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英语早读美文

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  美文美读的理论依据爱美是人的天性。古往今来,人们在生活中孜孜不倦地追求着美,创造着美,才有了辉煌灿烂的现代文明。下面是学习啦小编带来的适合早读的英语美文,欢迎阅读!

  适合早读的英语美文篇一

  The Long Goodbye 再见-太长

  "They grow up too soon," everyone told me. Eighteen years later, I finally understand what they meant.

  It's nearly the end of summer break and my son goes out with friends. Ten minutes after he leaves home, I receive his text: Here. It's the same message I've received hundreds of times before -- our agreed-upon shorthand to reassure me, and probably him, in some still-unexamined way, that he has arrived safely at his destination. In a matter of days he'll head to college, and this routine, along with many others that have framed our days and nights, will come to an end. Reading that text triggers images stored safely away in my memory, a tiny flip book of our lives together.

  My constant companion of nine months emerges with his eyes wide open. He's placed on my chest. I feel his heartbeat reverberating through mine. All I see are beginnings. Friends who visit caution that time is elusive, that he'll grow up faster than I can imagine, and to savor every moment. But I can't hear them; it's all too clichéd and my child has only just arrived. He's intoxicating: the beautiful bracelet-like creases in his wrists, the way he sounds like a little lamb when he cries. I'm filled with a renewed sense of purpose, of hope, of love. The first few months after he's born are topsy-turvy -- day is night, night is day. When sleep finally returns, so does work. My business suit is tight, my mind preoccupied. I pump milk in a cold, gray bathroom stall.

  His teeth begin to appear. Baby bottles give way to solid foods. He points high above his chair to the clock on the wall. "Clock," he says. It's his first word, minus the "l," and it makes me laugh. Soon he is walking, skipping, making angels in the snow.

  I'm promoted at work. It becomes harder to find the time to make playdates and pediatrician appointments. At lunch I read books about nurturing, teaching, inspiring your child. He calls my office with the help of his baby­sitter. "Momma," he says, "I'm making you a present."

  The tooth fairy arrives and leaves him handwritten notes. He discovers knock-knock jokes and learns how to add, subtract, and read. He builds giant castles with giant Legos, rides his shiny bike down a country road with his feet off the pedals.

  I quit my job to do freelance writing -- everything from training programs to marketing brochures to essays -­ usually when the rest of the family is sleeping. There's never enough ­money, but now at least we have time.

  Saturday nights are always family nights, spent at home. There are countless sporting events. He tries baseball, soccer, and track, then falls head over heels for basketball. He swings from tree limbs, wears superhero costumes, develops crushes, friendships, and fevers.

  I volunteer at his school: cut, paste, read, nourish, fund-raise, chaperone. I like this job.

  There are marathon bedtime story rituals, endless questions about how things work, and monsters under the bed. Lego pieces grow smaller and castles more intricate. He tries the guitar, plays the trombone, saves ­quarters to buy video games, and collects trading cards, which he keeps in a shoe box under his bed.

  We get a dog. He loves this dog with all his heart. The dog loves him back.

  One day his height surpasses mine and, seemingly the next, his father's.

  He reads an essay by a sportswriter. It lights a fire in him. He starts to write his own stuff, wandering into my office as I try to juggle freelance assignments.

  I feel privileged to read his work.

  Orthodontics are removed to reveal straight pearly whites. He earns his first paycheck as a baseball referee but wishes that it had been as a writer.

  He learns to do the laundry, scrub the bathroom, and make pasta, though he often professes to forget how to do all three.

  He turns 18.

  On a cold and rainy Election Day we head out together to vote. After two hours waiting in line, he's the only teen in sight. It's not lost on him -- by the next morning he has written all about it.

  He gets a job as a blogger, then starts his own website. And all the while there are macroeconomics, physics, and college applications.

  The flip book's down to its last pages.

  I've defined myself as a mother for 18 years. Who am I now? I look in the mirror. In my quest to help him grow wings, I forgot to grow some of my own. Can I find a new sense of purpose, rechannel the love?

  Before I was a mother I was a daughter, infused with energy and the unspoken reassurance that my parents would always be there. But I can't be a daughter again. I'm on my own.

  Does purpose -- mine, yours, anyone's -- require someone to nurture it, or is it inherent in all of us?

  I'll soon be putting these competing theories to the test.

  As I sit down to write this piece, I receive his text: Where are you?

  Here, I text back.

  For now.

  适合早读的英语美文篇二

  Realizing your ultimate aim实现你的最终目标

  Have you ever wondered why you do all that you do? What is the aim of all the effort? Why get a job, why earn, why build a house, why get a car, why save for the future? Think about it for a moment...

  You might say, we do this to ensure security and comfort for the rest of our lives... And why do we need security and comfort?

  I think security and comfort are both geared towards one final aim, to ensure lasting and genuine happiness. Happiness is the ultimate aim of everything we do. Again, take a moment to think about this...

  Happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim and end of human existence. –Aristotle

  The question I will raise is, do security and comfort really make us happy?

  A secure life

  安全的生活

  Look at some senior folks who have pursued security all their lives and are about to finish their journey. How happy do they look?

  Has your own pursuit of security thus far, kept you happy?

  And then how real is safety? As I read in this thought provoking article, how helpful was security for the people in Japan who were hit by the Tsunami recently?

  Life and future are too uncertain for anything, even money, to secure. There is absolutely no security in life. This realization need not be traumatic, in fact, it can be liberating! You don't have to be a slave to the future any more!

  Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature, nor do the children of men as a whole experience it. Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing –Helen Keller

  Do possessions make us happy?

  有钱我们真的就会开心么?

  You may say that happiness requires nice comforts like a house, a car, big bank balance, a high paying job.

  Here in India where I live, I have traveled through villages where people seemed to earn just enough to make ends meet. I have seen happiness there. I have seen smiling faces and smiling eyes that readily gave me directions to my destination, that displayed a friendly curiosity in me and my journey.

  I have also worked for 3 years on Wall Street, in a big Investment Bank. I have seen some people with a lot of money but still unhappy. I am not implying that all rich are unhappy(or the poor, happy). But the fact that there are some rich who look angry or listless and there are some people of modest means who look happy, points out that there must be something else to happiness, than just money, luxury and comfort.

  Most of the luxuries and many of the so-called comforts of life, are not only not indispensable, but positive hindrances to the elevation of mankind. –Henry David Thoreau

  Happiness, it seems, is not a factor of how much you have. You can feel happy listening to a good song, you can feel happy witnessing a beautiful sunrise, you can feel happy in any number of ways that don't require any possessions at all.

  So what causes happiness?

  那么,幸福源于何处呢?

  Happiness, to me, is the result of a decision to be happy. I feel all the happy people I have met, whether in villages or on Wall Street, had just decided to be happy. No matter what the situation, they just smile. The ones who are not happy have postponed their happiness, they have made it contingent upon some event, some amount of money, a certain status... They have put certain limitations on their happiness. They don't believe that the only limitations we have are the ones we put on ourselves.

  The happy ones remove all conditions on their happiness. They are dedicated to their decision to be happy, they focus on it constantly. They are not perfect, they falter sometimes. But their focus comes back quickly. They have brought happiness into routine, they have made it a habit.

  A few things to try

  要尝试的一些事

  Go ahead and make your own resolve to be happy. Practice it, try to be happy no matter what. If you falter(and you will falter, many times), don't feel guilty, just bring your focus back to your resolve. Slowly, you will find a sense of lasting happiness.

  Denounce the idea of working for a 'future happiness'. Instead, form goals that make you feel happy right now, form goals that make you feel enthusiastic and passionate in this, present moment.

  Listen to that favorite song of yours. Make a resolution to not think about anything till it ends. This is a simple choice, totally in your hands. No one can force you, without your complicity, to not enjoy.

  Look at a beautiful picture, play with your kid, talk to a genuine friend...

  Happiness is so readily available, right now!

  适合早读的英语美文篇三

  Keep on Singing爱的奇迹

  Like any good mother, when Karen found out that another baby was on the way, she did what she could to help her three-year-old son, Michael, prepare for a new sibling. They find out that the new baby is going to be a girl, and day after day, night after night, Michael sings to his sister in Mommy's tummy.

  The pregnancy progresses normally for Karen. Then the labor pains come. Every five minutes ... every minute. But Complications arise during delivery. Hours of labor. Would a C-section be required? Finally, Michael's little sister is born. But she is in serious condition. With siren howling in the night, the ambulance rushes the infant to the neonatal intensive care unit at St. Mary's Hospital in Knoxville, Tennessee.

  The days inch by. The little girl gets worse. The pediatric specialist tells the parents, "There is very little hope. Be prepared for the worst." Karen and her husband contact a local cemetery about a burial plot. They have fixed up a special room in their home for the new baby — now they plan a funeral.

  Michael, keeps begging his parents to let him see his sister, "I want to sing to her," he says. Week two in intensive care. It looks as if a funeral will come before the week is over. Michael keeps nagging about singing to his sister, but kids are never allowed in Intensive Care. But Karen makes up her mind. She will take Michael whether they like it or not.

  If he doesn't see his sister now, he may never see her alive. She dresses him in an oversized scrub suit and marches him into ICU. He looks like a walking laundry basket, but the head nurse recognizes him as a child and bellows, "Get that kid out of here now! No children are allowed." The mother rises up strong in Karen, and the usually mild-mannered lady glares steel-eyed into the head nurse's face, her lips a firm line. "He is not leaving until he sings to his sister!" Karen tows Michael to his sister's bedside. He gazes at the tiny infant losing the battle to live. And he begins to sing. In the pure hearted voice of a 3-year-old, Michael sings:

  "You are my sunshine, my only sunshine, you make me happy when skies are gray — "

  Instantly the baby girl responds. The pulse rate becomes calm and steady.

  Keep on singing, Michael. "You never know, dear, how much I love you. Please don't take my sunshine away — " The ragged, strained breathing becomes as smooth as a kitten's purr.

  Keep on singing, Michael. "The other night, dear, as I lay sleeping, I dreamed I held you in my arms..." Michael's little sister relaxes as rest, healing rest, seems to sweep over her.

  Keep on singing, Michael. Tears conquer the face of the bossy head nurse. Karen glows. "You are my sunshine, my only sunshine. Please don't, take my sunshine away."

  Funeral plans are scrapped. The next, day — the very next day — the little girl is well enough to go home!

  The medical staff just called it a miracle. Karen called it a miracle of God's love!

  NEVER GIVE UP ON THE PEOPLE YOU LOVE. LOVE IS SO INCREDIBLY POWERFUL.

  像其他的好妈妈一样,当凯伦发现自己又怀孕了时,她就尽力帮她三岁的儿子迈克尔做好准备迎接这个新生儿的到来。他们知道了这是个女孩后,迈克尔每天都趴在妈妈肚子上为他的小妹妹唱歌。

  凯伦的怀孕期进展正常。接着产前阵痛就来临了,每5分钟一次……每分钟一次。但在分娩过程中出现了并发症,阵痛持续了几个小时。是不是需要剖腹产?终于,迈克尔的小妹妹降生了。但她的情况很不好。伴着晚上警报器的鸣叫声,救护车把婴儿送到田纳西州诺克斯维尔市的圣玛丽医院,新生儿重病特护区。

  日子一天天过去了。女婴的情况愈来愈糟。小儿科专家告诉这对父母:“希望非常渺茫。请做好最坏的打算吧。”凯伦和她的丈夫联系了当地一家公墓,安排了葬礼的计划。他们已经在家里布置好了一间特别的婴儿房——但现在却要计划一个葬礼。

  迈克尔一直乞求父母让他进去看看小妹妹:“我想唱歌给她听,”他说。这是重病特护的第二周了。看来好像到不了这周结束葬礼就要来临了。迈克尔不断地缠着要给小妹妹唱歌听,然而重病特护区不允许儿童入内。不过凯伦下定了决心,不管他们愿不愿意,她都要带迈克尔进去。

  如果现在他看不到他的小妹妹,就再也没机会见到她了。她为儿子穿了一身特大型的护士服,带他走进重点护理组。他看起来就像一个行走的洗衣篮,不过护士长认出这是一个孩子,她吼道:“马上带那个孩子离开这儿!禁止小孩入内。”凯伦的母性变得坚强起来,这位平日里温柔的女士用坚毅的目光盯着护士长的脸,坚定地说:“他不会离开的,除非给他妹妹唱首歌。”凯伦拉着迈克尔走到他小妹妹的床前。他盯着这个不再为生存而挣扎的小婴儿,开始唱歌。用三岁孩子单纯的心声,迈克尔唱道:

  “你是我的阳光,惟一的阳光,当天空灰暗时你能使我快乐……”

  女婴立刻有了反应,脉搏跳动变得平静而稳定。

  迈克尔一直在唱着:“亲爱的,你不知道我有多么爱你。请不要带走我的阳光——”女婴不规则的、紧张的呼吸变得如小猫的呼噜声那般安稳。

  迈克尔继续唱着:“亲爱的,那天晚上当我睡着,我梦到我把你抱在怀中……”他的小妹妹放松下来了,放佛在休息,复原般的休息,似乎在她身上扩展开来。

  迈克尔还在唱着。泪水在护士长的脸上肆意流着。凯伦变得容光焕发。“你是我的阳光,惟一的阳光。请别带走我的阳光。”

  葬礼计划取消了。第二天——就在第二天——女婴就好起来,可以回家了!

  医护人员说这就是一个奇迹。凯伦说它是上帝之爱的奇迹。

  决不要放弃你所爱的人。爱的力量其大无比。

  
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