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  • 15 – The Lady or The Tiger ?

  • BOB DOUGHTY: Now, the VOA Special English program, AMERICAN STORIES.

  • (MUSIC)

  • We present the short storyThe Lady, or the Tiger?” by Frank R. Stockton. Here is

  • Barbara Klein with the story.

  • (MUSIC)

  • BARBARA KLEIN: Long ago, in the very olden time, there lived a powerful king. Some of

  • his ideas were progressive. But others caused people to suffer.

  • One of the king’s ideas was a public arena as an agent of poetic justice. Crime was punished,

  • or innocence was decided, by the result of chance. When a person was accused of a crime,

  • his future would be judged in the public arena.

  • All the people would gather in this building. The king sat high up on his ceremonial chair.

  • He gave a sign. A door under him opened. The accused person stepped out into the arena.

  • Directly opposite the king were two doors. They were side by side, exactly alike. The

  • person on trial had to walk directly to these doors and open one of them. He could open

  • whichever door he pleased.

  • If the accused man opened one door, out came a hungry tiger, the fiercest in the land.

  • The tiger immediately jumped on him and tore him to pieces as punishment for his guilt.

  • The case of the suspect was thus decided.

  • Iron bells rang sadly. Great cries went up from the paid mourners. And the people, with

  • heads hanging low and sad hearts, slowly made their way home. They mourned greatly that

  • one so young and fair, or so old and respected, should have died this way.

  • But, if the accused opened the other door, there came forth from it a woman, chosen especially

  • for the person. To this lady he was immediately married, in honor of his innocence. It was

  • not a problem that he might already have a wife and family, or that he might have chosen

  • to marry another woman. The king permitted nothing to interfere with his great method

  • of punishment and reward.

  • Another door opened under the king, and a clergyman, singers, dancers and musicians

  • joined the man and the lady. The marriage ceremony was quickly completed. Then the bells

  • made cheerful noises. The people shouted happily. And the innocent man led the new wife to his

  • home, following children who threw flowers on their path.

  • This was the king’s method of carrying out justice. Its fairness appeared perfect. The

  • accused person could not know which door was hiding the lady. He opened either as he pleased,

  • without having knowing whether, in the next minute, he was to be killed or married.

  • Sometimes the fierce animal came out of one door. Sometimes it came out of the other.

  • This method was a popular one. When the people gathered together on one of the great trial

  • days, they never knew whether they would see a bloody killing or a happy ending. So everyone

  • was always interested. And the thinking part of the community would bring no charge of

  • unfairness against this plan. Did not the accused person have the whole matter in his

  • own hands?

  • (MUSIC)

  • The king had a beautiful daughter who was like him in many ways. He loved her above

  • all humanity. The princess secretly loved a young man who was the best-looking and bravest

  • in the land. But he was a commoner, not part of an important family.

  • One day, the king discovered the relationship between his daughter and the young man. The

  • man was immediately put in prison. A day was set for his trial in the king’s public arena.

  • This, of course, was an especially important event. Never before had a common subject been

  • brave enough to love the daughter of the king.

  • The king knew that the young man would be punished, even if he opened the right door.

  • And the king would take pleasure in watching the series of events, which would judge whether

  • or not the man had done wrong in loving the princess.

  • (MUSIC)

  • The day of the trial arrived. From far and near the people gathered in the arena and

  • outside its walls. The king and his advisers were in their places, opposite the two doors.

  • All was ready. The sign was given. The door under the king opened and the lover of the

  • princess entered the arena.

  • Tall, beautiful and fair, his appearance was met with a sound of approval and tension.

  • Half the people had not known so perfect a young man lived among them. No wonder the

  • princess loved him! What a terrible thing for him to be there!

  • As the young man entered the public arena, he turned to bend to the king. But he did

  • not at all think of the great ruler. The young man’s eyes instead were fixed on the princess,

  • who sat to the right of her father.

  • From the day it was decided that the sentence of her lover should be decided in the arena,

  • she had thought of nothing but this event.

  • The princess had more power, influence and force of character than anyone who had ever

  • before been interested in such a case. She had done what no other person had done. She

  • had possessed herself of the secret of the doors. She knew behind which door stood the

  • tiger, and behind which waited the lady. Gold, and the power of a woman’s will, had brought

  • the secret to the princess.

  • She also knew who the lady was. The lady was one of the loveliest in the kingdom. Now and

  • then the princess had seen her looking at and talking to the young man.

  • The princess hated the woman behind that silent door. She hated her with all the intensity

  • of the blood passed to her through long lines of cruel ancestors.

  • Her lover turned to look at the princess. His eye met hers as she sat there, paler and

  • whiter than anyone in the large ocean of tense faces around her. He saw that she knew behind

  • which door waited the tiger, and behind which stood the lady. He had expected her to know

  • it.

  • The only hope for the young man was based on the success of the princess in discovering

  • this mystery. When he looked at her, he saw that she had been successful, as he knew she

  • would succeed.

  • Then his quick and tense look asked the question: “Which?” It was as clear to her as if

  • he shouted it from where he stood. There was not time to be lost.

  • The princess raised her hand, and made a short, quick movement toward the right. No one but

  • her lover saw it. Every eye but his was fixed on the man in the arena.

  • He turned, and with a firm and quick step he walked across the empty space. Every heart

  • stopped beating. Every breath was held. Every eye was fixed upon that man. He went to the

  • door on the right and opened it.

  • (MUSIC)

  • Now, the point of the story is this: Did the tiger come out of that door, or did the lady?

  • The more we think about this question, the harder it is to answer. It involves a study

  • of the human heart. Think of it not as if the decision of the question depended upon

  • yourself. But as if it depended upon that hot-blooded princess, her soul at a white

  • heat under the fires of sadness and jealousy. She had lost him, but who should have him?

  • How often, in her waking hours and in her dreams, had she started in wild terror, and

  • covered her face with her hands? She thought of her lover opening the door on the other

  • side of which waited the sharp teeth of the tiger!

  • But how much oftener had she seen him open the other door? How had she ground her teeth,

  • and torn her hair, when she had seen his happy face as he opened the door of the lady! How

  • her soul had burned in pain when she had seen him run to meet that woman, with her look

  • of victory. When she had seen the two of them get married. And when she had seen them walk

  • away together upon their path of flowers, followed by the happy shouts of the crowd,

  • in which her one sad cry was lost!

  • Would it not be better for him to die quickly, and go to wait for her in that blessed place

  • of the future? And yet, that tiger, those cries, that blood!

  • Her decision had been shown quickly. But it had been made after days and nights of thought.

  • She had known she would be asked. And she had decided what she would answer. And she

  • had moved her hand to the right.

  • The question of her decision is one not to be lightly considered. And it is not for me

  • to set myself up as the one person able to answer it. And so I leave it with all of you:

  • Which came out of the open doorthe lady, or the tiger?

  • (MUSIC)

  • BOB DOUGHTY: You have heard the American StoryThe Lady, or the Tiger?” by Frank R.

  • Stockton. Your storyteller was Barbara Klein. This story was adapted into Special English

  • by Shelley Gollust. It was produced by Lawan Davis. Listen again next week for another

  • American story in VOA Special English. I’m Bob Doughty.

15 – The Lady or The Tiger ?

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15--《女人或老虎》--弗蘭克-R-斯托克頓著。 (15 - The Lady or The Tiger - by Frank R. Stockton.)

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