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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
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After those first five weeks, after the close of boot camp, the color sergeants1 eased up. Ever soslightly. They didn’t shout at us quite so much. They treated us like soldiers.
As such, however, it was time to learn about war. How to make it, how to win it. Some of thisinvolved stupefyingly boring classroom lessons. The better bits involved drills simulating differentways of being killed, or not, depending.
CBRN, they were called. Chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear. We practiced putting onprotective gear, pulling it off, cleaning and wiping the poisons and other muck that might bethrown, dropped or sprayed on us. We dug countless3 trenches4, donned masks, curled into the fetalposition, rehearsed the Book of Revelation over and over.
One day the color sergeants assembled us outside a redbrick building, which had been turnedinto a CS gas chamber5. They ordered us inside, activated6 the gas. We took off our gas masks, putthem on again, took them off. If you weren’t quick about it, you got a mouthful, a lungful. But youcouldn’t always be quick, and that was the point, so eventually everyone sucked gas. The exerciseswere supposed to be about war; to me they were about death. The whole leitmotif of Armytraining was death. How to avoid it, but also how to face it, head-on.
It felt natural, therefore, almost inevitable7, that they put us on buses and took us to BrookwoodMilitary Cemetery8, to stand on graves, to listen as someone read a poem.
“For the Fallen.”
The poem predated the ghastliest wars of the twentieth century, so it still had a trace ofinnocence.
They shall not grow old,
As we that are left grow old…
It was striking how much of our earliest training was intercut, leavened9, with poetry. The gloryof dying, the beauty of dying, the necessity of dying, these concepts were pounded into our headsalong with the skills to avoid dying. Sometimes it was explicit10, but sometimes it was right in ourfaces. Whenever we were herded11 into chapel12 we’d look up and see etched in stone: Dulce etdecorum est pro2 patria mori.
Sweet and fitting it is to die for one’s country.
Words first written by an ancient Roman, an exile, then repurposed by a young British soldierwho’d died for his country. Repurposed ironically, but no one told us that. They certainly weren’tetched ironically into that stone.
Poetry, for me, was slightly preferable to history. And psychology13. And military strategy. Iwince just remembering those long hours, those hard chairs in Faraday Hall and Churchill Hall,reading books and memorizing dates, analyzing14 famous battles, writing essays on the mostesoteric concepts of military strategy. These, for me, were the ultimate trials of Sandhurst.
Given a choice, I’d have taken five more weeks of boot camp.
I fell asleep in Churchill Hall, more than once.
You there, Mr. Wales! You’re sleeping!
We were advised, when feeling sleepy, to jump up, get the blood flowing. But that seemedoverly confrontational15. By standing16 you were informing the instructor17 that he or she was a bore.
What sort of mood would they be in when it came time to mark your next paper?
Weeks ran together. In week nine—or was it ten?—we learned bayoneting. Wintry morning. Afield in Castlemartin, Wales. The color sergeants put on head-splitting punk rock music, fullvolume, to rouse our animal spirits, and then we began running at sandbag dummies18, bayonetshigh, slashing19 and shouting: KILL! KILL! KILL!
When the whistles blew, when the drill was “over,” some guys couldn’t turn it off. They keptstabbing and stabbing their dummies. A quick glimpse into the dark side of human nature. Thenwe all laughed and pretended we hadn’t seen what we’d just seen.
Week twelve—or maybe thirteen?—was guns and grenades. I was a good shot. I’d beenshooting rabbits and pigeons and squirrels with a .22 since I was twelve.
But now I got better.
So much better.
1 sergeants | |
警官( sergeant的名词复数 ); (美国警察)警佐; (英国警察)巡佐; 陆军(或空军)中士 | |
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2 pro | |
n.赞成,赞成的意见,赞成者 | |
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3 countless | |
adj.无数的,多得不计其数的 | |
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4 trenches | |
深沟,地沟( trench的名词复数 ); 战壕 | |
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5 chamber | |
n.房间,寝室;会议厅;议院;会所 | |
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6 activated | |
adj. 激活的 动词activate的过去式和过去分词 | |
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7 inevitable | |
adj.不可避免的,必然发生的 | |
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8 cemetery | |
n.坟墓,墓地,坟场 | |
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9 leavened | |
adj.加酵母的v.使(面团)发酵( leaven的过去式和过去分词 );在…中掺入改变的因素 | |
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10 explicit | |
adj.详述的,明确的;坦率的;显然的 | |
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11 herded | |
群集,纠结( herd的过去式和过去分词 ); 放牧; (使)向…移动 | |
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12 chapel | |
n.小教堂,殡仪馆 | |
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13 psychology | |
n.心理,心理学,心理状态 | |
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14 analyzing | |
v.分析;分析( analyze的现在分词 );分解;解释;对…进行心理分析n.分析 | |
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15 confrontational | |
adj.挑衅的;对抗的 | |
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16 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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17 instructor | |
n.指导者,教员,教练 | |
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18 dummies | |
n.仿制品( dummy的名词复数 );橡皮奶头;笨蛋;假传球 | |
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19 slashing | |
adj.尖锐的;苛刻的;鲜明的;乱砍的v.挥砍( slash的现在分词 );鞭打;割破;削减 | |
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