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Japanese
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An Occurrence at Owl Creek
Bridge (Ambrose Bierce) |
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12:26 |
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J01 |
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An American short story in Special English. Today's story is called "An
Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge." It was written by Ambrose Bierce. The
occurrence, or event, in our story takes place during the war of the
1860's between the American states of the North and the states of the
South. A group of soldiers is hanging a Southern farm owner for trying to
stop Northern military movements across the Owl Creek Bridge. In the last
moments of his life, the Southern prisoner dreams he has escaped; and
everything that happens in the story is really only the work of the
prisoner's brain just before he dies. Now our story . . .
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T
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J02 |
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A man stood on a railroad bridge in Alabama, looking down into the swift
waters of the Owl Creek River below. The man's hands were tied behind his
back. There was a rope around his neck. The rope was tied to part of the
bridge above him. Three soldiers of the Northern Army stood near the
prisoner, waiting for their captain's orders to hang him.
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T
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J03 |
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Everybody was ready. The prisoner stood quietly. His eyes were not
covered. He looked down and saw the water under the bridge. Now he closed
his eyes. He wanted his last thoughts to be of his wife and children. But,
as he tried to think of them, he heard sounds again and again. The sounds
were soft, but they got louder and louder and started to hurt his ears.
The pain was strong; he wanted to shout . . . but the sounds he heard were
just those of the river running swiftly under the bridge.
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T
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J04 |
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The prisoner quickly opened his eyes and looked at the water. "If I could
only free my hands," he thought, "then I could get the rope off my neck
and jump into the river. I could swim under the water and escape the fire
of their guns. I could reach the other side of the river and get home
through the forest. My house is outside of their military area and my wife
and children are safe there. I would be too . . ."
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T
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J05 |
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While these thoughts raced through the prisoner's mind, the captain gave
the soldiers the order to hang him. A soldier quickly obeyed. He made the
rope firm around the prisoner's neck, then dropped him through a hole in
the bridge.
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J06 |
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As the prisoner fell, everything seemed black and empty. But then he felt
a sharp pain in his neck and could not breathe. There were terrible pains
running from his neck down through his body, his arms and his legs. He
could not think. He could only feel a feeling of living in a world of
pain.
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T
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J07 |
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Then suddenly he heard a noise . . . something falling into water. There
was a big sound in his ears. Everything around him was cold and dark. Now
he could think. He believed the rope had broken and that he was in the
river. But the rope was still around his neck and his hands were tied. He
thought, "How funny . . . how funny to die of hanging at the bottom of a
river!" Then he felt his body moving up to the top of the water.
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J08 |
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The prisoner didn't know what he was doing,. But his hands reached the
rope on his neck and tore it off. Now he felt the most violent pain he had
ever known. He wanted to put the rope back on his neck. He tried . . . but
could not. His hands beat the water and pushed him up to the top. His head
came out of the water. The light of the sun hurt his eyes. His mouth
opened and he swallowed air. It was too much for his lungs. He blew out
the air with a scream.
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T
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J09 |
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Now the prisoner could think more clearly. All his senses had returned.
They . . . they were even sharper than before. He heard sounds he never heard
before – that no man’s ears Ever heard – the flying wings of small
insects, the movement of a fish. His eyes saw more than just the trees
along the river. They saw every leaf on the trees and they saw the thin
lines in the leaves. And he saw the bridge with the wall at one end. He
saw the soldiers and the captain on the bridge. They shouted and they
pointed at him. They looked like giant monsters. As he looked, he heard
gunfire. Something hit the water near his head. Now there was a second
shot. He saw one soldier shooting at him
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J10 |
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He knew he had to get to the forest and escape. He heard an officer call
to the other soldiers to shoot . . . The prisoner went down into the river
. . . deep -- as far as he could. The water made a great noise in his
ears, but he heard the shots. As he came up to the top again, he saw the
bullets hit the water. Some of them touched his face and hands. One even
fell into the top of his shirt. He felt the heat of the bullet on his
back.
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J11 |
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When his head came out of the water for air, he saw that he was farther
away from the soldiers. And he began swimming strongly. As he swam, the
soldiers fired their rifles. Then they fired their cannon at him. But
nothing hit him. Then, suddenly, he could not swim. He was caught in a
whirlpool which kept turning him around and around. This was the end, he
thought. Then, just as suddenly as it had caught him, the whirlpool lifted
him and threw him out of the river. He was on land!
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J12 |
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He kissed the ground. He looked around him. There was a pink light in the
air. The wind seemed to make music as it blew through the trees. He wanted
to stay there. But the cannon fired again. And he heard the bullets above
his head. He got up and ran into the forest.
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J13 |
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At last, he found a road toward his house. It was a wide, straight road.
Yet, it looked like a road that never had any travellers on it: no farms,
no houses on its sides; only tall black trees. In the tall black trees,
the prisoner heard strange voices. Some of them spoke in words that he
could not understand.
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J14 |
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His neck began to hurt. When he touched it, it felt very large. And his
eyes hurt so much that he could not close them. His feet moved, but he
could not feel the road. As he walked, he was in a . . . a kind of sleep. Now
half-awake, half-asleep, he found himself at the door of his house. His
lovely wife ran to him. Ah, at last!
He put his arms about his beautiful wife. And just then, he felt a
terrible pain in the back of his neck. All around him there was a great
white light and the sound of a cannon. And then . . . darkness and silence
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J15 |
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The prisoner was dead; his neck was broken. His body hung at the end of a
rope. It kept swinging from side to side, swinging gently under a hole in
Owl Creek Bridge.
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J16 |
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You have been listening to an American short story in Special English. The
name of our story was "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge." It was written
by Ambrose Bierce. Our storyteller was Jack Moyles. The Voice of America
invites you to listen to another American short story in Special English
next week at this same time.
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Voice of America
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