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Introduction to Literary Chinese - Lesson 5, Text 2

Adapted from the 1927 book by J. Brandt
Hail
An autumn day was burning hot, and the sweltering heat did not abate.
Suddenly a dark mist spread out in all directions, and a great wind rushed in.
Pieces of ice in the air jostled each other and fell to the earth with noise.
The clanging of the roof tiles and the wind-chimes blared in one's ears.
A boy was startled and asked, "The weather was just so hot, how can there be snow?"
His father said, "It is not snow; it is called hail."
The boy asked, "Where does hail come from?"
The father said, "When water vapors in the air, about to become rain drops, suddenly are blown by cold winds in the heights, they instantly set into clumps of ice and fall down in disorder.
The small ones are like beans, the large ones are like a hen's egg.
It injures crops, hurts men and cattle, destroys huts and sheds, and often causes extraordinary camalities."