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・ The She-bear
・ The She-Creature
・ The She-Devil
・ The She-Wolf (1965 film)
・ The Sheaf
・ The Sheards
・ The Shearing Touch
・ The Shebang
・ The Sheboygan Press
・ The Sheds
・ The Sheep
・ The Sheep and the Goats
・ The Sheep Has Five Legs
・ The Sheep Look Up
・ The Sheep Thief
The Sheep-Pig
・ The Sheepdogs
・ The Sheepdogs (album)
・ The Sheepman
・ The Sheer
・ The Sheet
・ The Sheffield College
・ The Sheffield Institute for the Recording Arts
・ The Sheffield Private School
・ The Sheffield Tower
・ The Sheik (film)
・ The Sheik (novel)
・ The Sheik II
・ The Sheik of Araby
・ The Sheik of Scrubby Creek


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The Sheep-Pig : ウィキペディア英語版
The Sheep-Pig

''The Sheep-Pig'', or ''Babe, the Gallant Pig'' in the U.S., is a children's novel by Dick King-Smith, first published by Gollancz in 1983 with illustrations by Mary Rayner. Set in rural England, where King-Smith spent twenty years as a farmer, it features a lone pig on a sheep farm. It was adapted as the 1995 film ''Babe'', which was a great international success. King-Smith won the 1984 Guardian Children's Fiction Award, a once-in-a-lifetime book award judged by a panel of British children's writers.〔
Crown published the first U.S. edition in 1985, retaining the Rayner illustrations under the new title ''Babe, the Gallant Pig''.〔 There have been dozens of English-language editions and translations in fifteen other languages, primarily in 1995 and later, sometimes with new illustrations.〔("Formats and Editions of The sheep-pig" ). WorldCat. Retrieved 2012-08-04.〕
==Storyline==

The plot revolves around a young pig, won at a fair by a local sheep farmer named Farmer Hogget. He has no use for pigs, so his wife intends to fatten up the "little porker" for Christmas dinner.
In unfamiliar surroundings the little piglet is scared. However he meets Fly the sheepdog, who takes pity on him and comforts him. She asks what his name is, and he replies that his mother called all her children Babe. Fly and her puppies teach Babe the rules of the farm. Babe starts to learn how to herd sheep, first practising and failing with the ducks. However he has the idea of herding the sheep by asking them politely rather than ordering them about like sheep-dogs do. Fly's puppies are soon sold and Fly is heartbroken and so Babe asks her if he could be her son.
One day Farmer Hogget and Fly bring a sickly ewe named Maa back to the farm. When Babe meets Maa in the farm stable Maa helps Babe to realise that sheep are not as stupid as Fly has told him. Babe promises to visit Maa again when she is well. Some time later, when Babe visits Maa in the fields, he sees sheep rustlers stealing the sheep. Babe saves the sheep and herds them away from the rustlers’ lorry. He also bites one of the rustlers in the leg and squeals so loudly that Mrs. Hogget telephones the police. When the patrol car comes up the lane, the rustlers drive away, with no sheep. Babe has saved the flock and Mrs. Hogget decides to reward him by sparing his life.
Later on Farmer Hogget takes Babe with him up to the fields and, on a whim, asks the pig to round up the sheep. Just as Babe is asking the sheep politely Maa appears in the centre of the herd to tell the sheep about Babe. Hogget is astonished that the sheep are walking in perfect straight lines around their pen. From then on, Babe accompanies Farmer Hogget up to the fields every day.
Hogget starts to think that since Babe is a worthy animal he could enter him into the sheepdog trials. So he starts to train the pig in what he needs to do. One morning, when Babe heads up to the fields alone, he finds the sheep panicking because wild dogs are terrorising them. Babe runs back to the farm and alerts Fly. However, Babe discovers that Maa is critically injured and she dies before she can be helped. Hogget arrives on the scene and sees Babe with a dead sheep and believes that the pig may have killed her. He prepares to put Babe down by shooting him with his gun, in case he is a danger to the other animals. However Mrs. Hogget tells Farmer Hogget about the dogs who have attacked the sheep. Fly, unable to believe that Babe could do such a thing, goes to ask the sheep what really happened. She even forces herself to be polite to them, and so the sheep willingly tell her that Babe saved their lives. Babe is proven innocent and Farmer Hogget resumes his training, entering him into the county sheep dog trials.
Before Babe goes for the trials, Fly manages to obtain a password from the sheep, so that Babe can speak to the sheep he’ll be herding. On the day of the trials Babe and Fly go with Farmer Hogget to the grounds. Farmer Hogget appears with Fly but swaps her for Babe. He performs perfectly, without any commands from Farmer Hogget, and says the password to the sheep. At the end of his trial Babe and Farmer Hogget score full marks, and Farmer Hogget looks down at his sheep-pig and tells him, "That'll do, Pig."
The Sheep-Pig contains twelve short chapters, each one written in speech marks (" "):
:1. "Guess my weight"
:2. "There. Is that nice?"
:3. "Why can't I learn?"
:4. "You'm a polite young chap"
:5. "Keep yelling, young un"
:6. "Good Pig"
:7. "What's trials?"
:8. "Oh, Maa!"
:9. "Was it Babe?"
:10. "Get it off by heart"
:11. "Today is the day"
:12. "That'll do"

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Sheep-Pig」の詳細全文を読む



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