here are the articles in china college english intensive reading books.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

CET3-04 LADY HERMITS WHO ARE DOWN BUT NOT OUT

     Unit  Four   sound.gif (2200 字节)                       
      Text
                   In big cities Like  New  York, you  can  find  homeless
wonmen with shopping bags wandering on the streets.
They choose to live in an isolated, mistrustful world of
their own. They are called lady hermits or just shop-
ping-bag ladies.

               LADY HERMITS WHO ARE DOWN BUT NOT OUT     
           Every  large  city  has  its  shifting  population  of vagrants. But  in  most
cases these are men, usually with an unhealthy appetite for alcohol. Only
New York, it seems, attracts this peculiar populace of lone and homeless
women who live in an isolated, mistrustful world of their own.
5 Shopping-bag ladies do not drink. They do not huddle together for
warmth and companionship like bums. They do not seem to like one anoth-
er very much . Neithe, are they too keen on conventional people. Urban
hermits, one sociologist has called them. They will spend their days and
nights in the same neighbourhood for months on end, then disappear as in
10 explicably as they came. They know th e hours when resraurants put their
leftovers in the garbage cans where they search for food And local resi-
dents, seeing the same bag lady on the same corner every day, will slip
her some change as they pass.
Shopping-bag ladies do not overtly beg,but they do not refuse what is
15 cffered.Once a shopping-bag lady becomes a figure of your neighbourhood,
it is as hard to pass her by without giving her some money as it is to
ignore the collection box in church. And although you may not like it, if
she chooses your doorway as her place to sleep in the night, it is as
morally hard to turn her away as it is a lost dog.
20 There are various categories of bag ladies: those who live on the
streets, claiming they enjoy the freedom from constraints of society; those
who became homeless because a relative died or because they couldn't keep
up rent payments, and they didn't know where to go or how to apply for
relief; and quasi bag ladies who have an anchor point-a sister or brother
25 whom they can visit once in a while to take a bath.
Most shopping-bag ladies seem to be between the ages of 40 and 65.
They wear layers of clothes even in summer time, with newspapers stuffed
between the layers as further protection against bad weather. In general,
the more bags the ladies carry the better organised they are to cope
30 with life on the streets.
"You may think I have a lot of garbage in these bags," one shopping-
bag lady volunteered over lunch in a church soup kitchen,"but it's every-
thing I need. Extra clothes, newspapers for the cold." Shopping-bag ladies
are not very communicative and take genera l conversation as an intrusion.
35 But after a while, warmed by chicken soup, she began to speak.
"The place is nice," she volunteered, "people are friendly. Most New
Yorkers are very cold I have sisters in the city, but when you grow up,
eaeh goes his own way. Right?"
"I go out a lot because of my teeth. You know how it is: you pick up
40 something in a restaurant and your teeth turn rotten,no matter how careful
you are. People aren't considerate. The restaurants don't wash the glasses
properly, and before you know where you are you have caught it. That's
what happened to me. I don't like meeting people until I have this dental
work done. So I go out to forget my troubles. I sit a little while some-
45 where, have something to eat at one of these places, then go wherever I
have to go. I take all my things with me because you can't trust people."
The story of the dental work was a typical shopping-bag lady fantasy.
Psychiatrists say that even after long interviews shopping-bag ladies
are still at a loss to separate truth from imagination.
50 One quasi bag lady spends about eight hours every day at the foot of
the main escalator in a railroad station, although she rents a room in a
cheap hote in the neighbourhood.One of the priests from the nearby church
found this lodging for her after he discovered that she was entitled to a
small disability pension which she had never claimed. But every day from
55 about nine to five, she still akes a milk crate and sits by the station
escalator,not doing anything or talking to anyone.It's like a job to her.
No one knows how msny shopping-bag ladies there are in New York.
The figure is going up. Some priests, nuns and researchers spend a great
deal of time shepherding or observing shopping-bag ladies and are doing
60 what they can to better the life of the lady hermits who are down.
                               New Words     
  hermit / n.                             person who avoids other people and
lives alone
隐士
shift/ vi. move from one place, position, etc.
to another
转移,移动
vagrant / n. person who lives a wandering life
with no steady home or work
流浪者
appetite / n. desire or wish, esp. for food食欲,胃口
alcohol / n. ,酒精
attract / vt. draw towards oneself 吸引
attraction/ n.
attractive/ a.
peculiar / a. unusual; strange
奇特的;奇怪的
populace / n. population; the common people
lone / a. without other people or things
孤独的
isolate / vt. separate from others 使隔离,使孤立
mistrustful / a. iacking confidence or trust
shopping-bag/ n.
购物袋
huddle / vi. crowd together 挤作一团
warmth/n. the state or quality of being warm
companionship /n.
伴侣关系,友谊;一群伙伴
companion/ n. 同伴,伴侣
bum/ n. wandering beggar 游民,叫花子
keen / a. eager, anxious to do things 热心的, 渴望的
conventioital/ a. following accepted practices, customs,
and stan- dards
习俗的,寻常的
convention/ n. 习俗,惯例
sociologist /n. a person who studies societies and
human behav-ior in groups
社会学家
neighborhood /n. a group of people and their homes
forming a small area within a larger
place
街坊,四邻
inexplicably /ad. in a way not capable of explanation
leftovers / n. (used with a pl. v.)food remaining
uneaten af- ter a meal
garbage /n. waste material; rubbish; scraps of
food to be thrown away
garbage can dustbin
垃圾桶
resident/ n. person living in a place permanently,
not just a visitor
居民
slip /vt. give or pay secretly 悄悄给
overtly / ad. publicly 公开地
collection /n. the gathering of money at a religious
service; money collected
募捐;募金
collection box a box for the collection of money,esp.
one passed from hand to hand in church
奉献箱
doorway / n. 门口;门道
morally / ad. with regard to right behavior 道德上
moral/ a.
category /n class
种类
claim /kleim/ vt. declare to be true; ask for as a right;
take as a rightful owner
声称;要求;认领
constraint /n. sth. that limits one's freedom of
action
拘束
rent /n. money paid regularly for the use of a
room, building, or piece of land
租金
vt. pay at regular times for the use of
(property)
租用
payment n. the amount of money (to be)paid
relief / n. help given to people in trouble
救济
quasi / a. half; seeming ,
anchor / n. ;依靠
layer / n.
stuff /vt. fill tightly with ...塞满
protection/ n. the act of protecting or the state of
being pro-tected
protective /a.
cope/ vi. deal successfully with a difficult
situation
对付,应付
volunteer/ vt. tell or say without being asked; make
a willing offer
主动讲;自愿提供
voluntary/ a.
soup / n.

communicative / a. ready and willing to talk or give information
愿意交谈的
communiCation/ n. 交流;通讯
conversation / n. (an)informal talk 谈话
intrusion / n. coming unasked and unwanted (often
suggesting rudeness and invasion of
privacy)
侵犯;打扰
rotten/ a. having gone bad 腐烂的;腐朽的
considerate/a. thoughtful of the rights or feelings
of others
体谅的
dental / a. of or for the teeth
wherever/ conj. in, at, or to whatever place
fantasy / n. any strange mental image or illusion;
wild imagi- nation
怪念头;幻想
psychiatrist/n. doctor who treats mental and emotional
disorders
精神病医生
loss/ n. the act or example of losing sfh.
escalator /n.
自动楼梯
priest /n. 牧师;教士;神父
lotlging / n. a (temporary) place to live (临时)住所
lodge /v. (使)暂住,(使)寄宿
entitle vt. give the right to ...以权利
disability / n. the condition of being unable to perform
a task or function because of a physical
or mental im- pairment
伤残
pension / n. regular payment made (by a government
or a company) to sb. old, retired, or
disabled
养老金;退休金;抚恤金
crate / n. a plastic or wooden tray divided into
sections for carrying bottles of milk,
beer, etc.
,,
nun/ n. 修女;尼姑
shepherd /vt. take care of; guide or direct (people)
like sheep
看护;带领
better/ vt. improve
                         Phrases & Expressions       
   keen on                              interested in, fond of        
on end continuously
连续地
pass by go past; pay no attention to ...
走过
;忽视
turn away refuse to allow (sb.) to enter ...
拒之门外
keep up mainatain; continue
once in a while sometimes, but not often
间或,偶尔
in general in mast cases; usually 通常
cope with deal effectively with 善于处理
no matter how/what, etc. however, whatever, etc.
at a loss uncertain what to do or say; confused
不知所措
be entitled to have the right to


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