新视野英语第四册课文原文.pdf
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1、The Temptation of a Respectable WomanMrs.Baroda was a little annoyed to learn that her husband expected hisfriend,Gouvernail,up to spend a week or two on the plantation.Gouvernails quiet personality puzzled Mrs.Baroda.After a few days withhim,she could understand him no better than at first.She left
2、 her husband andhis guest,for the most part,alone together,only to find that Gouvernail hardlynoticed her absence.Then she imposed her company upon him,accompanying him in his idle walks to the mill to press her attempt to penetratethe silence in which he had unconsciously covered himself.But it har
3、dlyworked.When is he going your friend?she one day asked her husband.Formy part,I find him a terrible nuisance.Not for a week yet,dear.I cant understand;he gives you no trouble.No.I should like him better if he did if he were more like others,and Ihad to plan somewhat for his comfort and enjoyment.G
4、aston pulled the sleeve of his wifes dress,gathered his arms around herwaist and looked merrily into her troubled eyes.You are full of surprises,he said to her.Even I can never count uponhow you are going to act under given conditions.Here you are,he went on,taking poor Gouvernail seriously and maki
5、ng a fuss about him,the last thinghe would desire or expect.Fuss!she hotly replied.Nonsense!How can you say such a thing!Fuss,indeed!But,you know,you said he was clever.So he is.But the poor fellow is run down by too much work now.Thatswhy I asked him here to take a rest.You used to say he was a man
6、 of wit,she said,still annoyed.I expectedhim to be interesting,at least.Im going to the city in the morning to have myspring dresses fitted.Let me know when Mr.Gouvernail is gone;until that time Ishall be at my aunts house.That night she went and sat alone upon a bench that stood beneath anoak tree
7、at the edge of the walk.She had never known her thoughts to be soconfused;like the bats now above her,her thoughts quickly flew this way andthat.She could gather nothing from them but the feeling of a distinct necessityto leave her home in the next morning.Mrs.Baroda heard footsteps coming from the
8、direction of the barn;sheknew it was Gouvernail.She hoped to remain unnoticed,but her white gownrevealed her to him.He seated himself upon the bench beside her,without asuspicion that she might object to his presence.Your husband told me to bring this to you,Mrs.Baroda,he said,handingher a length of
9、 sheer white fabric with which she sometimes covered her headand shoulders.She accepted it from him and let it lie in her lap.He made some routine observations upon the unhealthy effect of the nightbreeze at that season.Then as his gaze reached out into the darkness,hebegan to talk.Gouvernail was in
10、 no sense a shy man.His periods of silence were not hisbasic nature,but the result of moods.When he was sitting there besideMrs.Baroda,his silence melted for the time.He talked freely and intimately in a low,hesitating voice that was notunpleasant to hear.He talked of the old college days when he an
11、d Gaston hadbeen best friends,of the days of keen ambitions and large intentions.Now,allthere was left with him was a desire to be permitted to exist,with now and thena little breath of genuine life,such as he was breathing now.Her mind only vaguely grasped what he was saying.His words became ameani
12、ngless succession of verbs,nouns,adverbs,and adjectives;she onlydrank in the tones of his voice.She wanted to reach out her hand in thedarkness and touch him which she might have done if she had not been arespectable woman.The stronger the desire grew to bring herself near him,the further,in fact,di
13、d she move away from him.As soon as she could do so without anappearance of being rude,she pretended to yawn,rose,and left him therealone.Mrs.Baroda was greatly tempted that night to tell her husband-who wasalso her friend of this foolishness that had seized her.But she did not yieldto the temptatio
14、n.Besides being an upright and respectable woman she wasalso a very sensible one.When Gaston arose the next morning,his wife had already departed,without even saying farewell.A porter had carried her trunk to the station andshe had taken an early morning train to the city.She did not return untilGou
15、vernail was gone from under her roof.There was some talk of having him back during the summer that followed.That is,Gaston greatly desired it;but this desire yielded to his honorable wifesvigorous opposition.However,before the year ended,she proposed,wholly from herself,tohave Gouvernail visit them
16、again.Her husband was surprised and delightedwith the suggestion coming from her.I am glad,my dear,to know that you have finally overcome your dislikefor him;truly he did not deserve it.Oh,she told him,laughingly,after pressing a long,tender kiss upon hislips,I have overcome everything!You will see.
17、This time I shall be very nice tohim.Charlie ChaplinHe was born in a poor area of south London.He wore his mothersold red stockings cut down for ankle socks.His mother was temporarilydeclared mad.Dickens might have created Charlie Chaplins childhood.Butonly Charle Chaplin could have created the grea
18、t comic character of theTramp,the little man in rags who gave his creator permanent fame.Other countries France,Italy,Spain,even Japan and Korea have provided more applause(and profit)where Chaplin is concerned than theland of his birth.Chaplin quit Britain for good in 1913 when he journeyed toAmeri
19、ca with a group of performers to do his comedy act on the stage wheretalent scouts recruited him to work for Mack Sennett,the king of Hollywoodcomedy films.Sad to say,many English people in the 1920s and 1930s thoughtChaplins Tramp a bit,well,crude Certainly middle-class audiences did;theworking-cla
20、ss audiences were more likely to clap for a character who revoltedagainst authority,using his wicked little cane to trip it up,or aiming the heel ofhis boot for a well-placed kick at its broad rear.All the same,Chaplins comicbeggar didnt seem all that English or even working class.English trampsdidn
21、t sport tiny moustaches,huge pants or tail coats:European leaders andItalian waiters wore things like that.Then again,the Tramps quick eye for apretty girl had a coarse way about it that was considered,well,not quite niceby English audiences-thats how foreigners behaved,wasnt it?But forover half of
22、his screen career,Chaplin had no screen voice to confirm hisBritish nationality.Indeed,it was a headache for Chaplin when he could no longer resistthe talking movies and had to find the right voice for his Tramp.Hepostponed that day as long as possible:in Modern Times in 1936,the first filmin which
23、he was heard as a singing waiter,he made up a nonsense languagewhich sounded like no known nationality.He later said he imagined the Trampto be a college-educated gentleman whod come down in the world.But if hedbeen able to speak with an educated accent in those early short comedymovies,its doubtful
24、 if he would have achieved world fame.And the Englishwould have been sure to find it odd.No one was certain whether Chaplin didit on purpose but this helped to bring about his huge success.He was an immensely talented man,determined to a degree unusualeven in the ranks of Hollywood stars.His huge fa
25、me gave him the freedom 一 and,more importantly,the money to be his own master.He already hadthe urge to explore and extend a talent he discovered in himself as he wentalong.It cant be me.Is that possible?How extraordinary,is how he greetedthe first sight of himself as the Tramp on the screen.But tha
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