
跪求高手给个分析“心是孤独的猎手”里人物性格或者是人物孤独心境的英语小论文 感激不尽 hubayue@163.com
这篇是本书的主要人物介绍,我看了有性格描写的部分,你参考一下吧。
D Doctor Benedict CopelandDoctor Copeland is a black man raised in the South but educated in the North, so he sees the disgrace of the racism in the town better than anyone. He is respected by his patients, many of whom have named their children after him, but he has little respect for them. He feels that most of the people in town, his own children included, are allowing themselves to be taken advantage of, and he frowns upon gestures, even those made in friendship, that make his race look lazy or weak. The doctor has trouble relating with people. When his daughter tells him that the way he talks to people hurts their feelings, he says, “I am not interested in subterfuges. I am only interested in the truth.” At a family reunion he sits by himself, sulking and grumbling and embarrassed that his father-in-law describes God’s face as “a large white man’s face with a white beard and blue eyes.” Doctor Copeland feels more involved with books than with people. He reads Spinoza and Thorstein Veblen and Karl Marx, whom he named one of his sons after (the son goes by the name “Buddy,” just as the son he calls William goes by “Willie”). When Willie is tortured in jail and his feet have to be amputated, Dr. Copeland goes to see a judge he knows, but he is stopped in the hall of the courthouse by a deputy sheriff who insults him, accuses him of being drunk, beats him and arrests him, throwing him in a cell with the very lower-class blacks that he has spent his lifetime avoiding. Upon his release and after a long night of drinking and talking with Jake Blount, Dr. Copeland and Jake start planning ways to make people aware of society’s injustices. Dr. Copeland is impatient with Jake’s plan, which would take a long time, and demands that violent meetings in the street are in order. The two argue, and their discussion about promoting racial harmony dissolves into racial insults. In the end, Dr. Copeland, too sick with tuberculosis to care for himself, is taken off to his father-in-law’s farm, riding in a wagon piled high with his possessions (his other option was to ride on his son’s lap), feeling that his mission is uncompleted and still hungry for justice.C Biff BrannonBrannon is the calmest and most content character in the novel, although not in the beginning. At the start of the novel, Brannon works hard to run the New York Cafe and keep it open day and night. He does not appear to have a very good relationship with his wife of twenty-one years, Alice. They are seldom together because she sleeps while he works and he sleeps while she works, and when they are together they argue about how he treats the customers; she feels that he gives too much food and liquor away to strange people like Blount. “I like freaks,” he explains. “I just reckon you certainly ought to, Mister Brannon,” she replies, “being as you’re one yourself.” Later, thinking about that conversation, Biff thinks about his “special friendly feeling for sick people and cripples,” and accepts it with neither pride nor disdain. As the novel develops, it becomes evident that Biff himself is androgynous, that he feels that he is part male and part female, which explains his disinterest in sleeping with Alice. He is a big, brutish man who wears his mother’s wedding ring on his smallest finger, wears perfume, and arranges decorative baskets “with an eye for color and design.” When his sister comes by with her daughter, she tells Biff, “Bartholomew, you’d make a mighty good mother,” and he thanks her for the compliment. Locked in his cellar, Biff thinks about how nice it would be to adopt two children, a boy and a girl, but he does not dream of raising them with anyone else. Elsewhere in the book Biff reflects on “the part of him that sometimes wished he was a mother and that Mick and Baby were his kids.” Writing to his friend, Singer expresses the opinion that Biff “is not like the others…. He watches. The others all have something they hate. And they all have something they love more than eating or sleeping or friendly company.” Critics have suggested that it is Brannon, not Singer, who is the religious center of this novel because he lives by principles of love and acceptance. Like the rest, he is upset by Singer’s death, and the novel ends with him sitting in the New York Cafe, keeping his mind occupied with crossword puzzles and flower arrangements, waiting for customers.K John SingerSinger is not the central character in the novel, although he is the central figure in the lives of the other characters. Being deaf and mute, he is forced to watch people carefully when they talk, and that concentration, combined with the fact that they can talk freely with him without fear of being interrupted, gives them the impression that he really understands them and cares about them. In fact, the only person Singer really cares about is the Greek Antonapoulos, another deaf-mute who lived with Singer for ten years and never showed any sign of understanding him any more that Singer understands Mick, Dr. Copeland, Blount, or Brannon when they talk about their lives. Singer spends his life’s savings to cover up for the petty thievery and destruction that Antonapoulos causes, and when his friend is sent away to a mental institution he is so lonely that he moves into the Kelly boarding house, because “he could no longer stand the rooms where Antonapoulos had lived.” None of his friends in town know about Antonapoulos, and when Singer takes his vacation time to visit him at the asylum, the others are anxious for his return. Singer’s reaction to this attention is conveyed in a letter that he sends to the Greek in which he discusses them all. “They are all very busy people,” he explains. “I do not mean that they work at their jobs all day and night but that they have much business in their minds that does not let them rest.” The letter goes on to explain that he does not enjoy their company, as each of them thinks, but that he has feelings ranging from slight approval of Mick (“She likes music. I wish I knew what it is she hears.”) to disgust with Blount (“The one with the moustache I think is crazy.”) At the end of the letter about their obsessions he, without irony, goes into his own obsession, stating exactly how many days it has been since he and Antonapoulos were together: “All of that time I have been alone without you. The only thing I can imagine is when I will be with you again.” When Singer goes to visit his friend and finds out that he has died, he wanders around in a stupor for half a day, then takes a pistol from the jewelry shop he works at and commits suicide.H Mick KellyMick is the character who is most like the author, growing up in a Southern town during the course of the novel. When she is first introduced, in the long chapter that brings all of the characters into the cafe, she is a “gangling, towheaded youngster, a girl of about twelve … dressed in khaki shorts and, a blue shirt, and tennis shoes-so that at first glance she was like a very young boy.” “I’d rather be a boy any day,” she tells her older sister who criticizes her clothes. In contrast to this childish image is the fact that Mick has come to the cafe to purchase cigarettes. During the summer days, Mick is responsible for her younger brothers, Bubber and Ralph, and is constantly with them. Ralph is so young that he should be wheeled through town in a carriage or a stroller, but since the Kelly family is poor, they can afford neither, so Mick ties him down in an old wagon so that he won’t fall out. Mick is fascinated with music, stopping when she hears a radio playing in a room in the boarding house or while passing someone’s home, so interested that she knows exactly which yard to go to to hear music in a time of emotional distress. Early in the novel, Mick is trying to make her own violin with a broken, plastered ukulele body, a violin bridge, and strings from a violin, a guitar and a banjo; when her older brother Bill, whom she looks up to, tells her that it will not work she gives up in frustration. Although Mick does not have a wide circle of friends, due largely to her family responsibilities, she is also not a social outcast: when she throws a party for her new classmates at the technical school, wearing a dress and makeup for the first time to assert her sophistication, it is a reasonable success. She ends up disappointed, because the dirty, scruffy neighborhood kids whom she is trying to leave in her past come to the party and mingle with her new friends. Like the other major characters in the book, Mick goes to Singer’s room to talk out her problems-he has a radio in his room, although he cannot hear it, and she listens to it when she visits. At the end, she has to give up her dream of studying for a career in music to take a job at Woolworth’s. After Singer’s death, she realizes that this job is not temporary, that it marks a change in her personality: “But now no music was in her mind. It was like she was shut out from the inside room…. It was like she was too tense. Or maybe because it was like the store took all her energy and time.” She tries to convince herself that she will return to music, but ends up repeating it and repeating it unconvincingly.
求孤独的美洲狮简介和读后感,谢谢
1、故事内容及评价 ①故事简介 镇上有两个哑巴,他们总是在一起。
每天清早,他们从住所出来,手挽手地走在去上班的路上。
两个伙伴很不一样。
带路的是那个非常肥胖、迷迷糊糊的希腊人。
夏天,他出门时总是穿着黄色或绿色T恤——前摆被他胡乱地塞进裤子里,后摆松散地垂着。
天冷一些的时候,他就在衬衫外面套上松松垮垮的灰毛衣。
他的脸圆圆、油油的,眼皮半开半闭,弯曲的嘴唇划出温柔而呆滞的笑容。
另一个哑巴是高个,眼睛里透出敏捷和智慧。
他穿得很朴素,总是一尘不染。
②文字评价:浅显、柔和、沁人心脾。
2、作者简介 卡森·麦卡勒斯,20世纪美国最重要的作家之一,1917年2月19日生于美国佐治亚州的Columbus。
29岁后瘫痪。
著有《心是孤独的猎手》、《婚礼的成员》、《黄金眼睛的映像》、《没有指针的钟》等小说作品。
其中,《心是孤独的猎手》在美国“现代文库”所评出的“20世纪百佳英文小说”中列第17位。
1967年9月29日麦卡勒斯在纽约州的Nyack去世,时年50岁。
《孤独的美洲狮》读后感怎么写,希望有一篇例文
精彩内容:清晨,山中雾气弥漫。
在春天的湿气中,这条小径增添了几分湿滑。
猎人梅里韦尔每走一步都格外小心昨天晚上他在隐秘的山谷里露营,今天他又往上走了一千米向远处望去,树干与怪石遍布山林间,地面上像是铺着一层由树根和灌木编织而成的地毯。
他可以看见山体的原貌,有幽深的峡谷,也有歪斜的岩石。
远处山顶上终年不化的积雪沐浴在阳光下,各处雄伟的山峰都像被阳光洒上了一层橘黄色。
太阳越升越高,梅里韦尔停下脚步,很想摘下帽子来更好地欣赏光线营造出的奇景。
他住在东部,经常来西部的高山打猎,对这里并不陌生,但熟悉的景象并没有让他心生厌倦,反而让他每看一次都热血沸腾。
他的目光追随着阳光不断地下移突然,他看见一只动物,心跳顿时加速,把日出的景象完全抛在脑后。
一只雄伟的公山羊站在一块岩石边缘,高高仰着头,头上的一对弯角向后延伸过肩,为保护母山羊,公山羊时刻提防着可能存在的危险。
梅里韦尔由山脚向上攀登,就是为了能捕获这种猎物。
于是他借助树枝的遮掩,蹑足前行,动作迅速却又无声无息。
《孤独的美洲狮》读后感400字
精彩内容:梅里韦尔对打猎已经毫无兴致了。
他听说美洲狮的幼崽非常容易驯服,因此他必须找到它们。
比起山羊头,它们是更新奇的战利品。
首先,他研究了母狮尸体的方位,然后回到山坡下,又仔细研究了一下灰熊的体形,他在脑海中想象着他不幸错过的对决场景。
之后,他才开始寻找已经成为孤儿的美洲狮幼崽。
在乱石和灌木丛中搜寻幼崽并不是一件容易的事情,还好有母狮的脚印做参考,但因泥石流而掉落的一块岩石阻断了梅里韦尔的搜索,在一番寻找之后,他才重新发现了美洲狮的脚印。
这时,几滴睡沫从他头顶上方喷溅而下,紧接着传来一声尖锐的哀嚎,如同猫叫一般。
想到有偷猎的动物捷足先登,梅里韦尔不由得怒火直冲心头,他纵身一跃,跳到了有声音传来的岩石上。
《猎人笔记》读后感1000字
《猎人笔记》读后感 《猎记》罗斯著名作家屠格涅夫的作,上星期的某天我班上的邓兴致勃勃地把它带到学校来,倒是让我先睹为快了.这是一本以散文的形式写成的小说,通过写“我”到各个地方去打猎时所遇到的各种各样的情景,反映了俄国当时的社会生活.这本书深深吸引我的原因首先是作者对大自然风光的精彩描写.我的童年生活里也有田野、森林,小河和溪流,可是,我从来没有用心去感受它的美妙之处,然而本书中作者那生动、形象的描述激起了我对大自然的热爱,也勾起了我对童年时代暑假生活的美好回忆.每每读到诸如“我坐在一片白桦林里,秋天的天气有点怪,一会儿阳光普照,一会儿又下起了小雨,天空中时而飘满白云,一忽儿又都散得干干净净,蓝蓝的天空显得纯洁、平静而温柔……”这样的句段时,都会有一种想放声朗读的欲望,的确可以陶冶性情.其次,本书二十五个故事中出现的人物有善良的农民,有受欺凌的农奴,落魄的小地主和冷酷无情的贵族地主,每一个故事的结尾都留有余地供读者想象和思考,有着意犹未尽的滋味.书中的“我”是贵族出身,因为所受教育不同而与其他贵族地主的言行举止大相径庭,他以一个受人尊敬的猎人的姿态记录了农奴们平凡的生活故事,但字里行间体现了作者对农民和农奴深切的同情之心,对贵族地主的高傲和自私还大胆地给予了讽刺和鞭挞,这一点难能可贵,令人敬佩!我欣赏书中的“我”,因为他热爱生活,因为他风度偏偏,因为他腹有诗书,因为他爱恨分明,更因为他“出淤泥而不染”!



