Unit Two      
           

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                      Aunt  Bettie  is  faced  with a  difficult   decision.  A 
              Wounded Union  soldier  is  found hiding in  a  farmhouse 
              near her  home. She  has to  decide  whether  to  help  him 
              or let him be captured. What will she choose to do?
                 THE WOMAN WHO WOULD NOT TELL

                                                                                  Janice Keyser Lester 
           "I never  did  hate the Yankees. All  that  I hated was the war... " 
           That's  how  my  great-aunt  Bettie  began  her  story. I heard  it many
    times as  a child,whenever my family visited Aunt Bettie in the old housein 
    Bettyville, Virginia. Aunt Bettie was almost 80 years old then.  But I could 
5  picture   her as  she  was in the story  she told me- barely 20,  pretty,  with 
    bright blue eyes.

           Bettie Van Metre had good reason to hate the  Civil  War. One  of her  
     brothers was killed at Gettysburg, another taken prisoner.Then her  yaung 
     husband, James, a Confederate officer, was captured and sent to  an  un-
10  known prison camp somewhere.

           One hot day in  late September Dick  Runner, a  former  slave,  came 
     to  Bettie with a strange report. He had been checking  a  farmhouse  half 
     a  mile   away  from  the Van Metre  home, a  farmhouse he thought  was 
     empty. But inside,  he  heard  low  groans.  Following  them  to  the  attic,
15  he  found   a   wounded Union soldier, with a rifle at his side.

         When Aunt Bettie told me about her first sight of the bearded  man  in 
     the  stained  blue  uniform, she always used the same words. "It  was like 
     walking  into a  nightmare :  those  awful  bandages,  that  dreadful  smell. 
     That's what war is  really like, child:  no bugles and banners.Just pain and
20  filth, futility and death. "
          To Bettie Van Metre this man was not an enemy but rather a suffering 
      human being. She gave him  water and tried to clean his terrible  wounds. 
     Then she went out into the  cool  air and leaned against the house,  trying 
     not to be sick as she  thought of what she  had  seen-that  smashed  right 
25  hand, that missing  left leg. 

            The man's papers Bettie found in the attic established his identity: Lt. 
      Henry Bedell, Company  D, llth Vermont  Volunteers, 30  years  old. She  
      knew that she should report the,presence of this Union officer to the Con-
      federate army.But she also knew that she would not do it.This is how she
30  explained  it to me: "I kept  wonderirig if  he  had a wife somewhere, wait-
      ing, and hoping, and not  knowing- just as  I was. It seemed  to  me  that 
      the only thing that mattered was to get her husband back to her. "

           Slowly, patiently, skillfully, James Van  Metre's wife  fanned  the spark 
     of life that flickered in Henry Bedell.Of drugs or medicines she had alomst
35  none.  And she  was   not  willing to take any from the few supplies  at the
     Confederate hospital. But she did the best she could with what she had.
            As his strength returned,Bedell told Bettie about his wife and children 
      in Westfield, Vermont.  And Bedell  listened as she   told  him  about  her
      brothers and about  James.  "I knew his wife must  be  praying  for  him " 
40  Aunt Bettie would  say to me,  "just  as I was  praying  for James. It  was 
     strange how close I felt to her. "

           The October nights in the valley grew cold. The infection  in  Bedell's 
     wounds flared up. With Dick and his wife, Jenrue, helping, she moved the 
     Union officer at night,  to a bed in a  hidden loft above the  warm  kitchen 
45  of  her own home.
           But the next day, Bedell had a high fever. Knowing that she  must  get 
     help or he would die, she went to her long-time  friend  and family doctor, 
     Graham Osborne.

            Dr Osborne  examined  Bedell, then shook  his head. There was little 
50  hope, he said, unless proper medicine could be found.
            "All right, then," Bttie said.  "I'll get  it from the  Yankees  at Harpers 
     Ferry. "
           The  doctor  told her she   was  mad. The  Union  headquarters  were   
     almost 20  Miles away.Even if she reached them, the Yankees would never 
55  believe her story. 

           "I'll take proof," Bettie said.She went to the loft and came  back  with
      a blood-stained paper bearing the official War Department seal."This is a 
      record  of  his  last promotion," she  said. "When I show it,they'll have to 
      believe me. " 
60       She made  the  doctor write out a list of the medical items he  needed.  
      Early the next morning she set off.

           For five hours she drove, stopping only to rest her horse.The sun was 
      almost down when she finally  stood  before  the  commanding  officer at 
      Harpers Ferry.
65      Gen. John D. Stevenson listened, but did not believe  her. " Madam, "  
     he said, "Bedell's death was. reported to us. "
          "He's alive, " Bettie  insisted. "But  he won't be much longer unless he
    has the medicines on that list.

           "Well," the  general  said  finally, "I'm  not going to  risk the lives of a 
70  patrol  just  to find out."He  turned  to a junior officer."See that Mrs. Van 
     Metre gets the supplies. " He brushed aside Bettie's thanks. " You're  a 
     brave woman, " he said, "whether you're telling the truth or not. "

           With  the  medicines that  Bettie  carried  to  Berryville,  Dr.  Osborne 
      brought Bedell through the crisis.Ten days later Bedell was hobbling on a 
75  pair of crutches that Dick had made for him."I can't go on putting  you in 
     danger, "Bedell  told  Bettie. "I'm strong enough to travel now.I'd  like  to
     go back as soon as possible. "
            So it was  arranged  that  Mr. Sam,  one  of  Bettie's  neighbors  and 
      friends,should go and help Bettie deliver Bedell to Union headquarters at
80  Harpers Ferry in his wagon. 

          They  hitched Bettie's  mare  alongside  Mr.  Sam's  mule.  Bedell  lay 
     down in an old box filled with hay, his rifle and crutches beside him.
          It was  a long,  slow  journey that  almost ended  in  disaster.  Only  an 
      hour from the Union lines,two horsemen suddenly appeared.One pointed
85  a pistol, demanding money while the other pulled Mr. Sam from the wag-  
      on. Shocked,  Bettie sat still. Then a rifle shot cracked  out, and   the man 
      with the pistol fell to the ground dead. A second shot,and the  other  man 
      went sprawling.It was Bedell shooting! Bettie watched him lower the rifle
      and brush the hay out of  his hair. "Come on, Mr. Sam, " he said.  "Let's 
90  keep moving. "

          At Harpers Ferry, the soldiers stared in  surprise at the old farmer  and
    the girl. They  were even more  amazed  when the  Union  officer  with  the 
    missing leg rose from his hay-filled box.
          Bedell was sent to Washington.There he told his story to Secretary of
95  War  Edwin M. Stanton. Stanton wrote a letter of  thanks  to  Bettie  and 
     signed an order to free James Van Metre from prison.But first James had 
     to be found.It was arranged for  Bedell to go with Bettie as she  searched 
     for her husband.

           Records showed that a James Van  Metre  had  been sent to a prison 
100 camp in Ohio.But when the ragged prisoners were paraded before Bettie, 
      James was not there. A second prison was checked, with the same result. 
      Bettie Van Metre fought  back a chilling fear that her  husband  was dead.
      Then at Fort Delaware, near  the end of the line of  prisoners  a  tall  man 
      stepped out and stumbled into Bettie's arms.Bettie held him,tears stream-
105 ing down her face. And Henry Bedell, standing by on his crutches, wept,
      too.
                                 
                             New Words         
                              

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    tell/ vi.                                 act as an informer 告发 
  Yankee/ n.                            (in the Civil War) a native  of  any  of  
                                                    the north- ern states; a citizen of  the 
                                                    U. S. 北方佬;美国佬 	
  great-aunt/ n.                        an aunt of one's father or mother; sister
                                                  of one's  grandfather or grandmother 
   civil/ a.                                 国内的;民间的
  confederate/ a.                     of or belonging to the  Confederacy 南部联邦的 
  capture/ vt.                           make a prisoner of; seize 俘虏;夺得
  unknown/ a.                         whose name,nature,or origin is not known 
   former/ a.                             of an earlier period 以前的  
  farmhouse/ n.                       the main house on a farm, where a farmer lives 
   groan/ n.                               a sound made in a deep voice that expresses 
                                                  suf-fering, grief or disapproval 呻吟()
   attic/ n.                                the spa~ just under the roof of a house,  
                                                 esp. that made into a low small room 阁楼  	
  Union, the/ n.                       those states that supported the  Federal  	
                                                  govern-ment of the U.S. during the Civil 	
                                                  War; the U.S.A. (美国南北战争期间的)联邦
                                  政府; 美国
            a.                        of or having to do with the Union 
    rifle / n.                         步枪
  awful / a.                             terrible; very bad 
    bandage / n.                        a narrow long  piece of  material, esp. 	
                                                  cloth,for binding a wound or injury 绷带
  dreadful/ a.                          very unpleasant or shocking; terrible 
    bugle / n.                            a musical wind instrument usually  made 	
                                                  of  brass, used  chiefly  for  military  signals 军号,喇叭
  filth / n.                               disgusting dirt 污秽
  futility / n.                            uselessness
       futile/ a.
    lean/ vi.                              support  or  rest  oneself  in  a  bent  position ,establish / vt.                       find out or  make  certain  of (a  fact,  	
                                                    answer, etc.), prove 确立,证实
  identity / n.                          who or what a particular person or thing  is 身份
  identical/ a.                       同一的;完全相同的
  Lt. / abbr.                            lieutenant 陆军中尉
  company / n.            voluntser / n.                       person who joins the army, navy, or  air  	
                                                     force of his own free will 志愿兵
  presence/ n.                        being present in a place 
   skillfully/ ad.                        in a skillful manner 灵巧地,娴熟地
  skillful / a.                           having or showing skill 
   fan/ vt.                                ,扇动;激起
  spark/ n.                             火花
  flicker/ vi.                           burn unsteadily; shine with an  unsteady light 
   drug/ n.                              a medicine or substance used for medical purposes 
   supply/ n.                           (pl.) the food, equipment, etc.necessary  		
                                                  for an army,expedition or the like 补过品 
  pray/ vi.                             祈祷
  valley/ n.                            a stretch  of  land  between  hills  or  	
                                                 mountains; the land through which a stated 
                                                 river or great riv- er system flows 山谷;  流域 
  infection / n.                       感染;传染
     infect/ vt.                      
   flare/ vi.                              burn with a bright, unsteady flame (火焰)闪耀
  loft/ n.                                a room under the  roof  of  a  building, attic 阁楼
  ferry/ n.                            渡口;渡船
  headquarters/ n.                  (used with a sing. or pl. v.) the  place  	
                                                    from which the chief of a  police  force  
                                                    or the com- manding officer of  an  army 
                                                    sends out orders 司令部
  proof / n.                           evidence showing that sth. is true 证据
  bear/ vt.                             show; have 
   seal / n.                              ,图章
  item / n.                             a single thing among a set, esp.included in a list ;commanding/ a.                 having command; in charge 
      commanding officer        指挥官
   command/ vt.                 指挥
  Gen./ abbr.                        general 将军
  madam/ n.                          respectful form of address  to  a  woman  	
                                                (whether married or unmarried) 夫人,太太,  女士,小姐
  risk / vt.                             endanger; take the chance of 
   patrol / n.                           a small group of soldiers, vehicles,etc.  	
                                                  sent out to search for the enemy, or to 
                                                  protect a place from the enemy 巡逻队
  junior / a.                           younger or lower in rank than another
   hobble / vi.                        walk awkwardly; limp 跛行;蹒跚
  crutch / n.                          support used under the arm to help a lame  
                                                  person to walk 拐杖
  wagon / n.                         four-wheeled vehicle for carrying goods, 
                                                 pulled by horses or oxen 四轮运货马()hitch / vt.                           fasten with a hook, ring,rope,etc. 钩住, 拴住,套住
  mare / n.                            female horse or donkey 
   alongside/ prep.                 close to; along the side of 
   mule / n.                            an animal that has a donkey and a  horse  
                                                 as par- ents disaster / n.	                   a great or sudden  misfortune;  terrible accident
    line/ n.                             a row of defence works, esp.that nearest 
                                                the enemy 战线,防线
  horseman/ n.                     a  person who rides a horse, esp. one who 
                                                is skilled 
   pistol / n.                          handgun 手枪
  crack / v.                          (cause to) make a sudden explosive sound 
                                                (使)发出爆裂声			
  sprawl / vi.                        lie or sit with hands  and  feet  spread  
                                                out, esp. ungracefully		
   lower/ vt.                          move or let down in height 放下;放低
  secretary / n.                     an  official  who  takes  charge  of  a  
                                                governmental department;an employee in an 
                                                office,who is in charge of correspondence,  
                                                records, making appointments, etc. 部长, 大臣;秘书
   ragged / a.                      (of a person) dressed in old torn ciothes;  
                                                 (of clothes) old and torn 衣衫褴褛的; 破旧的
   parade / vt.                     cause to walk in an informal  procession  
                                               for the purpose of being looked at;cause 
                                               to march in  procession 使列队行进
          n.                        游行;检阅    
   chill / v.                          (cause to) have a  feeling  of  cold  as  
                                                from fear; (cause to) become  cold, esp.
                                                without freezing (使)感到冷;(使)fort / n.                          要塞,堡垒   
   stumble/ vi.                    walk or move in an unsteady way;  strike 
                                              the foot against sth. and almost fall 
    stream/ vi.                       flow fast and strongly; pour out
	                 
                            Phrases & Expressions     
                           
   take prisoner                   capture and hold as a prisoner, esp. as a 
                                                prisoner of war 俘虏
  flare up                           break out or intensify suddenly or violently; 
                                                burst into bright flame or rage 突发;加剧;
                                           突然发光;突然发怒
  write out                         write in full; write (sth. formal) 
   brush aside                     disregard, ignore 不理;漠视
  bring through                  save (sb.) from (an illness, etc.)
  
                          
                            Proper Names             
            
   Berryville                                     贝里维尔(美国地名)
   Virginia                    弗吉尼亚(美国州名)
   Bettie Van Metre                 贝蒂..米特
  the Civil War                               (美国)南北战争
  Gettysburg                            葛底斯堡(美国城市)
   Dick Runner                          迪克.朗纳
  Henry Bedell                               亨利.贝德尔 
  Vermont                                佛蒙特(美国州名)
   westf ield                             韦斯菲尔德(美国地名)  
   Jennie                                         詹妮(女子名)
   Graham Osborne                        格雷厄姆.奥斯本   
  Harpers Ferry                             哈珀斯渡口(美国地名)  
   Stevenson                                  史蒂文森(姓氏) 
   Secretary of War (old use)          (美国)陆军部长 
  Edwin M. Stanton                      埃德温.M.斯坦顿
  Ohio                                          俄亥俄(美国州名)
   Fort Delaware                            特拉华堡(美国地名)
 

 

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