How we arrived at the island of Tools.
Having well ballasted the holds of our human vessels1, we weighed anchor, hoised up sail, stowed the boats, set the land, and stood for the offing with a fair loom2 gale3, and for more haste unpareled the mizen-yard, and launched it and the sail over the lee-quarter, and fitted gyves to keep it steady, and boomed it out; so in three days we made the island of Tools, that is altogether uninhabited. We saw there a great number of trees which bore mattocks, pickaxes, crows, weeding-hooks, scythes5, sickles6, spades, trowels, hatchets7, hedging-bills, saws, adzes, bills, axes, shears8, pincers, bolts, piercers, augers, and wimbles.
Others bore dags, daggers9, poniards, bayonets, square-bladed tucks, stilettoes, poniardoes, skeans, penknives, puncheons, bodkins, swords, rapiers, back-swords, cutlasses, scimitars, hangers10, falchions, glaives, raillons, whittles11, and whinyards.
Whoever would have any of these needed but to shake the tree, and immediately they dropped down as thick as hops12, like so many ripe plums; nay13, what’s more, they fell on a kind of grass called scabbard, and sheathed14 themselves in it cleverly. But when they came down, there was need of taking care lest they happened to touch the head, feet, or other parts of the body. For they fell with the point downwards15, and in they stuck, or slit16 the continuum of some member, or lopped it off like a twig17; either of which generally was enough to have killed a man, though he were a hundred years old, and worth as many thousand spankers, spur-royals, and rose-nobles.
Under some other trees, whose names I cannot justly tell you, I saw some certain sorts of weeds that grew and sprouted18 like pikes, lances, javelins19, javelots, darts20, dartlets, halberds, boar-spears, eel-spears, partizans, tridents, prongs, trout-staves, spears, half-pikes, and hunting-staves. As they sprouted up and chanced to touch the tree, straight they met with their heads, points, and blades, each suitable to its kind, made ready for them by the trees over them, as soon as every individual wood was grown up, fit for its steel; even like the children’s coats, that are made for them as soon as they can wear them and you wean them of their swaddling clothes. Nor do you mutter, I pray you, at what Plato, Anaxagoras, and Democritus have said. Ods-fish! they were none of your lower-form gimcracks, were they?
Those trees seemed to us terrestrial animals, in no wise so different from brute21 beasts as not to have skin, fat, flesh, veins22, arteries23, ligaments, nerves, cartilages, kernels24, bones, marrow25, humours, matrices, brains, and articulations; for they certainly have some, since Theophrastus will have it so. But in this point they differed from other animals, that their heads, that is, the part of their trunks next to the root, are downwards; their hair, that is, their roots, in the earth; and their feet, that is, their branches, upside down; as if a man should stand on his head with outstretched legs. And as you, battered26 sinners, on whom Venus has bestowed27 something to remember her, feel the approach of rains, winds, cold, and every change of weather, at your ischiatic legs and your omoplates, by means of the perpetual almanack which she has fixed28 there; so these trees have notice given them, by certain sensations which they have at their roots, stocks, gums, paps, or marrow, of the growth of the staves under them, and accordingly they prepare suitable points and blades for them beforehand. Yet as all things, except God, are sometimes subject to error, nature itself not free from it when it produceth monstrous29 things, likewise I observed something amiss in these trees. For a half-pike that grow up high enough to reach the branches of one of these instrumentiferous trees, happened no sooner to touch them but, instead of being joined to an iron head, it impaled30 a stubbed broom at the fundament. Well, no matter, ’twill serve to sweep the chimney. Thus a partizan met with a pair of garden shears. Come, all’s good for something; ’twill serve to nip off little twigs31 and destroy caterpillars32. The staff of a halberd got the blade of a scythe4, which made it look like a hermaphrodite. Happy-be-lucky, ’tis all a case; ’twill serve for some mower33. Oh, ’tis a great blessing34 to put our trust in the Lord! As we went back to our ships I spied behind I don’t know what bush, I don’t know what folks, doing I don’t know what business, in I don’t know what posture35, scouring36 I don’t know what tools, in I don’t know what manner, and I don’t know what place.
1 vessels | |
n.血管( vessel的名词复数 );船;容器;(具有特殊品质或接受特殊品质的)人 | |
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2 loom | |
n.织布机,织机;v.隐现,(危险、忧虑等)迫近 | |
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3 gale | |
n.大风,强风,一阵闹声(尤指笑声等) | |
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4 scythe | |
n. 长柄的大镰刀,战车镰; v. 以大镰刀割 | |
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5 scythes | |
n.(长柄)大镰刀( scythe的名词复数 )v.(长柄)大镰刀( scythe的第三人称单数 ) | |
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6 sickles | |
n.镰刀( sickle的名词复数 ) | |
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7 hatchets | |
n.短柄小斧( hatchet的名词复数 );恶毒攻击;诽谤;休战 | |
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8 shears | |
n.大剪刀 | |
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9 daggers | |
匕首,短剑( dagger的名词复数 ) | |
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10 hangers | |
n.衣架( hanger的名词复数 );挂耳 | |
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11 whittles | |
v.切,削(木头),使逐渐变小( whittle的第三人称单数 ) | |
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12 hops | |
跳上[下]( hop的第三人称单数 ); 单足蹦跳; 齐足(或双足)跳行; 摘葎草花 | |
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13 nay | |
adv.不;n.反对票,投反对票者 | |
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14 sheathed | |
adj.雕塑像下半身包在鞘中的;覆盖的;铠装的;装鞘了的v.将(刀、剑等)插入鞘( sheathe的过去式和过去分词 );包,覆盖 | |
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15 downwards | |
adj./adv.向下的(地),下行的(地) | |
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16 slit | |
n.狭长的切口;裂缝;vt.切开,撕裂 | |
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17 twig | |
n.小树枝,嫩枝;v.理解 | |
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18 sprouted | |
v.发芽( sprout的过去式和过去分词 );抽芽;出现;(使)涌现出 | |
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19 javelins | |
n.标枪( javelin的名词复数 ) | |
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20 darts | |
n.掷飞镖游戏;飞镖( dart的名词复数 );急驰,飞奔v.投掷,投射( dart的第三人称单数 );向前冲,飞奔 | |
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21 brute | |
n.野兽,兽性 | |
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22 veins | |
n.纹理;矿脉( vein的名词复数 );静脉;叶脉;纹理 | |
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23 arteries | |
n.动脉( artery的名词复数 );干线,要道 | |
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24 kernels | |
谷粒( kernel的名词复数 ); 仁; 核; 要点 | |
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25 marrow | |
n.骨髓;精华;活力 | |
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26 battered | |
adj.磨损的;v.连续猛击;磨损 | |
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27 bestowed | |
赠给,授予( bestow的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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28 fixed | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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29 monstrous | |
adj.巨大的;恐怖的;可耻的,丢脸的 | |
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30 impaled | |
钉在尖桩上( impale的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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31 twigs | |
细枝,嫩枝( twig的名词复数 ) | |
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32 caterpillars | |
n.毛虫( caterpillar的名词复数 );履带 | |
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33 mower | |
n.割草机 | |
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34 blessing | |
n.祈神赐福;祷告;祝福,祝愿 | |
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35 posture | |
n.姿势,姿态,心态,态度;v.作出某种姿势 | |
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36 scouring | |
擦[洗]净,冲刷,洗涤 | |
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