设万维读者为首页 万维读者网 -- 全球华人的精神家园 广告服务 联系我们 关于万维
 
首  页 新  闻 视  频 博  客 论  坛 分类广告 购  物
搜索>> 发表日志 控制面板 个人相册 给我留言
帮助 退出
microsoftbug的博客  
我知道我无知-而其他人不知道自己无知,所以他们是双倍的无知(苏格拉底)  
https://blog.creaders.net/u/6453/ > 复制 > 收藏本页
网络日志正文
赶鸭子上架:读最长的英语文学名句 2018-06-03 06:07:50


Gabriel Garcia Marquez, “The Last Voyage of the Ghost Ship.” 2156 words.

“Now they’re going to see who I am, he said to himself in his strong new man’s voice, many years after he had first seen the huge ocean liner without lights and without any sound which passed by the village one night like a great uninhabited place, longer than the whole village and much taller than the steeple of the church, and it sailed by in the darkness toward the colonial city on the other side of the bay that had been fortified against buccaneers, with its old slave port and the rotating light, whose gloomy beams transfigured the village into a lunar encampment of glowing houses and streets of volcanic deserts every fifteen seconds, and even though at that time he’d been a boy without a man’s strong voice but with his’ mother’s permission to stay very late on the beach to listen to the wind’s night harps, he could still remember, as if still seeing it, how the liner would disappear when the light of the beacon struck its side and how it would reappear when the light had passed, so that it was an intermittent ship sailing along, appearing and disappearing, toward the mouth of the bay, groping its way like a sleep﹚alker for the buoys that marked the harbor channel, until something must have gone wrong with the compass needle, because it headed toward the shoals, ran aground, broke up, and sank without a single sound, even though a collision against the reefs like that should have produced a crash of metal and the explosion of engines that would have frozen, with fright the soundest﹕leeping dragons in the prehistoric jungle that began with the last streets of the village and ended on the other side of the world, so that he himself thought it was a dream, especially the, next day, when he. saw the radiant fishbowl. of the bay, the disorder of colors of the Negro shacks on the hills above the harbor, the schooners of the smugglers from the Guianas loading their cargoes ﹐f innocent parrots whose craws were full of diamonds, he thought, I fell asleep counting the stars and L dreamed about that huge ship, of course, he was so convinced that he didn’t tell anyone nor did he remember the vision again until the same night on the following March when he was looking for the flash of dolphins in the sea and what he found was the illusory line, gloomy, intermittent, with the same mistaken direction as the first time, except that then he was so sure he was awake that he ran to tell his mother and she spent three weeks moaning with disappointment, because your brain’s rotting away from doing so many things backward, sleeping during the day and going out at night like a criminal, and since she had to go to the city around that time to get something comfortable where she could sit and think about her dead husband, because the rockers on her chair had worn out after eleven years of widowhood, she took advantage of the occasion and had the boatman go near the shoals so that her son could see what he really saw in the glass of; the sea, the lovemaking of manta rays in a springtime of sponges, pink snappers and blue corvinas diving into the other wells of softer waters that were there among the waters, and even the wandering hairs of victims of drowning in some colonial shipwreck, no trace of sunken liners of anything like it, and yet he was so pigheaded that his mother promised to watch with him the next March, absolutely, not knowing that the only thing absolute in her future now was an easy chair from the days of Sir Francis Drake which she had bought at an auction in a Turk’s store, in which she sat down to rest that same night sighing, oh, my poor Olofernos, if you could only see how nice it is to think about you on this velvet lining and this brocade from the casket of a queen, but the more she brought back the memory of her dead husband, the more the blood in her heart bubbled up and turned to chocolate, as if instead of sitting down she were running, soaked from chills and fevers and her breathing full of earth, until he returned at dawn and found her dead in the easy chair, still warm, but half rotted away as after a snakebite, the same as happened afterward to four other women before the murderous chair was thrown into the sea, far away where it wouldn’t bring evil to anyone, because it had. been used so much over the centuries that its faculty for giving rest had been used up, and so he had to grow accustomed to his miserable routine of an orphan who was pointed out by everyone as the son of the widow who had brought the throne of misfortune into the village, living not so much from public charity as from fish he stole out of the boats, while his voice was becoming a roar, and not remembering his visions of past times anymore until another night in March when he chanced to look seaward and suddenly, good Lord, there, it is, the huge asbestos whale, the behemoth beast, come see it, he shouted madly, come see it, raising such an uproar of dogs’ barking and women’s panic that even the oldest men remembered the frights of their greatゞrandfathers and crawled under their beds, thinking that William Dampier had come back, but those who ran into the street didn’t make the effort to see the unlikely apparatus which at that instant was lost again in the east and raised up in its annual disaster, but they covered him with blows and left him so twisted that it was then he said to himself, drooling with rage, now they’re going to see who I am, but he took care not to share his determination with anyone, but spent the whole year with the fixed idea, now they’re going to see who I am, waiting for it to be the eve of the apparition once more in order to do what he did, which was steal a boat, cross the bay, and spend the evening waiting for his great moment in the inlets of the slave port, in the human brine of the Caribbean, but so absorbed in his adventure that he didn’t stop as he always did in front of the Hindu shops to look at the ivory mandarins carved from the whole tusk of an elephant, nor did he make fun of the Dutch Negroes in their orthopedic velocipedes, nor was he frightened as at other times of the copper﹕kinned Malayans, who had gone around the world, enthralled by the chimera of a secret tavern where they sold roast filets of Brazilian women, because he wasn’t aware of anything until night came over him with all the weight of the stars and the jungle exhaled a sweet fragrance of gardenias and rotter salamanders, and there he was, rowing in the stolen boat, toward the mouth of the bay, with the lantern out so as not to alert the customs police, idealized every fifteen seconds by the green wing flap of the beacon and turned human once more by the darkness, knowing that he was getting close to the buoys that marked the harbor, channel, not only because its oppressive glow was getting more intense, but because the breathing of the water was becoming sad, and he rowed like that, so wrapped up in himself, that he. didn’t know where the fearful shark’s breath that suddenly reached him came from or why the night became dense, as if the stars had suddenly died, and it was because the liner was there, with all of its inconceivable size, Lord, bigger than, any other big thing in the world and darker than any other dark thing on land or sea, three hundred thousand tons of shark smell passing so close to the boat that he could see the seams of the steel precipice without a single light in the infinite portholes, without a sigh from the engines, without a soul, and carrying its own circle of silence with it, its own dead air, its halted time, its errant sea in which a whole world of drowned animals floated, and suddenly it all disappeared with the flash of the beacon and for an instant it was the diaphanous Caribbean once more, the March night, the everyday air of the pelicans, so he stayed alone among the buoys, not knowing what to do, asking himself, startled, if perhaps he wasn’t dreaming while he was awake, not just now but the other times too, but no sooner had. he asked himself than a breath of mystery snuffled out the buoys, from the first to the last, so that when the light of the beacon passed by the liner appeared again and now its compasses were out of order, perhaps not even knowing what part of the ocean sea it was in, groping for the invisible channel but actually heading for the shoals, until he got the overwhelming revelation that that misfortune of the buoys was the last key to the enchantment and he lighted the lantern in the boat, a tiny red light that had no reason to ala

rm anyone in the watch towers but which would be like a guiding sun for the pilot, because, thanks to it, the liner corrected its course and passed into the main gate of the channel in a maneuver of lucky resurrection, and then all the lights went on at the same time so that the boilers wheezed again, the stars were fixed in their places, and the animal corpses went to the bottom, and there was a clatter of plates and a fragrance of laurel sauce in the kitchens, and one could hear the pulsing of the orchestra on the moon decks and the throbbing of the arteries of high﹕ea lovers in the shadows of the staterooms, but he still carried so much leftover rage in him that he would not let himself be confused by emotion or be frightened by the miracle, but said to himself with more decision than ever, now they’re going to see who I am, the cowards, now they’re going to see, and instead of turning aside so that the colossal machine would not charge into him he began to row in front of it, because now they really are going to see who I am, and he continued guiding the ship with the lantern until he was so sure of its obedience that he made it change course from the direction of the docks once more, took it out of the invisible channel, and led it by the halter as if it were a sea lamb toward the lights of the sleeping village, a living ship, invulnerable to the torches of the beacon, that no longer made invisible but made it aluminum every fifteen seconds, and the crosses of the church, the misery of the houses, the illusion began to stand out and still the ocean liner followed behind him, following his will inside of it, the captain asleep on his heart side, the fighting bulls in the snow of their pantries, the solitary patient in the infirmary, the orphan water of its cisterns, the unredeemed pilot who must have mistaken the cliffs for the docks, because at that instant the great roar of the whistle burst forth, once, and he with downpour of steam that fell on him, again, and the boat belonging to someone else was on the point of capsizing, and again, but it was too late, because there were the shells of the shoreline, the stones of the street, the doors of the disbelievers, the whole village illuminated by the lights of the fearsome liner itself, and he barely had time to get out of the way to make room for the cataclysm, shouting in the midst of the confusion, there it is, you cowards, a second before the huge steel cask shattered the ground and one could hear the neat destruction of ninety thousand five hundred champagne glasses breaking, one after the other, from stem to stern, and then the light came out and it was no longer a March dawn but the noon of a radiant Wednesday, and he was able to give himself the pleasure of watching the disbelievers as with open mouths they contemplated the largest ocean liner in this world and the other aground in front of the church, whiter than anything, twenty times taller than the steeple and some ninety﹕even times longer than the village, with its name engraved in iron letters, Halalcsillag, and the ancient and languid waters of the sea of death dripping down its sides.”




浏览(1261) (1) 评论(3)
发表评论
文章评论
作者:bunny2 留言时间:2018-06-03 08:01:50

翻译和写作(原创)是两码事。翻译的关键是准确,写作的关键是表达好,二个标准,都可以不顾语法。

回复 | 0
作者:bunny2 留言时间:2018-06-03 07:58:55

这是文学名句,长句子。长短没有规定,只有需要。写的好是关键,长要长的有道理。国内的英语教学一塌糊涂,都差不多。我在过的吉大和中大都没什么口语好的老师。

回复 | 0
作者:俞先生 留言时间:2018-06-03 07:47:34

我当学生的时候,老师也曾经向大家展示一个英语长句,有好几页。我当时的印象是,英语的句子可长可短。长一点也正常。后来,到加拿大后,我有一次翻译一篇文章,其中句子较长,我以为没事。后来,老外看见了,说我的句子不能太长,只能写短一点。后来,又不敢写长句了。感到困惑。不知道怎样才对。不知道你的看法如何?

回复 | 0
我的名片
microsoftbug
注册日期: 2012-07-04
访问总量: 525,843 次
点击查看我的个人资料
Calendar
最新发布
· [中华联邦共和国宪章]
· 看海外的民运自媒体和博客就知道
· 中国的一切问题都能在中国文化中
· 生为猪不幸哼哼者更不幸明白而不
· Female in Chinese Culture
· 流氓流气宣布:流氓从不下流
· 中国决不容许G20国家讨论香港游
友好链接
· hare:hare的博客
· bunny2:bunny2的博客
· Madhatter:English_only的博客
分类目录
【范例电视台转播站】
· 【第三次讲座录象供浏览】
· 范例电视台直播频道(A)
· 范例电视台直播频道(B)
【直播室】
· Female in Chinese Culture
· 中国社会的底线与习近平的命运
· 周末哲学讲座调查
· 【第三次讲座录象供浏览】
【on ccp】
· 看海外的民运自媒体和博客就知道
· "亡书记"最后的指示-请准备好葬
· 觉悟不分海内外骗子勿论东西方
· 如何对待万维上中国共产党的走狗
· ZT: 人海打不过火海——半岛不可回
· 评习近平的“宪法宣誓”
· 有种种迹象表明:中国大乱在即
· 美帝的外交小技俩被我轻易识破
· “我是流氓我怕谁?”
· 检查我们的“共产党思维”
【politics】
· [中华联邦共和国宪章]
· 生为猪不幸哼哼者更不幸明白而不
· 中国决不容许G20国家讨论香港游
· "到底谁是他妈的国家主人?!
· 台湾民谣
· 真正中国的觉醒开始了......
· 贸易战谈判最新进展
· 美国佬,您到底要咱怎么办?
· 赵家公主究竟犯了什么事使奴才们
· 习近平-带上8千万党员投降吧
【bookworm】
· 中国人改变命运速成法
· "我 - 用什么庆祝自由!"
· 学好外语的十个阶段
· Gettysburg Speech (sound test)
· “永别了- 武器!”- AND WHY?
【academia】
· Clarity? What to Clarify?
· 谈相对与绝对的关系(下)
· What is The Absolute Truth?
· 为什么不能一直问“为什么”-“质”
· 基因编辑-不可避免
· 为什么学好外语口语【十分困难】
· 什么是“绝对论”?
· 美中贸易战-今天的“伯罗奔尼撒战
· 转摘:只有真知灼见是我需要的
· 什么是范例微观世界起源的"小爆
【culture】
· 中国的一切问题都能在中国文化中
· 胡杰纪录片系列:麦地冲的歌声(
· 我支持刘鹤这么说
· 中国文化的缺失和变态
· 关于万维二十周年论坛调整的建议
· 中国只能学美国 - 别无选择
· 为什么中国传统文化的“诚信”没有
· 谈一点教育背景与学习的必要
· “感性文化”面面观(1)
· 再谈美国的伟大
【out of thinking】
· 我不是"民主派"
· 哎这年头出国需要爬这么高啊!
· 改变看法–学懂哲学的标志
· 如何理解Leveraged ETF?
· 道德国民无德行
【life】
· 流氓流气宣布:流氓从不下流
· 任老板真给中国人长志气:如果川
· 如何对待愚昧的“性情真人”?
· 谁说中国大众没有讽刺国家领导人
· "我想活......但是......&q
· 党给他们同样一个"中国梦"
· 中国"50怪"
· 大爷,您对广州花6亿建干部专用
· 中国人的“聋哑英语”是如何炼成的
· 你能满足只喝水不顾容器吗?
存档目录
2021-01-16 - 2021-01-18
2019-10-27 - 2019-10-27
2019-07-08 - 2019-07-21
2019-06-24 - 2019-06-24
2019-05-14 - 2019-05-28
2019-04-07 - 2019-04-26
2019-03-03 - 2019-03-24
2019-02-02 - 2019-02-24
2019-01-07 - 2019-01-31
2018-12-01 - 2018-12-30
2018-11-01 - 2018-11-29
2018-10-03 - 2018-10-19
2018-09-02 - 2018-09-28
2018-08-02 - 2018-08-28
2018-07-01 - 2018-07-31
2018-06-01 - 2018-06-27
2018-05-06 - 2018-05-30
2018-04-08 - 2018-04-27
2018-03-18 - 2018-03-25
2018-01-13 - 2018-01-19
2017-12-23 - 2017-12-30
2016-04-02 - 2016-04-13
2016-03-09 - 2016-03-31
2016-02-14 - 2016-02-14
2015-09-02 - 2015-09-24
2015-08-01 - 2015-08-18
2015-07-25 - 2015-07-30
2015-06-19 - 2015-06-27
2015-05-01 - 2015-05-01
2015-03-10 - 2015-03-10
2015-02-14 - 2015-02-18
2015-01-04 - 2015-01-11
2014-12-06 - 2014-12-29
2014-11-01 - 2014-11-28
2014-10-02 - 2014-10-29
2014-09-06 - 2014-09-29
2014-08-02 - 2014-08-10
2014-07-05 - 2014-07-28
2014-06-24 - 2014-06-30
2014-05-17 - 2014-05-26
2014-04-05 - 2014-04-26
2014-03-29 - 2014-03-29
2014-02-01 - 2014-02-23
2014-01-02 - 2014-01-24
2013-12-14 - 2013-12-31
2013-11-30 - 2013-11-30
2013-10-13 - 2013-10-13
2013-09-01 - 2013-09-22
2013-08-11 - 2013-08-23
2013-07-14 - 2013-07-24
2013-06-03 - 2013-06-08
2013-05-02 - 2013-05-26
2013-04-03 - 2013-04-29
2013-03-27 - 2013-03-31
2013-02-06 - 2013-02-28
2013-01-01 - 2013-01-30
2012-12-01 - 2012-12-29
2012-11-15 - 2012-11-29
 
关于本站 | 广告服务 | 联系我们 | 招聘信息 | 网站导航 | 隐私保护
Copyright (C) 1998-2024. Creaders.NET. All Rights Reserved.