290. Treasure Island - chapter 1 (B1 Story) - podcast episode cover

290. Treasure Island - chapter 1 (B1 Story)

Jan 22, 202625 minSeason 5Ep. 290
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Summary

Mike Bilbrough introduces a B1-level adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's "Treasure Island," beginning with chapter one. He first provides a brief biography of Stevenson and then meticulously explains several B1 phrasal verbs. The core of the episode is the reading of the story's opening, detailing the mysterious Captain's arrival and the initial impact on the innkeeper's family, followed by a test on the previously explained phrasal verbs.

Episode description

Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson. My B1-level version.

Chapter 1

Squire Trelawney, Dr. Livesey, and some other gentlemen asked me to write down the whole story of Treasure Island, from the beginning to the end . I must leave out only the exact position of the island, because there is still treasure there...

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Transcript

Introduction to Treasure Island

As from today, I'm going to be reading you a book by Robert Louis Stevenson, which is a classic Treasure Island. I remember reading this book when I was a boy. And in fact, it was written in 1883. So it's rather an old book. But school children these days really enjoy this adventure story. And I'm going to read it to you today, starting with chapter one. But what I've done is to rewrite this book completely.

to a B one level. It's a faithful B one version with the official glossary from Cambridge. at B one so what I have done is to write the text and highlight the words in bold which are B one level. And I will put this audio script on my website, so you can actually read it as well, and identify those important B one level words. Today what I'll do is to read chapter one, and I'll pick out some words to talk about.

What I'm going to talk about today are the phrasal verbs in chapter one. I'll explain them to you, and then there'll be a short test afterwards. So this is a B one recording of the complete book by Robert Lewis Stevenson. Here we go. Hello and welcome to Practicing English. My name is Mike Bilber, and these are podcasts. For students of English.

at B one or B two levels. For transcripts please go to practising English dot com Would you like to see my books for learning B one and B two level English? Then go to the show notes at your podcast app, and just below today's lesson you'll see a link to Amazon, And there you'll be able to read about my new B1 book and my B2 book. Check it out today.

Robert Louis Stevenson's Biography

Before I start, I'm going to tell you briefly about Robert Louis Stevenson, who he was Yesterday I started reading The Black Cat, which is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, who was American, but Robert Louis Stevenson was actually born in Scotland, in Edinburgh. In eighteen fifty And he was very ill as a child, but he had a wonderful imagination. He refused to enter into his father's engineering profession, and he chose literature instead.

He travelled to improve his breathing problems. It was then that he met his wife, Fanny Osborne, in France. Robert was a well known Victorian author. He wrote classics like Treasure Island in eighteen eighty three and Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde eighteen eighty six. Due to poor health, he moved to Samoa, where he was known as Tusitala, the teller of stories.

He died of a brain hemorrhage in eighteen ninety four. He was only forty four years old, leaving behind much loved adventure stories still read today.

Explaining B1 Phrasal Verbs

So that's just a brief introduction about Robert Lewis Stevenson. I'm going to give you some of the phrasal verbs. at B one level which appear in the story and let's talk about them and then there'll be a test on these afterwards. So the first one is to leave out. If you leave something out you omit it. Hm It's interesting that most phrasal verbs have a Latin based word equivalent.

So the phrasal verbs are usually the Anglo Saxon part of English, and there's also a Latin part of English, which came from French And so we do have a lot of these words which are Latin based which sound more formal than the Anglo Saxon or the phrasal verbs and ' So to leave out is to omit, which means not to do something. Okay, so I was making a cake, and I left out the sugar. So it didn't taste very sweet. It means I didn't include the sugar. I didn't put it in the cake to leave out.

When I came home today, my wife asked me about what I'd done, and so I told her about my day, but I left out the part where I scratched the car. Because I knew she would be very upset. So you can leave out part of a story as well. I left out the part where the car was scratched,'cause my wife would get very angry and very upset about it. My next one is to look around. It's a nice casual sort of phrasal verb this one.

To look around is to go somewhere and look at the things that you can see on one side and on the other, in front of you and behind and You can go to a city, perhaps, visit a town, as a tourist, and you can look around. So in that case rather than just looking from one side to the other, you are walking around its streets and enjoying the sights of the city.

To look around. You can look around a shop as well. You can go in and perhaps you're not interested in buying something. You just want to look around to look at what is in the shop. So this word around is a nice kind of casual, relaxed word, and the same way you can walk around. If you're looking around a town which you're visiting, well then you're walking as well. So you walk around to walk around a town and look at things which you're interested in. To walk around.

So it doesn't have to be in a circle. because we think of the word round as being a circle. It could mean, and it often does mean, just going in different directions, backwards and forwards But with no particular direction in mind to walk around and ' The next one is not really a phrase or verb, it's just a verb and a preposition, or should I say really an adverb particle. To look up. We use verbs of movement with adverb particles just to give the direction.

And in this case it's to look up, so perhaps I'm doing something, like reading a book, and then somebody approaches And so I look up and say hello. It means I raise my head to look up. The next one is to stay away. To stay away to stay away from somebody because well, maybe you don't like somebody or somewhere you don't want to go there. Perhaps you've been to a shop and you didn't really like it very much. So you stay away from that shop, you don't go back.

If you work or you're at school, there might be somebody you don't particularly like very much. And so you stay away from them. You do not go and say hello you turn around and walk away. To stay away. The next one is to look out for something. This really is like to wait for something for something that you are expecting to happen. We often look out for the postman. We're expecting a letter, an important letter.

And so every morning you look out of the window look out of the window, which is slightly different meaning, just meaning look from the inside to the outside. But to look out for meaning you are waiting for somebody to arrive. In this case, the postman. To pull out is the next one, the phrasal verb to pull out. So again, really it's just an adverb particle after a verb. To pull, okay, is to move something in a particular direction.

To pull the door shut. If you pull something out, it means that it must be in somewhere. So perhaps um you want to blow your nose, and so you pull out your handkerchief. From your pocket to pull out. The next one is to give in. To give in is perhaps When you've been trying something difficult to And you can't do it. And so you say Ah that's too hard for me. I'm not going to continue doing this. Maybe it's a sudoku.

Or some puzzle that you can't do. I give in It's too difficult for me. Now to give in also can mean when perhaps you have argued with somebody. And you say one thing, and the other person says something completely different, the opposite, you start to argue. Well, perhaps you don't like arguing, so in the end you give in.

And you say OK, I don't want to argue anymore, all right? So to give in when something's too difficult to do, like a puzzle, and to give in when you are arguing, and to say I don't want to argue anymore.

Right. Well that's it. Those are the phrasal verbs. I would like you to listen for them while I'm reading the story. So they are to leave out, look around, walk around, look up Stay away from, look out for, pull out, and give in and The audio script is available at my website at at practisingenglish dot com podcast two hundred and ninety There is a link from your podcast app directly to my webpage where you can read it and you can see these phrasal verbs and other B1 words there as well.

Treasure Island: Chapter One Reading

Okay, so listen out for those phrasal verbs. Here we go with chapter one of Treasure Island by Robert Lewis Stevenson. Hm. Squire Trelawney, Dr. Livsey, and some other gentlemen asked me to write down the whole story of Treasure Island, from the beginning to the end. I must leave out only the exact position of the island, because there is still treasure there. So I begin my story in the year seventeen fifty nine, and I go back to the time when my father ran the Admiral Benbo Inn.

That was when the old sailor, with a sword cut on his face, first came to stay with us. I remember him very clearly. He came walking slowly to the door of the inn, and a man followed him with a huge box on a small cart. He was tall and strong, with brown skin from the sun, His dirty blue coat was old, and his hair was tied in a long tail. His hands were rough, and one cheek had a long white cut.

He looked around the bay while singing quietly to himself. Then he began to sing an old sea song, which he sang many times later. Fifteen men on a dead man's chest Yo, ho ho, and a bottle of rum. His voice was high, and shook a little, like a voice broken by many years at sea. Then he knocked on the door with a stick, and asked my father in a rough voice for a glass of rum.

He drank it slowly, enjoying the taste while he looked at the sea and at the sign above the inn. This is a good bay, he said at last. And a pleasant inn. Do you get many people here, mate? My father said no. There were very few visitors. Well, then, said the sailor, this is the place for me. Bring my box inside. I'll stay here for a while, I'm a simple man. I want rum, bacon, and eggs. You can call me captain. Then he threw some gold coins on the floor. Tell me when their money is used up.

He said, with an angry look. Although his clothes were poor and his speech was rough, he did not look like a common sailor. He looked like a man who was used to giving orders. The man who brought his box told us that the sailor had arrived the day before, and had asked for a quiet inn by the coast. That was all we ever learned about him. He seemed to be a quiet man. During the day he walked about the bay, or stood on the cliffs with a telescope.

In the evening he sat by the fire and drank strong rum and water. When people spoke to him he usually did not answer. He only looked up angrily and made a loud noise with his nose. Soon everyone learned to leave him alone. Every day he asked if any sailors had passed along the road. At first we thought he was lonely, but later we understood that he wanted to stay away from them.

If a sailor came to the inn, the captain would watch him carefully before entering the room, and would stay very quiet while the sailor was there. One day he pulled me by the arm to a corner of the room, and promised me to give me a coin, a silver coin, every month. If I would look out for a sailor with one leg. I had to tell him at once if I ever saw such a man. Sometimes he forgot to pay me, but later he always gave me the money and repeated his orders. The one legged sailor lived in my dream.

On stormy nights when the wind shook the house, I saw him in terrible shapes. Sometimes his leg was cut off at the knee, sometimes he had no leg at all and In my nightmares he ran after me, and I woke up full of fear. I paid a high price for that small coin. Still, I was less afraid of the captain than many other people were. Sometimes he drank too much rum. Then he sang loud and mad songs, or forced everybody to listen to his stories.

He would not let anyone leave the inn until he was sleepy and went to bed and His stories were the worst part. and they were about cruel punishments, storms, and terrible crimes at sea. My father worried that people would stop coming to the inn. But in fact, some visitors liked the excitement. Young men even called the captain a true sea dog and admired him. However, the captain destroyed our family. He stayed for weeks and then months without paying.

My father was too afraid to ask for more money. When he tried, the captain only looked at him angrily. The fear and worry made my father's health worse, and my father died not long after and Only once did someone try to stop him. That was Dr. Livsey. One evening the doctor was sitting in the inn when the captain began singing again. The doctor did not like it and spoke calmly to him. When the captain pulled out a knife and moved towards him, the doctor did not move.

If you do not put that knife away at once, said the doctor, you will be punished by law. They looked hard at each other, but in the end the captain gave in and sat down. After that night he was much quieter, and for many evenings he sat in silence.

Phrasal Verbs Practice Test

Right, so that's the end of chapter one of Treasure Island. Okay, now to test you on these phrasal verbs. It's perhaps a little difficult if you're driving along in your car, or not reading the text. So what I'll do I'm going to read the sentence in the story which contains the phrase or verb. I will not say it Leave it out and you say the verb which is missing. Now to make this easier, what I'm going to do, I'm going to give you a choice of two phrasal verbs.

You just have to choose the right one. Number one I must Only the exact position of the island, because there is still treasure there. Leave out or look around? Leave out I must leave out only the exact position of the island. Looked up or walked around? Walked around. During the day he walked around the bay, or stood on the cliffs with a telescope. Number three Other sailors, look out for or stay away from. Stay away from. He wanted to stay away from other sailors. Number five.

When the captain of A knife and moved towards him the doctor did not move. Gave in or pulled out? pulled out when the captain pulled out a knife. Number six. They looked hard at each other, but in the end the captain and sat down. Gave in or looked up? Gave in, but in the end the captain gave in and sat down. Right. That's the end. Just six questions for today, okay? But as I say, please come to my website, have a look at the audio script.

And you can see lots of other useful be one words there as well. I'll be back next week with chapter two. Goodbye for now.

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