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      1. 21世紀(jì)大學(xué)英語讀寫教程第4冊(cè)第8單元課文講解

        時(shí)間:2020-08-20 16:28:30 大學(xué)英語 我要投稿

        21世紀(jì)大學(xué)英語讀寫教程第4冊(cè)第8單元課文講解

          導(dǎo)語:很多人不知道如何跟自己的父親溝通相處,下面是一篇關(guān)于這方面的英語課文,歡迎大家來閱讀。

        21世紀(jì)大學(xué)英語讀寫教程第4冊(cè)第8單元課文講解

          My Father's Son

          Bill Heavy

          When my father rings, I hurry down to the front door of my condo. There he is, in corduroy pants, the tread worn off the knees, and a shirt I outgrew in tenth grade. He's come to help me put in a new garbage disposal. Actually, I'm helping him. His mechanical gene passed over his only son, on its way to some future generation. At 39, I've made my peace with this.

          My father hasn't been to my place since he helped me paint four years ago. The truth is, I'm often not sure how to talk to him. But this time it will be easy. We have a job to do.

          In minutes he has taken over the whole enterprise, lying under the sink and squinting up into the machinery. And suddenly I am 12 years old again, watching him fix things and feeling useless.

          As a child, I identified so strongly with my mother that I thought my father was just a long-term house guest with spanking privileges. She and I are bookish, introverted worriers. My father is an optimist who has never had a sleepless night in his life.

          Like most fathers and sons, we fought. But there was no cooling-off period between rounds. It was a cold war lasting from the onset of my adolescence until I went off to college in 1973.I hated him. He was a former navy fighter pilot, with an Irish temper and a belief that all the problems of the world—including an overprotected son who never saw anything through to completion—could be cured by the application of more discipline.

          At a time when an eighth-grader's social status was measured in the fraction of an inch of hair kissing his collar, my father would march me down to the barbershop on Saturdays and triumphantly tell the man with the scissors. "Just leave him enough to comb." I would close my eyes, determined not to give him the satisfaction of seeing me cry. Without even thinking about it, I froze him out of my life, speaking only when spoken to. I learned to use silence like a knife. My one communique for an entire dinner was usually a sarcastic "May I be excused now? I have homework."

          I lay awake at night imagining him being transferred by the gas company he worked for to an oil rig in the North Sea. But it didn't happen, and soon all that remained was the contest of wills.

          I went off to college, but he was still in my head. I could hear his voice every time I fell short in anything. Only when I began seeing my freelance articles in print did I begin to feel that I was slipping beyond his reach and into my own life.

          Eventually I discovered that there is no anti-inflammatory agent like time. Now I wondered, could this aging 74-year-old be the giant who once thundered up the stairs to spank me, of whom I was so afraid that I wet my pants? In his place was someone I worried about, whom I dressed in my down hunting jacket for his annual pilgrimage to the Army-Navy game. My profession, which he had once ridiculed, saying, "Gee, do you think there's any money in it?" now became a source of pride when fellow Rotarians mistook him for Bill Heavy "the writer." It was as if now that I no longer needed so desperately to please him, I had succeeded. We had become two old veterans from opposing armies, shaking hands years after the fighting, the combat so distant as to be a dream.

          Before we can install the disposal, we have to snake out the pipes. Soon we get stuck trying to figure out how a gasket fits.

          "Ah," he says finally, "we're going to have to call a plumber."

          This is not how I remember him. He used to be so stubborn, the kind of guy who could make IRS examiners throw up their hands in frustration and let him off. Now that I have his mind-set and don't want to give up, it's as if he's acquired mine.

          He says, "Besides, I gotta get home. Your mother and I have to be at a dinner party at 7:30."

          "Don't you pay for the plumber," he says. "Putting this thing in is part of my Christmas present to you."

          Though we've failed to install the disposal, it's been oddly satisfying. At last we're on even ground. Maybe he wasn't the best father. Maybe I wasn't the best son, but I realize I will never be ready to cope with his leaving. I know that I'm luckier than some of my friends, whose fathers died while they were still locked in the battle that neither really wanted.

          The plumber comes two days later. He secures the disposal in its place as easily as I buckle my belt.

          Not long ago, I started badgering my parents to get their estate in order. They didn't want to deal with it. I finally wrote them a letter saying if I were a parent, I would want to make damn sure the IRS got as little of my money as possible. I knew this would push my father's buttons. It worked. They met with a lawyer.xc

          Later, my father and I lunch at a restaurant near my office so he can fill me in on the details. "One thing I don't want you to worry about is what'll happen to me," he says, with the satisfied air of a man who has taken care of business. "The Navy will cremate me for free."

          "And what about the ashes?" I ask, concerned only with practical things. It is as if we are talking about how to get rid of the old disposal.

          "They scatter them at sea." He turns away, looking around for our waiter. Something breaks inside me. When he turns back, I am crying, hot tears springing up in my eyes so suddenly I'm almost choking.

          "I don't want you to die," I manage to say. "I don't want them to scatter your ashes. I'll scatter your ashes."

          "Oh, Bill," he says, taken aback, totally at a loss about what to say. "I just didn't want to burden you with it."

          I have no way to tell him that I want to be burdened with it, that it is my birth right to be burdened with it. "I know," I say.

          I don't even look around to see if anybody is watching. I don't care. I reach across the table for his hand and hold it, trying to stop the tears.

          New Words

          condo

          n. an apartment in a block of apartments of which each is owned by the people who live in it 公寓套間

          corduroy

          n. & a. 燈芯絨(的)

          tread

          n. grooved part on the surface 棱紋

          outgrow

          vt. grow too large or too tall for (esp. one's clothes); grow faster or taller than 長(zhǎng)大(或長(zhǎng)高)而穿不下(原有的衣服等);長(zhǎng)得比…快(或高)

          garbage

          n. rubbish, refuse 垃圾

          garbage disposal

          (裝于廚房洗滌槽排水管內(nèi)的)污物碾碎器

          mechanical

          a. 1. of, connected with, produced by machines 機(jī)械的;與機(jī)械有關(guān)的;由機(jī)械制成的

          2. 手工操作的;技工的

          squint

          vi. look sideways or with half-shut eyes or through a narrow opening 瞟;瞇著眼看;由小孔窺視

          spank

          vt. punish (a child) by slapping on the buttocks with the open hand or a slipper, etc. (用巴掌或拖鞋等)打(小孩的)屁股

          introverted

          a. (性格)內(nèi)向的;不愛交際的

          worrier

          n. person who worries a lot 擔(dān)心的人,發(fā)愁的人

          optimist

          n. a person who is always hopeful and looks upon the bright side of things 樂觀的人;樂觀主義者

          cooling-off period

          a period of time when two people or groups who are arguing about sth. can go away and think about how to improve the situation (爭(zhēng)執(zhí)雙方冷靜下來考慮如何改善關(guān)系的)冷卻期

          onset

          n. the beginning (esp. of sth. unpleasant) (尤指不快之事的)開始

          navy

          n. 海軍

          fraction

          n. 1. a small part, bit, amount, or proportion (of sth.) (某物的)小部分,一點(diǎn)兒,少許;片斷

          2. 分?jǐn)?shù);小數(shù)

          collar

          n. part of a garment that fits around the neck 衣領(lǐng)

          barbershop

          n. place where a man gets his face shaved and hair cut 理發(fā)店

          triumphantly

          ad. joyfully, satisfactorily (at a success or victory) 得意洋洋地;得勝地;成功地

          communique

          n. official announcement 公報(bào)

          sarcastic

          a. 諷刺的,嘲笑的.,挖苦的

          rig

          n. a large structure in the sea used for drilling oil wells 鉆井架;鉆塔

          freelance

          a. 自由作家的;自由職業(yè)者做的

          anti-inflammatory

          a. 抗炎的,消炎的;息怒的

          agent

          n. substance, natural phenomenon, etc. producing an effect 劑;自然力;動(dòng)因

          down

          n. fine, soft feathers of young birds 羽絨

          pilgrimage

          n. 1. a journey to a sacred place or shrine 朝圣;朝覲

          2. a journey to a place associated with sb. /sth. one respects 到敬仰的某處之行

          ridicule

          vt. make fun of; mock 嘲弄;嘲笑

          gee

          int. (used to express surprise, admiration, etc.) (用以表示驚奇、贊賞等)哎呀,嘿

          oppose

          vt. fight or complete against in a battle, competition, or election 反對(duì);反抗;與…較量

          snake

          vt. 用長(zhǎng)鐵絲通條疏通(管道)

          stuck

          a. not able to move or continue doing sth. 不能動(dòng)的;不能繼續(xù)做某事的;被卡住的

          gasket

          n. 墊圈;襯墊;密封墊

          plumber

          n. workman who fits and repairs water-pipes, bathroom articles, etc. 管子工

          mind-set

          n. mentality, way of thinking 心態(tài);思想傾向

          buckle

          n. (皮帶等的)搭扣,搭鉤

          vt. 用搭扣把…扣住(或扣緊、扣上)

          badger

          vt. pester;nag persistently 糾纏;煩擾

          estate

          n. all the money and property that a person owns, esp. that which is left at death 財(cái)產(chǎn);(尤指)遺產(chǎn)

          cremate

          vt. burn (a corpse) to ashes 火化(尸體)

          aback

          ad. backwards 向后地;退后地

          birth right

          與生俱來的權(quán)利

          Phrases and Expressions

          put in

          install 安裝

          pass over

          move past without touching; overlook; fail to notice 掠過;忽視;不注意

          make one's peace with

          settle a quarrel with;accept 與…講和;接受

          identify with

          regard oneself as sharing the characteristics or fortunes with 與…認(rèn)同

          see through

          not give up (a task, undertaking, etc.) until it is finished 把(任務(wù)等)進(jìn)行到底

          freeze out

          exclude (sb.) by a cold manner, competition, etc. (以冷淡態(tài)度、競(jìng)爭(zhēng)等)排斥(某人)

          in print

          (of a person's work) printed in a book, newspaper, etc. (指作品)已印出;已出版

          throw up one's hands

          show that one is annoyed or has given up hope with sb. or sth. that causes trouble (因厭煩等而)突然舉起雙手;認(rèn)定無望而放棄嘗試

          let off

          excuse; not punish; not punish severely 原諒;不懲罰;對(duì)…從輕處理

          push sb.'s buttons

          start sb. in action 使某人行動(dòng)起來

          fill sb. in (on sth.)

          give sb. full details (about sth.) 對(duì)某人提供(有關(guān)某事的)詳情

          for free

          without charge or payment 不要錢;免費(fèi)

          get rid of

          become free of 扔掉,處理掉;擺脫

          be taken aback

          be startled 吃驚

          at a loss

          perplexed, uncertain 困惑;不知所措

          Proper Names

          Bill Heavey

          比爾·希維(男子名)

          the North Sea

          北海(在大不列顛島和歐洲大陸之間)

          Rotarian

          “扶輪國際(Rotary International)”成員

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