新概念第四册文本.pdf
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1、新概念第四册文本作者:乐羊子1)We can read of things that happened 5,000 years ago in the Near East,where people first learned towrite.But there are some parts of the world where even now people cannot write.The only way thatthey can preserve their history is to recount it as sagas-legends handed down from one gen
2、eration ofstory-tellers to another.These legends are useful because they can tell us something about migrations ofpeople who lived long ago,but none could write down what they did.Anthropologists wondered wherethe remote ancestors of the Polynesian peoples now living in the Pacific Islands came from
3、.The sagas ofthese people explain that some of them came from Indonesia about 2,000 years ago.But the first peoplewho were like ourselves lived so long ago that even their sagas,if they had any,are forgotten.Soarchaeologists have neither history nor legends to help them to find out where the first m
4、odern mencame from.Fortunately,however,ancient men made tools of stone,especially flint,because this is easierto shape than other kinds.They may also have used wood and skins,but these have rotted away.Stonedoes not decay,and so the tools of long ago have remained when even the bones of the men who
5、madethem have disappeared without trace.*2)Why,you may wonder,should spiders be our friends?Because they destroy so many insects,andinsects include some of the greatest enemies of the human race.Insects would make it impossible for usto live in the world;they would devour all our crops and kill our
6、flocks and herds,if it were not for theprotection we get from insect-eating animals.We owe a lot to the birds and beasts who eat insects butall of them put together kill only a fraction of the number destroyed by spiders.Moreover;unlike someof the other insect eaters,spiders never do the least harm
7、to us or our belongings.Spiders are not insects,as many people think,nor even nearly related to them.One can tell thedifference almost at a glance for a spider always has eight legs and an insect never more than six.Howmany spiders are engaged in this work on our behalf?One authority on spiders made
8、 a census of thespiders in a grass field in the south of England,and he estimated that there were more than 2,250,000 inone acre,that is something like 6,000,000 spiders of different kinds on a football pitch.Spiders are busyfor at least half the year in killing insects.It is impossible to make more
9、 than the wildest guess at howmany they kill,but they are hungry creatures,not contentwith only three meals a day.It has been estimated that the weight of all the insects destroyed by spidersin Britain in one year would be greater than the total weight of all the human beings in the country.T.H.GILL
10、ESPIE Spare that Spider from The Listener3)Modern alpinists try to climb mountains by a route which will give them good sport,and the moredifficult it is,the more highly it is regarded.In the pioneering days,however,this was not the case at all.The early climbers were looking for the easiest way to
11、the top because the summit was the prize theysought,especially if it had never been attained before.It is true that during their explorations they oftenfaced difficulties and dangers of the most perilous nature,equipped in a manner which would make amodern climber shudder at the thought,but they did
12、 not go out of their way to court such excitement.They had a single aim,a solitary goal-the top!It is hard for us to realize nowadays how difficult it was for the pioneers.Except for one or two placessuch as Zermatt and Chamonix,which had rapidly become popular,Alpine villages tended to beimpoverish
13、ed settlements cut off from civilization by the high mountains.Such inns as there were weregenerally dirty and flea-ridden;the food simply local cheese accompanied by bread often twelve monthsold,all washed down with coarse wine.Often a valley boasted no inn at all,and climbers found shelterwherever
14、 they could-sometimes with the local priest(who was usually as poor as his parishioners),sometimes with shepherds or cheesemakers.Invariably the background was the same:dirt and poverty,and very uncomfortable.For men accustomed to eating seven-course dinners and sleeping between finelinen sheets at
15、home,the change to the Alps must have been very hard indeed.4)In the Soviet Union several cases have been reported recently of people who can read and detectcolours with their fingers,and even see through solid doors and walls.One case concerns aneleven-year-old schoolgirl,Vera Petrova,who has norma
16、l vision but who can also perceive things withdifferent parts of her skin,and through solid walls.This ability was first noticed by her father.One dayshe came into his office and happened to put her hands on the door of a locked safe.Suddenly she askedher father why he kept so many old newspapers lo
17、cked away there,and even described the way theywere done up in bundles.Veras curious talent was brought to the notice of a scientific research institutein the town of Ulyanovsk,near where she lives,and in April she was given a series of tests by a specialcommission of the Ministry of Health of the R
18、ussian Federal Republic.During these tests she was able toread a newspaper through an opaque screen and,stranger still,by moving her elbow over a childs gameof Lotto she was able to describe the figures and colours printed on it;and,in another instance,wearing stockings and slippers,to make out with
19、 her foot theoutlines and colours of a picture hidden under a carpet.Other experimentsshowed that her knees and shoulders had a similar sensitivity.During all these tests Vera was blindfold;and,indeed,except when blindfold she lacked the ability to perceive things with her skin.It was alsofound that
20、 although she could perceive things with her fingers this ability ceased the moment her handswere wet.5)The gorilla is something of a paradox in the African scene.One thinks one knows him very well.For ahundred years or more he has been killed,captured,and imprisoned,in zoos.His bones have beenmount
21、ed in natural history museums everywhere,and he has always exerted a strong fascination uponscientists and romantics alike.He is the stereotyped monster of the horror films and the adventurebooks,and an obvious(though not perhaps strictly scientific)link with our ancestral past.Yet the fact is we kn
22、ow very little about gorillas.No really satisfactory photograph has ever been taken ofone in a wild state,no zoologist,however intrepid,has been able to keep the animal under close andconstant observation in the dark jungles in which he lives.Carl Akeley,the American naturalist,led twoexpeditions in
23、 the nineteen-twenties,and now lies buried among the animals he loved so well.But evenhe was unable to discover how long the gorilla lives,or how or why it dies,nor was he able to define theexact social pattern of the family groups,or indicate the final extent of their intelligence.All this andmany
24、other things remain almost as much a mystery as they were when the French explorer Du Chaillufirst described the animal to the civilized world a century ago.The Abominable Snowman who hauntsthe imagination of climbers in the Himalayas is hardly more elusive.6)People are always talking about the prob
25、lem of youth*.If there is onewhich I take leave todoubt-then it is older people who create it,not the young themselves.Let us get down to fundamentalsand agree that the young are after all human beings-people just like their elders.There is only onedifference between an old man and a young one:the y
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