Читаем The Whispering Land полностью

a free drink – a drink for nothing, at someone else's expense to negotiate – see note to p. 35; here this verb acquires an ironical ring, since Oswald has to overcome a living obstacle in one's depth – in water not too deep to touch bottom (ant. out of one's depth)

pekinese (or pekingese) ['pi:ki'ni:z] – a small Chinese dog with short legs and a pug nose


TO PAGE 64


none of them seemed any the worse – evidently none of-them suffered from the ill effects of their swimming lesson would hump themselves down – would move down, proceeding with the help of humping their backs (cf. the description of the elephant seals manner of movement on p. 78)

Elizabethan ruff – a kind of collar worn in the 16th century, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. It was made of white


material, stiffly starched and standing up in folds touching each other.


TO PAGE 65


maypole – a high pole decorated with ribbons, flowers, etc., set up in the open for dancing round on May day, the first of May, celebrated in England as a spring festival belly-splitting charge – the leap taken by the old bull in charging the young one, which ended in his hurting his belly (note the author's device of alluding ironically to current idiomatic expressions, here to side-splitting laughter or ear-splitting noise)


TO PAGE 67


bulbous – shaped like a bulb, an enlarged, spherical termination of stem in certain plants, such as the onion, tulip or lily


TO PAGE 68


cul-de-sac ['kulde'saek] (Fr.) – a passage or street with an opening at one end only, from which there is no escape tinamu (or tinamou) [ti'na:mu:] – a South American bird resembling a quail (a game bird of America, Europe, Asia and Africa, also called partridge)


TO PAGE 70


Darwin's rhea – a South American three-toed ostrich


TO PAGE 71


school crocodile – a long line of schoolchildren walking by twos to pace, v. t. – to set the pace for another rider or runner in a race bonnet – the hood protecting the engine of a motor-car


TO PAGE 73


windfall – an unexpected piece of good fortune (literally, something blown down by the wind, especially fruit) -

sea-front (or water-front) – a street or a part of town facing the sea; Bournemouth – a popular English seaside resort

Tierra del Fuego (Sp.) - "Land of Fire", a group of islands separated from the south end of South America by the Strait of Magellan. Its farthest point is Cape Horn.


TO PAGE 74


The verb to fret is used here in its special, architectural meaning: 'to decorate with pattern carved in relief.' The author means that the stones were irregular in shape, but irregular artistically.

with a jaundiced eye – here suspiciously, with some irritation (from the noun jaundice, a disease accompanied by yellowness of the skin and of the whites of the eyes; figuratively, a stale of mind in which one is spiteful, irritable or suspicious)


TO PAGE 75


to make the best of a disaster – to try and got along as best one can, in spite of a disastrous state of things trippers (from trip 'a short journey') – people on an excursion; the word is often used contemptuously (e. g. "at week-ends the beach is crowded with noisy trippers")

abandon, n. - careless freedom

Turkish bath – here a building where Turkish baths are taken. A Turkish bath is a hot air or steam bath followed by soaping, washing, rubbing, kneading, massaging, etc. Added to the dropsy and the quiet concentration of chess players, the atmosphere of a Turkish bath helps to convey the impression of complete inactivity and sleepiness.


TO PAGE 76


the Leaning Tower of Pisa ['pi:ze] – one of the famous sights in Italy: the white marble bell-tower, 178 feet in height, which leans 14 feet off the perpendicular the Acropolis – the citadel of Athens, Greece, situated on a hill about 250 feet high and richly adorned with architecture and sculpture (especially in the 5th century B. C.)


TO PAGE 77


barrage balloon – one of a series of balloons used to form a barrier against enemy planes stop-watch – a watch with a hand that can be stopped or started by pressing a knob on the rim; a stop-watch is used for timing a race, etc.

rather him than me – I wouldn't do it; let him, if he likes


TO PAGE 78


there was quite a colour variation – there was a considerable variation in color (note the current colloquial construction with quite a)

algae (sing. alga) – the Latin name of a large group of lowly organized plants, including the seaweeds and similar weeds found in stagnant or slow-flowing fresh water to take to the air – to go suddenly up into the air to show oneself to advantage – to allow to see one at one's best, in such a way as to bring out one's strong points


TO PAGE 79


the animation of a group of opium smokers – no animation at all (opium smoking has the effect of reducing the smokers to a state of insensibility); cf. the Turkish bath simile on p, 75


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