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关于英语优秀文章阅读.docx

1、关于英语优秀文章阅读关于英语优秀文章阅读 导读:我根据大家的需要整理了一份关于关于英语优秀文章阅读的内容,具体内容:英语散文的翻译,最难的不是语言的翻译,而是如何传递原文所给人的感觉和神韵。下面是我带来的,欢迎阅读!篇一Alienation and the Internet (网. 英语散文的翻译,最难的不是语言的翻译,而是如何传递原文所给人的感觉和神韵。下面是我带来的,欢迎阅读! 篇一 Alienation and the Internet (网络,你离间了人群?) The Internet provides an amazing forum for the free exchange of

2、 ideas. Given the relatively few restrictions governing access and usage,it is the communications modal equivalent of international waters.1 It is my personal belief that the human potential can only be realized by the globalization of ideas. I developed this position2 years before the Internet came

3、 into wide spread use. And I am excited at the potential for the Internet to dramatically alter our global society for the better. However I am also troubled by the possible unintended negative consequences. There has been much talk about thenew information age.But much less widely reported has been

4、 the notion that the Internet may be responsible for furthering the fragmentation of society by alienating its individual users.3 At first this might sound like an apparent contradiction:how can something,that is on the one hand responsible for global unification by enabling the free exchange of ide

5、as,alienate the participants? I had a recent discussion with a friend of mine who has what he described as aproblemwith the Internet. When I questioned him further he said that he wasaddicted,4 and hasforcedhimself to go off-line. He said that he felt like an alcoholic,in that moderate use of the In

6、ternet was just not possible for him.5 I have not known this fellow to be given to exaggeration,therefore when he described his internet binges,6 when he would spend over twenty-four hours on line non-stop,it gave me pause to think. He said,the Internet isnt real,but I was spending all my time on li

7、ne,so I just had to stop.He went on to say that all of the time that he spent on line might have skewed7 his sense of reality,and that it made him feel lonely and depressed. The fragmentation of society has been lamented for some time now. It seems to me that it probably began in earnest after World

8、 War II when a generation returned from doing great deeds overseas. They won the war,and by God they were going to win the peace. Automobile ownership became commonplace and suburbs were created.Progresswas their mantra.8 So even prior to the Internets widespread popularity,folks were already becomi

9、ng distanced from their extended families and neighbors. And when we fast-forward to today we see an almost cruel irony in that people can and often do develop on-line relationships with folks on the other side of the globe,without leaving their homes. But at the expense of the time that would have

10、otherwise been available for involvement in other activities which might foster a sense of community in their villages,towns and cities. Last weekend my wife and I invited our extended family to our home to celebrate our daughters birthday. During the celebration my young nephew spent the entire tim

11、e on my computer playing a simulated war game. My brother-in-law and I were chatting near by and it struck us that in generations past,his son,my nephew,would have been outside playing with his friends. But now the little fellow goes on line to play his games against his friends in cyberspace. It se

12、ems to me that the Internet is a powerful tool that presents an opportunity for the advancement of the acquisition and application of knowledge. However,based on my personal experience I can understand how,as they surf the web some folks might be confronted with cognitive overload.9 And I can also u

13、nderstand how one might have his or her sense of reality distorted in the process. Is the Internet a real place?Depending upon how areal placeis defined it might very well be. At the very least,I believe that when we use the Internet,we are forced to ask fundamental questions about how we perceive t

14、he world about usperhaps another unintended consequence. Some would argue that the virtual existences created by some users who debate,shop,travel and have romance on line are in fact not real. While others would argue that,since in practical terms,folks are debating,shopping,travelling and having r

15、omance,the converse is true. All of this being said,I believe that the key to realizing the potential of the Internet is in achieving balance in our lives. This would allow us to maximize its potential without losing our sense of place.10 However like most things that is easier said than done. It se

16、ems to me that we are a society that values immediate gratification above all else,and what better place to achieve it than in cyberspace,where the cyber-world is your cyber-oyster.11 The widespread use of the automobile forever changed our society and culture,and perhaps a similar sort of thing is

17、occurring now. I am not at all certain where theinformation superhighwaywill lead us:some say to Utopia,12 while others feel its the road to hell. But I do know that we all have the ability to maintain our sense of place in the world. Whether we choose to take advantage of this ability is another ma

18、tter. 篇二 You! 生命掌握在你的手里超越卓越的你 Consider.YOU. In all time before now and in all time to come,there has never been and will never be anyone just like you. You are unique in the entire history and future of the universe. Wow!Stop and think about that. Youre better than one in a million,or a billion,or a

19、 gazillion. You are the only one like you in a sea of infinity! Youre amazing!Youre awesome!And by the way,TAG,youre it. As amazing and awesome as you already are,you can be even more so. Beautiful young people are the whimsey of nature,but beautiful old people are true works of art. But you dont be

20、comebeautifuljust by virtue of the aging process. Real beauty comes from learning,growing,and loving in the ways of life. That is the Art of Life. You can learn slowly,and sometimes painfully,by just waiting for life to happen to you. Or you can choose to accelerate your growth and intentionally dev

21、our life and all it offers. You are the artist that paints your future with the brush of today. Paint a Masterpiece. God gives every bird its food,but he doesnt throw it into its nest. Wherever you want to go,whatever you want to do,its truly up to you. 试想一下.你!一个空前绝后的你,不论是以往还是将来都不会有一个跟你一模一样的人。你在历史上和

22、宇宙中都是独一无二的。哇!想想吧,你是万里挑一、亿里挑一、兆里挑一的。 在无穷无尽的宇宙中,你是举世无双的。 你是了不起的!你是卓越的!没错,就是你。你已经是了不起的,是卓越的,你还可以更卓越更了不起。美丽的年轻人是大自然的奇想,而美丽的老人却是艺术的杰作。但你不会因为年龄的渐长就自然而然地变得美丽。 真正的美丽源于生命里的学习、成长和热爱。这就是生命的艺术。你可以只听天由命,慢慢地学,有时候或许会很痛苦。又或许你可以选择加速自己的成长,故意地挥霍生活及其提供的一切。你就是手握今日之刷描绘自己未来的艺术家。 画出一幅杰作吧。 上帝给了鸟儿食物,但他没有将食物扔到它们的巢里。不管你想要去哪里,不

23、管你想要做什么,真正做决定的还是你自己。 篇三 The Blanket (一床双人毛毯) Floyd Dell,born June 28,1887,Barry,Ill.,U.S. died July 23,1969,Bethesda,Md. novelist and radical journalist whose fiction examined the changing mores in sex and politics among American bohemians before and after World War I. A precocious poet,Dell grew up

24、 in an impoverished family and left high school at age 16 to work in a factory. Moving to Chicago in 1908,he worked as a newspaperman and soon was a leader of the citys advanced literary movement. He became assistant editor of the Friday Literary Review of the Evening Post in 1909 and editor in 1911

25、,making it one of the most noted American literary supplements. As a critic,he furthered the careers of Sherwood Anderson and Theodore Dreiser. A socialist since his youth,he moved to New York in 1914 and was associate editor of the left-wing The Masses until 1917. Dell was on the staff of The Liber

26、ator,which succeeded The Masses,from 1918 to 1924. His first and best novel,the largely autobiographical Moon-Calf,appeared in 1920,and its sequel,The Briary-Bush,in 1921. Homecoming,an autobiography taking him to his 35th year,was published in 1933. His other novels on life among the unconventional

27、 include Janet March(1923),Runaway(1925),and Love in Greenwich Village(1926)。His nonfiction includes Were You Ever a Child?(1919),on child-rearing;the biography Upton Sinclair:A Study in Social Protest(1927);and Love in the Machine Age(1930),which presented his views on sex. Little Accident,a play w

28、ritten with Thomas Mitchell and based on Dells novel An Unmarried Father(1927),was successfully produced in 1928. Dell joined the Federal Writers Project and moved to Washington,D.C.,in the late 1930s as an official for the project. He continued in government work after the project ended,until his r

29、etirement in 1947. Petey hadnt really believed that Dad would be doing Itsending Granddad away.Awaywas what they were calling it.Not until now could he believe it of his father. But here was the blanket that Dad had bought for Granddad,and in the morning hed be going away. This was the last evening

30、theyd be having together. Dad was off seeing that girl he was to marry. He would not be back till late,so Petey and Granddad could sit up and talk. It was a fine September night,with a silver moon riding high. They washed up the supper dishes and then took their chairs out onto the porch.Ill get my

31、fiddle,said the old man,and play you some of the old tunes. But instead of the fiddle he brought out the blanket. It was a big double blanket,red with black stripes.Now,isnt that a fine blanket!said the old man,smoothing it over his knees.And isnt your father a kind man to be giving the old fellow a

32、 blanket like that to go away with?It cost something,it didlook at the wool of it!Therell be few blankets there the equal of this one! It was like Granddad to be saying that. He was trying to make it easier. He had pretended all along that he wanted to go away to the great brick buildingthe government place. There hed be with so many other old fellows,having the best of everything. . . . But Petey hadnt believed Dad would really do it,not until this night when he brought home the blanket. Oh,yes,its a fine blanket,said Petey. He got up and went into the house. He wasnt

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