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Unit305

     Unit Five   

                  
     Text     

            
               mother and  her son  learn  more  from  a  moment 

           of  defeat than  they  ever  could   from a    victory.   Her  ex-

           ample  of  never  giving  up  gives him courage for  the  rest 

           of his life.
                          DAY MOTHER CRIED     

                       
                                                                                        Gerald  Moore

            home from  school that dark  winter's day so long ago, I  was 

    filled  with  anticipation. I  had a new issue of  my favorite sports  magazine 

    tucked  under my arm, and the house to  myself. Dad was at  work, my sis-

    ter was  away, and  Mother wouldn't be home from her new job for an hour. 

5  I bounded up the steps, burst into the living room and lipped on a light.

            was shocked  into  stillness by what I saw. Mother, pulled into a tight 

    ball  with  her  face in  her hands, sat  at  the  far  end of the coueh.She was

    crying. I had never seen her cry.

           approached  cautiously and touched  her shoulder.  "Mother?"  I  said.

10 "What's happened?"

            took a  long  breath  and managed a weak smile. "It's nothing, real-

     ly.  Nothing  important.  Just  that  I'm  going to  lose  this new  job. I can't 

     type fast enough. "

            you've  only  been  there three  days,  "I said. "You'll catch on. "I

15 was repeating a line she had spoken to me a hundred times when I was hav-

     ing trouble learning or doing something important to me.

           "No, "she said sadly. "I always s aid I could do anything I set my mind

     to, and I still think I can in most things. But I can't do this."

             felt helpless and out of place. At age 16 I still assumed Mother could

20 do anything. Some years  before, when  we sold  our  ranch, and  moved to 

     town, Mother had  decided to open a day nursery. She had had no training,

     but that didn't stand in her way. She sent away for correspondence courses 

     in child care,did the lessons and in six months formally qualified herself for 

     the task. It  wasn't long  before  she had a  full enrollment and a  waiting list.

25 I accepted all this as a perfectly normal instance of Mother's ability. 

              neither the nursery nor the motel my parents bought later had pro-

    vided enough income to send my sister  and  me  to  college. In two years I 

    would  be  ready for  college. In three  more my  sister  would  want  to  go.

    Time was running out, and Mother was frantic for ways to  save  money. It

30 was clear that Dad could do no more than he was  doing already -- farming  

     80 acres in addition to holding a fulltime job.

              few months after we'd sold the motel, Mother arrived  home  with a 

     used  typewriter.  It skipped between certain  letters and  the keyboard  was 

     soft. At dinner that night I pronounced the machine a "piece of junk."

35        all we can  afford,  "Mother  said.  "It's good enough  to  learn  

     on. "And from that day on,as soon as the table was cleared and the dishes 

     were done, Mother would disappear into her sewing room to practice. The 

     slow tap, tap, tap went on some, nights until midnight.

               was nearly Christmas when I heard  Mother  got a job at  the radio 

40  station.  I  was  not the  least  bit  surprised, or  impressed.  But  she  was  

     ecstat- ic. 

           ,  after her  first day at work, I could  see that  the  excitement

     was gone. Mother looked tired and drawn. I responded by ignoring her. 

           , Dad made dinner and cleaned the  kitchen. Mother  stayed in

45  her sewing room, practicing. "Is Mother all right? "I asked Dad.  

             having a  little  trouble with her typing, "he said."She  needs to

      practice. I think she'd appreciate it if we all helped out a bit more." 

            "I already do a lot, "I said, immediately on guard.

            "I know you do, "Dad said evenly. "And you may have to  do  more.

50  You might just remember that she is working primarily so you  can  go to  

      college. "

              honestly didn't care.I wished she would just forget the whole thing. 

      My shock and embarrassment at finding Mother in  tears  on  Wednesday

      was a perfect index of how little I understood the pressures on her.Sitting 

55  beside her on the couch, I began very slowly to understand.

             guess   we all  have to fail sometime, "Mother said  quietly. I could 

      sense her pain  and the tension  of holding back the strong  emotions that

      were  interrupted by  my arrival.  Suddenly, something  inside  me turned.   

      I  reached out and put my arms around her.

60         broke then. She put her face against my shoulder and sobbed. I 

      held her close and didn't try to talk.  I knew I  was doing  what I should, 

      what I could, and that it was enough. In  that  moment, feeling  Mother's 

      back racked with emotion,I understood for the first time her vulnerability. 

      She was still my mother,but she was something more: a  person like  me,

65  capable of fear and hurt and failure.I could feel her pain as she must have 

      felt  mine on a  thousand  occasions  when I  had sought comfort in her 

      arms. 

              week  later Mother took  a job selling  dry goods at half the salary

      radio  station  had offered. "It's a job I can do, "she said simply. But the 

      evening practice sessions on the old green  typewriter continued. I had a 

70  very different feeling now when I passed her door at night and heard  her

      tapping away. I knew there was something more going on in there than a 

      woman learning to type.

              I left for college two years later,Mother had an office job with

     better pay and more responsibility. I have to believe  that in  some strange 

75 way  she  learned  as  much from  her moment of  defeat as I did,because 

     several years later,when I had finished  school and proudly accepted a job 

     as  a  newspaper  reporter;  she  had  already  been  a  journalist  with  our 

     hometown paper for six months.

            old green typewriter sits in my office now, unrepaired. It is a me-

80 mento, but what it recalls for me is not  quite what  it  recalled for Mother. 

     When I'm having trouble with a story and think about giving up or when I 

     start to feel sorry for myself and think  things  should be  easier for  me, I 

     roll  a  piece of  pape  into  that  cranky old  machine  and type, word  by 

     painful word,  just  the way Mother did. What I  remember then is not her  

85 faiharer; but her courage, the courage to go ahead.

             It's the best memento anyone ever gave me.

                              
                                                         

                             
    anticipation/ n.                          expectation 

       anticipate/ vt. 

    issue / n.                                  发行物(刊物的)一期    

  tuck / vt.                                  put or push into a desired  convenient  	

                                                         position so as to  hold  tightly; draw  	

                                                         together into a small space 塞(进);卷(起) 

    bound /vi.                                move along quickly by jumping or leaping  	

                                                         move- ments 跳跃 

  flip /v.                                      turn or move quickly or with a jerk 

    tight / a.	                                 drawn, fixed  or  fastened  together 

                                                         firmly 紧的,牢的  

      ad.                                   firmly, closely 

    couch / n.                                 a long comfortable seat with a back and  	

                                                        arms on which more than one person may 

                                                        sit; sofa 长沙发椅 	

  approach/ v.                             come near or nearer (to) 

    cautiously/ad.                           very carefully 细心地,谨慎地 

    cautious/ a. 

    type/ vt.                                   write (sth.) with a typewriter 

    line/ n.                                     a row of words in a poem; a row of words  	

                                                        on a page of writing or in print(诗,文的一行)  

  helpless/ a.                              unable to look after oneself  or take  	

                                                         action to help others, powerless 

    assume/ vt.                             take as  true  without  actual  proof;

                                                         suppose 假使,主观认为 

  ranch / n.                                a very large farm for raising  horses,  	

                                                         cattle or sheep 大牧场,大农场  

  nursery / n.                             a  place  where  small  children  are  	

                                                        temporarily cared for 托儿所  

  day nursery/ n.                        a place where small children are cared  	

                                                         for during the day 

    trtaining/ n.                              the process of training or being trained;  	

                                                         instruc- tion 

    corresponderice/ n.                 the act of exchanging letters 通信

  correspondence course/ n.       an educational course in which instructions 	

                                                        and work are exchanged between the teacher  	

                                                        and student by post 函授课程 

  formally / ad.                          according to proper  rules  or  lawful 

                                                       forms 正式地

     formal/ a. 

    qualify / vt.                             make fit or competent  for  a  special 

                                                        purpose 使具有资格 

  enrol(1)ment / n.                     the number of people who have registered  	

                                                         them- selves as members of a school, a 	

                                                         program, etc. ;registering 注册人数;

                                                        注册,登记

     enrol(l) v.                          注册,登记 

  motel / n.                               aroadside hotel providing  overnight  	

                                                        lodging for motorists 汽车旅馆 

  frantic / a.                              wildly anxious, afraid, happy; etc. 

    acre / n.                                英亩

  addition/ n.                            the act of adding 加,加法  

  full-time/ a.                            occupying all normal working hours 

    typewriter/n.              打字机

  keylioard / n.                         the set of keys on a typewriter, piano, 

                                                      etc. 键盘

  jnnk / n.                                old useless things 破烂,垃圾	

  tap/ n                                    a short light blow 轻叩

  midnight/ n.                           the middle of the night 午夜 

  ecstatic / a.                            marked by  a  state  of  overwhelming  	

                                                    emotion, esp. great joy 欣喜若狂的

  drawn /a.                              (of the face) looking  very  tired  or  	

                                                    worned or tense 憔悴的;紧张的  

  respond /vi.                          act in answer to the action of another; 

                                                     answer 

    dad / n.                                (colloq.) father 

    evenly/ ad.                            calmly, peacefully 

    even/ a.	 

    primarily 

        praimarali/ ad.                  mainly; chiefly 

    embarrassment/ n.                a feeling of shyness, shame or guilt 

    index / n.                             sign or indication 指数,指标  

  pressure /n.                         a constraining influence upon the mind

                                                      (心理上的)压力 

  tension / n.                          (a feeling of) nervous anxiety, worry,

                                                      or pressure 紧张	

  arrival/ n.                            the act of arriving 

    rack / vt.                            shake violently 猛力摇动 

  vulnerability/n.                    being liable to be damaged or hurt 易受

                                 伤的,脆弱性  	

     vulnerable /a. 	

    dry goods                           (AmE) cloth, ribbons, laces, curtains  	

                                                   and similar textile fabrics 织物类商品 

  session / n.                          a meeting or period of time devoted to  	

                                                   a particu- lar activity 会议;(从事某项

                                活动的)一段时间 	

  journalist/ n.                        a person whose profession is writing  	

                                                    for, edit- ing, or publishing newspapers  	

                                                    or magazines, a reporter 新闻工作者;记者

  memento / n.                      sth. which reminds one of a holiday, a 	

                                                    friend, etc. 纪念品

  cranky / a.                          (of a machine) shaky; malfunctioning

                                                   不稳的;有毛病的  	

                         
                              Phrase.s & Expressions    

                           
    have sth. to oneself                   have sth. for one's own private use 

    at work	                                   working; operating 

    catch on (to)                            (informal) learn; understand 学会,懂得

  set one's mind to (or on)           pull all one's efforts into doing (sth.) 

                                                          决心做

  stand/be in sb's way                 be in a position to delay or prevent someone  	

                                                          from his in- tended actions 阻碍,妨碍

  send away for                          request (sth.) or order (goods) to be sent 

                                                          by post 函索 

  run out	                                   come to an end ; be used up 到期;用完,耗尽   

  in addition (to)                         besides; as well (as) 

    help out                                   give help; help (sb.) at a time of need 

                                                          帮助;帮助(某人)摆脱困境 

  on guard                                  ready to defend or protect; watchful 警惕

                                    提防

  in tears                                    ciying 

    hold back                                control; make (sth.) stay in place 抑制,阻止  

  go on                                      take place or happen 

    go ahead                                 make progress; advance