欢迎光临

我们一直在努力
当前位置:首页 > 歌词大全




  • No One Will Ever Know
  • by Janet Seever

  • Karen, Judy and I were the last ones back in the school room after lunch.
  • We put our metal lunch boxes on the shelf above the coat hooks,
  • which were mostly empty.
  • All of the other sixth graders were already outside,
  • playing marbles or hop scotch or jumping rope,
  • since it was a pleasant spring day.
  • “Look what I found this morning in the storage cupboard
  • when I was getting out some art supplies for Mrs. Eiffler.”
  • With a conspiratorial grin on her face,
  • Karen held up a wooden box filled with short pieces of chalk in every color of the rainbow.
  • “Wow! What fun it would be to write on the chalkboard while everyone is outside.”
  • Judy’s eyes twinkled with anticipation.

  • “But Mrs. Eiffler doesn’t want us writing on the chalkboard,”
  • I responded, already feeling guilty,
  • although we had not yet done a thing.

  • “Don’t be such a ‘fraidy cat’, Janet. No one will ever know,”
  • said Karen, reaching into the box and drawing out a piece of chalk.

  • “Right. Everyone is outside,
  • so we’re safe.
  • No one will tell on us.”
  • Judy was already drawing a house with sure strokes.

  • I reluctantly joined my friends in the artwork,
  • wanting to be part of what was going on,
  • but afraid of being caught.
  • I knew well that we were breaking not one,
  • but two class rules.
  • The second rule was that no one was allowed to stay inside at noon
  • without a written excuse from home if the weather was nice.

  • Trying various colors,
  • we drew houses, trees and three-dimensional boxes.
  • It was fun!
  • All the time we were watching the clock,
  • knowing that our fun would be over if anyone walked into the room.

  • Then Judy had an idea.
  • “We’re all right-handed.
  • Let’s see who can write their name best using their left hand.”

  • Judy and Karen picked up their chalk and started writing.
  • I chose a white piece from the box and wrote my name.
  • The handwriting was a bit shaky,
  • but no one would doubt that it said “Janet.”

  • “I think Judy is the winner,”
  • said Karen.
  • “Hers is the best.”

  • “We’d better get this board cleaned off before Mrs. Eiffler comes back,”
  • said Judy, eying the clock.
  • [!--empirenews.page--]
  • She picked up an eraser and began erasing our handiwork from the board.
  • Everything came off... but my name!

  • In disbelief,
  • I looked at the chalk I held in my sweaty hand.

  • On closer examination,
  • it wasn’t chalk at all. I had picked up a small piece of white color crayon
  • which was mixed in with the pieces of chalk.

  • My stomach churned and my knees felt weak.
  • What would Mrs. Eiffler do to me?

  • My mother had a saying:
  • “Fools’ names and fools’ faces always appear in public places.”
  • I never understood fully what it meant before.
  • Now I did!
  • I was a fool,
  • and there was my name in crayon to prove it.
  • And the teacher would be returning soon.

  • “Quick, let’s get some wet paper towels,”
  • said Judy,
  • springing into action.

  • After vigorous rubbing,
  • my name still remained.

  • “I think I saw a can of cleanser by the sink in the coat room,”
  • I said as I raced to find it.
  • Precious minutes were ticking away.

  • We rubbed and my name came off all right,
  • but in the process of removing it,
  • we left an abrasion on the chalkboard.
  • Listening for footsteps coming down the hall,
  • we dried the scrubbed area as much as we could with more paper towels
  • and fanned it with a book to remove every tell-tale trace of wetness.

  • We were just slipping into our desks as the bell rang
  • and the other students began entering the room.
  • The teacher walked in soon afterward.

  • Mrs. Eiffler never asked about abrasion and maybe never noticed it.
  • But I did.
  • Every time I walked past the marred surface of the chalkboard,
  • I remembered. Oh, how I remembered.

  • The lesson I learned that day is one I never forgot,
  • even though over forty years have passed since the event.
  • “No one will ever know”
  • is never true. Even if no one else found out,
  • I myself knew.
  • Sometimes living with a guilty conscience is punishment enough.
  • 热门歌词推荐