时间:2019-01-10 作者:英语课 分类:高中英语人教版必修高三


英语课

[00:07.89]A housemaid worked very long hours and only had half a day off each week.

[00:12.93]Rosanna had to start work at 5:00 am in order to light the fires before the family of the house woke up.

[00:20.79]Then she laid the table for breakfast while other servants took Rachel and her mother cups of tea and helped them to get dressed.

[00:28.45]After the family had finished breakfast, the servants would eat theirs downstairs in the servants’ hall.

[00:33.91]This was usually a plain room with simple wooden furniture.

[00:37.75]The food “downstairs” was basic,

[00:40.49]not the rich food from the “upstairs” dining room.

[00:42.25]After breakfast Rosanna would clean the rooms,

[00:45.60]serve meals and be “on call” whenever she was needed.

[00:48.97]Her day would end after she had served evening tea a about 9:30 pm.

[00:53.62]She might sit in the servants’ hall to play cards or chat for a while before going to bed.

[00:59.02]Servants had little private life or free time of their own,

[01:02.79]so they were interested in everything that happened “upstairs” and would gossip 1 about the family and their guests.

[01:08.69]Despite the hard word required of them,

[01:10.94]servants were paid little, and there were some families who treated their servants badly.

[01:16.11]However, in many houses the servants had great affection 2 for the “upstairs” family,

[01:20.84]and felt part of a “downstairs” family too.

[01:23.40]Most servants had a safe environment to work in,

[01:26.64]plenty of food and a clean bed to sleep in.

[01:29.09]This was very different from the dirt and poverty that thousands of unemployed 3 people were living in at the time.

[01:35.57]It was also different from the dangerous conditions in many of the factories.

[01:39.91]In fact, a lot of people thought that working as a servant for a kind family was good job.

[01:45.65]READING

[01:50.02]THE FATHER OR THE MODERN ENGLISH DETECTIVE NOEL

[01:54.38]Wilkie Collins was born in London in 1824 and his first novel-a historical romance 4 called Anatonia-was published when he was 26.

[02:05.32]Shortly after this he met Charles dickens,

[02:08.88]and they formed a close friendship that lasted for ten years and influenced both men’s writing.

[02:15.30]Collins went on to publish 25 novels are well as many short stories,

[02:20.34]play and works 5 of non-fiction.

[02:22.88]However, he is most well known for the two mystery novels The woman is White and The Moonstone.

[02:30.45]Collins published both mysteries as serials 6 in All the Year Round.

[02:36.20]When it appeared in the magazine in 1860,

[02:39.57]The Woman in White was so popular that it became the subject of a song and a play.

[02:45.60]It even influenced fashion,

[02:47.56]and many women started to dress in white.

[02:50.49]Eight years later The Moonstone was published and earned Collins the title “the father or the modern English detective novel”.

[02:59.11]TS Elliot, another famous writer,

[03:02.14]said that The Moonstone was the “first and greatest of English detective novels”,

[03:08.02]and it is still admired by modern crime writers today.

[03:11.47]An author of many mysteries,

[03:13.50]Dorothy L Sayers considered The Moonstone to be “probably the very finest detective story ever written”,

[03:22.33]and many people agree with her.

[03:24.19]There are several reasons why they think so.

[03:26.64]One is the way the events in the novel are revealed 7 to the reader.

[03:30.20]Collins uses different characters to tell each section of the story.

[03:34.24]The characters have very different personalities 8 and voices,

[03:38.01]which are interesting and often amusing 9.

[03:40.72]There are also several features of the plot which started trends in mystery writing.

[03:46.00]For example, many detective stores are set in a country house,

[03:50.70]in a situation where the theft must have been committed by one of the people in the house.

[03:56.40]The character of a famous detective with an unusual appearance and habits occurs in many books,



n.流言蜚语,爱说长道短的人;vi.传播流言
  • She broadcast the gossip all over the town.她将这个流言传遍全镇。
  • They spread a lot of tacky gossip about his love life.关于他的爱情生活,他们散播了许多不堪的闲言闲语。
n.喜爱;爱慕,感情;倾向,意向
  • The handsome young man excited affection in a girl.那位英俊的年轻男子引起了一个女孩的爱慕之情。
  • He has a deep affection for his old friend.他对老朋友感情很深。
adj.失业的,没有工作的;未动用的,闲置的
  • There are now over four million unemployed workers in this country.这个国家现有四百万失业人员。
  • The unemployed hunger for jobs.失业者渴望得到工作。
n.恋爱关系,浪漫气氛,爱情小说,传奇
  • She wrote a romance about an artist's life in Tokyo.她写了一个关于一位艺术家在东京生活的浪漫故事。
  • They tried to rekindle the flames of romance.他们试图重燃爱火。
n.作品,著作;工厂,活动部件,机件
  • We expect writers to produce more and better works.我们期望作家们写出更多更好的作品。
  • The novel is regarded as one of the classic works.这篇小说被公认为是最优秀的作品之一。
n.连载小说,电视连续剧( serial的名词复数 )
  • The computer can alter the serials librarian and produce a bindery notice. 计算机可提醒管理连续出版物的馆员,并制作装订通知。 来自辞典例句
  • I realized I have started to like a few of their serials. 我意识到我已开始喜欢上了不少他们的连续剧。 来自互联网
v.显示( reveal的过去式和过去分词 );揭示;泄露;[神学]启示
  • They revealed to me that the experiment had failed. 他们向我透露试验失败了。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • His insincerity is revealed by the quick goggle of his eyes. 他眼睛的快速转动泄露了他的不诚。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n. 诽谤,(对某人容貌、性格等所进行的)人身攻击; 人身攻击;人格, 个性, 名人( personality的名词复数 )
  • There seemed to be a degree of personalities in her remarks.她话里有些人身攻击的成分。
  • Personalities are not in good taste in general conversation.在一般的谈话中诽谤他人是不高尚的。
adj.有有趣的,好玩的
  • The girl was amusing herself with a doll.那女孩在玩洋娃娃自娱。
  • He related some amusing stories in his childhood to his children.他向孩子们述说了他少年时代的一些趣事。
学英语单词
a movable feast
acaryotes
adversely possess
anti-positivist
anticollective
antiskiding factor
arborealities
atm adaptation layer(aal)
authur
automatic recording titrator
Berikey
blade wheel rotor
broad arrows
by easy stages
chemical chain
Chou coordinates
closed cup flash point tester of petroleum products
colloclarain
colloidal silver
connivence
control volume
cossarts
crackhead
creolist
darken into
disruptive innovation
Dryopteris filix-mas Schott
emulsion splitter
entangled twist
evaporation source shutter
financial outturn
furnace top pressure power generation
Galactia
genus rhizopuses
get in someone's face
hatelessness
Himalrandia lichiangensis
homo economics
horn gap switch
hygienic forceps
imprest system
in community
income range
insurance for war risk
kid's meal
knock off joint
kunashiri-to (kunashir i.)
lecioblast
light railways
liquid ring
manustupration
match ban
mechanical resonance
metallized fabric
minocycline
mortgagable
most-dangerous
Mugiloidea
multislacking
news client
nivation
nochebuena
object computer
ohhhh
orchidectomize
overload measurement
political-action
polypores
prethoughtful
queven
real-world affectiveness
redundance character
reliability standard
return clause
rhizosolenia
sanitary pipe laying
schelling
screen of cable
semi-rigid base course
short-term psychotherapy
shotfiring curtain
sinuses reuniens
Sop Long
Spanish-speaking
summary estimate
switch jaw contact
taken to task
teicher
theory of law
thermal drift
throttled flow
Triballi
trimethobenzamides
trouser-clip
tylopilus ferrugineus
uncased drill hole
Villanovan culture
w.d
warp tying machine
waved on
wet takeoff power
Xtra-dull