village wanted to be the same
thing: a steamboat pilot. Our village lay on the
great Mississippi River. Once a day, at noon, a steamboat
came up from St. Louis. Later, at one o’clock, another
came down from Keokuk. Before these hours, the day was
full and bright with waiting. After them, the day was a dead
and empty thing.
2 I can see that old time now. The white town sleeps in
the morning sun. The streets are empty. Some animals walk
near the buildings. The waters of the Mississippi are quiet
and still. A man who has drunk too much lies peacefully
near the river. Other men sit outside their stores in chairs.
They look at the town and don’t talk much.
3 Then a worker cries, “S-t-e-a-m-boat coming!” And
everything changes! The man who has drunk too much
gets up and runs. Suddenly the streets are full. Men,
women, and children run to the steamboat landing. The
animals make a hundred different noises. The town wakes
up!
4 The steamboat that comes toward the town is long
and pretty. Her big wheel turns and turns. Everybody looks
at her and at the men who live on her. The pilot stands
tallest, the center of everything, the king. Slowly the
steamboat comes to the landing. Men take things off the
boat and bring other things on. In ten minutes she is gone
again. The town goes back to sleep. But the boys of the
town remember the boat. They remember the pilot. And
they don’t forget.
5 I was fifteen then, and I ran away from home. I went
to New Orleans. There I met a pilot named Mr. Bixby. I said
I wanted to be his cub-pilot, or learner. He said no—but
only once. I said yes a hundred times. So in the end I won.
He said he would teach me the river. He didn’t smile or
A CUB-PILOT'S EDUCATION 59
laugh, but I was the happiest boy in that city.
6 We left New Orleans at four o’clock one afternoon.
Mr. Bixby was at the wheel. Here at the beginning of the
river, there were a lot of steamboats. Most of them were at
landings on the sides of the river. We went past them
quickly, very close to them. Suddenly Mr. Bixby said, “Here.
You steer her.” And he gave me the wheel. My heart was in
my mouth. I thought it was very dangerous, close to those
other boats. I began to steer into the middle of the river. In
the middle, there was enough water for everybody.
7 “What are you doing?” Mr. Bixby cried angrily. He
pushed me away and took the wheel again. And again he
steered us near the other boats. After a while, he became a
little cooler. He told me that water runs fast in the middle
of a river. At the sides, it runs slow. “So if you’re going up¬
river, you have to steer near the sides. You can go in the
middle only if you’re going down-river.” Well, that was good
enough for me. I decided to be a down-river pilot only.
8 Sometimes Mr. Bixby showed me points of land.
“This is Six-Mile Point,” he said. The land pointed like a
finger into the water. Another time, he said, “This is Nine-
Mile Point.” It looked like Six-Mile Point to me. Later, he
said, “This is Twelve-Mile Point.” Well, this wasn’t very
interesting news. All the points seemed the same.
9 After six hours of this, we had supper and went to
bed. Even bed was more interesting than the “points.” At
midnight, someone put a light in my eyes. “Hey, let’s go!”
10 Then he left. I couldn’t understand this. I decided
to go back to sleep. Soon the man came again with his
light; now he was angry. “Wake up!” he called. I was angry,
too, and said, “Don’t put that light in my eyes! How can I
sleep if you wake me up every minute?”
11 AJ1 the men in the room laughed at this. The man
left again, but came back soon with Mr. Bixby. One minute
later I was climbing the steps to the pilot-house. Some of
my clothes were on me. The rest were in my hands. Mr.
Bixby walked behind me, angry. Now, here was something
interesting: Pilots worked in the middle of the night!
12 And that night was a bad one. There was a lot of
60 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
mist on the river. You could not see through it. Where were
we going? I was frightened. But Mr. Bixby turned the wheel
easily and happily. He told me we had to find a farm. Jones
Farm. To myself I said, “Okay, Mr. Bixby. You can try all
night. But you’ll never find anything in this mist.”
13 Suddenly Mr. Bixby turned to me and said, “What’s
the name of the first point above New Orleans?”
141 answered very quickly. I said I didn’t know.
15 “Don’t knowT
16 The loudness of his voice surprised me. But I
couldn’t answer him.
17 ‘Well, then,” he said, “What’s the name of the next
point?”
18 Again I didn’t know.
19 “Now, look! After Twelve-Mile Point, where do you
cross the river?”
20 “I-I-I don’t know.”
21 “You-you-you don’t know? Well, what do you know?”
22 “I—nothing, it seems.”
23 “Nothing? Less than nothing! You say you want to
pilot a steamboat on the river? My boy, you couldn’t pilot a
cow down a street! Why do you think I told you the names
of those points?”
24 “Well, to-to—be interesting, I thought.”
25 “What?! To be interesting?” Now he was very angry.
He walked across the pilot-house and back again. This
cooled him down. “My boy,” he said more softly, “You must
get a little notebook. I will tell you many names of places on
this river. You must write them all down. Then you must
remember them. All of them. That is the only way to
become a pilot.”
26 My heart fell. I never remembered things easily in
school. But also I didn’t fully believe Mr. Bixby. No one, I
thought, could know all of the Mississippi. No one could
put that great river inside his head.
27 Then Mr. Bixby pulled a bell. A worker’s voice
came up from below.
28 “What’s this, sir?”
29 ‘Jones Farm,” Mr. Bixby said.
A cub-pilot's education 61
30 I could see nothing through the mist. And Mr.
Bixby could see nothing. I knew that. So I didn’t believe
him. How could I? We were in the middle of nowhere! But
soon the boat’s nose softly hit the landing. Workers’ voices
came up to us. I still couldn’t believe it, but this was Jones
Farm!
II
31 And so, slowly, I began to put the Mississippi River
inside my head. I filled a notebook—I filled two
notebooks—with names from the river. Islands, towns,
points, bends in the river. The names of all these things
went into my notebooks. And slowly some of them began to
go into my head. Then more of them. I began to feel better
about myself. I was beginning to learn the river.
32 Then one day Mr. Bixby said to me, “What is the
shape of Apple Bend?”
33 “The shape of Apple Bend?”
34 ‘Yes, of course.”
35 “I know the name of Apple Bend. I know where it is.
Don’t tell me I have to know the shape of it, too!”
36 Mr. Bixby’s mouth went off like a gun, bang! He
shot all his bad words at me. Then, as always, he cooled.
“My boy,” he said, ‘You must learn the shape of this river
and everything on it. If you don’t know the shape, you can’t
steer at night. And of course the river has two shapes. One
during the day, and one at night.”
37 “Oh, no!”
38 “Oh, yes. Look: How can you walk through a room
at home in the dark? Because you know the shape of it. You
can’t see it.”
39 ‘You mean I must know this river like the rooms at
home?”
40 “No. I mean you must know it better than the rooms
at home.”
41 “I want to die.”
42 “My boy, I don’t want you to be sad or angry. But
there is more.”
43 “All right. Tell me everything. Give it to me!”
44 “I’m sorry, but you must learn these things. There is
A CUB-PILOT'S EDUCATION 63
no other way. Now, a night with stars throws shadows. Dark
shadows change the shape of the river. You think you are
coming to a bend, but there is no bend. And this is
different from a night with no stars. On a night with no
stars, the river has a different shape. You think there are no
bends, but there are bends. And of course, on a night with
mist, the river has no shape. You think you are going to
steer the boat onto the land. But then suddenly you see
that it’s water, not land. Well. Then you have your
moonlight nights. Different kinds of moonlight change the
shape of the river again. And there are different kinds of
shadows, too. Different shadows bring different shapes to
the river. You see—”
45 “Oh, stop!” I cried. ‘You mean I have to learn the
thousand million different shapes of this river?”
46 “No, no! You only learn the shape of the river. The
one shape. And you steer by that. Don’t you understand?
You steer by the river that’s in your head. Forget the one
that’s before your eyes.”
47 “I see. And you think that’s easy.”
48 “I never said it was easy. And of course the river is
always, always changing shape. The river of this week is
different from the river of last week. And next week it will
be different again.”
49 “All right. Goodbye. I’m going home.’
50 But of course I didn’t go home. I stayed. I wanted
to learn. I needed to learn. And day by day, month by month,
I did learn. The river was my school. Slowly I began to think
I was a good student. I could steer the boat alone, without
Mr. Bixby’s help. I knew the river like the rooms of my
house—no, better. I could steer at night, by the shape of
the river in my head. No cub-pilot was better, I thought.
Oh, my nose was very high in the air!
51 Of course, Mr. Bixby saw this. And he decided to
teach me another lesson.
52 One beautiful summer’s day we were near the bend
above Island 66. I had the wheel. We were in the middle of
the river. It was easy water, deep and wide.
53 Mr. Bixby said, “I am going below for a while. Do
64 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
B. Close Reading
Read the sentence from the story. Then answer the
question about the sentence.
Note: Questions 1-6 are about Part I (pages 56-61). Questions
7-12 are about Part II (pages 61-65).
1. “Then a worker cries ‘S-t-e-a-m-boat coming!’ And
everything changes!” (paragraph 3)
What were some of these changes?
C. Discussion
1. A Chinese thinker named Confucius said, “I hear, I
forget. I see, I remember. I do, I understand.” Does
Ben learn most by hearing, seeing, or doing? Do you
68 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
D. Vocabulary Practice
Match each word in Column A with the phrase in
Column B that has a similar meaning. Write the number
of the word next to the correct phrase.
A B
1. pilot machine
2. steer troubled in
the mind
3. shape not safe
4. worried outline; form;
appearance
5. engine give direction
to
6. dangerous “driver” of a
boat or plane
E. Word Forms
From the chart below, choose the form of the word that
best fits the sentence that follows it.
Example:
Across
1. One way to travel down the Mississippi River (S)
2. If you don’t know the_of the river, you
can’t find your way at night. (S)
3. Mr. Bixby (P)
4. The boy turned it to the left and to the right. (W)
5. “Why do you think I told you the names of all those
points? To be_ ?” (I)
Down
1. It can change the shape of the river. (S)
2. Mr. Bixby would usually get_before he
got cool. (H)
3. What did the boy begin to do with the boat on his first
day as cub-pilot? (S)
A cub-pilot's education 71
4. What was the boy in, when Mr. Bixby got him at
midnight? (B)
5. The nose of the boat softly touched the__
at Jones Farm. (L)
6. No one could see through the_on the
river. (M)
72
adapted from the story by
FRANK STOCKTON
sounds of happiness!
23 Wouldn’t it be better for him to die at once?
Couldn’t he wait for her in the beautiful land of the semi-
barbaric future?
24 But the tiger, those cries of pain, that blood!
25 Her decision had been shown in a second. But it
had been made after days and nights of deep and painful
thought. She had known she would be asked. She had
decided what to answer. She had moved her hand to the
right.
26 The question of her decision is not an easy one to
think about. Certainly I am not the one person who should
have to answer it. So I leave it with all of you: Which came
out of the opened door—the lady, or the tiger?
“This" means: which door hid the tiger, and which door hid
the lady.
1. The king did not let little things like that get in the
way of his imagination, (paragraph 6)
2. This was the way the law worked in the king’s semi-
barbaric country, (paragraph 7)
3. This uncertainty gave the day its fine and unusual
taste. (What uncertainty?) (paragraph 8)
4. But the king didn’t let this stand in the way of his
excellent law. (paragraph 10)
5. But how could the princess be sure of that?
(paragraph 14)
6. He had been sure that she would know it.
(paragraph 15)
7. Certainly I am not the one person who should have to
answer it. (paragraph 26)
82 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
C. Discussion
1. ‘Which came out of the opened door — the lady, or
the tiger?” What do you think? Did the princess send
her lover to the lady or to the tiger? Why?
2. The end of “The Lady, or the Tiger?” is about the
princess’s decision: that is, whether to send her lover
to the lady or to the tiger. But doesn’t the lover, too,
have a decision to make? Look at the picture on page
75. The lover is about to open one of the doors. In this
picture, he turns and takes a final look at the princess.
With a movement of her hand, she has told him to
open the door on the right. This leads us to a final
question. Remember, the lover knows that the princess
knows which door hides the lady, and which door
hides the tiger. How well does the lover know the
princess? Will he open the door she has chosen? Or,
believing it hides the tiger, will he open the other one?
Why, finally, did he open the door on the right?
3. Do you think people are less barbaric now than they
were hundreds of years ago? In what ways? Are they
more barbaric? In what ways? Or are they exactly the
same? Give specific examples to help others
understand your thoughts.
D. Vocabulary Practice
Choose the best word from the list below, and fill in the
blanks in the sentences.
volcano imagination
accused jealous
arena chance
fair semi-barbaric
86
adapted from the story by
AMBROSE BIERCE
Ambrose Bierce was born in Ohio in
1842. He went to school, a military academy,
for just one year. In 1864, during the Civil War
between the North and the South, Bierce joined
the Army. After the war he went to California.
He wrote political pieces for newspapers. His
first short story was published in 1871. That
same year he married and went to live in
London. After five years in London he returned
to the United States. He worked for the Hearst
Newspaper Company on the West Coast. He
went to write about the Mexican War in 1914,
where he disappeared in the fighting. "An
Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" appeared in
a collection of short stories. Tales of Soldiers
and Civilians, in 1891. A second collection,
Can Such Things Be?, was published in 1893.
87
88 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
I
A man stood upon a railroad bridge in northern
Alabama. He looked down into the river below.
The man’s hands were tied behind his back. A rope circled
his neck. The end of the long rope was tied to part of the
wooden bridge above his head.
2 Next to the man stood two soldiers of the Northern
army. A short distance away stood their captain. Two
soldiers guarded each end of the bridge. On one bank of
the river, other soldiers stood silently, facing the bridge.
The two guards at each end of the bridge faced the banks
of the river. None of the soldiers moved. The captain, too,
stood silent. He watched the work of the two soldiers near
him, but he made no sign. All of them were waiting silently
for Death. Death is a visitor who must be met with respect.
Even soldiers, who see so much death, must show respect to
Death. And in the army, silence and stillness are signs of
respect.
3 The man with the rope around his neck was going to
be hanged. He was about thirty-five years old. He was not
dressed like a soldier. He wore a well-fitting coat. His face
was a fine one. He had a straight nose, strong mouth, and
dark hair. His large eyes were gray, and looked kind. He did
not seem like the sort of man to be hanged. Clearly he was
not the usual sort of criminal. But the Army has laws for
hanging many kinds of people. And gentlemen are not
excused from hanging.
4 When the two soldiers were ready, they stepped away.
The captain faced the condemned man. They stood face to
face on a piece of wood. The middle of the board rested
against the edge of the bridge. When the captain stepped
off the board, the piece of wood would fall down into the
river. The condemned man would fall down after the
board. Only the rope around his neck would stop him. He
90 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
II
8 The condemned man’s name was Peyton Farquhar.
He was a rich farmer, the last son in an old Alabama family.
He owned slaves who worked on his farm. Like other
Southern farmers, he believed that slaves were necessary to
Southern farming. The Northern government had said that
it was against the law to have slaves. Now, the North and the
South were at war.
9 Certain work had kept Peyton Farquhar from joining
the Southern Army at the beginning of the war. But he was
at heart a soldier. He did everything he could to help the
South. No job was too low, no adventure too dangerous.
One evening, Farquhar and his wife were sitting in the
garden. A soldier rode up to the house. He was dressed like
AN OCCURRENCE AT OWL CREEK BRIDGE 91
other soldiers in the Southern Army. While Mrs. Farquhar
went to get him a drink of water, the soldier spoke with
Farquhar.
10 ‘The Northerners are rebuilding the railroads,” the
soldier said. “They are getting ready for another advance.
They’ve reached Owl Creek Bridge. They’ve fixed the
bridge and moved in a lot of soldiers. Anyone who attacks
the railroad or tries to destroy the bridge will be hanged.”
11 ‘How far is it to Owl Creek Bridge?” Farquhar
asked.
12 “About thirty miles.”
13 “Are there soldiers on this side of the bridge?”
14 “Only a few guards.”
15 “Suppose that a man went around the guards?”
Farquhar smiled. “What could he do to stop the advance?”
16 The soldier thought a moment. Then he said, “I
was at the bridge a month ago. I saw a lot of wood that the
river had washed against one end of the bridge. It’s very dry
now, and the wood would burn quickly and well.”
17 The lady had now brought the water. The soldier
drank. He thanked her, bowed to Farquhar, and rode away.
An hour later, after nightfall, he passed Farquhar’s farm
again. He went North in the direction he had come from.
He was a Northern soldier.
Ill
18 Peyton Farquhar fell down from the bridge. He lost
consciousness. He was like one already dead. He was
awakened—hours later, it seemed to him—by the great
pain in his neck. Pain passed through his body like rivers of
fire. He was conscious of a fullness in his head. He could
not think. He could only feel. He was conscious of motion.
He seemed to be falling through a red cloud. Then
suddenly the light flew upward with the noise of a loud
splash. A fearful noise was in his ears. All was cold and dark.
The power of thought came back to him. He knew the rope
had broken, and he had fallen into the river. The rope
around his neck was cutting off the air. To die of hanging at
the bottom of a river! No! Impossible! He opened his eyes
AN OCCURRENCE AT OWL CREEK BRIDGE 93
in the darkness. He saw light far, far above him. He was still
going down, for the light grew smaller and smaller. But
then it grew brighter, and he knew he was coming back up
to the top of the river. Now he felt sorry to be coming out
of the water. He had been so comfortable. “To be hanged
and drowned,” he thought. “That is not so bad. But I do
not want to be shot. No, I will not be shot. That’s not fair!”
19 He was not conscious of his actions until he felt
pain in his hands. Then he realized that he was trying to
free his hands. At last the rope fell off. His arms floated
upward; he could see his hands. He watched with interest.
His hands were trying to untie the rope around his neck.
They pulled off the rope and it floated away. “Put it back,
put it back,” he felt himself crying. His neck hurt badly. His
mind was on fire, his heart beat wildly enough to leave his
body. His whole body was in great pain. But his hands
pushed him up out of the water. And he took a great breath
of air.
20 Now he was fully conscious. His five senses seemed
unusually clear. The pain his body had felt made him see
and feel the beauty around him. He felt the water against
his skin. He heard the soft sound as it hit his neck and
shoulders. He looked into the forest on the bank and could
see each tree, each leaf. He could even see small forest
animals between the trees. A fish swam before his eyes. He
noticed how the sunlight shone on the fish’s silver skin.
21 He was facing away from the bridge when his head
came out of the water. Now he turned around. He saw small
men on the bridge, dark against the blue sky. They cried
out and pointed at him. The captain took out his gun but
did not shoot.
22 Then, suddenly, he heard a loud bang. Something
hit the water near his head. Water splashed in his face. He
heard a second shot and a light blue cloud rose from the
gun. Then Farquhar heard the captain call to the men:
“Ready, men . . . Shoot!”
23 Farquhar swam deep under the water. The water
sounded loud in his ears. But even above the sound of the
water he heard the shots. He swam down the river.
94 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
C. Discussion
D. Vocabulary Practice
The following phrases are definitions of words in the
reading. Find the appropriate word, then write it in the
blank.
.
9 The strong motion of a river or sea (paragraph 26)
.
10 Vanished, went out of sight (paragraph 28)
G. Writing: A Summary
A summary tells in a few words what someone else said or
wrote in many words.
or
AN OCCURRENCE AT OWL CREEK BRIDGE 101
The condemned man’s name was Peyton Farquhar.
or
1. A Life
Read the paragraph about Sarah Orne Jewett on page
103. What subjects does she write about? Where do her
stories take place? What other writers in this book write
mostly about one particular place?
.
2 The Pictures
Look at the picture on page 105. What can you tell about
the place they live in? What is the young man holding?
In the picture on page 108 the girl is at the top of a tall
pine tree. What will she be able to do from so high? What
kind of bird is flying past her? (Hint: The title tells you.)
What do you know about this bird? What can you find
out about it?
3. Thinking About It. . .
“A White Heron” takes place more than a hundred years
ago. The story’s main characters live deep in the country,
far from cities or towns or even villages. How do you feel
about the wild country? Have you spent time there?
Would you like to live there? Why, or why not?
.
4 Rapid Scanning
Sometimes we have to quickly scan an entire book, or
sections of a book, for specific information. In this
exercise, you are asked to scan the biographies of all the
writers in GREAT AMERICAN STORIES I. First, read the
questions below. Then scan the biographies of the writers
to find the answers. Try to do the entire exercise in no
more than five minutes.
a. Did these writers write in the 19th century, or in the
20th century?
b. List which ones were men. List which ones were
women.
c. How many of them died in the 20th century?
d. How many traveled outside the United States for long
periods of time?
e. How many of them were known for their stories about
specific places within the United States?
102
adapted from the story by
SARAH ORNE JEWETT
103
104 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
I
T ihe woods were already filled with shadows one
_ June evening just before eight o’clock. Sylvia was
driving her cow home. They turned deep into the dark
woods. Their feet knew the way. The birds in the trees
above her head seemed to sing “good night” to each other
quietly. The air was soft and sweet. Sylvia felt a part of the
gray shadows and the moving leaves. To Sylvia, it seemed as
if she hadn’t really been alive before she came to live with
her grandmother in this beautiful place.
2 Suddenly she heard a call. Not a bird’s call, which
would have had a friendly sound. It was a young man's call,
sudden and loud. Sylvia left the cow alone and hid behind
some leaves. But the young man saw her.
3 “Halloa, little girl. How far is it to the road?”
4 Sylvia was afraid. She answered in a soft voice, “A
good ways . .
5 “I’m hunting for some birds,” the young man said
kindly. He carried a gun over his shoulder. “I am lost and
need a friend very much. Don’t be afraid. Speak up, and
tell me what your name is. Do you think I can spend the
night at your house and go out hunting in the morning?”
6 Sylvia was more afraid than ever. But she said her
name, and dropped her head like a broken flower.
7 Her grandmother was waiting at the door. The cow
gave a “moo” as the three arrived.
8 “Yes, you should speak for yourself, you old cow,”
said her grandmother. “Where was she hiding so long,
Sylvy?”
9 Sylvia didn’t speak. She thought her grandmother
should be afraid of the stranger.
10 But the young man stood his gun beside the door.
He dropped a heavy gun-bag beside it. He said good
evening and told the old woman his story.
106 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
11 “Dear me, yes,” she answered. “You might do better
if you went out to the road a mile away. But you’re welcome
to what we’ve got. I’ll milk the cow right away. Now, you
make yourself at home. Sylvy, step round, and set a plate for
the gentleman!”
12 Sylvia stepped. She was glad to have something to
do, and she was hungry.
13 The young man was surprised to find such a
comfortable, clean house in the deep woods of Maine. He
thought this was the best supper he had eaten in a month.
After supper the new-made friends sat in the shadowed
doorway to watch the moon come up. The young man
listened happily to the grandmother’s stories. The old
woman talked most about her children. About her
daughter, Sylvia’s mother, who had a hard life with so many
children. About her son, Dan, who left home for California
many years ago.
14 “Sylvy is like Dan,” she said happily. “She knows
every foot of the woods. She plays with the woods animals
and feeds the birds. Yes, she’d give her own meals to them,
if I didn’t watch her!”
15 “So Sylvy knows all about birds, does she?” asked
the young man. “I am trying to catch one of every kind.”
16 “Do you keep them alive?” asked the old woman.
17 “No. I stuff them in order to save them,” he
answered. “I have almost a hundred of them. And I caught
every one myself.”
18 Sylvia was watching a toad jump in the moonlight.
19 “I followed a bird here that I want to catch. A white
heron. You would know a heron if you saw it, Sylvy,” he
said, hopefully. “A strange, tall white bird with long, thin
legs.”
20 Sylvia’s heart stopped. She knew that strange white
bird.
21 “I want that bird more than anything,” the young
man went on. “I .would give ten dollars to know where its
nest is.” V
22 Sylvia couldn’t believe there was so much money in
the world. But she watched the toad and said nothing.
A WHITE HERON 107
23 The next day Sylvia went with the young man into
the wood^. He was kind and friendly, and told her many
things about the birds. She wasn’t afraid of him anymore.
Perhaps in her heart a dream of love was born. But she
couldn’t understand why he killed and stuffed the birds he
liked so much.
JiiL ii
24 At the edge of the woods a great pine tree stood.
Sylvia knew it well. That night she thought of the tree. If
she climbed it early in the morning, she could see the
whole world. Couldn’t she watch the heron fly, and find its
hidden nest? What an adventure it would be! And how
happy her friend would be! The young man and the old
woman slept well that night, but Sylvia thought of her
adventure. She forgot to think of sleep. At last, when the
night birds stopped singing, she quietly left the house.
25 There was the tall pine tree, still asleep in the
moonlight. First she climbed a smaller tree next to it. Then
she made the dangerous step across to the old pine. The
birds in the woods below her were waking up. She must
climb faster if she wanted to see the heron as it left its nest.
The tree seemed to grow taller as she went up. The pine
tree must have been surprised to feel this small person
climbing up. It must have loved this new animal in its arms.
Perhaps it moved its branches a little, to help her climb.
Sylvia’s face shone like a star when she reached the top. She
was tired, but very happy. She could see ships out to sea.
Woods and farms lay for miles and miles around her. The
birds sang louder and louder. At last the sun came up.
Where was the heron’s nest? Look, look, Sylvia! A white
spot rises up from the green trees below. The spot grows
larger. The heron flies close. A wild, light bird, wide wings,
and a long thin neck. He stops in the tree beyond Sylvia.
Wait, wait, Sylvia! Do not move a foot or a finger, to
frighten it away!
26 A moment later, Sylvia sighs. A large company of
noisy birds comes to the tree, and the heron goes away. It
flies down to its home in the green world below. Sylvia
A WHITE HERON 109
knows its secret now. She climbs back down. Now she is
almost crying. Her fingers hurt, and her feet slip. She
wonders what the young man will say to her. What will he
think when she tells him how to find the heron’s nest?
27 “Sylvy, Sylvy,” her grandmother called, but nobody
answered.
28 The young man woke up and dressed. He wanted
to begin hunting again. He was sure Sylvia knew something
about the white heron. Here she comes now. Her small face
is white, her old dress is torn and dirty. The grandmother
and the young man wait at the door to question her. The
time has come to tell about the heron’s nest.
29 But Sylvia does not speak. The young man looks
into her eyes. He will make them rich. She wants to make
him happy. He waits to hear the story she can tell.
30 No, she must keep silent! What is it that keeps her
quiet? This is the first time the world has put out a hand to
her. Does she have to push it away because of a bird? She
hears again the wind blowing in the pine tree. She
remembers how the white heron flew through the golden
air. She remembers how they watched the sea and the
morning together. Sylvia cannot speak. She cannot tell the
heron’s secret and give its life away.
31 Poor Sylvia! She was sad when the young man went
away. She could have helped him. She would have followed
him like a dog. She would have loved him as a dog loves!
Many nights afterwards Sylvia remembered his “Halloa” as
she came home with the cow. She forgot the sharp sound of
his gun. She forgot the birds, wet with blood. Were the
birds better friends than the hunter? Who can tell?
32 Oh, Woods! Oh, Summertime! Remember what
riches were lost to her. Bring her your riches instead, your
beauties and your gifts. Tell all your secrets to this lonely
country child!
110 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
A WHITE HERON
EXERCISES
A. Understanding the Main Ideas
Answer the following questions with complete sentences.
1. At the beginning of the story, why was Sylvia afraid of
the young man?
2. How does the grandmother act with the young man?
3. Why is the young man killing birds?
4. Why does he say he will pay ten dollars?
5. Why does he think Sylvia can help him?
6. Why does she watch the toad so carefully?
7. Why does she leave the house before the sun comes
up?
8. Why does she climb the tall pine tree?
9. What is the heron’s secret?
10. Why can’t she give the heron’s secret away?
C. Discussion
D. Vocabulary Practice
A B
quite far away 1. She knows every foot of the
woods.
faithfully 2. Sylvy, step round and set a
plate for the gentleman.
lowered 3. You might do better if you
went out to the road.
happily 4. This is the first time the
world has put out its hand
to her.
hurry up 5. The road is a good ways
from here.
a lot about 6. Sylvia’s face shone like a
star.
have more success 7. She dropped her head like
a broken flower.
tried to help 8. From the top of the tree
Sylvia could see the whole
world.
for miles 9. She would have loved him
as a dog loves.
Write the new sentences here
1.
A WHITE HERON 113
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
E Word Forms
From the chart below, choose the form of the word that
best fits the sentences below.
noun adjective adverb verb
surprise surprising surprisingly surprise
secret secretive secretly secrete
hunter hunted hunt
shadow shadowy shadow
comfort comfortable comfortably
stuffing stuffed stuff
114 GREAT AMERICAN STORIES
1. (surprise) By the second day of his visit, Sylvia was
_friendly with the young man.
2. (secret) Sylvia was a__child,
perhaps because she was alone so much of the time.
3. (hunt) The young man was an unusual kind of
G. Writing
■
-
I
Second Edition
Great
American
Stories i
An ESL/EFL Reader
C.G. Draper
Eight adaptations of famous stories by classic American authors are
featured in this reader for learners of English at the beginning-
intermediate to intermediate level. Adaptations and exercises
gradually increase in difficulty throughout the book. The exercises
include reading skills, vocabulary, and writing.
ISBN 0-13-3bM3fll-b
90000>