The Silver Sword
The Silver Sword
The Silver Sword
Thriller C~ A dventure
m
4
T H E SILVER SW ORD
G re a t C la r e n d o n S tr e e t, O x fo r d 0 x 2 6 0 p
O x fo r d U n iv e rs it y P ress is a d e p a r tm e n t o f th e U n iv e r s it y o f O x fo rd .
It fu r t h e r s th e U n iv e rs it y 's o b je c t iv e o f e x c e lle n c e in r e s e a rc h , s c h o la r s h ip ,
a n d e d u c a tio n b y p u b lis h in g w o r ld w id e in
O x fo rd N e w Y o r k
A u c k la n d C a p e T o w n D a r e s S a la a m H o n g K o n g K a ra c h i
K u a la L u m p u r M ad rid M e lb o u r n e M e x ic o City* N a ir o b i
N e w D e lh i S h a n g h a i T a ip e i T o r o n to
W ith o ffic e s in
A r g e n t in a A u s tria B ra z il C h ile C z e c h R e p u b lic F ra n c e G re e c e
G u a t e m a la H ungary* Ita ly Ja p a n P o la n d P o r tu g a l S in g a p o r e
S o u th K o re a S w itz e rla n d T h a ila n d T d r k e y U k r a in e V ie t n a m
o x f o r d and o x f o r d e n c l is h a r e r e g is te r e d tr a d e m a r k s o f
O x fo r d U n iv e rs it y P ress in th e UK a n d in c e r t a in o t h e r c o u n t r ie s
N o u n a u th o r iz e d p h o to c o p y in g
A ll r ig h t s re s e rv e d . N o p a n o f th is p u b lic a tio n m a y b e re p r o d u c e d ,
s t o r e d in a r e t r ie v a l sy ste m , o r tr a n s m it te d , in a n y fo r m o r b y a n y m e a n s,
w it h o u t t h e p r io r p e rm is s io n in w r it in g o f O x fo r d U n iv e r s it y P re ss,
o r a s e x p r e s s ly p e rm itt e d b y law , o r u n d e r te r m s a g r e e d w ith t h e a p p r o p r ia t e
r e p r o g r a p h ic s r ig h t s o rg a n iz a tio n . E n q u ir ie s c o n c e r n in g r e p r o d u c t io n
o u ts id e th e s c o p e o f th e a b o v e sh o u ld be se n t to th e ELT R ig h ts D e p a rtm e n t.
O x fo rd U n iv e rs ity P re ss, at th e a d d r e s s a b o v e
Y ou m u s t n o t c ir c u la te th is b o o k in a n y o t h e r b in d in g o r c o v e r
a n d y o u m u st im p o se th is sa m e c o n d it io n o n a n y a c q u ir e r
P rin te d in S p a in b y U n ig r a f S .L
MAP
1 T he escape
2 Journey through the air
3 T he silver sword
4 The children
5 J a n and Ivan
6 Looking for Edek
7 Across the country
8 T rouble with a train
9 The Bavarian farmer
10 T he Burgom aster
11 D angerous water
12 Missing
13 T h e storm
14 Safe!
GLOSSARY
2
The escape
2
Jou rney through the air
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j
The Silver Sword
T
6
Journey through the air
4
The Silver Sword
‘T h a t’s the prison bell,’ said the man. ‘They ring it when
a prison er escap es.’
‘I am the prisoner,' Joseph told them.
J
The silver sw o rd
S
The silver sword
For several days, Josep h searched the city for his children.
At night he returned home to the K rauses, who gave him
food and a bed.
One night, M rs K rause said, ‘Y ou can ’t go on like this.
Almost certainly your children died when the bom b went
off. Search for your wife instead o f them .’
‘ G e r m a n y is a large place,’ said Joseph . ‘ H ow will I find
her?’
•it ■
The Silver Sword
10
The silver sword
Ruth is fifteen now, and she’s tall with fair hair. Edek is
thirteen, and Bronia is five.’
'W arsaw is full of children,’ said the boy. ‘They’re all
dirty and hungry and they all look alike.’
‘I'll give you this sw ord if you do something for m e,’ said
Joseph. ‘If you ever see Ruth or Edek or Bronia, you must
tell them about our meeting. Tell them I’m going to
Switzerland to find their mother. Tell them to follow me as
soon as they can.’
The boy took the sw ord and put it in his wooden box.
The Silver Sword
12
The children
4
The children
13
Hf
4
The Silver Sword
14
The children
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4
The Silver Sword
They m ade their new home in a cellar at the other end o f the
city. When they asked the Polish Council about their
mother, they were told she had been taken to G erm any to
work on the land. N o bod y knew which part o f G erm any.
‘T he w ar will end so o n ,’ they were told, ‘and your
mother will come back.’
16
The children
17
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The Silver Sword
Edek kept him self busy, but Ruth found her new life
difficult. Then she started a school. She invited other lost
children, o f Bronia’s age and a little older. While Edek w as
out finding food, she told them stories, and taught them to
read and write. There w as soon a crowd o f poor, hom eless
children wanting to join her school, but there w as only
room for twelve.
In the early summer, they went to live in the forest
outside the city. Life w as healthier here, and there were
plenty o f other families for the children to play with. R uth ’s
school som etim es had as many as twenty-five children in it.
Because o f the kindness o f the farmers, it w as easier to
get food. The farm ers were not allowed to sell foo d to
anyone except the N azis, but they gave the children whatever
they could. And they also hid food in cellars or holes in the
ground. Then the children helped them to take it secretly
into the towns, to sell to the Polish people.
Edek w as one o f the children who did this. He went o ff to
the tow n at night with butter sewn into his coat, or hidden
km ong w ood in a cart. But one night, Edek did not return.
Ruth questioned other fam ilies in the forest, but no one had
seen him. After som e days, she discovered that he had
called at a house in a village. The secret police had been
there, searching for hidden food. They discovered the
butter that w as sewn into Edek’s coat. After setting fire to
the house, they had taken the owner and Edek aw ay.
‘From now on,’ Ruth told Bronia, ‘we will have to look
after ourselves.’
5
Jan a n d Ivan
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<*+ *
4
20
Jan and Ivan
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4
The Silver Sword
22
Jan and Ivan
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'tt *
The Silver Sword
6
Looking for Edek
While Bronia was asleep that night, Ruth and Jan talked. >
There was a lot Ruth wanted to know about her father, and
Jan told her the little that he remembered.
‘Why didn’t you speak about him before?’ Ruth wanted
ro know. ‘Surely he told you our nam es?’
But war does strange things to young people. The worry
of finding food and staying alive each day was enough to
make Jan forget Joseph . But now he remembered him. And
he remembered som ething else.
‘He was going to Switzerland to find your m other,’ said
Jan.
By the morning, Ruth knew w hat she must do.
‘We’re going to Switzerland to find Father and M oth er,’
she told Bronia.
‘Where’s that?’ asked Bronia.
‘M illions of kilometres aw ay ,’ said Jan .
'Spring is com ing,’ said Ruth, ‘and in summer it will be
25
*
The Silver Sword
26
Looking for Edek
41* '
4
The Silver Sword
28
Across the country
7
A cross the co un try
There were still a few trains running from Posen, and Ruth,
Edek, Bronia and Jan m anaged to get on one. It was full of
refugees and on its way to Berlin. They were in one of the
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31
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A
The Silver Sword
32
Across the country
dry and com fortable, and there w as food to eat. After four
bowls o f soup each, the children were given blankets and
mattresses and taken to a corner o f the hall where they
found a place to sleep. But com fortable though it w as, the
camp w as to be their home for only a few days.
‘Switzerland is still a long way aw ay ,’ Ruth reminded the
others. ‘We m ust go o n .’
‘T ake the Potsdam road and follow your noses,’ the
family were told, and o ff they went, singing a happy song.
Russian soldiers marched past them, then lines of women
and girls in grey-green uniform s. These were followed by
hundreds o f carts, pulled by horses.
N ext day, the children went across the country cowards
Bitterfeld and Halle. A British officer hac! given them some
money for food, but this w as soon gone and they had to find
work to get more. This w as difficult because the factories
were closed, and che farm s were using the freed prisoners of
war. Some villages refused to let the children enter because
there was no more food or places to stay for refugees.
One cam p had a school for Polish children. If they
remained there, the children were told, they would receive
all the food and schooling and medicine they needed. Edek
was very tired when they arrived, and Ruth w as ready to
stay for as long as he needed to rest. But Edek felt better
after a few days, and one look at the silver sword was
enough to make him want to go on to Switzerland.
So they came to the edge o f the R ussian zone.
In the first days of peace after the w ar ended, there were
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The Silver Sword
8
Trouble with a train
• 3 ^
Trouble with a train
Edek clim bed into a tree which gave him a good view of
the line. H e saw Ja n climb the signal ram p, which went
right acro ss the line, and then lie down flat on the top,
above the line. W hat w as he going to do?
‘I m ust go and find ou t,’ thought Edek.
He jum ped dow n from the tree and went to the bottom
of the signal ram p.
‘W hat are you doing, Ja n ? ’ he called.
Jan did not see Edek until that moment. ‘ Go aw ay !’ he
said, angrily.
Then cam e a noise as the signal changed to green.
‘Go aw ay !’ Jan screamed at Edek. And he threw himself
at the signal and began to pull it.
Edek heard the sound of a distant train.
‘Com e d ow n !’ he shouted to Jan .
Jan took no notice. He worked quickly with a spanner
and a pair of wire cutters. The noise o f the train grew
louder, and dirty sm oke rose above the trees.
'‘There’s going to be an accident!’ Edek thought, and
began to climb up the side of the ramp.
Edek w as not strong. Coughing badly, he pulled himself
up the ram p to the top. The signal had now changed to red.
An angry Ja n m oved past Edek’s face, nearly knocking him
off the ram p. H e said something, but Edek could not hear
him because o f the noise of the train. Still worried about an
accident, Edek stood u p ’on the ram p and waved at the
train. But the signal w as at red, where Jan had put it, and
the train w as already stopping.
36
Trouble with a train
The Silver Sword
38
Trouble with a train
39
The Silver Sword
40 '
The Bavarian farmer
desk. ‘Edek Balicki,’ he said, ‘you can go. Jan , you will pay
200 m arks or go to prison for seven d ay s.’
Ruth and Ja n talked together for a minute, then Ruth
said, ‘Jan says he’ll go to prison. We don’t have enough
money to pay the 2 0 0 m arks.’
‘W e’re saving our money to buy som e boots for E dek,’
said Bronia.
‘It isn’t long, Ja n , and you’ll be looked after,’ said
Captain Greenw ood, kindly. ‘When you come out, stay
with that mother - perhaps she’ll be able to teach you not to
steal. And remind her to send me a postcard when you get
to Sw itzerland.’
9
The Bavarian farmer
41
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4
The Stiver Sword
‘When will you grow up, you silly boy! ’ she said, pulling
Ja n out o f the barn. ‘Say you’re sorry.’
‘So rry ,’ Ja n said to the farmer.
‘N o w perhaps you’ll tell me w hat you’re doing here,’
said the farm er, looking at Edelc.
Edek explained who they were and where they were
42
The Bavarian farmer
Kurt W olff’s farm was high up in the Bavarian hills, not far
from C zechoslovakia. There were trees right to the top of
the hills, and between the hills was the River Falken.
A few kilom etres away was the village of Boding, where
each day the Burgom aster received his orders from the
44
The Bavarian farmer
45
The Silver Sword
46
The Burgomaster
10
The Burgom aster
N ext day, Jan and Edek were w orking in the fields when a
car went past on the road, throw ing up a cloud of dust
behind it. It w as travelling very fast, and disappeared
behind som e trees. A m om ent later, there was a crash,
follow ed by a shout.
‘It’s hit a tree,’ said Jan .
‘We’ll have to go and help,’ said Edek. ‘The driver may
be hurt.’
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The Silver Sword
48
The Burgomaster
The next day the Burgom aster cam e to see the farmer.
‘All Polish and Ukrainian refugees m ust be sent home by
tom orrow. Y ou’re hiding Polish children here.’ And the
Burgom aster told him w hat had happened the day before.
‘They must go home, like the rest,’ he said.
‘Their parents are in Sw itzerland, and they want to find
them ,’ said the farmer.
The Burgomaster laughed, ‘i ’ve heard that story before.
Anyone in trouble at home alw ays tries to get to France or
Switzerland. But the Sw iss w on’t have them, unless the
children can prove that one parent is alive and already in
the country.’
The farmer took the silver sw ord from the shelf and told
the Burgom aster its story. The Burgom aster laughed again.
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■
A
The Silver Sword
50
The Burgomaster
Ij
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'*♦
The Silver Sword
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J
Dangerous water
11
D angerous w ater
53
'it “
The Silver Sword
then he put a leg over the side o f the bridge - and dropped
dow n into the shallow water.
H e w as an American soldier.
Ruth tried to pull aw ay, but the m an caught her paddle
and held on to it. Ruth pulled hard, but the m an held on to
»■ the paddle. She pulled and turned the paddle sharply, but
still he held on. Then she let go o f the paddle, and the
soldier fell backw ards as the canoe w as carried under the
bridge and back into the fast-m oving water.
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Dangerous water
55
*
4
The Silver Sword
Soon, R uth could see the rapids ahead o f them, and she
knew this w as the m ost dangerous part o f the river. Here
the w ater m oved very fast, hurrying between large rocks,
some o f them as high as houses.
The noise filled their ears, and Bronia closed her eyes.
But Ruth found she w as alm ost too excited to be afraid. She
threw her paddle from side to side, always turning aw ay
from the white, broken water where the sharp rocks lay
hidden. It becam e a battle between her and the wild river.
But a quick touch with the paddle at the right moment was
enough to sh oot them safely past each rock.
Then the river became wider, and once again there were
trees on either side. The water slowed down, and Ruth
realized that they had got through safely . She thought
about Edek and Jan . H ad they got through the rapids, too?
She lay back and watched the sky as, Bronia slept. Then
she herself becam e sleepy and closed her eyes.
She w oke to find herself sitting in water. T o her horror,
she sa\V that the canoe had hit a rock in shallow water, and
there w as a large hole in the bottom . The hole was much
too big to mend.
She w oke Bronia. ‘We’ll have to leave the canoe and
w alk,’ she said. Bronia looked alarm ed. 'D on't worry. It
can’t be far to the D anube now .’
They walked through the trees to the place where the rivet-
joined the D anube at Falkenburg. There were no trees here,
only green fields, a dusty road, and a good view of the river.
Ruth looked up and down it, hoping to see Jan and Edek.
56
Dangerous water
4
The Silver Sword
12
M issing
58 N
Missing
59
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The Silver Sword
60
Missing
They got in the front seat of the lorry beside Jo e Wolski and
went off along the road to Switzerland.
‘W hat’s in the back of your lorry?’ asked Bronia, hearing
a noise.
The Silver Sword
62
The storm
13
The storm
64
The storm
65
The Silver Sword
66
The storm
67
The Silver Sword
68
The storm
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The Silver Sword
14
Safe!
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Safe!
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to «
A
The Silver Sword
Jan pulled open his shirt. And there w as the silver sword,
tied to a thin piece o f rope round his neck. ‘I knew if I kept the
sword safe,’ he said to Joseph, ‘we would find you again.’
He untied the sw ord and gave it to Ruth's mother.
‘Joseph gave it to me, but it’s yours now ,’ he said. ‘You
can keep it for ever if you’ll be my m other.’
V V M*
she loved her own children, but Ruth was the only person
who could m anage him. She knew that the way to his heart
was through anim als, and she took him to the farm s near
the village where the farm ers soon discovered that Jan
could do alm ost anything with a sick animal. So in time,
even the wild Jan grew up and learned to behave well.
At the beginning, Ruth found the new life more difficult
than the others. She had been clever and brave and had
looked after Edek, Bronia and Jan like a mother. But she
had grown up too quickly, and at first she behaved like a
young child, not wanting to leave her mother, and following
iVlargrit Balicki everywhere. But slowly Ruth became better/
and in 1947 she went to Zurich university. Four years later,
then a teacher, she married a young Frenchman who had
come to work in the children’s village. When a second
French house w as built, Ruth and her husband became
house-parents. They may still be there.
And not far aw ay, in the Polish house, M argrit Balicki
keeps som ething very special, in its own special box.
The silver sword.
GLOSSARY
ACTIVITIES
ACT IVITI ES
Before Reading
1 J a n will g o to prison. Y /N
2 M r Balicki will see the silver sw o rd ag a in . Y / N
3 One o f the children dies on the journey. Y /N
4 T h e children will find both o f their parents. Y /N
5 J a n will find his fam ily again. Y /N
While Reading
I * ■. ’ ■' . ' r
1 R e a d C h ap ters 1 to 3. C h o o s e the best q u estio n -w o rd fo r these
q uestions, and then a n s w e r them.
77
44
4
a c t iv it ie s : While Reading
1 ‘I s u p p o s e th at w a s a birthday p resent!’
2 ‘H e ’s no t s tr o n g en o ugh to w ork o u tsid e .’
3 ‘Y o u an d I sh o u ld be enem ies.’
4 ‘W e m u st help y o u to find her.’
78
a c t iv it ie s : While Reading
5 ‘ H e - he c a n ’ t hear o r s p e a k . ’
6 ‘T h e y m ust g o hom e, like the rest.’
7 ‘ I k n o w he’s alive.-I k n o w it in m y h eart.’
8 ‘ It’s y o u r only chance to e sc a p e .’
B efo re you read C h a p te r 14, c an you gu ess how the story will
end? Circle Y (Yes) o r N (N o ) for each sentence.
79
'if ■
4
AC TI VIT IE S
After Reading
SO
a c t iv it ie s : After Reading
81
a c t iv it ie s : After Reading
a h c e m s r e s 1
b n c r p e r e z e
c p 1 y r s r n
J 0 C A M P S E P H
s G B A R N R A L V
1 Z 0 N E E U R 0 1
G A T T 0 M 1 0 R E
N R B U T !I N P R C
A C E L L A R E Y A
L H P A D D L E T N!
S Y R 1 F L E 0 U 0!
R A P1 D S R S N E i
0 W M A T T R E S s s
1 W h a t is the sentence?
*
2 W h o said it, a n d to w h om ?
3 W h a t w a s he h o ld in g in his hands?
'8 2
a c t iv it ie s : After Reading
M y d ear friends,
At last we have arrived at a c a m p n ea r L a k e C onstance. T h e
journey in the c an o es w a s quite difficult fo r Bronia and me.
W hen we p a sse d the village, an A m e ric a n s o l d i e r ___________ .
W e g o t aw a y from him w h e n ____________ . L ater w e found
o u r paddle, an d went d o w n the river to Falkenbu rg. T h ere we
f o u n d ___________ .
Ed ek becam e very ill an d I w a s w o rried t h a t ___________ .
Luckily, a soldier called J o e W o l s k i ___________ .
N o w we w an t to go to S w itzerlan d - but first we have to '
___________ . J a n thinks that h e ____________ . C ou ld you send it
to us? T h en p erh ap s the c a m p o f f i c i a l ___________ .
T h a n k you so m uch f o r ____________. W e w i l l ____________ .
Love from R uth
83
H* *
sam
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
34
h
i
ABOUT BOOKWORMS
S t a g e 2 (' ( S I h e a d w o r d s ) S ta g e 5 (1800 h e ad w o rd s)
M o r e t h a n hf ry t it le s a r e a l s o a v a i l a b l e o n c a s s e t t e , a n d t h e r e a r e m a n y /
t itle s a t S t a g e s 1 to 4 w hich a re sp e cia lly re c o m m e n d e d for yo u n ge r
learn ers. In a dd itio n ro the in tro d u ctio n s and activities in each
B o o k w o r m , r e s o u r c e m a t e r i a l i n c l u d e s p h o t o c o p i a b l e te st w o r k s h e e t s
and T e a c h e r 's H a n d b o o k s , w hich c o n ta in adv ice on run nin g a class ti
li b r a r y a n d u s i n g c a s s e t t e s , a n d t h e a n s w e r s f o r th e a c t i v i t i e s in th e b o o k s .
85
4
B O O K W O R M S • T H R I L L E R Sc A D V E N T U R E • S T A G E 4
Treasure Island
RO BER T L O U IS STEV EN SO N
R etold by Jo h n Escott
B O O K W O R M S • T H R I L L E R Sc A D V E N T U R E • S T A G E 4
Retold by Jo h n Escott
86'
BO OK WO RM S • T H R I LL E R & A D V E NT U RE • STAGE 4
M r M idshipm an Hornblower .
C. S. FO RESTER
R etold by R alph M o w at
Little Women
L O U ISA MAY A LCO TT
R etold by Jo h n Escott
Great Expectations
CHARLES D IC K E N S
R e to ld by C la re Vr est
SS
r ' . l ar copeneahi s wooden box?" i ;-
-v ^ ^ K fc ^ T ^ w illtb n n a x m e ^ " „
h o p e tp i.fin ^