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电影雨果英语作文

发布时间:2022-08-15 13:33:32

『壹』 从电影雨果里找出二十句经典英文句子

everything has a purpose, even machines. clock tell the time and trains take you places. they do what they're meant to do, like monsieur labisse. maybe that's why broken machines make me so sad. they can't do what they're meant to do. maybe it's the same with people. if you lose your purpose, it's like you're broken.
一切事物都有使命,就连机器也是一样。钟要报时,火车要带你去往目的地。他们都在做着本职的工作。也许这就是为什么机器坏掉我会这么难过。这样他们就不能尽到自己的职责了。也许人也是一样的。如果你的生活毫无目的,就好像你坏掉了一样。
right after my father died, i would come up here a lot. i'd imagine the whole world was one big machine. machines never come with any extra parts, you know. they always come with the exact amount they need. so i figure if the entire world was one big machine, i couldn't be an extra part. i had to be here for some reason. and that means you have to be here for some reason, too. 我父亲死后,我经常到这儿来。我会把整个世界想象成一个巨大的机器,机器永远不会有多出来的零件,你知道的。他们总是精确地有着自己需要的份量,所以我想,如果这个世界是一个巨大的机器,我就不会是多余的零件,我在这里,总是有原因的,这也说明,你能在这里,也是有原因的。

『贰』 哪位大虾 给我准备一篇雨果《悲惨世界》的简介 英文简介 三分钟之内完事,重谢哦

1.Les Miserables (Synopsis)

Jean Valjean, released on parole after 19 years on the chain gang, finds that the yellow ticket-of-leave condemns him to be an outcast. Only the saintly Bishop of Digne treats him kindly and Valjean, embittered by years of hardship, repays him by stealing some silver. Valjean is caught and brought back by police, and is astonished when the Bishop lies to the police to save him and also gives him two precious candlesticks. Valjean decides to start his life anew.

Eight years have passed and Valjean, having broken his parole and changed his name to Monsieur Madeleine, has risen to become mayor of Montreuil. Javert, a police sergeant who has been tracking the parole-breaker for years, discovers Valjean’s true identity and swears to put him back in jail. To keep his promise to Fantine, a dying woman, Valjean escapes from Javert and rescues Cossette, Fauntine’s illegitimate daughter, from the Thenardiers who have been lodging and mistreating the girl for five years. Valjean is again in disguise and lives a quiet life in Paris with Cossette, his “daughter”. He rescues Marius, a revolutionist who is in love with Cossette, from the fierce battle at the barricade. He is given the chance to kill Javert, but instead lets him go.

Valjean confesses the truth of his past to Marius before the young couple gets married and Maruis decides that Valjean should keep away from Cossette so as not to taint the sanctity and safety of their union. Thenardier tries to blackmail Marius, only to reveal the truth that it is Valjean who saved Marius from the barricade that night. Marius and Cossette go to Valjean before the old man dies. Moved by Valjean’s generosity and kindness, Jarvet gives up his ty as a police sergeant and commits suicide. The miserable world is enlightened by the glory of humanity.

2." Les Miserables " (1862) is representative works of Victor Hugo,as one of the most famous novels in the French literature.
The novel basic plot is Ran A Rang pitiful life history. He originally is one poor family background worker, because the income insufficient family member gets by, by one time stole the bread is arrested is put in prison. Passed 19 years firm prison and the bitter service life. The punishment completely after also has the larceny behavior, but benevolent bishop in the rice the sorrowful influence, the transformation is one shed oneself manner person. He uses an alias is Madland, works as the entrepreneur, and is pushed for mayor. But soon and further because exposed the status is arrested is put in prison, after escapes rescues the deceased female worker Fantin's daughter Cosette match from one bastard hand special, went to Paris. Afterwards again unceasingly encountered police's pursuit. The Ran A Rang entire life fills is imprisoned the pain which the bitter service and drifts about destitute, this is the novel main clue.
" Les Miserables " is the work which one realism and the romanticism unifies, the very many chapters glitter the realism glory, such as , in 1832 Paris's street barricade war all wrote is quite real. But the romanticism technique quite was also obvious in the plot arrangement, writes the many extraordinary events. If Ran A rang lets lie down is lifted in the coffin the monastery, he rescues from the street barricade Marilius, all is strange, molds, environment description, symbolic and contrast technique aspect and so on utilization in the character image, also manifests the romanticism the characteristic.

『叁』 雨果的英文简介——急求!!

Hugo, Victor

born Feb. 26, 1802, Besançon, Fr.
died May 22, 1885, Paris

poet, novelist, and dramatist who was the most important of the French Romantic writers. Though regarded in France as one of that country's greatest poets, he is better known abroad for such novels as Notre-Dame de Paris (1831) and Les Misérables (1862).

Early years (1802–30).

Victor was the third son of Joseph-Léopold-Sigisbert Hugo, a major and, later, general in Napoleon's army. His childhood was coloured by his father's constant traveling with the imperial army and by the disagreements that soon alienated his parents from one another. His mother's royalism and his father's loyalty to successive governments—the Convention, the Empire, the Restoration—reflected their deeper incompatibility. It was a chaotic time for Victor, continually uprooted from Paris to set out for Elba or Naples or Madrid, yet always returning to Paris with his mother, whose royalist opinions he initially adopted. The fall of the empire gave him, from 1815 to 1818, a time of uninterrupted study at the Pension Cordier and the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, after which he matriculated at the law faculty at Paris, where his studies seem to have been purposeless and irregular. Memories of his life as a poor student later inspired the figure of Marius in his novel Les Misérables.

From 1816, at least, Hugo had conceived ambitions other than the law. He was already filling notebooks with verses, translations—particularly from Virgil—two tragedies, a play, and elegies. Encouraged by his mother, Hugo founded a review, the Conservateur Littéraire (1819–21), in which his own articles on the poets Alphonse de Lamartine and André de Chénier stand out. His mother died in 1821, and a year later Victor married a childhood friend, Adèle Foucher, with whom he had five children. In that same year he published his first book of poems, Odes et poésies diverses, whose royalist sentiments earned him a pension from Louis XVIII. Behind Hugo's concern for classical form and his political inspiration, it is possible to recognize in these poems a personal voice and his own particular vein of fantasy.

In 1823 he published his first novel, Han d'Islande, which in 1825 appeared in an English translation as Hans of Iceland. The journalist Charles Nodier was enthusiastic about it and drew Hugo into the group of friends, all devotees of Romanticism, who met regularly at the Bibliothèque de L'Arsenal. While frequenting this literary circle, which was called the Cénacle, Hugo shared in launching a new review of moderate tendencies, the Muse Française (1823–24). In 1824 he published a new verse collection, Nouvelles Odes, and followed it two years later with an exotic romance, Bug-Jargal (Eng. trans. The Slave King). In 1826 he also published Odes et ballades, an enlarged edition of his previously printed verse, the latest of these poems being brilliant variations on the fashionable Romantic modes of mirth and terror. The youthful vigour of these poems was also characteristic of another collection, Les Orientales (1829), which appealed to the Romantic taste for Oriental local colour. In these poems it can be remarked that the poet, while skillfully employing a great variety of metres in his verse and using ardent and brilliant imagery, was also graally shedding the legitimist royalism of his youth. It may be noted, too, that “Le Feu ciel,” a visionary poem, forecast those he was to write 25 years later. The fusion of the contemporary with the apocalyptic was always a particular mark of Hugo's genius.

Hugo emerged as a true Romantic, however, with the publication in 1827 of his verse drama Cromwell and a once-famous preface. The subject of this play, with its near-contemporary overtones, is that of a national leader risen from the people who seeks to be crowned king; but the play's reputation rested largely on the long, elaborate preface, in which Hugo proposed a doctrine of Romanticism that for all its intellectual moderation was extremely provocative. He demanded a verse drama in which the contradictions of human existence—good and evil, beauty and ugliness, tears and laughter—would be resolved by the inclusion of both tragic and comic elements in a single play. Such a type of drama would abandon the formal rules of classical tragedy for the freedom and truth to be found in the plays of William Shakespeare. Cromwell itself, though immensely long and almost impossible to stage, was written in verse of great force and originality.

Success (1830–51).

The defense of freedom and the cult of an idealized Napoleon in such poems as the ode “À la Colonne” and “Lui” brought Hugo into touch with the liberal group of writers on the newspaper Le Globe, and his move toward liberalism was strengthened by the French king Charles X's restrictions on the liberty of the press as well as by the censor's prohibiting the stage performance of his play Marion de Lorme (1829), in which the character of Louis XIII was portrayed unfavourably. Hugo immediately retorted with Hernani, the first performance of which, on Feb. 25, 1830, gained victory for the young Romantics over the traditional Classicists in a now-famous literary battle. In this play he extolled the Romantic hero in the form of a noble outlaw at war with society, dedicated to a passionate love and driven on by inexorable fate. The actual impact of the play owed less to the plot than to the sound and beat of the verse, which was softened only in the elegiac passages spoken by Hernani and Doña Sol.

Hugo had derived his early renown from his plays; he gained wider fame in 1831 with his historical novel Notre-Dame de Paris (Eng. trans. The Hunchback of Notre-Dame), an evocation of life in medieval Paris ring the reign of Louis XI. The novel condemns a society that, in the persons of Frollo the archdeacon and Phoebus the soldier, heaps misery on the hunchback Quasimodo and the gypsy girl Esmeralda. The theme touched the public consciousness more deeply than had that of his previous novel, Le Dernier Jour d'un condamné (1829; The Last Days of a Condemned), the story of a condemned man's last day, in which Hugo launched a humanitarian protest against the death penalty. While Notre-Dame was being written, Louis-Philippe, a constitutional king, had been brought to power by the July Revolution. Hugo composed a poem in honour of this event, Dicté aprés juillet 1830; it was a forerunner of much of his political verse.

Four books of poems came from Hugo in the period of the July Monarchy: Les Feuilles d'automne (1831; “Autumn Leaves”), intimate and personal in inspiration; Les Chants crépuscule (1835; Songs of Twilight), overtly political; Les Voix intérieures (1837; “Inner Voices”), both personal and philosophical; and Les Rayons et les ombres (1840; “Sunlight and Shadows”), in which the poet, renewing these different themes, inlges his gift for colour and picturesque detail. But Hugo was not content merely to express personal emotions; he wanted to be the “sonorous echo” of his time. In his verse political and philosophical problems were integrated with the religious and social disquiet of the period; one poem evoked the misery of the workers, another praised the efficacy of prayer. He addressed many poems to the glory of Napoleon, though he shared with his contemporaries the reversion to republican ideals. Hugo restated the problems of his century and the great and eternal human questions, and he spoke with a warmhearted eloquence and reasonableness that moved people's souls.

So intense was Hugo's creative activity ring these years that he also continued to pour out plays. There were two motives for this: first, he needed a platform for his political and social ideas, and, second, he wished to write parts for a young and beautiful actress, Juliette Drouet, with whom he had begun a liaison in 1833. Juliette had little talent and soon renounced the stage in order to devote herself exclusively to him, becoming the discreet and faithful companion she was to remain until her death in 1883. The first of these plays was another verse drama, Le Roi s'amuse (1832; Eng. trans. The King's Fool), set in Renaissance France and depicting the frivolous love affairs of Francis I while antithetically revealing the noble character of his court jester. This play was at first banned but was later used by Giuseppe Verdi as the libretto of his opera Rigoletto. Three prose plays followed: Lucrèce Borgia and Marie Tudor in 1833 and Angelo, tyran de Padoue (“Angelo, Tyrant of Paa”) in 1835. Ruy Blas, a play in verse, appeared in 1838 and was followed by Les Burgraves in 1843.

Hugo's literary achievement was recognized in 1841 by his election, after three unsuccessful attempts, to the French Academy and by his nomination in 1845 to the Chamber of Peers. From this time he almost ceased to publish, partly because of the demands of society and political life but also as a result of personal loss: his daughter Léopoldine, recently married, was accidentally drowned with her husband in September 1843. Hugo's intense grief found some mitigation in poems that later appeared in Les Contemplations, a volume that he divided into “Autrefois” and “Aujourd'hui,” the moment of his daughter's death being the mark between yesterday and today. He found relief above all in working on a new novel, which became Les Misérables, published in 1862 after work on it had been set aside for a time and then resumed.

With the Revolution of 1848, Hugo was elected a deputy for Paris in the Constituent Assembly and later in the Legislative Assembly. He supported the successful candidacy of Prince Louis-Napoléon for the presidency that year. The more the president evolved toward an authoritarianism of the right, however, the more Hugo moved toward the assembly's left. When in December 1851 a coup d'état took place, which eventually resulted in the Second Empire under Napoleon III, Hugo made one attempt at resistance and then fled to Brussels.

Exile (1851–70).

Hugo's exile was to last until the return of liberty and the reconstitution of the republic in 1870. Enforced at the beginning, exile later became a voluntary gesture and, after the amnesty of 1859, an act of pride. He remained in Brussels for a year until, foreseeing expulsion, he took refuge on British territory. He first established himself on the island of Jersey, in the English Channel, where he remained from 1852 to 1855. When he was expelled from there, he moved to the neighbouring island of Guernsey. During this exile of nearly 20 years he proced the most extensive part of all his writings and the most original.

Immersed in politics as he was, Hugo devoted the first writings of his exile to satire and recent history: Napoléon le Petit (1852), an indictment of Napoleon III, and Histoire d'un crime, a day-by-day account of Louis Bonaparte's coup. Hugo's return to poetry was an explosion of wrath: Les Châtiments (1853; “The Punishments”). This collection of poems unleashed his anger against the new emperor and, on a technical level, freed him from his remaining classical prejudices and enabled him to achieve the full mastery of his poetic powers. Les Châtiments ranks among the most powerful satirical poems in the French language. All Hugo's future verse profited from this release of his imagination: the tone of this collection of poems is sometimes lyrical, sometimes epic, sometimes moving, but most often virulent, containing an undertone of national and personal frustration.

Despite the satisfaction he derived from his political poetry, Hugo wearied of its limitations and, turning back to the unpublished poems of 1840–50, set to work on the volume of poetry entitled Les Contemplations (1856). This work contains the purest of his poetry—the most moving because the memory of his dead daughter is at the centre of the book, the most disquieting, also, because it transmits the haunted world of a thinker. In poems such as “Pleurs dans la nuit” and “La Bouche d'ombre,” he reveals a tormented mind that struggles between doubt and faith in its lonely search for meaning and significance.

Hugo's apocalyptic approach to reality was the source of two epic or metaphysical poems, La Fin de Satan (“The End of Satan”) and Dieu (“God”), both of them confrontations of the problem of evil. Written between 1854 and 1860, they were not published until after his death because his publisher preferred the little epics based on history and legend contained in the first installment (1859) of the gigantic epic poem La Légende des siècles (The Legend of the Centuries), whose second and third installments appeared in 1877 and 1883, respectively. The many poems that make up this epic display all his spiritual power without sacrificing his exuberant capacity to tell a story. Hugo's personal mythology of the human struggle between good and evil lies behind each of the legends: Eve's motherhood is exalted in “Le Sacre de la femme”; mankind liberating itself from all religions in order to attain divine truth is the theme of “Le Satyre”; and “Plein Ciel” proclaims, through utopian prediction of men's conquest of the air, the poet's conviction of indefinite progress toward the final unity of science with moral awareness.

After the publication of three long books of poetry, Hugo returned to prose and took up his abandoned novel, Les Misérables. Its extraordinary success with readers of every type when it was published in 1862 brought him instant popularity in his own country, and its speedy translation into many languages won him fame abroad. The novel's name means “the wretched,” or “the outcasts,” but English translations generally carry the French title. The story centres on the convict Jean Valjean, a victim of society who has been imprisoned for 19 years for stealing a loaf of bread. A hardened and astute criminal upon his release, he eventually softens and reforms, becoming a successful instrialist and mayor of a northern town. Yet he is stalked obsessively by the detective Javert for an impulsive, regretted former crime, and Jean Valjean eventually sacrifices himself for the sake of his adopted daughter, Cosette, and her husband, Marius. Les Misérables is a vast panorama of Parisian society and its underworld, and it contains many famous episodes and passages, among them a chapter on the Battle of Waterloo and the description of Jean Valjean's rescue of Marius by means of a flight through the sewers of Paris. Les Misérables's plot is basically that of a detective story, but by virtue of its characters, who are sometimes a little larger than life yet always vital and engaging, and by its re-creation of the swarming Parisian underworld, the main theme of man's ceaseless combat with evil clearly emerges while the whole gives a faithful picture of the ebb and flow of life.

The remaining works Hugo completed in exile include the essay William Shakespeare (1864) and two novels: Les Travailleurs de la mer (1866; The Toilers of the Sea), dedicated to the island of Guernsey and its sailors; and L'Homme qui rit (1869; The Man Who Laughs), a curious baroque novel about the English people's fight against feudalism in the 17th century, which takes its title from the perpetual grin of its disfigured hero. Hugo's last novel, Quatrevingt-treize (1874; Ninety-three), centred on the tumultuous year 1793 in France and portrayed human justice and charity against the background of the French Revolution.

Last years (1870–85).

The defeat of France in the Franco-German War and the proclamation of the French Third Republic in 1871 brought Hugo back to Paris. He became a deputy in the National Assembly (1871) but resigned the following month. Though he still fought for his old ideals, he no longer possessed the same energies. The trials of recent years had aged him, and there were more to come: in 1868 he had lost his wife, Adèle, a profound sadness to him; in 1871 one son died, as did another in 1873. Though increasingly detached from life around him, the poet of L'Année terrible (1872), in which he recounted the siege of Paris ring the “terrible year” of 1870, had become a national hero and a living symbol of republicanism in France. In 1878 Hugo was stricken by cerebral congestion, but he lived on for some years in the Avenue d'Eylau, renamed Avenue Victor-Hugo on his 80th birthday. In 1885, two years after the death of his faithful companion Juliette, Hugo died and was given a national funeral; his body lay in state under the Arc de Triomphe and was buried in the Panthéon.

Reputation.

Victor Hugo's enormous output is unique in French literature; it is said that he used to write each morning 100 lines of verse or 20 pages of prose. “The most powerful mind of the Romantic movement,” as he was described in 1830, laureate and peer of France in 1845, he went on to assume the role of an outlawed sage who, with the easy consciousness of authority, put down his insights and prophetic visions in prose and verse, becoming at last the genial grandfather of popular literary portraiture and the national poet who gave his name to a street in every town in France.

This instinctive recognition of Hugo as a great poet at the time of his death was followed by a period of critical neglect. A few of his poems were remembered, and Les Misérables continued to be widely read. The generosity of his ideas and the warmth of their expression still moved the public mind, for Hugo was a poet of the common man and knew how to write with simplicity and power of common joys and sorrows. But there was another side to him—what Paul Claudel called his “panic contemplation” of the universe, the numinous fear that penetrates his sombre poems La Fin de Satan and Dieu. Hugo's knowledge of the resources of French verse and his technical virtuosity in metre and rhyme, moreover, rescued French poetry from the sterility of the 18th century. André Gide, when asked whom he considered the greatest French poet, replied “Victor Hugo, alas,” explaining that if it was a regrettable fact at least it was fact.

Jean-Bertrand Barrère
Additional Reading
Biographies include Andre Maurois, Olympio: The Life of Victor Hugo (1956, reissued 1985); Joanna Richardson, Victor Hugo (1976); and Elliott M. Grant, The Career of Victor Hugo (1945, reprinted 1969). John Porter Houston, Victor Hugo, rev. ed. (1988), is an introction, focusing especially on his poetry and its technical aspects. An analysis of Hugo's romantic drama is found in Charles Affron, A Stage for Poets: Studies in the Theatre of Hugo & Musset (1971). Victor Brombert, Victor Hugo and the Visionary Novel (1984), explores the symbolic and mythological character of Hugo's works and is illustrated with Hugo's drawings.

『肆』 巴黎圣母院读后感英语作文 初中水平

傲雪寒梅
我爱梅花,爱它的坚强,爱它的清高.我家的院子里就有一株梅花树.
在春夏秋三季里,梅花并没有什么出众之处,唯有到了千里冰封的冬天,它傲立在风雪中的坚强性格,才显露出来.
去年冬末,接连几日浓云密布,朔风呼啸,鹅毛般的大雪从天而降,下个不停.我透过窗子向外望去,嗬,好一株梅花!枝头上既有含苞欲放的花蕾,也有绽放的花朵.火红的花瓣,淡黄的花蕊,雪片落到花瓣上,红里带白,白里透红,我仿佛闻到了一阵沁人心脾的清香,心情不由得豁然开朗,走到院子里欣赏这完美的"傲雪寒梅图"!
入夜,雪片轻飘,朦胧的月光洒在梅花梢头,更平添了几许清高.陆游写过一首咏梅的《卜算子》,其中有这样一句:"无意苦争春,一任群芳妒",李清照的《渔家傲》中也有类似的句子:"莫辞醉,此花不与群花比".是啊,在百花齐放,争芳吐艳的春天,你不会注意到它的身影;而在这冰天雪地中,在其它花草全部凋谢枯萎的时候,它却绽开了鲜艳的花朵!梅花在我心中是清高的象征,它不甘随波逐流,与百花一齐盛开在春天,宁可超凡脱俗地挺立在风雪中.

古人说过这样一句话:"梅花香自苦寒来",梅花不畏严寒,傲霜斗雪,经过寒冬风雪的锤炼,花儿更艳,更香了,我们这一代的青少年儿童,就应像这傲雪的寒梅,在艰难困苦中挣扎,磨炼,而不能被父母,长辈的娇惯,只有这样,将来步人社会,才能被社会所接受,为祖国的建设描绘光辉的一页!
我愿意作一株傲雪的寒梅!
点评:
这是一篇好的抒情散文,它的感人之处不仅在于它具有艺术化的散文风格,尤其是在于它的情——真实的,真切的,动人的情.抒情散文的意韵贵在情真.《傲雪寒梅》一文写出作者对梅的热爱,不仅中心突出,立意深刻,而且写出了它的魂,这正是"散文不散"的体现."无意苦争春""只把春来报,待到山花烂漫时,她在丛中笑"梅如此,人亦应如此.只有经过风雪霜寒的考验,才能茁壮成长.望广大青少年认真读该文,会从中体悟到一些真谛.

我爱家乡的梅花
我的家乡在流溪河林场,这里的景色美不胜收,像一幅美妙的图画!
流溪河林场最迷人的景物要算梅花了,梅花分为三个品种:白梅,腊梅,红梅.
梅花是在冬天十二月左右盛开的.每到梅花盛开的时候,来自各地不同的游客络绎不绝地慕名来到梅园观赏梅花.一进梅园,一阵阵清香扑鼻而来,使人心旷神怡,游客们都赞不绝口.这时候的白梅花大多都是含苞欲放的.有些梅花的花瓣翩翩落下,就像下雪,显得娇柔可爱.怪不得有那么多游客纷纷留下它们的倩影呢!
有一股花香跟白梅花的味不同.那是一股浓郁的香味,它把我引到了腊梅区.腊梅的全身是金黄的,显得很高雅,我被它的美陶醉了.有些腊梅树的树形特别优美,也引来了不少的摄影爱好者.
走上望梅亭,梅园内的景色都尽收眼底.顿时,我的心情变得越来越舒畅,真想高声歌唱.我仔细观赏,突然,我发现梅园内有几棵红梅树,树上长有红梅花,孤傲而冷艳,这美真是别具一格呀!
啊,家乡的梅花,我为你而感到自豪!因为有你,我们的家乡才更显出勃勃的生机.如果你们有空也到我们美丽的家乡来游玩吧,这里一定会令你们留连忘返!

雪海探梅
白梅似雪,暗香浮动,茫茫一片.1696年清巡抚宋荦来到光福赏梅,故题名"香雪海".我的家乡就位于光福,为中国三大赏梅胜地之首.
3月10日那天,春光明媚,我们来到香雪海.刚近香雪海,就闻到一股沁人心脾的清香,那香味淡淡的,似兰非兰,似桂非桂.越近,香味越浓,真称得上"香飘云天外"了.
迎着香味跨入香雪海大门,展现在眼前的是满山的梅花,白得像雪,像云."遥知不是雪,为有暗香来",我今日才真正领略了古人为之感叹不已的梅林景色.

走近梅花,又一阵浓香袭来,我深深地吸了一口气,不禁为"香雪海"美名叫绝.拾级而上到达半山腰,眼前豁然开朗,只见山坳里银海荡漾,凝如积雪,一朵朵梅花争奇斗艳,竞相展示出自己最美丽的风姿.
进入梅花林中,俳徊在雪海里,轻抚着微微颤动的花枝,强烈地感受到了春的脉博,春的生机,心中不由得涌起阵阵暖意.难怪几千年来咏梅之诗,描梅之诗不歇,她那美而不艳,香而不腻的冰清玉洁,她那坚强的意志与顽强的生命力,曾使多少文人游客为之陶醉,为之赞颂啊!
我爱梅花,我爱香雪海,我更爱美丽的家乡.

爱梅说
梅兰竹菊,岁寒四友,而我独爱梅花.宋代王安石的"墙角数枝梅,凌寒独自开.遥知不是雪,为有暗香来."诗句是那样的优美,把梅花的样子深深刻在了我的心中.
梅,一种极为平凡的植物,盛开在令人畏惧的严寒,独占枝头,不畏不惧.他是冬天的佼佼者,以高洁,坚强来征服花的世界.愈是寒冷,愈是风欺雪压,
花开的就愈精神,寒冷造就了冰肌玉骨,清雅俊秀.他由五瓣娇小的花瓣组成,
白梅是那样的纯洁无瑕,墨梅是那样的高贵典雅,红梅是那样的清香浓郁,梅花所独有的那种幽香,能把人深深地吸引住.
梅,典雅,冷俏,高洁,坚贞.江山万里雪,一花天下春!冬天,大地万物都沉睡,看不见牡丹的富贵,百合的可人,莲花的出淤泥而不染,只有它,一朵朵小小的梅花,正义凛然地耸立在冰雪地的严冬.他抬头挺胸,十分神气的占领了整个冬季人们的目光.他不与百花争春,只在干枯的冬天绽放,吐露芬芳,把寒冷的冬天点缀得冷艳动人.
借花喻人,梅花的凌寒斗艳,冰雪留香被喻为民族之精神,坚强勇敢的品格,为世人所敬重!我们应该学习他的不怕困难,勇于战胜挫折的精神.在学习中,要刻苦努力,不断进取,更上一层楼;在失败后,要挺起胸膛,抬起头,继续向前;在生活中,要勇敢的生存,不被恶势所击败.勇于面对,勇敢战胜,这就是梅花给我们的启示.
我爱梅花,爱它的娇小动人,爱它的幽雅清香,更爱它的不惧严寒,勇往直前.

我爱梅花
花的世界里开放着各种争奇斗艳,多姿多彩的花儿.因为他们是美好的象征,所以,谁都喜欢.有人喜欢华贵艳丽的牡丹,有人喜欢绚丽火红的玫瑰,有人喜欢淡雅幽香的水仙,但我却偏爱独傲霜雪的梅花.
梅花——自古以来,都是诗人们赞颂的对象.就像毛泽东的"已是悬崖百丈冰,犹有花枝俏."陆游的"零落成泥辗作尘,只有香如故." 以及王冕的"不要人夸好颜色,只留清气满乾坤".这类诗句不胜枚举.
梅花没有牡丹的雍容华贵,没有菊花的尊贵典雅,没有水仙的婀娜多姿,但却有着超凡脱俗的傲骨.它不开在阳春三月,而是开在寒冬腊月.迎接它的不是和煦的阳光,而是凛冽的北风;滋育他成长的不是和风细雨,而是冰天雪地.然而,当你漫步在它身旁,映入你眼帘的却是傲然挺立的枝干,含苞欲放的花蕊.瞧,那一朵已经开放,红红的,细细的花蕊伸出,红红的花瓣紧紧的依偎着花蕊,像母亲拥抱着婴儿.细细的花蕊间,零星点缀着白色,丝丝缕缕,情意绵绵.那就要开放的,饱胀得快要裂开,勇敢地迎接风雪的考验.啊,这就是梅花.三九严寒,任凭风霜雪打,从不低头弯腰,依然那样娴静,用它那高洁质朴的性格,洗涤人们的心灵,陶冶人们的情操.

梅花也是报春的使者,但"俏也不争春".当百花争艳,它却像害羞的姑娘躲"在丛中笑",默默的积蓄力量,孕育生机,准备再与冰雪搏斗.
生活的历程中免不了风霜雨雪.我们应从梅花精神中吸取力量,以梅花的坚强精神去对待前进道路上的困难.
指导教师陈巧蓉
点评:梅花自古以来都是文人墨客赞美的对象.读了毛主席与陆游的《卜算子 咏梅》,小作者对梅花的喜爱之情更甚了,于是通过梅花与牡丹,菊花等在生活环境,生存条件的对比,把梅花的高洁质朴展现出来.
游王坛十里梅花
"快点!去王坛赏梅花了"随着这一声,我像一个弹簧人一样,从床上跳了起来,做好准备工作,叫上了自己的表哥和爸爸,妈妈坐上了21路公交车出发了.
在去王坛的路上我们总共转了4辆公交汽车,在坐公交车的同时也已经在跟酸甜苦辣做斗争.
在路上我一不注意看见了2004年雅典奥运会皮划艇项目的冠军孟关良的故乡,只见一只只白色的皮划艇在平水水库上来回游动,我看到这里我还有点小小的自豪哩!当然,那时我最想看见的就是孟关良本人,看到他让他签个名也是一件快乐的事,但我也知道那是不可能的!
一个小时过去了,我们终于踏上了王坛的地盘,可我一朵梅花也没看见,我就问爸爸.爸爸说:"这还不是目的得呢!目的得在王坛下面的东村!"我叹道:"啊!"
我不知道后来又坐了多长时间的车.但我知道我一下车就如爸爸说的十里梅花一样,满山的白梅花,就像满山的积雪一样,梅花在山上开着,我和表哥已经控制不了我们童年的心灵,一下子把爸,妈丢在了身后了.
我们走在山路上,不时还能听到蜜蜂的"嗡嗡"声,或是小溪的流水声和山羊的"咩咩"声.忽然,淡淡的梅花香从前面的地方扑鼻而来.山路两旁的梅花像迎接贵客一样弯着腰,就像在向我们表示敬意,这样的风景简直比画还要美.我们走石桥,我们和溪水,我们爬山坡,我们背唐诗名叫《早梅》:
一树寒梅白玉条,
迥临村路傍溪桥.
应缘近水花先发,
疑是经春雪未销.
这是唐朝的戒昱写的,而诗的大意和赏梅时的风景刚好相配.
接着我们就开始痛痛快快的玩.我们一会儿去草丛追在吃草的羊,一会儿又学着他们叫.一会儿又去爬山.一会儿去走田野.然而大部分时间都花在赏梅上.我站在梅林里闻花香,数花瓣,辩花形,高兴的不得了.一会儿半天就过去了.我们就找了户人家吃了口饭.不知为什么,简单的一餐饭,在农村特别香特别美,也特别的像山珍海味.
今天我非常高兴,能到这么一个山清水秀的好地方来,可这次来只有一件事不好,那就是照相机拍到一半胶卷没了,所以下次一定要再来过!

我特喜欢梅花
"墙角数枝梅,凌寒独自开.遥知不是雪,为有暗香来."
——题记
冬,乘着北风而来,她没有春的姹紫嫣红,没有夏的丰富美丽,更没有秋的累累硕果.一提起冬,不少人就会情不自禁地想起它的寒冷来以及那萧条的枯木残草.但我却希望它的到来.因为,也只有在这别具一格的季节里才能见到那令我思绪飞跃的梅花.
梅花,她就像人生的向标.她迎接着狂风暴雪的打击,却毅然挺胸直立,不会逃避寒冬带来的种种困难,而是暗自飘香.
梅花,她就像冬天的画家.雪中白茫茫的一片,草木枯萎,鲜花凋零,梅,却给单调的世界添上了一线生机,一点色彩.让人觉得冬天似乎并不那么可怕.
梅花,她就像寂寞中的使者.她渐渐地绽放,渐渐地凋谢,渐渐地死亡.她对这个世界充满了美好的憧憬,也对这个世界并无多少留恋.
梅花,就像一位得道的高僧.看破了红尘,生死对她毫无畏惧可言.在她强健的身躯里,能看到的是对生死的感悟.
梅花,就像一位坚持不懈的人.不管呈现在眼前的困难有多大,只要存在着一丝的希望,她也绝不会放弃.就算牺牲自己宝贵的生命也总是无怨无悔.
梅花,她不像富丽堂皇的牡丹,不像争奇斗艳的杜鹃,也不像火红耀眼的玫瑰,更不像婀娜多姿的荷花,在我的眼中,她最像山林中那一棵棵高大挺拔的竹子.她绝不随波逐流,而是严以律己,洁身自好.
人就应该像这严冬中盛开的梅花,像她一样,我们应该有傲骨,而不可有傲气.

『伍』 雨果简介英文版

Hugo, Victor

born Feb. 26, 1802, Besan�0�4on, Fr.
died May 22, 1885, Paris

poet, novelist, and dramatist who was the most important of the French Romantic writers. Though regarded in France as one of that country's greatest poets, he is better known abroad for such novels as Notre-Dame de Paris (1831) and Les Misérables (1862).

Early years (1802–30).

Victor was the third son of Joseph-Léopold-Sigisbert Hugo, a major and, later, general in Napoleon's army. His childhood was coloured by his father's constant traveling with the imperial army and by the disagreements that soon alienated his parents from one another. His mother's royalism and his father's loyalty to successive governments—the Convention, the Empire, the Restoration—reflected their deeper incompatibility. It was a chaotic time for Victor, continually uprooted from Paris to set out for Elba or Naples or Madrid, yet always returning to Paris with his mother, whose royalist opinions he initially adopted. The fall of the empire gave him, from 1815 to 1818, a time of uninterrupted study at the Pension Cordier and the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, after which he matriculated at the law faculty at Paris, where his studies seem to have been purposeless and irregular. Memories of his life as a poor student later inspired the figure of Marius in his novel Les Misérables.

From 1816, at least, Hugo had conceived ambitions other than the law. He was already filling notebooks with verses, translations—particularly from Virgil—two tragedies, a play, and elegies. Encouraged by his mother, Hugo founded a review, the Conservateur Littéraire (1819–21), in which his own articles on the poets Alphonse de Lamartine and André de Chénier stand out. His mother died in 1821, and a year later Victor married a childhood friend, Adèle Foucher, with whom he had five children. In that same year he published his first book of poems, Odes et poésies diverses, whose royalist sentiments earned him a pension from Louis XVIII. Behind Hugo's concern for classical form and his political inspiration, it is possible to recognize in these poems a personal voice and his own particular vein of fantasy.

In 1823 he published his first novel, Han d'Islande, which in 1825 appeared in an English translation as Hans of Iceland. The journalist Charles Nodier was enthusiastic about it and drew Hugo into the group of friends, all devotees of Romanticism, who met regularly at the Bibliothèque de L'Arsenal. While frequenting this literary circle, which was called the Cénacle, Hugo shared in launching a new review of moderate tendencies, the Muse Fran�0�4aise (1823–24). In 1824 he published a new verse collection, Nouvelles Odes, and followed it two years later with an exotic romance, Bug-Jargal (Eng. trans. The Slave King). In 1826 he also published Odes et ballades, an enlarged edition of his previously printed verse, the latest of these poems being brilliant variations on the fashionable Romantic modes of mirth and terror. The youthful vigour of these poems was also characteristic of another collection, Les Orientales (1829), which appealed to the Romantic taste for Oriental local colour. In these poems it can be remarked that the poet, while skillfully employing a great variety of metres in his verse and using ardent and brilliant imagery, was also graally shedding the legitimist royalism of his youth. It may be noted, too, that “Le Feu ciel,” a visionary poem, forecast those he was to write 25 years later. The fusion of the contemporary with the apocalyptic was always a particular mark of Hugo's genius.

『陆』 急!!雨果英文简介

Victor Hugo (l802~1885) is the leader of the French Romantic school sports. France is one of literary history's greatest writers. His life spanned almost the entire 19th century, his literary career 60 years ago, enring creativity. He parade of romantic novels, painting powerful, permanent charm readers. Hugo was born in 1802 in southern France owed Shangsong City. Grandfather was a carpenter, the father of the republic army officer, Wang Spain, Napoleon's brother Joseph had been granted to the rank ranged Bonaparte, who was a confidant of King senior officials. Hugo bright and intelligent, 9-year-old began to write poetry. 15-year-old wrote the "joy of learning" by the French Academy Award degree; by the age of 20 published books of poetry, "Songs and Carols," King Louis the 18th bestow his annuity. In 1827, Victor Hugo published scripts "Cromwell" and the preamble. Although the script fails to perform, but was considered a friend of French romanticism preamble to the Declaration, a landmark document into literary history. French romanticism it had a strong role in promoting the development of literature. 1830, Hugo scripts "that Kennedy Europe," the French Academy in Grand Theater, a huge, Romantic established a dominant position in French literary circles. "Europe that Kennedy" is about a 16th century Spanish aristocratic descent who resisted European Nepalese King that the story Hugo praise the bandit chivalrous and noble, and demonstrated strong anti-feudal tendencies. In July 1830, France had "July Revolution", the revival of the feudal monarchy was doubled. Hugo warmly praised the revolution and the glorification of revolutionaries and poems mourning those who died in the street fighting heroes. 1831 Victor Hugo's "Notre Dame de Paris" is the most romantic novels. Fantastic fiction plot twists and turns, the tension lively and unpredictable, dramatic and colorful. The story takes place in the Middle Ages. "Fool's day" day of the Roma artists in the square dance. Ingush from the gypsy girl married to attract the pedestrian, she is also very beautiful dancers look beautiful and impressive.
Then, the Notre Dame de Paris Gerardi 克罗德• Frola immediately with the fans of the beautiful Esmeralda, his inner fire burning passion, fell madly in love with her. So he ordered the church bell, looked like Quasimodo neighborhood furious rush to put Ingush. France captain King arrows than rescue the Ingush law to seize the Quasimodo. He revolution whipping people to the square, good non-Gypsy girl Qianqiu, Kasimo to buy bottled water instead. Although ugly appearance revolution, pure and noble felt that he was very grateful Ingush, had fallen in love with her. Ingush naive to the law than Selections of Falling Love at First Sight, the two appointments, Frola follow quietly behind, out of jealousy. France he had stabbed a knife and then fled. Aimeisilada because of the murder and sentenced to death. Quasimodo put Ingush rush out from under the gallows, possession of Notre Dame in Paris, Frola opportunity threat Gypsy girl to satisfy his desires for her, was rejected after she handed over the king's army, an innocent girl was hanged. Quasimodo angrily described Frola shift the church died from a fall, he hugged the body with Ingush have died.
Hugo novel performance of the strong hatred of the feudal government and the church, but also reflected his deep sympathy for the people of the lower classes.

『柒』 2篇英文电影观后感,急啊。注意是要英文版的。

The Incredibles超人特工队

The Incredibles is a 2004 American computer-animated action-fantasy-comedy film about a family of superheroes who are forced to hide their powers. It was written and directed by Brad Bird, a former director and executive consultant of The Simpsons, and was proced by Pixar and distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. about Bob's yearning to help people draws the entire Parr family into a battle with the villain and his killer robot.
The film won the 2004 Annie Award for Best Animated Feature, along with two 2004 Academy Awards, including Best Animated Feature and Best Sound Editing. It also received nominations for two other Academy Awards, won a 2005 Hugo Award, and was nominated for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy at the 2004 Golden Globes.
《超人特工队》是一个2004年的美国动画影片讲述的是超级家族被迫隐藏自己的力量。由 Brad Bird创作指导 之前指导《辛普森一家》的导演,,迪斯尼皮克斯公司制作。讲的是鲍勃的渴望帮助人们吸引整个家庭进入战争与帕尔的坏蛋和他的杀手机器人。
这部电影获得了2004年的安妮获最佳动画片,随着两个2004年奥斯卡大奖,包括最佳动画片、最佳音效编辑。它还获得了提名其他两个奖项,赢得了2005雨果奖项,而被提名为最佳音乐剧或喜剧电影——在2004年的金球奖。

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