陜西 張 鵬
肯·坎貝爾在陪伴妻子復(fù)健的過(guò)程中發(fā)現(xiàn)了自己對(duì)跑步的熱愛(ài),經(jīng)過(guò)長(zhǎng)時(shí)間的訓(xùn)練,他成功完成了一場(chǎng)100千米的超級(jí)馬拉松比賽。盡管有關(guān)節(jié)炎并可能需要進(jìn)行全膝關(guān)節(jié)置換手術(shù),但他仍保持對(duì)奔跑的樂(lè)觀心態(tài)并繼續(xù)前行。
主題語(yǔ)境:體育與健康 篇幅:366詞 建議用時(shí):7分鐘
1 Ken Campbell had last attempted running at high school.When his wife,Susan,injured her foot, she needed support to rejoin her running group, so Campbell went along to keep her company in the recovery.“We were just walking at the beginning,”he says.“And I was heavy.I weighed over 90 kg.”But as the weeks and months passed, the weight fell away and Susan recovered—and Campbell's abilities grew.At the age of 63,he ran 50 km,and at 70,he ran through the night to complete a 100 km ultramarathon.
2 So how does someone with no sporting precedent (先例) become an ultradistance runner in his 60s and 70s? Susan had run marathons before her injury.But for Campbell,the turning point came when Susan's Fleet Feet running group took to the trails in the Sierra Nevada foothills near their home in Citrus Heights,California.
3 Campbell went out to visit Susan's group, and the trails were a terrible mess.It had been raining.And he was running in his road shoes, slipping, sliding and falling.He was struggling.He thought he liked that a lot and he could do better.
4 What he liked above all was the feeling of being enveloped by the trail and being embraced by the closeness of the vegetation and the nearness of the river.He was walking where native people had walked for thousands of years and where miners had walked on their way to gold.
5 Running the 100 km ultramarathon took Campbell 16 hours.When Campbell crossed the finish line at 3 am, Susan handed him a 100 km sticker to display on the back of his truck.He already had a 50 km one there.“It is a public announcement that you are part of this community,”he says.“Wherever we park,I see a line of vehicles with their various stickers and I feel that we are a tribe.”
6 Campbell suffered arthritis(關(guān)節(jié)炎)before he started running, and was a candidate for knee replacement.But for now, he is putting off surgery.It could put an end to the running.“The sense of well-being and accomplishment will carry me on forever,”he says.“If I can't run,I will walk.”
Detail1.What enabled Campbell to take up running again?
A.He lost weight.
B.He trained overnight.
C.His wife accompanied him.
D.His wife shared her experience.
Inference2.What did Campbell discover while accompanying his wife on a tail run?
A.The joy of being out in the wild.
B.The hardships of native people.
C.The pleasure of gold mining.
D.The mysteries of nature.
Inference3.What did the stickers on the back of Campbell's truck bring him?
A.A discount on parking.
B.A sense of belonging.
C.An enormous income.
D.An honour to his wife.
Inference 4.What can we learn about Campbell from the text?
A.He's a crowd-pleaser.
B.He is easy to content.
C.He is hard to deal with.
D.He's a determined man.
He was walking where native people had walked for thousands of years and where miners had walked on their way to gold.他行走在千百年來(lái)土著人曾經(jīng)行走過(guò)的地方,也行走在礦工們?nèi)ネ诰螯S金的道路上。
【點(diǎn)石成金】本句是一個(gè)復(fù)合句,句中的and 連接的是兩個(gè)并列的從句,前后兩個(gè)where引導(dǎo)的均為地點(diǎn)狀語(yǔ)從句。
running group 跑步團(tuán)隊(duì)
keep sb company 陪伴某人
turning point 轉(zhuǎn)折點(diǎn)
be enveloped by 被……所環(huán)繞
finish line 終點(diǎn)線(xiàn)
100 km sticker 100千米標(biāo)簽
sense of well-being 幸福感
put off 推遲