【電影資源|電影院天堂|電影免費看|電影免費在線觀看|免費電影院|免費電影資源|免費電影公眾號|電影免費在線觀看|電影免費看公眾號|在線電視劇|熱門電影電視劇】
您想看的全都有
▲
聚集全球影視
香港電影電視劇
國內電影電視劇
歐美電影電視劇
韓國電影電視劇
日本電影電視劇
韓國電影電視劇
泰國電影電視劇
印度電影電視劇
網絡電影電視劇
……………
覆蓋全面
喜劇電影電視劇
悲劇電影電視劇
愛情電影電視劇
動作電影電視劇
槍戰電影電視劇
犯罪電影電視劇
恐怖電影電視劇
懸疑電影電視劇
動畫電影電視劇
家庭電影電視劇
魔幻電影電視劇
科幻電影電視劇
戰爭電影電視劇
青春電影電視劇
天天更新免費看
最新熱門類資源
最新好評類資源
最新網絡類資源
最新華語類資源
最新歐美類資源
本」
……………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………
END
謝謝觀看
看電影電視劇一個號就夠了,平臺有近100萬部電影電視劇供您觀看,在本文上方「藍色字觀影入口」進入公眾號菜單欄「看電影」可觀看所有電影電視劇。
以下歐美電影榜英文介紹
paper novels the druggist kept to sell to traveling men. She had bought
it, only yesterday, because the first sentence interested her very much,
and because she saw, as she glanced over the pages, the magical names
of two Russian cities. The book was a poor translation of "Anna Karenina." Thea opened it at a mark, and fixed her eyes intently upon the small
print. The hymns, the sick girl, the resigned black figures were forgotten.
It was the night of the ball in Moscow.
Thea would have been astonished if she could have known how, years
afterward, when she had need of them, those old faces were to come
back to her, long after they were hidden away under the earth; that they
would seem to her then as full of meaning, as mysteriously marked by
Destiny, as the people who danced the mazurka under the elegant
Korsunsky.
105
外語下載中心http://down.tingroom.com
Chapter
18
Mr. Kronborg was too fond of his ease and too sensible to worry his children much about religion. He was more sincere than many preachers,
but when he spoke to his family about matters of conduct it was usually
with a regard for keeping up appearances. The church and church work
were discussed in the family like the routine of any other business.
Sunday was the hard day of the week with them, just as Saturday was
the busy day with the merchants on Main Street. Revivals were seasons
of extra work and pressure, just as threshing-time was on the farms. Visiting elders had to be lodged and cooked for, the folding-bed in the parlor was let down, and Mrs. Kronborg had to work in the kitchen all day
long and attend the night meetings.
During one of these revivals Thea's sister Anna professed religion
with, as Mrs. Kronborg said, "a good deal of fluster." While Anna was
going up to the mourners' bench nightly and asking for the prayers of
the congregation, she disseminated general gloom throughout the household, and after she joined the church she took on an air of "set-apartness"
that was extremely trying to her brothers and her sister, though they
realized that Anna's sanctimoniousness was perhaps a good thing for
their father. A preacher ought to have one child who did more than
merely acquiesce in religious observances, and Thea and the boys were
glad enough that it was Anna and not one of themselves who assumed
this obligation.
"Anna, she's American," Mrs. Kronborg used to say. The Scandinavian
mould of countenance, more or less marked in each of the other children,
was scarcely discernible in her, and she looked enough like other Moonstone girls to be thought pretty. Anna's nature was conventional, like her
face. Her position as the minister's eldest daughter was important to her,
and she tried to live up to it. She read sentimental religious story-books
and emulated the spiritual struggles and magnanimous behavior of their
persecuted heroines. Everything had to be interpreted for Anna. Her
opinions about the smallest and most commonplace things were gleaned
106
外語下載中心http://down.tingroom.com
from the Denver papers, the church weeklies, from sermons and SundaySchool addresses. Scarcely anything was attractive to her in its natural
state—indeed, scarcely anything was decent until it was clothed by the
opinion of some authority. Her ideas about habit, character, duty, love,
marriage, were grouped under heads, like a book of popular quotations,
and were totally unrelated to the emergencies of human living. She discussed all these subjects with other Methodist girls of her age. They
would spend hours, for instance, in deciding what they would or would
not tolerate in a suitor or a husband, and the frailties of masculine nature
were too often a subject of discussion among them. In her behavior Anna
was a harmless girl, mild except where her prejudices were concerned,
neat and industrious, with no graver fault than priggishness; but her
mind had really shocking habits of classification. The wickedness of Denver and of Chicago, and even of Moonstone, occupied her thoughts too
much. She had none of the delicacy that goes with a nature of warm impulses, but the kind of fishy curiosity which justifies itself by an expression of horror.
Thea, and all Thea's ways and friends, seemed indecorous to Anna.
She not only felt a grave social discrimination against the Mexicans; she
could not forget that Spanish Johnny was a drunkard and that "nobody
knew what he did when he ran away from home." Thea pretended, of
course, that she liked the Mexicans because they were fond of music; but
every one knew that music was nothing very real, and that it did not
matter in a girl's re-lations with people. What was real, then, and what
did matter? Poor Anna!
Anna approved of Ray Kennedy as a young man of steady habits and
blameless life, but she regretted that he was an atheist, and that he was
看電影電視劇一個號就夠了,平臺有近100萬部電影電視劇供您觀看,進入下方「閱|讀|原|文」在公眾號菜單欄「看電影」可觀看所有電影電視劇。