A level 1 Oxford Bookworms Library graded reader. This version includes an audio book: listen to the story as you read.
Written for Learners of English by Jennifer Bassett.
When Lord Asano drew his sword on Lord Kira one spring day in 1701, it began a story that is now a national legend in Japan. Lord Kira lived, but Lord Asano died, and after his death, his samurai became ronin, samurai without a master. And so began their long plan for revenge on Lord Kira. Their loyalty to their dead master made them famous, and people in Japan remember them to this day. The story of the forty-seven ronin has been told and retold for 300 years - in plays, novels, and films. A major Hollywood film was made about the forty-seven ronin in 2013.
Jennifer Bassett has been a teacher, teacher trainer, editor, and materials writer, and has taught in England, Greece, Spain, and Portugal. She is the Series Editor of the Oxford Bookworms Library, and has written more than twenty original and retold stories for the series, including The Phantom of the Opera, One-Way Ticket, The President's Murderer, and William Shakespeare. Two of her adaptations, Rabbit-Proof Fence and Love Among the Haystacks, have won Language Learner Literature Awards, and three of her other titles have been finalists for the Awards. She has created a new sub-series called Bookworms World Stories, which are collections of short stories written in English from around the world. She has also written original stories for the English Today Readers and Storylines series. Jennifer is series co-adviser, with H.G. Widdowson, of the Oxford Bookworms Collection, volumes of unadapted short stories for advanced learners.
Một câu chuyện về những Ronin trung thành. Nếu mà lấy tư duy của bây giờ đánh giá về cách hành xử của các ronin thì có lẽ mình sẽ nghĩ họ thật sự ngu ngốc. Cả cuộc sống của họ chỉ là để dành cho chủ nhân Asano của họ. Khi chủ nhân của họ chết, thì họ cũng như chết theo. Nhiệm vụ cuối của họ chỉ có là trả thù cho chủ nhân của họ. Họ không nghĩ đến cuộc sống cá nhân, họ không nghĩ đến vợ con hay gia đình gì cả. Thứ họ nghĩ đến chỉ là trả thù và được chết như một samurai. Cái thứ mà họ gọi là code of samurai. Nhưng mình không thể biết được liệu họ có hạnh phúc với lựa chọn của họ không. Hay chỉ là họ sợ người đời đánh giá, nên họ quyết định chọn trả thù và rồi chết trong tư thế ngẩng cao đầu. Có thể ở mỗi thời mỗi khác, có thể họ đã hạnh phúc khi được sống như vậy. Mình cũng không rõ nữa. Mình chỉ nghĩ lại rằng, có những thứ mình nghĩ là hạnh phúc, nhưng liệu có thực sự là nó như vậy không. Khó nghĩ quá.
I had avoided reading this book for a long time because I don't like classic stories for some reasons. However, finally I decided to read it. I am Japanese, so I knew this event, but I didn't know it in detail. It seems to be discussed among many people whether this event was a good thing or a bad thing. I felt that the person who first became violent was bad, even though many people may have the different thoughts from me.
I did not know much about ronin or samurai. Now I understand a bit more about the way of life of ronin and samurai. The story was like a summary of the longer story. Knowing the ending, I don't think I would like to read the whole story. I prefer happy endings.
Next - Aladdin and the enchanted lamp - the same level
the loyalty with their master and the patience of them for killing the enemy's master to revenge. Then, they had a death's samurai just like their intending.