现代大学英语精读Book 4-Unit 6课文.doc
《现代大学英语精读Book 4-Unit 6课文.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《现代大学英语精读Book 4-Unit 6课文.doc(5页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、【精品文档】如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流现代大学英语精读Book 4-Unit 6课文.精品文档.Book 4-Unit 5Text AThe TelephoneAnwar F. Accawi1. When I was growing up in Magdaluna, a small Lebanese village in the terraced, rocky mountains east of Sidon, time didnt mean much to anybody, except maybe to those who were dying. In those days,
2、there was no real need for a calendar or a watch to keep track of the hours, days, months, and years. We knew what to do and when to do it, just as the Iraqi geese knew when to fly north, driven by the hot wind that blew in from the desert. The only timepiece we had need of then was the sun. It rose
3、 and set, and the seasons rolled by and we sowed seed and harvested and ate and played and married our cousins and had babies who got whooping cough and chickenpoxand those children who survived grew up and married their cousins and had babies who got whooping cough and chickenpox. We lived and love
4、d and toiled and died without ever needing to know what year it was, or even the time of day.2. It wasnt that we had no system for keeping track of time and of the important events in our lives. But ours was a natural or, rather, a divinecalendar, because it was framed by acts of God: earthquakes an
5、d droughts and floods and locusts and pestilences. Simple as our calendar was, it worked just fine for us.3. Take, for example, the birth date of Teta Im Khalil, the oldest woman in Magdaluna and all the surrounding villages. When I asked Grandma, How old is Teta Im Khalil?4. Grandma had to think fo
6、r a moment; then she said, Ive been told that Teta was born shortly after the big snow that caused the roof on the mayors house to cave in.5. And when was that? I asked.6. Oh, about the time we had the big earthquake that cracked the wall in the east room.7. Well, that was enough for me. You couldnt
7、 be more accurate than that, now, could you?8. And thats the way it was in our little village for as far back as anybody could remember. One of the most unusual of the dates was when a whirlwind struck during which fish and oranges fell from the sky. Incredible as it may sound, the story of the fish
8、 and oranges was true, because men who would not lie even to save their own souls told and retold that story until it was incorporated into Magdalunas calendar.9. The year of the fish-bearing whirlpool was not the last remarkable year. Many others followed in which strange and wonderful things happe
9、ned. There was, for instance, the year of the drought, when the heavens were shut for months and the spring from which the entire village got its drinking water slowed to a trickle. The spring was about a mile from the village, in a ravine that opened at one end into a small, flat clearing covered w
10、ith fine gray dust and hard, marble-sized goat droppings. In the year of the drought, that little clearing was always packed full of noisy kids with big brown eyes and sticky hands, and their motherssinewy, overworked young women with cracked, brown heels. The children ran around playing tag or hide
11、-and-seek while the women talked, shooed flies, and awaited their turns to fill up their jars with drinking water to bring home to their napping men and wet babies. There were days when we had to wait from sunup until late afternoon just to fill a small clay jar with precious, cool water.10. Sometim
12、es, amid the long wait and the heat and the flies and the smell of goat dung, tempers flared, and the younger women, anxious about their babies, argued over whose turn it was to fill up her jar. And sometimes the arguments escalated into full-blown, knockdown-dragout fights; the women would grab eac
13、h other by the hair and curse and scream and spit and call each other names that made my ears tingle. We little brown boys who went with our mothers to fetch water loved these fights, because we got to see the womens legs and their colored panties as they grappled and rolled around in the dust. Once
14、 in a while, we got lucky and saw much more, because some of the women wore nothing at all under their long dresses. God, how I used to look forward to those fights. I remember the rush, the excitement, the sun dancing on the dust clouds as a dress ripped and a young white breast was revealed, then
15、quickly hidden. In my calendar, that year of drought will always be one of the best years of my childhood.11. But, in another way, the year of the drought was also one of the worst of my life, because that was the year that Abu Raja, the retired cook, decided it was time Magdaluna got its own teleph
16、one. Every civilized village needed a telephone, he said, and Magdaluna was not going to get anywhere until it had one. A telephone would link us with the outside world. A few menlike the retired Turkish-army drill sergeant, and the vineyard keeperdid all they could to talk Abu Raja out of having a
17、telephone brought to the village. But they were outshouted and ignored and finally shunned by the other villagers for resisting progress and trying to keep a good thing from coming to Magdaluna.12. One warm day in early fall, many of the villagers were out in their fields repairing walls or gatherin
18、g wood for the winter when the shout went out that the telephone-company truck had arrived at Abu Rajas dikkan, or country store. When the truck came into view, everybody dropped what they were doing and ran to Abu Rajas house to see what was happening.13. It did not take long for the whole village
19、to assemble at Abu Rajas dikkan. Some of the rich villagers walked right into the store and stood at the elbows of the two important-looking men from the telephone company, who proceeded with utmost gravity, like priests at Communion, to wire up the telephone. The poorer villagers stood outside and
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 现代大学英语精读Book 4-Unit 6课文 现代 大学 英语 精读 Book Unit 课文
限制150内