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大学英语综合教程第三册 3

所属教程:大学英语综合教程第三册

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[00:00.00] In 2004 a center in honor of the "underground railroad" opens in Cincinnati.The railroad was unususl.

[00:09.25]It sold no tickets and had no trains.Yet it carried thousands of passengers to the destination of their dreams.

[00:18.68]THE FREEDOM GIVERS’ By Ferqus M. Bordewich

[00:24.53]A gentle breeze swept the Canadian plains as I stepped outside the small two-story house.

[00:32.78]Alongside me was a slender woman in a black dress,my guide back to a time when the surrounding settlement in Dresden,

[00:43.36]Ontario,was home to a hero in American history.As we walked toward a plain gray church.

[00:52.48]Barbara Carter spoken proudly of her great-great-grand-father,Josiah Henson.

[01:00.45]"He was confident that the Creator intended all men to be created equal.And he never gave up struggling for that freedom."

[01:10.69]2 Carter's devotion to her ancestor is about more than personal pride:it is about family honor.

[01:20.43]For Josiah Henson has lived on through the character in American fiction that he helped inspire:Uncle Tom,

[01:30.51]the long-suffering slave in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin.

[01:36.73]Ironically,that character has come to symbolize everything Henson was not.A racial sell out unwilling to stand up for himself?

[01:47.81]Carter gets angry at the thought."Josiah Henson was a man of principle,"she said firmly.

[01:56.22]3I had traveled here to Henson's last home-now a historic site that Carter formerly directed-to learn more about a man who was,

[02:08.08]in many ways an African-American Moses.After winning his own freedom from slavery,

[02:16.15]Henson secretly helped hundreds of other slaves to escape north to Canada--and liberty.Many settled here in Dresden with him.

[02:27.64]4 Yet this stop was only part of a much larger mission for me.

[02:33.84]Josiah Henson is but one name on a long list of courageous men and women who together forged the Underground Railroad,

[02:44.47]a secret web of escape routes and safe houses that they used to liberate slaves from the American South.

[02:53.48]Between1820 and1860,as many as100,000 slaves traveled the Railroad to freedom.

[03:03.22]5 In October 2000, President Clinton authorized$16 million for the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center

[03:14.43]to honor this first great civil-rights struggle in the U.S.The center is scheduled to open in 2004 in Cincinnati.And it's about time.

[03:27.60]For the heroes of the Underground Railroad remain too little remembered,their exploits still largely unsung.

[03:37.50]I was intent on telling their stories.

[03:41.91]6 John Parker tensed when he heard the soft knock.Peering out his door into the night,

[03:49.49]he recognized the face of a trusted neighbor."There's a party of escaped slaves hiding in the woods in Kentucky,

[03:58.42]twenty miles from the river,"the man whispered urgently.

[04:03.28]Parker didn't hesitate."I'll go,"he said,pushing a pair of pistols into his pockets.

[04:11.61]7 Born a slave two decades before,in the 1820s,

[04:17.23]Parker had been taken from his mother at age eight and forced to walk in chains from Virginia to Alabama,

[04:26.37]where he was sold on the slave market.Determined to live free someday,he managed to get trained in iron molding.

[04:36.22]Eventually he saved enough money working at this trade on the side to buy his freedom.Now,by day,

[04:45.60]Parker worked in an iron foundry in the Ohio port of Ripley.By night he was a"conductor" on the Underground Railroad,

[04:57.35]helping people slip by the slave hunters.In Kentucky,where he was now headed,

[05:05.16]there was a$1000 reward for his capture,dead or alive.

[05:11.25]8 Crossing the Ohio River on that chilly night,Parker found ten fugitives frozen with fear."Get your bundles and follow me,

[05:22.17]" he told them,leading the eight men and two women toward the river.

[05:28.05]They had almost reached shore when a watchman spotted them and raced off to spread the news.

[05:36.20]9 Parker saw a small boat and,with a shout,pushed the escaping slaves into it.There was room for all but two.

[05:45.78]As the boat slid across the river,Parker watched helplessly

[05:52.03]as the pursuers closed in around the men he was forced to leave behind.

[05:58.11]10 The others made it to the Ohio shore,

[06:02.14]where Parker hurriedly arranged for a wagon to take them to the next “station”

[06:08.61]on the Underground Railroad--the first leg of their journey to safety in Canada.Over the course of his life,

[06:18.12]John Parker guided more than400 slaves to safety.

[06:23.48]11 While black conductors were often motivated by their own painful experiences,

[06:30.27]whites were commonly driven by religious convictions.Levi Coffin,a Quaker raised in North Carolina,explained,

[06:40.67]“The Bible,in bidding us to feed the hungry and clothe the naked,said nothing about color.”

[06:48.27]12 In the 1820s Coffin moved west to Newport(new Fountain City),Indiana,where he opened a store.

[06:58.09]Word spread that fleeing slaves could always find refuge at the Coffin home.

[07:04.59]At times he sheltered as many as 17 fugitives at once,

[07:10.37]and he kept a team and wagon ready to convey them on the next leg of their journey.Eventually three principal routes

[07:20.76]converged at the Coffin house,which came to be the Crand Central Terminal of the Underground Railroad.

[07:29.44]13 For his efforts,Coffin received frequent death threats and warnings that his stores and home would be burned.

[07:38.58]Nearly every conductor faced similar risks--or worse.In the North,

[07:45.76]a magistrate might have imposed a fine or a brief jail sentence for aiding those escaping.In the Southern states,

[07:55.98]whites were sentenced to months or even years in jail.One courageous Methodist minister,Calvin Fairbank,

[08:07.08]was imprisoned for more than 17 years in Kentucky,where he kept a log of his beatings:35,105 stripes with the whip.

[08:20.06]14 As for the slaves,escape meant a journey of hundreds of miles through unknown country,

[08:27.22]where they were ususlly easy to recognize.

[08:31.32]With no road signs and few maps,they had to put their trust in directions passed by word of mouth

[08:39.58]and in secret signs--nails driven into trees,for example--that conductors used to mark the route north.

[08:49.08]15 Many slaves traveled under cover of night,their faces sometimes caked with white powder.

[08:56.74]Quakers often dressed their"passengers",both male and female,in gray dresses,deep bonnets and full veils.On one occasion,

[09:08.65]Levi Coffin was transporting so many runaway slaves that he disguised them as a funeral procession.

[09:17.53]16 Canada was the primary destination for many fugitives.Slavery had been abolished there in 1833,

[09:27.38]and Canadian authorities encouraged the runaways to settle their vast virgin land.Among them was Josiah Henson.

[09:37.93]17 As a boy in Maryland,Henson watched as his entire family was sold to different buyers,

[09:45.56]and he saw his mother harshly beaten when she tried to keep him with her.

[09:52.04]Making the best of his lot,Henson worked diligently and rose far in his owner's regard.

[10:00.19]18 Money problems eventually compelled his master to send Henson,his wife and children to a brother in Kentucky.

[10:09.57]After laboring there for several years,Henson heard alarming news:the new master

[10:17.64]was planning to sell him for plantation work far away in the Deep South.The slave would be separated forever from his family.

[10:28.24]19 There was only one answer:flight."I knew the North Star,"Henson wrote years later.

[10:37.10]"Like the star of Bethlehem,it announced where my salvation lay."

[10:43.42]20 At huge risk,Henson and his wife set off with their four children.Two weeks later,starving and exhausted,

[10:53.27]the family reached Cincinnati,where they made contact with members of the Underground Railroad.

[11:00.98]"Carefully they provided for our welfare,and then they set us thirty miles on our way by wagon."

[11:09.47]21 The Hensons continued north,arriving at last in Buffalo,N.Y.There a friendly captain pointed across the Niagara River.

[11:21.53]"Do you see those trees?he said.They grow on free soil." He gave Henson a dollar and arranged for a boat,

[11:30.99]which carried the slave and his family across the river to Canada.

[11:36.63]22 I threw myself on the ground,rolled in the sand and danced around,till,

[11:43.92]in the eyes of several who were present,I passed for a madman.'He's some crazy fellow,'said a Colonel Warren.”

[11:54.27]23 "'Oh,no!Don't you know?I'm free!'"

[11:58.99]slender settlement confident give up

[12:03.12]苗条的 新拓居地 确信的 放弃

[12:07.25]creator devotion cabin ironically

[12:10.33]上帝 深爱 小棚屋 具有讽刺意味的是

[12:13.41]symbolize racial sellout unwilling

[12:17.24]象征 种族的 背叛者 勉强的

[12:21.07]stand up(for) historic site slavery

[12:24.57]支持 历史上有名的 地方 奴隶制

[12:28.07]mission courageous forge underground

[12:31.32]特殊使命 勇敢的 建立 秘密的

[12:34.57]web liberate authorize civil-rights

[12:37.85]网状物 解放 批准 民权的

[12:41.13]exploit unsung intent pistol

[12:45.36]功绩 未获得承认的 坚决的 手枪

[12:49.59]decade foundry on the side capture

[12:53.38]十年 铸造厂 作为兼职 抓捕

[12:57.17]chilly fugitive watchman helplessly

[13:00.00]冷的 逃亡者 看守人 无能为力地

[13:02.84]pursuer close in (on/around) hurriedly wagon

[13:09.42]追捕者 接近 仓促地 四轮运货马车

[13:16.00]painful religious conviction Quaker

[13:19.65]疼痛的 宗教的 坚定的 公谊会教徒

[13:23.29]Bible clothe naked converge

[13:27.34]圣经 给…穿衣服 裸体的 集中

[13:31.39]terminal magistrate impose jail

[13:34.93]终点 执法官 把…强加于 监狱

[13:38.47]Methodist imprison stripe as for

[13:42.26]循道宗的 监禁 鞭打 至于

[13:46.04]unknown cake powder bonnet

[13:48.70]陌生的 覆盖 粉末 女帽

[13:51.35]veil transport runaway disguise

[13:54.44]面纱 运输 逃跑的人 假扮

[13:57.54]funeral procession abolish virgin

[14:00.33]葬礼 队伍 废除 未开发的

[14:03.13]harshly make the best of diligently compel

[14:06.48]严厉地 尽量利用 勤奋地 强迫

[14:09.84]plantation salvation at risk starve

[14:13.11]种植园 拯救 冒风险 使饿死

[14:17.97]在某人看来 被看作

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