当前位置:课程学习>>第四章>>知识点一
●Sing a Song
Hero
There’s a hero if you look inside your heart
You don’t have to be afraid of what you are
There’s an answer if you reach into your soul
And the sorrow that you know will melt away
And then a hero comes along
With the strength to carry on
And you cast your fears aside
And you know you can survive
So when you feel like hope is gone
Look inside you and be strong
And you’ll finally see the truth that a hero lies in you
It’s a long road when you face the world alone
No one reaches out a hand for you to hold
You can find love if you search within yourself
And the emptiness you felt will disappear 3
And then a hero comes along
With the strength to carry on
And you cast your fears aside
And you know you can survive
So when you feel like hope is gone
Look inside you and be strong
And you’ll finally see the truth that a hero lies in you
Lord knows dreams are hard to follow
But don’t let anyone tear them away
Hold on there will be tomorrow
In time you’ll find the way
And then a hero comes along
With the strength to carry on
And you cast your fears aside
And you know you can survive
So when you feel like hope is gone
Look inside you and be strong
And you’ll finally see the truth That a hero lies in you!......
● Moments After the Crash
At 3:59 the plane _________ as it took off and tried to ____ altitude. It cleared two of the bridges on the Potomac River, but was _____ altitude. The ____ and passengers knew they were in trouble before it ______ the 14th Street Bridge and it ____ in half as it slammed through cars and railings (栏杆) then _______ into the cold, icy, dark waters.
Moments later only the tail section remained _____, 79 people were aboard Flight 90, six were to ______ the crash, but only five would live.
Huddled together in the cold icy waters, the survivors waited for the ______ helicopter to arrive. Treading water, the survivors ____ on, some ____ broken arms and legs, two with _______ lungs caused from the ______. “We’re all going to die,” someone said.
Aboard Flight 90 was Arland K. Williams Jr., who always sat in the tail section of the plane, “the _____ part of the plane,” he said. Not long before, Williams had just discussed his ________ with the woman he loved, “I think we’re going to marry soon.” It was 4:20 before the helicopter arrived at the _____, dropping the first lifeline ________ Bert Hamilton 100 yards to shore. It would be ten minutes before the helicopter returned, _______ the line to Williams. He caught it, but instead of ________ it around himself, he passed the line to flight ________ Kelly Duncan, the only crew member to survive. She took the line, wrapped it under her arms and held on _____ as she was carried to shore.
With room for only one helicopter at a time between bridges, it returned with two lifelines, and again Williams caught it and handed it off to ___ another survivor, Joe Stiley, the most _______ injured passenger.
Tirado , who also _____ to Stiley and her life line, however, _________, in pain and shock, soon lost her ___ and plunged back into the cold icy waters of the Potomac. Rescuers again _____ her a life line but she was unable to grasp it to save her own life.
Upon seeing this and as Tirado was about to go under, an _______, Lenny Skutnik, plunged from the banks of the river into the freezing water and brought her safely to shore.
By 4:30 p.m. Williams had been in the _______ water for 29 minutes, and his turn had finally come. The helicopter turned once more toward the ______ tail, its two-man crew eager to meet the man in the water, “to tell him they had never seen such ______ courage.”
They strained for ____ of the hero of Flight 90. But the balding man was gone. “He could have gone on the first trip,” pilot Usher wept, “but he put everyone else _____ of himself. Everyone.”
● Do You Know?
1) What makes a hero?
2) Can you name some heroes? What do you think that makes them heroes?
3) Have you ever tried to find a hero in yourself?
4) Do you think every ordinary person can be a hero if he wants to?
● Author
Roger Rosenblatt is a journalist, author, playwright and professor. As an essayist for Time magazine, he has won two George Polk Awards, and awards from the Overseas Press Club and the American Bar Association.
● The Air Crash
On Jan. 13, 1982 one of the worst snowstorms in the history of Washington, D.C. hit the city. Just about everything closed down—the government, businesses, schools, the airports. By about noon, the skies cleared and Washington’s National Airport reopened for business. The crew of Air Florida Flight 90 began preparing for a nonstop trip to sunny Fort Lauderdale, Florida. At 3:59 p.m., the twin-engine Boeing 737 was cleared for takeoff and began rumbling down the runway on its final flight.
Minutes later, the plane smashed into the 14th Street Bridge, only 1,200 yards from the Pentagon, destroying four automobiles and killing five people. The jet then fell into the ice-covered Potomac River, bringing all the passengers to their instant death except five—four passengers and one flight attendant—from the tail section, who found themselves gasping and struggling in the icy waters.
These five people however survived and they were able to survive because of four heroes. The author wrote this essay in praise of these heroes, three of whom had risked their lives to rescue the survivors and were able to live to tell the story, but the man that really held the whole nation’s attention was the fourth one who had kept pushing his lifeline and flotation rings to others until he went under.
● Washington, D.C.
● Presidential Monument
In recognition of his leadership in the cause of American independence, Washington earned the title “Father of His Country”. With this monument, the citizens of the United States show their enduring gratitude and respect for the first President of the United States.
Thomas Jefferson—political philosopher, architect, musician, book collector, scientist, horticulturist (园艺学家), diplomat, inventor, and third President of the United States, also author of the Declaration of American Independence, and Father of the University of Virginia.
The Lincoln Memorial is a tribute to President Abraham Lincoln and the nation he fought to preserve during the Civil War (1861-1865). The Lincoln Memorial was built to resemble a Greek temple. It has 36 Doric columns, one for each state at the time of Lincoln’s death. A sculpture by Daniel Chester French of a seated Lincoln is in the center of the memorial chamber.
● Potomac River
The Potomac River is often referred to as the “Nation’s River”, because it flows through the nation’s capital, where the magnificent monuments of the Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln memorials are reflected in its waters. It is one of the most beautiful and bountiful rivers on the East Coast and is known for its historic, scenic and recreational significance. It begins as a small spring at the Fairfax Stone in West Virginia, and winds its way through the mountains and valleys of Appalachia, past battlefields and old manufacturing towns. The river flows more than 380 miles and grows to more than 11 miles wide as it reaches the Chesapeake Bay at Point Lookout, Maryland.
●Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803—1882) is one of the most famous American essayists, poets and philosophers. Known as a transcendentalist, his main themes are individualism, independent thinking, self-reliance, idealism and the worship of nature. His works include Nature, Self-reliance, American Scholar, Overload and many other essays and poems.
Transcendentalism:
a philosophy/doctrine that knowledge may be obtained by a study of the mental processes, apart from experience.
先验哲学: 认为不必依赖经验仅研究心智活动即可获得知识的学说。
Quotes from Emerson:
“The sum of wisdom is that time is never lost that is devoted to work.” / “Do your work, and you shall reinforce yourself.” / “Goodbye, proud world! I’m going home; Thou art not my friend; I am not thine.” / “A man is a bundle of relations, a knot of roots, whose flower and fruitage is the world.”
Quotes from Emerson:
“Discontent is the want of self-reliance: it is infirmity of will. ” / “Every sweet has its sour; every evil its good.” / “Everything in Nature contains all the powers of Nature. Everything is made of one hidden stuff. ” / “The only reward of virtue is virtue; the only way to have a friend is to be one”