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现代大学英语精读第三册 02b

时间:2011-01-05 05:04来源:互联网 提供网友:cd2423   字体: [ ]
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  You hear it said that fathers want their sons to be what they feel they cannot themselves be, but I tell you it also works the other way. A boy wants something very special from his father. I know that as a boy I wanted my father to be a proud, silent, dignified1 man. When I was with other boys and he passed along the street, I wanted to feel a flow of pride. “There he is. That is my father.”
But he wasn’t such a one. He couldn’t be. It seemed to me then that he was always showing off. Let’s say someone in our town had got up a show. They were always doing it. The druggist would be in it, the shoe-store clerk, the horse doctor, and a lot of women and girls. My father would manage to get the chief comedy part. It was, let’s say, a civil war play and he was a comic Irish soldier. He had to do the most absurd things. They thought he was funny, I though he was terrible. I didn’t see how mother could stand it. She even laughed with others.
Or there was a parade. He’d be in that, too, right at the front of it, as grand marshal or something, on a white horse hired from a livery stable.
I remember once when he had done something ridiculous, and right out on Main Street, too, I was with some other boys and they were laughing and shouting at him and he was shouting back and having as good a time as they were. I ran down an alley2 back of some stores and, there in the Presbyterian Church sheds, I had a good long cry.
Or I will be in bed at night and father would come home and bring some men with him. He was a man who was never alone. Before he went broke, running a harness shop, there were always a lot of men loafing in the shop. He went broke, of course, because he gave too much credit. He couldn’t refuse it, and I thought he was a fool.
There’d be men I didn’t think would be fooling around with him. There might even be the superintendent4 of our school and a quiet man who ran the hardware store. Once I remember there was a white-haired man who was a cashier of the bank. It was a wonder to me they’d want to be seen with such a windbag5. I know now what it was that attracted them. It was because life in our town was at times pretty dull and he livened it up. He could tell stories. He made them laugh.
If they didn’t come to our house they’d go off, say at night, to where there was a grassy6 place by a creek7. They’d cook food there and drink beer and sit about listening to his stories.
He was always telling stores about himself. He’d say this or that wonderful thing had happened to him. It might be something that made him look like a fool. He didn’t care.
If an Irishman came to our house, right away father would say he was Irish. He’d tell what country in Ireland he was born in. he’d tell things that happened there when he was a boy. He’d make it seem so real that, if I hadn’t known he was born in southern Ohio, I’d have believed him myself.
If it was a Scotsman, a German or a Swede, the same thing happened. He’d be anything the other man was. I think they all knew he was lying, but they seemed to like him just the same.
A lot of father’s stories were about the civil war. To hear him tell it he’d been in about every battle. He’d known grant, Sherman, Sheridan and I don’t know how many others. He’d been particularly intimate with general grant so that when grant went east to take charge of all the armies, he took father along.
“I was an orderly at headquarters and Sim Grant said to me, ‘Irve,’ he said, ‘I’m going to take you along with me.’
It seems he and grant used to slip off sometimes and have a quiet drink together. He’d tell about the day lee surrendered and how, when the great moment came, they couldn’t find grant.
“You know,” my father said, “about he general’s memoirs8. You’ve read of how he had a headache and how, when he got word that lee was ready to call it quits, he was suddenly and miraculously9 cured.
“Huh,” said father. “he was in the woods with me.
“I was there with my back against a tree. I had got hold of a bottle of pretty good stuff.
“They were looking for grant. He had got off his horse and come into the woods. He found me. He was covered with mud.
“I had the bottle in my hand. What’d I care? The war was over. I knew we had them licked.”
My father said that he was the one who told grant about lee. An orderly riding by had told him, because the orderly knew how thick he was with grant. Grant was embarrassed.
“But irve, look at me. I’m all covered with mud,” he said to father.
And then my father said, he and grant decided10 to have a drink together. They took a couple of shots and then because he didn’t want grant to show up drunk before lee, he smashed the bottle against the tree.
That’s just the kind of thing he’d tell. Of course the men knew he was lying, but they seemed to like it just the same.
When we were broke down and out, do you think he ever brought anything home? Not he. If there wasn’t anything to eat in the house, he’d go off visiting around at farmhouses11. They all wanted him. Sometimes he’s stay away for weeks, mother working to keep us fed, and then home he’d come bringing, let’s say, a ham. He’d got it from some farmer friend. He’d slap it on the table in the kitchen. “You bet I’m going to see that my kids have something to eat,” he’d say, and mother would just stand smiling at him. She’d never say a word about her all the weeks he’d been away, not leaving us a cent for food. Once I heard her speaking to a woman in our street. Maybe the woman had cared to sympathize with her. “Oh,” she said, “it’s all right. Life is never dull when my man is about.”
But often I was filled with bitterness, and sometimes I wished he wasn’t my father. I’d even invent another man as my father. To protect my mother I’d make up stories of a secret marriage that for some strange reason never got known. As though some man, say, the president of a railroad company or maybe a congressman12, had married my mother, thinking his wife was dead and then it turned out she wasn’t.
So they had to hush13 it up but I got born just the same, I wasn’t really the son of my father. Somewhere in the world there was a very dignified man who was really my father.
And then there came a certain night. He’d been off somewhere for two or three weeks. He found me alone in the house, reading by the kitchen table.
It had been raining and he was very wet. He sat and looked at me for a lone3 time, not saying a word. I was startled, for there was on his face the saddest look I had never seen. He sat for a time, his clothes dripping. Then he got up.
“Come on with me,” he said.
I got up and went with him out of the house. I was filled with wonder but I wasn’t afraid. We went along a dirt road that led down into a valley, about a mile out of town, where there was a pond. We walked in silence. The man who was always talking had stopped his talking.
I didn’t know what was up and had the queer feeling that I was with a stranger.
The pond was quite large. It was still raining hard and there were flashes of lightning followed by thunder. We were on a grassy bank at the pond’s edge when my father spoke14, and in the darkness and rain his voice sounded strange.
Take off your clothes,” he said, still filled with wonder, I began to undress. There was a flash of lighting15 and I saw that he was already naked.
Naked, we went into the pond. Taking my hand he pulled me in. it may be that I was too frightened, too full of a feeling of strangeness, to speak. Before that night my father had never seemed to pay any attention to me.
I did not swim very well, but he put my hand on his shoulder and struck out into the darkness.
He was a man with big shoulders, a powerful swimmer. In the darkness I could feel the movement of his muscles. We swam to the wind blew. Sometimes there would be a flash of lightning and I could see his face clearly.
It was as it was earlier, in the kitchen, a face filled with sadness. There would be the momentary16 glimpse of his face and then again the darkness, the wind, and the rain. In me there was a feeling I had never known before.
It was a feeling of closeness. It was something strange. It was as though there were only we two in the world. It was as though I had been jerked suddenly out of my world of the schoolboy, out of a world in which I was ashamed of my father.
He had become blood of my blood; he the strong swimmer and I the boy clinging to him in the darkness. We swam in silence and in silence we dressed out wet clothes, and went home.
There was a lamp lighted in the kitchen and when we came in, the water dripping from us, there was my mother. She smiled at us. I remember that she called us “boys.”
“What have you boys been up to,” she asked, but my father did not answer. He turned and looked at me. Then he went, I though, with a strange dignity out of the room.
I climbed the stairs to my own room, undressed in the darkness and got into bed. I couldn’t sleep and did not want to sleep. For the first time I knew that I was the son of my father. He was a story talker as I want to be. It may be that I even laughed a little, softly there in the darkness. If I did, I laughed knowing that would never again be wanting another father.


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1 dignified NuZzfb     
a.可敬的,高贵的
参考例句:
  • Throughout his trial he maintained a dignified silence. 在整个审讯过程中,他始终沉默以保持尊严。
  • He always strikes such a dignified pose before his girlfriend. 他总是在女友面前摆出这种庄严的姿态。
2 alley Cx2zK     
n.小巷,胡同;小径,小路
参考例句:
  • We live in the same alley.我们住在同一条小巷里。
  • The blind alley ended in a brick wall.这条死胡同的尽头是砖墙。
3 lone Q0cxL     
adj.孤寂的,单独的;唯一的
参考例句:
  • A lone sea gull flew across the sky.一只孤独的海鸥在空中飞过。
  • She could see a lone figure on the deserted beach.她在空旷的海滩上能看到一个孤独的身影。
4 superintendent vsTwV     
n.监督人,主管,总监;(英国)警务长
参考例句:
  • He was soon promoted to the post of superintendent of Foreign Trade.他很快就被擢升为对外贸易总监。
  • He decided to call the superintendent of the building.他决定给楼房管理员打电话。
5 windbag QgcwX     
n.风囊,饶舌之人,好说话的人
参考例句:
  • Everyone knows he's a real windbag.大家都知道他是个很罗嗦的人。
  • Did you ever see such a windbag?你有见过这样饶舌的人?
6 grassy DfBxH     
adj.盖满草的;长满草的
参考例句:
  • They sat and had their lunch on a grassy hillside.他们坐在长满草的山坡上吃午饭。
  • Cattle move freely across the grassy plain.牛群自由自在地走过草原。
7 creek 3orzL     
n.小溪,小河,小湾
参考例句:
  • He sprang through the creek.他跳过小河。
  • People sunbathe in the nude on the rocks above the creek.人们在露出小溪的岩石上裸体晒日光浴。
8 memoirs f752e432fe1fefb99ab15f6983cd506c     
n.回忆录;回忆录传( mem,自oir的名词复数)
参考例句:
  • Her memoirs were ghostwritten. 她的回忆录是由别人代写的。
  • I watched a trailer for the screenplay of his memoirs. 我看过以他的回忆录改编成电影的预告片。 来自《简明英汉词典》
9 miraculously unQzzE     
ad.奇迹般地
参考例句:
  • He had been miraculously saved from almost certain death. 他奇迹般地从死亡线上获救。
  • A schoolboy miraculously survived a 25 000-volt electric shock. 一名男学生在遭受2.5 万伏的电击后奇迹般地活了下来。
10 decided lvqzZd     
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
参考例句:
  • This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
  • There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
11 farmhouses 990ff6ec1c7f905b310e92bc44d13886     
n.农舍,农场的主要住房( farmhouse的名词复数 )
参考例句:
  • Then perhaps she is staying at one of cottages or farmhouses? 那么也许她现在住在某个农舍或哪个农场的房子里吧? 来自辞典例句
  • The countryside was sprinkled with farmhouses. 乡间到处可见农家的房舍。 来自辞典例句
12 Congressman TvMzt7     
n.(美)国会议员
参考例句:
  • He related several anecdotes about his first years as a congressman.他讲述自己初任议员那几年的几则轶事。
  • The congressman is meditating a reply to his critics.这位国会议员正在考虑给他的批评者一个答复。
13 hush ecMzv     
int.嘘,别出声;n.沉默,静寂;v.使安静
参考例句:
  • A hush fell over the onlookers.旁观者们突然静了下来。
  • Do hush up the scandal!不要把这丑事声张出去!
14 spoke XryyC     
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说
参考例句:
  • They sourced the spoke nuts from our company.他们的轮辐螺帽是从我们公司获得的。
  • The spokes of a wheel are the bars that connect the outer ring to the centre.辐条是轮子上连接外圈与中心的条棒。
15 lighting CpszPL     
n.照明,光线的明暗,舞台灯光
参考例句:
  • The gas lamp gradually lost ground to electric lighting.煤气灯逐渐为电灯所代替。
  • The lighting in that restaurant is soft and romantic.那个餐馆照明柔和而且浪漫。
16 momentary hj3ya     
adj.片刻的,瞬息的;短暂的
参考例句:
  • We are in momentary expectation of the arrival of you.我们无时无刻不在盼望你的到来。
  • I caught a momentary glimpse of them.我瞥了他们一眼。
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