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, . 28 1920 . ³ : 50 , 50 , 100 , . ³ , . 50 , , 1969 . 50 , , , -.

- , . , ̒, [28; . 357] : . [24; . 551] , - , 볺. 1921 -, . , , . 쳿 . ̒ , 1935 ̒ 4 1948 . : 1957 , : ϳ ̒ 1971 , . 1948 1951 볿, . 1953 1955 볿. 1951 䳳, 1991 . 䳿 : 1967 ³ 1988. 䳿 : 1960 , 1968 , ͳ 1979 . 1969 , : , , ̳ , Ƴ , ij 䳻, . - .

- , - . , , - - . -, , - , - .

 

 

2. 2. - ij 䳻, The girl in the train

- ij 䳻. The Girl in The Train. 1969 , - 䳿.

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ϳ , , . , . , , , , , - , . , , . , , . ³ , , . 쳺, , . , , , .

, , , . - , . - , , , 䳿. . , . , , , . ϳ , , , . , . .

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, . , . - . . - , (, , , ) ' - . [19; . 47] ( ) ij 䳻 . , , . . ., - , () , ( ) . [11; . 65] , . . , , . [35; . 314] , , . ( :

Ive never told a soul before. Not a soul. (38; . 364)

, - .

, - . , .

His name, though he insists on this anonymity, is almost a household word; he has been a Professor of Gynaecology at a teaching hospital in London; he crossed his legs awkwardly and nearly knocked over the table. (38; . 364)

, , , . , , .

Professor X told it as if he were reliving some dreadful, personal experience, which of course he was. (38; . 364)

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The year was 1945, the month December; the war was long over; he was travelling north to give some lectures at the University of Edinburg; he had caught the 4 p.m. train; the train on Wednesday was fairly empty. (38; . 364)

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A girl ran in, breathless; she could scarcely be more than nineteen; she was rather small and rather pretty; her face seemed very pale; she was wearing a brownish coat-and-skirt probably expensive; a modest string of pearls around her neck, and shoes which he recognized as Army-A.T.S.-Issue; the wind ruffled the blond hair; the red glow from in front caught the blond hair and turned it pink; she turd to him, was about to speak, then turned back to the window.

(38; . 365)

쳺, , , ; , , . , , , 쳿, : (. Auxiliary Territorial Service - ATS). , , , . , ; , , . , .

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Their compartment was near the front of the train; a hot reflection from the cab, inferno from the firebox, were reflected in a thin bank of fog; it was cold, and the fog would increase. (38; . 366)

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Fog does strange things sometimes. We see things in it that arent there we ever hear them. (38; . 367)

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Odd that she should have found a friend on the platform; the eyes were wide; like her lips they seemed black; she spoke and he was shocked to find her almost in tears; suddenly she seemed to have forgotten her worry. (38; . 366)

Suddenly , . , , . - , . [33; c. 431]

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A full red mouth which was black in the dim lightning of the compartment; her lips seemed black; her fiancé was a lieutenant in the Black Watch; he had laid the body out, closed the straight black eyes (38; . 367)

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He wants me to get off the train; he said so just now; he came right up to the window fairly close, anyway, just before we moved off. And he told me to to get off the train. (38; . 368)

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You dont think you could be imagining it, do you? Youre going to meet him in Edinburg, arent you? Yes hell be waiting for me. In Edinburg She smiles suddenly. (38; . 367)

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Suddenly she let out a cry and jumped to the window. Yes-yes. I can hear-; I must go, must go. Hes insisting! (38; . 367)

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He seized her wrist as she made to open the carriage door; Youre hurting me Not as much as youll hurt him, hurt Angus, if you get off the train here.; He literally shouted at her; the Professor knew about hysterical women. She leapt suddenly to her feet, pulled the window wide open and started to talk hysterically into the night. (38; . 368)

, , , . , . , , ? 䳿 . . . , , .

The train lurch beneath him; he dragged himself into consciousness she screamed; at the moment the carriage lurched over on its side; she (a woman) still was screaming; but he heard no noise: it had been drowned in the other screams, of splintering wood and glass, of tortured metal. (38; . 369)

, . , , , , , , , .

He lost consciousness in a thunderous stab of pain; there seemed to be blood it was hot and sticky; the left leg, from the excruciating pain it now gave him; what he saw filled him with such horror; blood from a wound in the head had drenched them both and she was unconscious, quite possibly dead; with a gasp of horror he realized; a dreadful moaning; he touched the blood-smeared head; he was still caked brown with blood; blood from tragic creature. (38; . 369)

䳿, , . 쳺, , , .

.

(. assono - ) - , , , . [5; c.79] , , : blood, thunderous, struck, done, stomach [ʌ]; dark, glass, last [ɑ]; fog [ɔ]

(. ad - litera - ) - , , . [5; c.79] , , : dreadful, horror, red, straggle, dark [r]; drugs, dead, dreadful, dark, blood, dragged- [d].

The fog ironically enough, had cleared completely since the crash. (38; . 380)

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But this was ridiculous. A.T.S. Issue; Then to the horror of all around, he pulled himself up by the frame of the rubber-covered couch Miss Sinclar! Mona! You- you got off at York! Changed mind last-last minute. H-had to run (38; . 382)

, , . , - , , . , - , , . , .

He read the List of Dead in the paper. He got to Ss, failed to see it first, and took heart. Then there it was: Sinclar, Miss Mona. Highgate London. (38; . 383)

, . , . :

You know what really upsets me? Just cant get out of my head. What can the young man think? (38; . 383)

5 ,  . , , , , . - , , , , , , . , .

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, , , (). , , , : ''³ , , '', '' . '' '''' '''' , , - . [11; c. 93]

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ij 䳻 , : dreadful ( 4 ), red ( 3 ), black - ( 3 ), fog - ( 7 ), suddenly ( 2 ), blood ( 4 ), horror ( 3 ). , , , , : fog.

1.3. - , The Vampire of Croglin

, - - The vampire of Croglin.

, , . , , . , . , . , , .

, , . 쒿 Գ. 1874 ̳ 볿. ³ 볺 . . , . , . ³ , .

1875 . , , . , , . , , . , . . , . dz 볿. Ƴ , , , . 볿 , , . .

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The Gosts of King Arthur and his knights; manifestations of an unpleasant nature; it is old country; castles within their massive walls more than their flesh-and-blood inhabitants. In 1874 a Mr Edward Cranswell bought it. (38; . 142)

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Croglin hall had stool there for centuries; a lonely, low-built house; the Hall was neighboured by the little churchyard whose ancient memorials dating from Normand days; curious architecture windows were on the ground level and extremely vulnerable; no outcry was made by Victorian household. (38; . 142)

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It was summer night in 1987; brilliant full moon; the night began to chill; Amelias bedroom windows overlooked the wide lawn of the Hall. Now a sheet of palest silver, like calm sea; she was unable to sleep for the stuffiness of her room; the water motionless as grass; suddenly a movement outside roused her. (38; . 143)

. 䳿 . ͳ , . , , , , . , - , . , , (), ().

䳿 . ̳ . ̳ , , , . , ( ); ( ) . ̳ , - , . ̳ ( ), 䳿 . , , . , , 䳿, , . , - , , , , .

suddenly . . .

The thing put on a spurt of speed, and suddenly was gone. (38; . 143)

- , : horror . ; terrified . ; dreadful . .

In barely a moment, the terrified girl saw a face appear at her window. What kind of face she could never afterwards say, except it was dreadful. The silence of Croglin Hall was again broken by Amelias terrified screams; she had heard the terrified scratching at the window. (34; . 144)

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() - . (. Onomatopoieia , onoma - ' + poieo - , ). , , , , . [31; . 231]

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A scratching noise on the glass told her that the person outside was attempting to break in; she knelt and scrabbled for it, the noises at the window frowning louder and louder; she began to shriek, and went on shrieking; her screams broke out afresh; she heard dreadful scratching at the window; at the first shriek, he was out of bed; he tore along the passage; an owl hooted; smashes lids and hacked sides. (34; . 144)

, , . , , , , . . , , . , , ?

The doctor who treated Amelias injuries confirmed that they were mainly bites;

Some kind of dingo?; dogs do not remove panes from windows; the Cranswells now heard for the first time, other attacks of the same kind. (38; . 144)

, . . . , , , .

He tore along the passage; when he judged himself near enough he fired; excitement and running had almost knocked the breath out of his body; his quarry was still in sight, moving slowly now, sometimes lost among the tombstones, then reappearing, a crouching feral shape; at last he stopped and surveyed the territory; The night was dark; he was alone. (38; . 145)

, , .

In the morning he and Michael, together with four neighbours entered the Fisher vault. The vault held some sixteen coffins, ranged on stone shelved, and of varying dates, judging by their condition. Every one da been broken into with savage force. Yellowed ancient bones, whiter ones, skulls which had become half-decomposed-all lay in battlefield riot at the feet of the appalled men. But was it, in fact, the vampire? The bodies of the long-dead do not bleed: nor would a genuine vampire be likely to be interested in the sustenance to be obtained from other ancient corpses. The Croglin terrorist was as the Cranswells had concluded before the discovery in the vault, a wandering lunatic, with necrophiliac tendencies and a homicidal mania directed towards women.

(38; . 146)

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: dreadful . ( 6 ), noise - . ( 4 ), attack - . ( 4 ), scratching - . ( 3 ), terrified - . ( 5 ) suddenly - . ( 3 ). , dreadful .

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, - The Girl in the Train The Vampire of Croglin (1969 .) 䳿 -, 䳿, , . The Girl in the Train 䳿 , , ; , 䳿 ..

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1. , The Girl in the Train fog - ( 7 ). : dreadful , red , black , suddenly , blood , horror .

2. , The Vampire of Croglin dreadful . ( 6 ). : noise - . , attack - . , scratching - . , terrified - . , suddenly - . .

, . , ( ) ; , . The Girl in the Train, , , , , 쳺, .

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:

 

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1. . . . . .: : 2002. 384 .

2. . . - // . . 2- . . .: , 1999. 423 .

3. . . : . ( . . . . ): . . . : 10. 02. 04 , 2005. 253 .

4. . . ( ). .: - . , 1984. 200 .

5. . - .: - 2013 213 .

6. . . // . : . 1995. 246 .

7. . . . .: . . . -., 2000. 382 .

8. .., .. : . -: - ., 2008 123 .

9. . ( . . . )// ϳ . Գ : . . . : , 2001. . . 22-27.

10. . . // : . XIV . . ., 2003. . 131 133.

11. . . . . . - . 2- . .: , 1988. 192 .

12. . . . .: , 1999. 287 .

13. . . // -: . .: , 1991. . 179 204.

14. . . . , , , , , , . .: , 1999. 480 .

15. . . 2. ., 1960. 1036 .

16. . . : . : - . , 1990. 108 .

17. . . // : . .: , 1991. . 36-66.

18. . . // . .: , 1993. . 5-53.

19. . . . 7 : . : , 2011. 364 .

20. . . : // : . XIV . . ., 2003. . 31 312.

21. Abbot V., Black J. and Smith E. The Representation of Scripts in Memory // Journal of Memory and Language. 1985, 24. p.179-199.

22. Andrew Bennet, Nicholas Royle An Introduction to Literature New York, Rontledge, 1987 389 p.

23. Farner, Geir The Ways We Read Narrative Literature London, Bloomsbury Academic, 2014 297 p.

24. John Arnold The Bibliography of Australian Literature Australia, University of Queensland Press, 2004 733 p.

25. McKee Robert Story: Style, Structure, Substance, and the Principles of Screenwriting New York, Harper Collins, 1997 438 p.

26. Prieto-Pablos, J. The Paradox of Suspense London, Poetics, 1998 - 113 p.

27. Parnee Liamputtong, Jean Rumbold Knowing Differently: Art-based and Collaborative Research Methods New York, Nova Science Publishers, 2008 149 p.

28. Shelby Tucker Among Insurgents: Walking Through Burma New York, I.B. Tauris&CoLtd., 2001 458 p.

29. T. R. Gadd How to write a composition Ontario, S&S Learning materials, 2006 30 p.

30. Walton, Kendall L. Mimesis as Make-Believe: On the Foundations of the Representational Arts Cambridge, Harvard University Press, - 1990 680 c.

 

 

31. . . - : , 1969. 608 c.

32. . . - --: , 2002. 320 .

33. . . - .: 1974. 503 .

34. . . - : , 1998. 685 .

35. Abrams M.H. A Glossary of literary terms. 11th edition Stanford, Cengage Learning 2015 367 p.

36. Collins Cobuild English Language Dictionary. William Collins Sons & Co Ltd, Glasgo, 1988. 1703 p.

37. Longman Dictionary of English Language and Culture. Lnd.: Longman, 1992. 1528 p.

 

 

38. John Canning (editor) 50 Great Horror Stories// The Girl in The Train; The Vampire of Croglin Washington: Random House Value Publishing, 1987. 567 p.

 

 





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