EN + ES
Escuchar
20
Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer
Capítulo 2, Página 6
"Oh,
I’ll
be
careful.
Let
me
try.
I’ll
give
you
the
core
of
my
apple."
"Well,
here—No,
Ben,
now
don’t.
I’m
afraid—"
"I’ll
give
you
all
of
it!"
Tom
gave
up
the
brush
with
a
sad
face
but
felt
happy
inside.
While
the
big
steamer
Big
Missouri
worked
hard
in
the
sun,
Tom
sat
on
a
barrel
in
the
shade.
He
dangled
his
legs,
ate
his
apple,
and
thought
about
getting
more
treasures.
Many
boys
came
by;
they
wanted
to
make
fun
of
him
but
stayed
to
paint.
After
Ben
got
tired,
Tom
traded
the
brush
to
Billy
Fisher
for
a
kite.
When
Billy
got
tired,
Johnny
Miller
gave
Tom
a
dead
rat
and
a
string
to
swing
it
with.
This
went
on
for
hours.
By
the
afternoon,
Tom
was
rich.
He
had
twelve
marbles,
part
of
a
jews-harp,
a
piece
of
blue
glass
to
look
through,
a
spool
cannon,
a
key
that
opened
nothing,
some
chalk,
a
glass
stopper,
a
tin
soldier,
a
couple
of
tadpoles,
six
firecrackers,
a
one-eyed
kitten,
a
brass
door-knob,
a
dog
collar
but
no
dog,
a
knife
handle,
four
pieces
of
orange
peel,
and
an
old
window
sash.
Tom
had
a
fun
and
lazy
time
with
many
friends.
The
fence
had
three
coats
of
whitewash!
If
he
hadn't
run
out
of
whitewash,
he
would
have
taken
everything
from
every
boy
in
town.
Tom
thought
that
the
world
was
not
so
bad
after
all.
He
found
out
something
important
without
knowing
it.
To
make
someone
want
something,
you
just
need
to
make
it
hard
to
get.
If
he
were
a
wise
man,
he
would
know
that
work
is
what
you
have
to
do,
and
play
is
what
you
want
to
do.
This
is
why
making
fake
flowers
or
using
a
treadmill
is
work,
but
bowling
or
climbing
a
mountain
is
fun.
Some
rich
men
in
England
drive
coaches
for
fun,
even
though
it
costs
a
lot.
If
they
got
paid,
it
would
become
work,
and
they
would
quit.
Tom
thought
about
how
his
life
had
changed.
Then
he
went
back
to
report
what
happened.
||
||
Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer — A2 Inglés | Cuentana