I divide all readers into two classes; those who read to remember and those who read to forget.

William Lyon Phelps

 
 
 
 
 
Thể loại: Tuổi Học Trò
Nguyên tác: 窓ぎわのトットちゃん (Madogiwa no Totto-chan)
Dịch giả: Dorothy Britton
Biên tập: Yen
Upload bìa: Little rain
Language: English
Số chương: 64
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Cập nhật: 2015-02-04 18:10:51 +0700
Link download: epubePub   PDF A4A4   PDF A5A5   PDF A6A6   - xem thông tin ebook
 
 
 
 
Chapter 48 - “Shabby, Old School”
here was a jingle--a sort of singsong refrain—that was popular among elementary school children. They did it a lot at her previous school. As the children went home after school, they would go out the gate looking back over their shoulders at their school and chant:
 
Akamatsu School's a shabby old school;
Inside though, it's a splendid school!
 
When children from some other school happened to pass by, these pupils would point their fingers at Akamatsu School and chant:
 
Akamatsu School's a splendid school;
Inside though, it's a shabby old school!
 
And they would end by making a rude noise.
Whether a school was shabby or splendid in the first line depended on whether the building was old or new. The important part of the chant was the second line. The part that said what the school was like inside. So it didn't really matter if the first line said your school was shabby on the outside. It was what it was like inside that mattered. The jingle was always chanted by at least five or six children together.
One afternoon after school the Tomoe pupils were playing as usual. They could do anything they liked until the final bell, when they had to leave the school grounds. The headmaster thought it was important for children to have time when they were free to do whatever they liked, so this period after classes were over was longer than at other elementary schools. That day some were playing ball, some had made themselves all dirty playing on the iron bars or in the sandbox, some were tending the flower beds, some of the older girls were just sitting on the steps chatting, and some were climbing trees. They were all doing just what they wanted. Among them were a few, like Tai-chan, who had stayed behind in the classroom to continue a physics experiment and were boiling flasks and doing experiments in test tubes. There were children in the library reading, and Amadera, who liked animals, was scrutinizing a stray cat he had found, turning it on its back and examining inside its ears. They were all enjoying themselves in their own ways.
Suddenly, a loud chant was heard outside the school:
 
Tomoe School is a shabby old school;
Inside, too, it's a shabby old school!
 
"That's terrible," thought Totto-chan. She happened to be right by the gate. Well, it wasn't really a gate, as it had leaves growing out of the posts. But at any rate, she heard them very clearly. It was too much. Imagine calling their school shabby both inside and out! She was indignant. The others were indignant, too, and came running toward the gate.
"Shabby old school!" reiterated the boys from the other school, as they ran off making rude noises.
Totto-chan was so-infuriated she ran after the boys. All by herself. But they were very fast, running down a side sneer and disappearing as quick as a wink. Totto-chan walked back to school disconsolately. As she walked, she sang:
 
Tomoe School is a wonderful school;
 
A few steps along, she added:
 
Inside and out, it's a wonderful school!
 
She liked it, and it made her feel better. So when she got back, she pretended she was from another school and shouted through the hedge in a loud voice, so that everybody could hear:
 
Tomoe School is a wonderful school;
Inside and out, it's a wonderful school!
 
The children playing in the grounds at first couldn't imagine who it was. When they realized it was Totto-chan, they went out to the road and joined in. Finally they all linked arms and marched along the roads surrounding the school chanting together. It was their hearts that were in unison even more than their voices, although they didn't realize that then. The more they went around the school, the more they entered into the spirit of it.
 
Tomoe School is a wonderful school;
Inside and out, it's a wonderful school!
 
The children little knew, of course, what happiness their chant was giving the headmaster, as he sat listening in his office.
It must be the same for any educator, but for those in particular who truly think about the children, running a school must be a daily series of agonies. It must have been even more so at a school like Tomoe, where everything was so unusual. The school could not escape criticism from people used to a more conventional system of education.
In such circumstances, that song of the children was the nicest gift they could possibly have given the headmaster.
 
Tomoe School is a wonderful school;
Inside and out, it's a wonderful school!
 
That day the final bell rang later than usual.
Totto-Chan, the Little Girl at the Window Totto-Chan, the Little Girl at the Window - Tetsuko Kuroyanagi Totto-Chan, the Little Girl at the Window