返回
朗读
暂停
+书签

视觉:
关灯
护眼
字体:
声音:
男声
女声
金风
玉露
学生
大叔
司仪
学者
素人
女主播
评书
语速:
1x
2x
3x
4x
5x

上一章 书架管理 下一页
Former Inhabitants and Winter Visitors
    I orms, and spent some cheerful

    er evenings by my fireside, whe snow whirled wildly

    , and even ting of the owl was hushed.  For many weeks

    I met no one in my  to cut wood

    and sled it to ts, ted me in

    making a pat snohe woods, for when I had

    once gone to my tracks, where

    ted the snow,

    and so not only made a my bed for my feet, but in t their

    dark line o conjure

    up ts of the memory of many

    of my toands resounded h

    tants, and t

    cted tle gardens and

    d  in by t than

    nohe pines would

    scrape bot once, and women and children who

    o go to Lincoln alone and on foot did it

    en ran a good part of tance.  though mainly

    but a e to neighe woodmans

    team, it once amused traveller more ts variety, and

    lingered longer in retch

    from to t through a maple swamp on

    a foundation of logs, ts of ill

    underlie t dusty ratton, nohe

    Alms-o Bristers hill.

    East of my bean-field, across to Ingraham,

    slave of Duncan Ingraleman, of Concord village,

    w o live in

    alden oods; -- Cato, not Uticensis, but Concordiensis.  Some say

    t tle

    patcs, ill he should be old

    and need t a younger and or got t last.

    oo,  present.

    Catos erated cellar-ill remains, to

    feraveller by a fringe of pines.  It is

    nohe

    earliest species of goldenrod (Solidago stricta) grohere

    l
上一章 书架管理 下一页

首页 >Walden简介 >Walden目录 > Former Inhabitants and Winter Visitors