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                   Text 1  The old Man        
                    and the Sea       
                            
                          
                    About the author        
                      
                   Ernest Miller Hemingway (1899-1960) was        
                    born in Oak Park, Illinois. His father was a successful physician        
                    with a relish for hunting and fishing. His mother was musical        
                    and sternly religious. He spent his boyhood shuttling with        
                    his family between a comfortable Chicago suburb and a remnant        
                    of the earlier frontier in the back-woods of Michigan. After        
                    high school, he eagerly sought to enlist in the army. Failing        
                    that, he got a job as a reporter, but was soon off to World        
                    War I as an ambulance driver and infantryman with the Italian        
                    army. After the war, he settled in Paris, where he served        
                    as a foreign correspondent for some time, and where he also        
                    began his serious writing career. He took an active part in        
                    the anti-Fascist struggle in the Spanish Civil War and in        
                    World War II; he served as war correspondent in both. During        
                    the McCarthy period in the early 1950's, he stood firm in        
                    his defiance of the persecution of the Left. Emotional breakdowns        
                    that proceeded from his frustrations about writing well in        
                    addition to physical ailments resulting from war wounds and        
                    heavy drinking finally led to his suicide in 1961.         
                      
                  More about the story         
                      
                    The Old Man and the Sea won the Pulitzer        
                    Prize (1953) and Hemingway received the Nobel Prize for literature        
                    (1954).        
                       
                  A great craftsman, Hemingway forged a style        
                    and a set of techniques all his own. His citation by the Nobel        
                    Prize Committee mentions "his powerful style-forming        
                    mastery of the art" of creating modern fiction. He helped        
                    to purify American writing of sentimentality, literary decoration,        
                    surface artfulness, and wordiness.        
                      
                  Dialogue is a distinguishing feature of his        
                    style. Upon dialogue falls much of the burden of setting,        
                    plot, character, and theme portrayed by other writers through        
                    description, narration and exposition. The conversation is        
                    not a simple record of the way people talk. Instead, it reduces        
                    speech to an essential pattern of mannerisms characteristic        
                    of the speaker. It gives an effect of reality that reality        
                    itself would not give.        
                      
                  Hemingway's description of the stream of consciousness        
                    and the interior monologue of his characters gives his readers        
                    access the depths of their hearts and minds.         
                        
                   Culture notes   
                     
                   Gulf Stream: Ocean        
                    current named for the Gulf of Mexico, flows past Florida and        
                    up the East coast of the USA until deflected near Newfoundland        
                    Northeast across the Atlantic Ocean (the North Atlantic Drift);      
                  its warm water moderates the climate of Northwest Europe.   
                          
                  guano:    
                  An accumulation of animal droppings, typical        
                    of birds but also of mammals such as bats. Guano deposits        
                    build up beneath breeding colonies, and are a rich source        
                    of phosphates and nitrates. They re often used as fertilizer.        
                      
                  DiMaggio,   
                  Joseph Paul ('Joe ') (1914--),American baseball player, star of the New York Yankees        
                    team from 1936 to 1951, renowned for his outstanding batting        
                    ability and for his outfield play. His second wife, to whom        
                    he was married for nine months in 1954, was the film actress        
                    Marilyn Monroe.        
                      
                   Canary   
                  Islands:   
                  (also Canaries) A group of islands, in Spanish possession        
                    since the 15th century, situated off the Northwest coast of        
                    Africa.        
                       
                     
                   Language notes         
                       
                  
                  1)        
                    The sail was patched with flour sacks and, furled, it looked        
                    like the flag of permanent defeat.        
                      
                  (那面帆用面粉袋打了一些补丁,收起来的时候,看上去就象一面标志着永远失败的旗帜。)   
                      
                  Permanent means lasting for a long        
                    time or forever.        
                      
                  e.g. Is this your permanent address, or are        
                    you only staying there for a short time?        
                    
                   
                  2)        
                    Then if you hook something truly big we can come to your aid.        
                       
                  (你要是捕到一条真正的大鱼,我们就可以来帮你了。)   
                      
                  Come to your aid here means help you.        
                      
                  e.g. We went to the aid of the injured man.        
                            
                  3)        
                    But then I think of Dick Sisler and those great drives in        
                    the old parks.        
                      
                  (但是接着我又想到狄克·西斯勒和他在垒球场打出的那几个漂亮球。)   
                      
                  Drive here is used as a noun meaning        
                    an act of hitting a ball, or the force with which it is hit.        
                      
                  e.g. to hit a long high drive to the right         
                      
                  
                  4)        
                    He no longer dreamed of storms, nor of women, nor of great        
                    occurrence.        
                      
                  (他不再梦见风暴,不再梦见女人,不再梦见惊人的遭遇。)   
                      
                  Occurrence means an event or happening.        
                      
                  e.g. This sort of incidence is an everyday        
                    occurrence.         
                            
                    
                  Text 2  The        
                    Old Man and the Sea       
                    (II)       
                            
                          
                    Language notes        
                      
                  1)        
                    Sometimes they attached themselves to him.        
                      
                  (有时候它们恋恋不舍地跟着他。)   
                      
                  Attach to means to cause to belong        
                    to (a group).         
                      
                  e.g. During the war I was attached to the        
                    naval college as a gunnery instructor.        
                      
                  2)        
                    But again the fish righted himself and swam slowly away.        
                      
                  (但是鱼又摆正了身子慢慢地游开去。)   
                      
                  Right oneself means to put oneself        
                    right or upright again.        
                      
                  e.g. The boat capsized but we soon righted        
                    it.        
                      
                     
                  3)       
                    The old man looked carefully in the glimpse of vision that       
                    he had.       
                      
                  (老头用定睛仔细地望了一眼。)   
                      
                  Glimpse here means a quick look         
                    or incomplete view.         
                      
                  e.g. I only caught a glimpse of the thief,        
                    so I can't really describe him.        
                    
                  4)    
                    He did not like to look at the fish anymore since he had been    
                    mutilated.    
                     
                  (他不忍心再多看那死去的鱼一眼,因为它已被咬得残缺不全了。)  
                     
                  Mutilate means seriously damage    
                    by removing a part.    
                     
                  e.g. The kidnapper threatened to mutilate    
                    the child if his price was not paid soon.        
     
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