1、新视野大学英语读写教程第四册第四单元B篇原文和翻译 新视野大学英语读写教程第四册第四单元B篇原文和翻译篇一:新视野大学英语读写教程第四册第二单元A篇原文和翻译 unit2 Charlie Chaplin He was born in a poor area of south London. He wore his mothers old red stockings cut down for ankle socks. His mother was temporarily declared mad. Dickens might have created Charlie Chaplins child
2、hood. But only Charle Chaplin could have created the great comic character of “ the Tramp “, 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 the land of his
3、 birth. Chaplin quit Britain for good in 1913 when he journeyed to America with a group of performers to do his comedy act on the stage where talent scouts recruited him to work for Mack Sennett, the king of Hollywood comedy films. Sad to say, many English people in the 1920s and 1930s thought Chapl
4、ins Tramp a bit, well, “ crude “. Certainly middle-class audiences did; the working-class audiences were more likely to clap for a character who revolted against authority, using his wicked little cane to trip it up, or aiming the heel of his boot for a well-placed kick at its broad rear. All the sa
5、me, Chaplins comic beggar didnt seem all that English or even working class. English tramps didnt sport tiny moustaches, huge pants or tail coats: European leaders and Italian waiters wore things like that. Then again, the Tramps quick eye for a pretty girl had a coarse way about it that was conside
6、red, well, not quite nice by English audiences thats how foreigners behaved, wasnt it? But for over half of his screen career, Chaplin had no screen voice to confirm his British nationality. Indeed, it was a headache for Chaplin when he could no longer resist the talking movies and had to find “the
7、right voice” for his Tramp. He postponed that day as long as possible: in Modern Times in 1936, the first film in which he was heard as a singing waiter, he made up a nonsense language which sounded like no known nationality. He later said he imagined the Tramp to be a college-educated gentleman who
8、d come down in the world. But if hed been able to speak with an educated accent in those early short comedy movies, its doubtful if he would have achieved world fame. And the English would have been sure to find it “odd”. No one was certain whether Chaplin did it on purpose but this helped to bring
9、about his huge success. He was an immensely talented man, determined to a degree unusual even in the ranks of Hollywood stars. His huge fame gave him the freedom and, more importantly, the money to be his own master. He already had the urge to explore and extend a talent he discovered in himself as
10、he went along. “It cant be me. Is that possible? How extraordinary,” is how he greeted the first sight of himself as the Tramp on the screen. But that shock roused his imagination. Chaplin didnt have his jokes written into a script in advance; he was the kind of comic who used his physical senses to
11、 invent his art as he went along. feless objects especially helped Chaplin make “contact” with himself as an artist. He turned them into other kinds of objects. Thus, a broken alarm clock in the movie The Pawnbroker became a “sick” patient undergoing surgery; boots were boiled in his film The Gold R
12、ush and their soles eaten with salt and pepper like prime cuts of fish (the nails being removed like fish bones). This physical transformation, plus the skill with which he executed it again and again, are surely the secrets of Chaplins great comedy. He also had a deep need to be loved and a corresp
13、onding fear of being betrayed. The two were hard to combine and sometimes as in his early marriages the collision between them resulted in disaster. Yet even this painfully-bought self-knowledge found its way into his comic creations. The Tramp never loses his faith in the flower girl wholl be waiti
14、ng to walk into the sunset with him; while the other side of Chaplin makes Monsieur Verdoux, the French wife killer, into a symbol of hatred for women. Its a relief to know that life eventually gave Charlie Chaplin the stable happiness it had earlier denied him. In Oona ONeill Chaplin, he found a pa
15、rtner whose stability and affection spanned the 37 years age difference between them that had seemed so threatening that when the official who was marrying them in 1942, turned to the beautiful girl of 17 whod given notice of their wedding date and said, “And where is the young man?” Chaplin, then 5
16、4, had cautiously waited outside. As Oona herself was the child of a large family with its own problems, she was well-prepared for the battle that Chaplins life became as unfounded rumors of Marxist sympathies surrounded them both and, later on, she was the center of rest in the quarrels that Chapli
17、n sometimes sparked in their own large family of talented children. Chaplin died on Christmas Day 1977. A few months later, a couple of almost comic body-thieves stole his body from the family burial chamber and held it for money: the police recovered it with more efficiency than Mack Sennetts clums
18、y Keystone Cops would have done. But one cant help feeling Chaplin would have regarded this strange incident as a fitting memorial his way of having the last laugh on a world to which he had given so many. 他出生在伦敦南部的一个贫困地区。他穿的短袜是从妈妈的红色长袜上剪下来的。 他的妈妈一度被诊断为精神失常。狄更斯或许能创作出查理卓别林的童年故事, 但只有查理卓别林才能塑造出了不起的喜剧角色
19、“流浪汉”,这个使其创作者声名永驻的衣衫褴褛的小人物。就卓别林而言,其他国家,如法国、意大利、西班牙,甚至日本,都比他的出生地给予了他更多的掌声(和更多的收益)。在1913年,卓别林永久地离开了英国,与一些演员一起启程到美国进行舞台喜剧表演。在那里,他被星探招募到好莱坞喜 剧片之王麦克塞纳特的旗下工作。令人遗憾的是,20世纪二、三十年代的很多英国人认为卓别林的“流浪汉”多少有点“粗俗”。中产阶级当然这样认为。劳动阶层反倒更有可能为这样一个反抗权势的角色拍手喝彩:他以顽皮的小拐杖使绊子,或用皮靴后跟对准权势者肥大的臀部踢一下。尽管如此,卓别林的滑稽乞丐形象并不那么像英国人,甚至也不像劳动阶级的人
20、。 英国流浪者并不留小胡子,也不穿肥大的裤子或燕尾服:欧洲的领导人和意大利的侍者才那样穿戴。另外,“流浪汉”瞟着漂亮女孩的眼神也有些粗俗,被英国观众认为不太正派只有外国人才那样,不是吗? 而在卓别林大半的银幕生涯中,银幕上的他是不出声的,也就无从证明他是英国人。事实上,当卓别林再也无法抵制有声电影,不得不为他的“流浪汉”寻找“合适的声音”时,他确实很头疼。他尽可能地推迟那一天的到来:在 1936 的里,他第一次在影片里发声唱歌。在片中,他扮演一名侍者,满口胡言乱语,听起来不像任何国家的语言。后来他说,他想象中的“流浪汉”是一位受过大学教育,但已经没落的绅士。但假如他在早期那些短小的喜剧电影中能
21、操一口受教育人的口音,那么他是否会闻名世界就难说了,而英国人也肯定会觉得这很“古怪”。没有人知道卓别林这么干是不是有意的,但这促使他获得了巨大的成功。他是一个才能非凡的人,他的决心之大甚至在好莱坞明星中也十分少见。他的巨大名声为他带来了自由,更重要的是带来了财富,他因此得以成为自己的主人。在事业发展之初,他就感到一种冲动要去发掘并扩展自己身上所显露的天才。 当他第一次在银幕上看到自己扮演的“流浪汉”时,他说:“这不可能是我。那可能吗?瞧这角色多么与众不同啊!”这种震惊唤起了他的想象。卓别林并没有把他的笑料事先写成文字。他是那种边表演边根据感觉去创造艺术的喜剧演员。没有生命的物体特别有助于卓别林
22、发挥自己艺术家的天赋。他将这些物体想象成其他东西。因此,在中,一个坏闹钟变成了正在接受手术的“病人”;在中,靴子被放在锅里煮,靴底被蘸着盐和胡椒吃掉,就像上好的鱼片一样(鞋钉就像鱼骨那样被剔除)。这种对事物的转化,以及他一次又一次做出这种转化的技巧,正是卓别林伟大喜剧的奥秘所在。他也深切地渴望被爱,同时也害怕遭到背叛。这两者很难结合在一起,有时这种冲突导致了灾难,就像他早期的几次婚姻那样。然而即使是这种以沉重代价换来的自知之明也在他的喜剧创作中 得到了表现。 “流浪汉”始终没有失去对卖花女的信心,相信她正等待着与自己共同走进夕阳之中;而卓别林的另一面使他的凡尔杜先生,一个杀了妻子的法国人,成为
23、了仇恨女人的象征。 令人宽慰的是,生活最终把卓别林先前没能获得的稳定和幸福给了他。 他找到了沃娜奥尼尔卓别林这个伴侣。她的沉稳和深情跨越了他们之间37岁的年龄差距。他们的年龄差别太大,以致当1942年他们要结婚时,新娘公布了他们的结婚日期后,为他们办理手续的官员问这位漂亮的17岁姑娘:“那个年轻人在哪儿?”当时已经54岁的卓别林小心翼翼在外面等候着。 由于沃娜本人出生在一个被各种麻烦困扰的大家庭,她对卓别林生活中将面临的挑战也做好了充分准备,因为当时关于他俩有很多毫无根据的流言。后来在他那个有那么多天才孩子的大家庭中,卓别林有时会引发争吵,而她则成了安宁的中心。卓别林死于1977年圣诞节。 几
24、个月后,几个近乎可笑的盗尸者从他的家庭墓室盗走了他的尸体以借此诈钱。警方追回了他的尸体,其效率比麦克塞纳特拍摄的启斯东喜剧片中的笨拙警察要高得多。但是人们不禁会感到,卓别林一定会把这一奇怪的事件看作是对他的十分恰当的纪念他以这种方式给这个自己曾为之带去这么多笑声的世界留下最后的笑声。篇二:新视野大学英语读写教程(第二版)第四册课文及翻译 The Temptation of a Respectable Woman was a little annoyed to learn that her husband expected his friend, Gouvernail, up to spend
25、a week or two on the plantation. Gouvernails quiet personality puzzled After a few days with him, she could understand him no better than at first. She left her husband and his guest, for the most part, alone together, only to find that Gouvernail hardly noticed her absence. Then she imposed her com
26、pany upon him, accompanying him in his idle walks to the mill to press her attempt to penetrate the silence in which he had unconsciously covered himself. But it hardly worked. ”When is he going your friend?” she one day asked her husband. “For my part, I find him a terrible nuisance.” ”Not for a we
27、ek 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 I had to plan somewhat for his comfort and enjoyment.” Gaston pulled the sleeve of his wifes dress, gathered his arms around her waist and looked merrily into her troubl
28、ed eyes. ”You are full of surprises,” he said to her. “Even I can never count upon how you are going to act under given conditions. Here you are,” he went on, “taking poor Gouvernail seriously and making a fuss about him, the last thing he would desire or expect.”Fuss!” she hotly replied. “Nonsense!
29、 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. Thats why I asked him here to take a rest.” ”You used to say he was a man of wit,” she said, still annoyed. “I expected him to be interesting, at leas
30、t. Im going to the city in the morning to have my spring dresses fitted. Let me know when is gone; until that time I shall be at my aunts house.” That night she went and sat alone upon a bench that stood beneath an oak tree at the edge of the walk. She had never known her thoughts to be so confused;
31、 like the bats now above her, her thoughts quickly flew this way and that. She could gather nothing from them but the feeling of a distinct necessity to leave her home in the next morning. heard footsteps coming from the direction of the barn; she knew it was Gouvernail. She hoped to remain unnotice
32、d, but her white gown revealed her to him. He seated himself upon the bench beside her, without a suspicion that she might object to his presence. ”Your husband told me to bring this to you, ,” he said, handing her a length of sheer white fabric with which she sometimes covered her head and shoulders. She accepted it from him and let it lie in her lap. He made some routine observations upon the unhealthy effect of the night breeze at that season. Then as his gaze reached out into the darkness, hebegan to
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