时间:2019-03-01 作者:英语课 分类:听播客学英语


英语课

   Do you know what “to gaze” at something means? It means to look at something for a long time. And normally the thing that you are gazing at is a long way away. So we might say, for example, that I gaze at the distant hills, or I gaze at the horizon. And where is the best place for gazing? Beside the sea, of course. People often stand on the shore, or on the rocks, or on a cliff, and gaze out to sea. Sometimes they are looking at a boat, far away at sea. Sometimes they are looking at nothing in particular. They are just gazing.


  If you go to a place called Crosby, near Liverpool on the west coast of England, you will see 100 men gazing out to sea. They are not real men, however. They are sculptures, made of cast iron. Each one is six feet tall – that is, about 180 cm. They were made by the sculptor 1 and artist Antony Gormley, who modelled them on his own body. His 100 men have not always been at Crosby. For a time they were beside the sea at Cuxhaven in Germany, and later they moved to Stavanger in Norway. But when Antony Gormley first saw the wide, empty beach at Crosby, he knew that this was the right place for his 100 men. But in Britain, you are not allowed just to go to a beach and put 100 statues on it. No, you have to get permission first. You have to ask the local authority for planning consent. In 2005, the local authority agreed that Antony Gormley could put his statues on the beach, and keep them there for 16 months. Some people did not like the statues. They said that they spoiled the beach; or that they disturbed feeding sea-birds; or that they were dangerous. Some people complained because the statues are of naked men, with no clothes. But other people thought that the statues were wonderful, and that they made people think in new ways about the empty beach and the sea. After a lot of argument, the local authority has now agreed that Gormley’s 100 men can stay on Crosby beach permanently 2.
  Antony Gormley’s sculptures are now quite well known in Britain. We have one of them in Birmingham. It is called “Iron : Man”. But his most famous statue is called the Angel of the North. It is a huge statue – over 20 metres tall – of an angel with outspread wings. The wings are the size of the wings on a jumbo jet. It stands on a hill overlooking the town of Gateshead in north-east England. You can see it if you drive north into Newcastle along the main A1 road. At first the Angel of the North was very controversial, but now most people love it. It has become a famous landmark 3.

n.雕刻家,雕刻家
  • A sculptor forms her material.雕塑家把材料塑造成雕塑品。
  • The sculptor rounded the clay into a sphere.那位雕塑家把黏土做成了一个球状。
adv.永恒地,永久地,固定不变地
  • The accident left him permanently scarred.那次事故给他留下了永久的伤疤。
  • The ship is now permanently moored on the Thames in London.该船现在永久地停泊在伦敦泰晤士河边。
n.陆标,划时代的事,地界标
  • The Russian Revolution represents a landmark in world history.俄国革命是世界历史上的一个里程碑。
  • The tower was once a landmark for ships.这座塔曾是船只的陆标。
学英语单词
abortive infection(l woff 1953)
absolute hemianopsia
actualizable
air supplied suit
aleuroclava thysanospermi
animal tillage
annealed aluminumwire
Annual Summary of Admiralty Notices to Mariners
ao dai, aodai
autoclick
ball-bearing hostess
Bargfeld-Stegen
bawoyeus
be in activity
benzal cyanohydrine
Bourdon pressure vacuum gauge
by gum!
cacao moths
concept acquisition
containment barrier
coxcombries
cross contamination
cross-boundaries
digitally grounded
direct short circuit
Do you know
earthday
eotic animal
fill color
firefall
four-piecest
gastric ridge
genus Tarpon
gissa
go out with sb
goffering
ground-based navigational system
gutti
hand pulley block
hoistphone
hydroconcrete percolation resisting rank
hydroxyvitamin
hypertrichosis
hypoxic acidosis
in ventre sa mere
inutilized
ion triplet
Jim Brown
joint concept
leakage flux
lightener
lineham
live-roller bed
load flow
lobelines
lymph node permeability fsctors
Maltese language
marshalling area
micelle anisotropic reaction
multi-antireflection coating
multiply-accumulates
mutilus yolii
noune
Olta
omphalophyma
one-tons
opposite edge of a polyhedron
outken
oxyquinoline phthalyl sulfathiazole
panorpa taiwanensis
paper-net
particulate matter in sea water
penetratest
pipe insulated joint
plane interference
polishing plate
pre-loss
reactor feedwater flow
rod withdraw wequence
roll the dice
S-MBP
saut de l'ange
self-elect
short wave-pass filter
Sint-Martens-Bodegem
soft sugar
software transportation
solar impulsive hard X-ray burst
solid belt pulley
street-sign
strong capture
strongylium erythrocephalum
supragenic
triangular caisson
unhairing machine knife cylinder
UNIX-like file name
water fence
will believe that when one sees it
windboard
woolshed
Youngia tenuicaulis
Ziehl-Neelsen staining method