GOOD MORNING, MISS DOVE (after Frances Gray Patton) Miss Dove ['mis dav] was a strict teacher. If a pupil wanted to leave the classroom to get a drink of water, Miss Dove just looked at him and said nothing. They were afraid of that look and they called her the terrible Miss Dove', though she never shouted at them or scolded them. On that day, forty children were sitting in her class in the Geography lesson. They heard the bell, but they did not move, they did not talk, they all waited in silence and looked at Miss Dove. Only after she had told them to close their books and go, they left the classroom qi ctly without shouting or running. A boy who had talked during the lesson was left in the room and had to write twenty times "I must not talk during the lessons." The nek lesson began. The pupils came into the classroom and took their places. Miss Dove gave them written work to do, because it was Tuesday, and on Tuesdays they always had some written work. One of the boys pushed the girl who was sitting nek to him. Miss Dove looked at him, and he stopped moving, though she did not scold him. Miss Dove looked at the boy but she did not see him. Instead of him she saw his elder brother, Thomas Baker ['tomas "beika], who had sat in that place some six or seven years before. The war brought the children she had taught to different parts of the world. One was in Germany, another-in the jungle¹ of New Guinea [nju: 'gini], a third one-somewhere in Africa. She did not know where all of them were. Though all of them had finished school many years before, she now saw them as they had been at seven, at ten or at twelve. The pupil she thought about most often was Thomas Baker. 4 заданіє​

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Ответ дал: rom1k08
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Okay let’s go go dudes and get the boys to bed I got a
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