Thursday, 13 June 2013
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 5
PART 5
It was a
summer evening and the sun had not set, so the family and the servants searched
the gardens before it was dark. In the garden there were many trees and a deep
pond. They looked in the pond. They looked in the trees. Then they asked people
at the railway station. But no one had seen Virginia .
Mr Otis went to tell the village policeman that Virginia
had disappeared. But, by that time, it was dark and no one could search any
more that night.
None of the
family wanted to eat or sleep. They sat in the library and waited. They hoped Virginia would return safely. They planned to search
for Virginia again in the morning.
It was
midnight when the family decided to go to bed. They left the library and
started to walk up the stairs together. Suddenly all the clocks in the house
struck twelve and they heard a terrible noise. Thunder crashed outside the
house and the Otises heard a dreadful cry. Strange music sounded inside the
house and a door opened at the top of the stairs.
'Where have
you been?' Mr Otis asked angrily. 'Your mother has been very worried. You have
frightened us all. You must never play a trick like this again.'
'Except on
the ghost,' said the twins. 'You can play tricks on the ghost!'
'Father,' Virginia said quietly, 'I have been with the ghost. He
is dead and now he can rest. He gave me this box of beautiful jewels before he
died.'
She showed
her father the small box. Inside was a necklace made of red stones.
'Where did
you get this?' asked her father. 'Where have you been?'
Mr Otis
forgot to be angry. He was so pleased to see that Virginia
was safe.
'Come. I'll
show you,' said Virginia .
She turned
back to the door at the top of the stairs. All of the family followed her.
Washington Otis carried a lighted candle.
'This is the
body of Sir Simon de Canterville,' said Virginia .
'He murdered his wife in 1575. Then his wife's brothers shut him in this room.
He was given no food. Sir Simon starved to death. His ghost was in this house
for three hundred years. But now he has found peace.'
The Otis
family looked around the little room and did not know what to say. Virginia knelt on the floor beside the skeleton and
began to pray.
There was a
funeral four nights later. The Otises buried the body of Sir Simon de
Canterville in a grave among the trees.
The Otises,
Mrs Umney the housekeeper, and all the servants from Canterville Chase stood
near the grave. Behind them were people from the nearby village. Many people
had come to the funeral.
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 4 DISCUSSION 1
1. What will happen to Virginia? Is the ghost honest about his story or will he hurt Virginia?
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 4
PART 4
He was
looking at the library window which was made of coloured glass. There were
words painted on the glass.
He was
wearing his best clothes and had combed his long grey hair.
'I feel very
sorry for you,' said Virginia
quietly. 'I'm sorry that my brothers were not very kind to you. But you did try
to frighten them.'
'Yes I did,'
said the ghost. 'It is my job to frighten everyone who comes to Canterville
Chase.'
'You are very
wicked, I know,' said Virginia ,
'Mrs Umney, the housekeeper, told us that you killed your wife.'
'Yes I did,'
replied the ghost. 'But she wasn't very kind. And it wasn't very kind of her
brothers to starve me to death.'
'Starve you
to death?' said Virginia .
'Oh, poor ghost, are you hungry? Would you like a sandwich?'
'No thank
you,' he replied. 'I never eat anything. But you are very kind. You are much
kinder than the rest of your family. They are rude, nasty and unkind.'
'Stop!' cried
Virginia .
'You are nasty and unkind too. You stole my paint box. You used my paints to
make the blood-stain in the library. I never told anyone about it. But now I'm
going to fetch my father.'
She turned to
go, but the ghost spoke again.
'Please do
not go, Miss Virginia ,'
said the ghost. 'I am so lonely and so unhappy. I do not know what to do. I
want to go to sleep and I cannot.'
'It's easy to
sleep,' said Virginia .
'You go to bed and close your eyes.'
'I have not
slept for three hundred years,' said the ghost. 'I have not slept since I was
murdered by my wife's brothers.'
'Poor ghost,'
said Virginia ,
'how can I help you to sleep?'
'Far away in
the woods,' said the ghost, 'there is a little garden. In the little garden the
grass grows long and thick. There are many flowers and trees. A nightingale
sings all night long. The bird's sweet song is beautiful and sad. The white
stars and the pale moon look down on this little garden. It is very peaceful.'
'You mean it
is the Garden of Death ,' she said quietly.
'Yes, the Garden of Sleep ,'
said the ghost. 'It is very beautiful. There is peace and silence. There is no
yesterday and no tomorrow. But only Love can open the door to the garden. For
Love is stronger than Death.'
'Have you
read the writing on the library window?'
'Yes,' said
Virginia, 'but I do not understand it.'
'Look,' said
the ghost. 'Read the lines on the window.'
When a golden girl shall
weep
For the ghost that cannot
sleep,
Then the dead at last shall
die
And in restful earth may
lie.
'The words
mean you must weep for me,' said the unhappy ghost. 'Then the Angel of Death
will let me rest.
Will you
help?'
'What do I
have to do?' asked Virginia .
'You must
come with me into the darkness. You will see strange things. You will hear
strange voices, hut nothing will hurt you. You are good and kind. The dark
cannot hurt you.'
'I am not
afraid,' said Virginia
at last. 'I will come with you into the dark.'
The ghost
kissed her hand. His lips were cold like ice, but they burned like fire. The
ghost held her hand and they walked to the wall of the library. The wall
opened. There was darkness beyond the wall and a cold wind. Voices spoke out of
the wind. 'Go back, Virginia .
Go back before it is too late.'
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 3 DISCUSSION 1
1. What can you say about Virginia's personality? Why is she sad for the ghost?
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 3
PART 3
The ghost
went to the secret room where he lived. He sat down on a chair. He thought
about what had happened.
He had
frightened people for three hundred years. He had looked through windows and
frightened the servants. He had knocked on bedroom doors. He had frightened
people in their beds. He had blown out candles in the night. He had turned
green and made noises with his chains. Everyone had always been frightened. No
one had given him Rising Sun Oil to put on his chains. No one had thrown
pillows at him. He was a very unhappy ghost.
Washington
Otis removed the blood-stain in the library every day. Every morning the stain
had reappeared. But the stain was no longer the colour of blood. One morning it
was brown. Another morning it was purple. Then it became bright green.
The Otises
laughed at the blood-stain. They looked for it every morning before breakfast.
'What colour
is it today?' asked Washington Otis.
'It's green!'
shouted the twins. 'It's green blood today.'
They laughed
at the green blood-stain on the library floor.
Virginia Otis
did not laugh. The young girl was silent at breakfast. The blood-stain made her
feel sad and she almost cried when
she saw the bright green stain. She was sure that the ghost put the stain on
the floor. She felt sorry for the ghost.
'The stain
has been here for three hundred years,' said Virginia . 'We have been here for three
weeks. The poor ghost puts the stain on the floor every night. Can't you leave
the stain there?'
But the
others did not listen to Virginia .
The second
appearance of the ghost was on a Sunday night. The Otises had all gone to bed.
Suddenly they were woken up. They heard a terrible crashing noise downstairs.
The whole
family ran out of their bedrooms. They ran downstairs. It was dark but Mr Otis
and his eldest son carried candles. They heard another crashing noise in the
hallway near the front door.
There was a
suit of armour in the hallway. This suit of armour was more than three hundred
years old. It had fallen over and made a loud noise. The Canterville Ghost was
sitting on the floor next to the armour.
The ghost had
tried to put on the suit of armour. He wanted to walk around the house and
frighten the Otis family. But the metal suit was too heavy. The suit of armour
had fallen onto the floor.
The Canterville Ghost was sitting beside the armour. He was rubbing his knee. He had hurt himself.
Mr Hiram B.
Otis pointed a gun at the ghost. Washington Otis held his candle high in the
air. The Otis twins laughed loudly. Virginia
was afraid and stood beside her mother. They all looked at the Canterville
Ghost.
The ghost was
very angry. He stood up and gave a loud shout. He blew out the candle in
Washington Otis's hand. There was no light in the hall. Then the ghost ran up
the stairs in the darkness.
He stopped at
the top of the stairs and laughed. He had a frightening laugh. Men's hair had
turned grey when they heard him laugh. But the Otises were not afraid.
'Are you in
pain?' asked Mrs Otis. 'I have a bottle of Dr Dobell's medicine. It is good for
stomach-aches and headaches. Please take the medicine.'
The ghost
looked at Mrs Otis angrily. Then he disappeared in a green cloud and went back
to his secret room. He was very unhappy. He had tried to put on the suit of
armour, but it was too heavy. The armour had fallen over and the ghost had hurt
his leg.
The ghost
stayed in his room during the day. He came out at night to visit the library.
He repainted the blood-stain every night. And every morning, Washington Otis
removed the blood-stain with Pinkerton's Stain Remover.
But the ghost
had a problem. He had quickly finished all his red paint. Now his brown and
purple paints were finished as well. So, sometimes he painted the blood-stain
green, sometimes blue.
The ghost
made plans. He wanted to frighten the Otis twins. He planned to visit the twins
in the night. He planned to turn himself green and make a horrible noise. He
planned to visit the twins in their bedroom. He planned to touch them with his
ice-cold hands in the dark.
He left his
secret room at midnight. The house was dark.
He climbed
the stairs and walked along the corridor. The twins' bedroom was at the end of
the corridor round a corner. He turned the corner. Suddenly he stopped.
In front of
him was a round face with a terrible mouth and burning eyes. Fire shone out of
the mouth and eyes of this horrible face. It was the face of a ghost!
The
Canterville Ghost gave a shout and ran back to his secret room. He had never
seen a ghost before and felt very frightened.
Before
daylight came, the Canterville Ghost felt better. Were there two ghosts in the
house? He must find out. He must meet the second ghost.
He went back
upstairs and walked along the corridor towards the twins' room. The second
ghost was still there, but its eyes were no longer burning. He went up to it.
He touched it. The head of the second ghost fell onto the floor. It was not a
ghost at all. It was a head made from a large round vegetable called a pumpkin.
The twins had put a candle inside it. There was a card on the floor.
THE OTIS
GHOST THE ONLY TRUE CANTERVILLE GHOST.
The twins had
put the head in the corridor to frighten him. This made the Canterville Ghost
very angry. What could he do? He could think of nothing at that moment, so he
went back to his room.
The ghost
felt very weak and tired. He stayed in his room for five days. He did not
repaint the blood-stain in the library. There had been a blood-stain on the
library floor for three hundred years. Now the library floor was clean.
After a week
the ghost felt better. He decided to try once more to frighten the Otis twins.
He planned to make his face look as horrible as possible. He waited until the
middle of the night.
Slowly and
silently he walked to the twins' bedroom. It was one o'clock in the morning.
The house was quiet. The door of the twins' room was slightly open.
The ghost
took off his head and carried it under his arm. It is terrifying to see a
headless ghost. He wanted to terrify the twins.
He pushed
open the door of the twins' bedroom. The door banged against the wall.
He had
planned to shout and hold his head in his hinds. But a heavy jug of water fell
from the top of the door.
The wins had
played a trick on him. He was soaked with water. The twins shouted and laughed.
The ghost ran
back down the corridor. He could not frighten the twins. He could not frighten
anyone in the Otis family.
Washington
Otis came out of his bedroom. The ghost stopped running. Behind him, the twins
ran down the corridor. They shouted - 'Boo!' - in his ears and waved their
arms. Washington Otis laughed at him.
The ghost did
not know what to do. He ran through the nearest door, went back to the secret
room and lay down. He could not frighten anyone. He was a very unhappy ghost.
The Otises
did not see the Canterville ghost at night again. The twins waited for him when
it was dark. They put a rope across the corridor. They tied metal tins to the
rope. But the ghost did not walk into the tins. Only Mr Otis came along the
corridor. He fell over the rope and was very angry.
Virginia Otis
was also angry with the twins. 'Can't you leave the poor ghost alone?' she
said. 'Why do you want to hurt him? Why do you want to play tricks on him? He
has lived here for a very long time. Leave him alone.'
The twins did
not listen, but the ghost heard Virginia 's
words. The words gave him hope.
One
afternoon, Virginia
went to the library. The library door was slightly open. She pushed the door
wide open and quietly walked into the room.
There was
somebody sitting by the window. It was the Canterville Ghost!
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 2 DISCUSSION 3
3. What do you think will happen next? Will the ghost attack them?
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 2 DISCUSSION 2
2. How does the ghost feel about Mr. Otis's and his sons' behaviours?
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 2
PART 2
'Let's look
for the ghost,' said the Otis hoys. 'Let's look round the house.'
The Otises
looked round the house together. But they did not see the Canterville Ghost.
That night
the family went to bed early. The storm continued all night. Next morning they
went into the library. The blood-stain had reappeared on the floor.
'I'll remove
this blood-stain once more,' said Washington Otis. 'Mother doesn't want a
blood-stain in the library. I'll clean the floor again.'
He removed
the blood-stain with Pinkerton's Stain Remover. The library floor was clean.
But the next morning the stain had come back again.
'This is very
strange,' said Mr Otis. 'I'll lock the library door at night. No one can come
into the library. No one can put a stain on the floor.'
'I don't
think Pinkerton's Stain Remover is bad,' said Washington Otis. 'I think there
really is a ghost. The ghost is making the blood-stain. The ghost puts the
stain on the floor at night.'
'We must find
this ghost,' said Mr Hiram B. Otis. 'It must stop making these stains. Your
mother does not like blood on the library floor.'
That day the
family went out. They walked around the countryside near Canterville Chase.
They went to the nearby village. They looked at the old village houses. Then
they walked back to Canterville Chase through the woods. It was a summer
evening and the weather was tine.
It was late
when they got back to the house. The Otises were hungry and tired. After eating
supper they went to bed The bedrooms were upstairs. There was a long corridor
upstairs. The bedroom doors were along this corridor.
Mr Otis woke
up after midnight. There was a strange noise outside his room. The sound was
like metal chains. The chains were nibbing together.
Mr Otis got
out of bed and opened the bedroom door. He-looked into the corridor.
He saw the
Canterville Ghost in the corridor. The ghost was an old man with burning red
eyes. He had long grey hair and wore very old-fashioned clothes. There were
chains on his hands and feet. He was rubbing the chains together so they made a
noise.
'My dear sir,
your chains make a terrible noise,' Mr Otis said to the ghost. 'You must put
some oil on those chains. Here is some Tammany Rising Sun Oil from the United States .
Please put the oil on your chains.'
Mr Otis put a
bottle of oil on a table in the corridor. Then he closed his bedroom door and
went back to bed.
The
Canterville Ghost was very surprised. He had lived in Canterville Chase for
three hundred years. Everyone was frightened of him, because everyone was
afraid of ghosts. But this American gentleman was not afraid.
The
Canterville Ghost decided to work harder. He wanted to frighten the American.
He made a terrible noise and shone a horrible green light in the corridor.
Another door
opened at the end of the corridor. Mr Otis's youngest sons came out of their
bedroom. The two young boys had the pillows from their beds in their hands.
They threw the pillows at the ghost. They laughed at the ghost.
The ghost was
amazed and upset. No one had laughed at him before. He was a ghost. Everyone is
frightened of ghosts. No one had ever laughed at the Canterville Ghost before.
The
Canterville Ghost did not know what to do. He disappeared through the wall and
the house became quiet.
CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 1 DISCUSSION 1
1. Is Mr Otis afraid of ghosts? Does he believe that there is a ghost in the house?
THE CANTERVILLE GHOST PART 1
PART 1
Mr Hiram B.
Otis was a rich American from New
York . He had come to live and work in England , but he did not want to live in London . He did not want
to live in the city. He wanted to live in the countryside outside London .
Canterville
Chase was a large and very old house near London .
Lord Canterville, the owner, wanted to sell it. So Mr Hiram B. Otis visited
Lord Canterville.
'I do not
live in Canterville Chase,' Lord Canterville said to Mr Otis. 'I do not want to
live there. The house has a ghost - The Canterville Ghost.'
'I come from America ,' said
Mr Otis. 'America
is a modern country. I don't believe in ghosts. Have you seen this Canterville
Ghost?'
'No,' said
Lord Canterville, 'but I have heard it at night.'
'I don't
believe in ghosts,' Mr Otis said again. 'No one has found a ghost. No one has
put a ghost in a museum. And you haven't seen this ghost either.'
'But several
members of my family have seen it,' said Lord Canterville. 'My aunt saw the
ghost. She was so frightened that she was ill for the rest of her life. Also,
the servants have seen it so they will not stay in the house at night. Only the
housekeeper, Mrs Umney, lives in Canterville Chase. Mrs Umney lives there
alone.'
'I want to
buy the house,' said Mr Otis. 'I'll buy the ghost as well. Will you sell
Canterville Chase? Will you sell the ghost?'
'Yes, I
will,' said Lord Canterville. 'But, please remember, I told you about the ghost
before you bought the house.'
Mr Hiram B.
Otis bought Canterville Chase. Then his family came to England from America . He had a wife called
Lucretia, three sons and a daughter.
The eldest
son, Washington, was almost twenty years old. He was good-looking and had fair
hair. His two young brothers were twins. They were twelve years old. The
daughter, Virginia, was fifteen years old. She had large blue eyes and a lovely
face.
Mr Otis took
his family to live at Canterville Chase. The old house was in the countryside
west of London .
Mr Otis and his family travelled from London
by train. Then they rode to the house in a wagon pulled by two horses.
Canterville
Chase was big and old. Trees grew all around the house. The Otis family wanted
to stop and look at the outside of the house, but the sky darkened. A
thunderstorm was coming. Rain started to fall, so the family went inside the
house quickly.
Mrs Umney,
the housekeeper, was waiting for them by the front door. She was an old woman
and wore a black dress and white apron. She lived at Canterville Chase and
looked after the house.
'Welcome to
Canterville Chase,' said Mrs Umney. 'Would you like some tea?'
'Yes,
please,' said Mrs Otis.
The Otis
family followed Mrs Umney into the library. There was a big table in the centre
of the room and many chairs. Mrs Umney put teacups on the table, then she
brought a pot of tea.
The Otises
sat in the library and drank their tea. They looked out of a large window at
the rain. The rain was falling heavily and the sky was black. They heard
thunder and they saw lightning.
Mrs Otis
looked around the room. There were many books on bookshelves. There were
paintings on the walls. There was also a red stain on the floor. The red stain
was by the fireplace.
'What is this
red stain?' Mrs Otis asked Mrs Umney.
'It is
blood,' answered the old housekeeper in a quiet voice.
'I don't want
a blood-stain in my library,' said Mrs Otis. 'Please remove the stain. Please
clean the floor immediately.'
The old woman
smiled. 'It is the blood of Lady Eleanore de Canterville. She was murdered by
her husband, Sir Simon de Canterville, in 1575. The blood-stain has been here
for over three hundred years. It cannot be removed.'
'Nonsense,'
said Washington Otis. 'I have some Pinkerton's Stain Remover from America . It can
remove any stain. Watch.'
Washington
Otis took the stain remover from a bag. Pinkerton's Stain Remover looked like a
small black stick. He rubbed the stick on the blood-stain. A minute later the
floor was clean. The stick had removed the stain quickly and easily.
Mrs Umney
looked at the floor. She was frightened. No one had removed the blood-stain for
three hundred years. Mrs Umney was very frightened.
'Pinkerton's
can remove anything,' said Washington Otis. 'The blood-stain has gone.'
Lightning
flashed and lit the library. Thunder crashed over the house. Mrs Umney fainted.
Mr and Mrs
Otis ran across the library. They helped the old housekeeper who lay on the
floor. Mrs Umney's eyes were closed and her face was pale.
'Mrs Umney!
Mrs Umney!' cried Mrs Otis. 'Can you speak?'
Mrs Umney
opened her eyes. Trouble will come to this house,' she said. 'I have seen the
ghost. The ghost will come to you.'
All the
Otises helped Mrs Umney to stand up. 'The ghost will come,' she said again.
'You must not remove the blood-stain. You must not clean the library floor. The
ghost will be angry.'
Then Mrs
Umney went upstairs to her room.
WHO IS OSCAR WILDE?
To have information about the writer of the book, you can use the following link.
http://www.biography.com/people/oscar-wilde-9531078
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