大學(xué)英語精讀:第三冊 UNIT 9

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In the last days of World War 11, Adolf Hitler and his closest associates had sought shelter in a command bunker before the fall of Berlin. He knew that defeat was close at hand and that he must prepare for his own death. Here is a detailed description of how he ended his life.
    The Death of Hitler
    William L. Shirer
    During the afternoon of April 29, news arrived at the bunker where Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun were separated from the outside world. Mussolini, Hitler's fellow fascist dictator and partner in aggression, had met his end, and it had been shared by his mistress, Clara Petacci.
    They had been caught by Italian guerrillas on April 27 while trying to escape to Switzerland and executed after a brief trial. On the Saturday night of April 28 the bodies were brought to Milan in a truck and dumped on the town square. The next day they were strung up by the heels from lampposts and later cut down so that throughout the rest of Sunday, they lay in the gutter. On May Day Benito Mussolini was buried beside his mistress in the paupers' plot of a Milan cemetery. In such a horrible climax of degradation Mussolini and Fascism passed into history.
    It is not know how many of the details of Mussolini's shabby end were communicated to the Fuehrer. One can only guess that if he heard many of them he was only strengthened in his resolve not to allow himself or his bride to be made a spectacle —— not their live selves or their bodies.
    Shortly after receiving the news of Mussolini's death, Hitler began to make the final preparations for his. He had his favorite Alsatian dog poisoned and two other dogs in the household shot. Then he called in his two remaining women secretaries and handed them capsules of poison to use if they wished to when the advancing Russians broke in. He was sorry, he said, not to be able to give them a better farewell gift, and he expressed his appreciation for their long and loyal service.
    Evening had now come, the last of Adolf Hitler's life. He instructed Mrs. Junge, one of his secretaries, to destroy the remaining papers in his files, and he sent out word that no one in the bunker was to go to bed until further orders. This was interpreted by all as meaning that he judged the time had come to make his farewells. But it was not until long after midnight, at about 2:30 AM of April 30, as several witnesses recall, that the Fuehrer emerged from his private quarters and appeared in the general dining passage where some 20 persons, mostly the women members of his group of associates, were assembled. He walked down the line shaking hand with each and mumbling a few words that were inaudible. There was a heavy film of moisture on his eyes and, as Mrs. Junge remembered, "They seemed to be looking far away, beyond the walls of the bunker."
    After he retired, a curious thing happened. The tension which had been building up to an almost unendurable point in the bunker broke, and several persons went to the canteen —— to dance. The weird party soon became so noisy that word was sent from the Fuehrer's quarters requesting more quiet. The Russians might come in a few hours and kill them all —— though most of them were already thinking of how they could escaped —— but in the meantime, for a brief spell, now that the Fuehrer's strict control of their lives was over, they would seek pleasure where and how they could find it. The sense of relief among these people seems to have been enormous, and they danced on through the night.
    Berlin was no longer defensible. The Russians already had occupied almost all of the city. It was now merely a question of the defense of he Chancellery. It too was doomed, as Hitler and Bormann learned at the situation conference at noon on April 30, the last that was ever to take place. The Russians were just a block away. The hour for Adolf Hitler to carry out his resolve had come.
    His bride apparently had no appetite for lunch that day, and Hitler took his meal with his two secretaries and with his vegetarian cook, who perhaps did not realize that she had prepared his last meal. While they were finishing their lunch at about 2:30 PM, Erich Kempka, the Fuehrer's chauffeur, who was in charge of the Chancellery garage, received an order to deliver immediately 200 liters of gasoline in cans to the Chancellery garden. Kempka had some difficulty in rounding up so much fuel, but he managed to collect some 180 liters and with the help of three men carried it to the emergency exit of the bunker.
    While the oil to provide the first for the Viking funeral was being collected, Hitler, having done with his last meal, fetched Eva Braun for another and final farewell to his most intimate collaborators: Dr. Goebbels, Generals Krebs and Burgdorf, the secretaries, and Miss Manzialy, the cook.
    They finished their farewells and retired to their rooms. Outside in the passageway, Dr. Goebbels, Bormann and a few others waited. In a few moments a revolver shot was heard. They waited for a second one, but there was only silence. After a decent interval they quietly entered the Fuehrer's quarters. They found the body of Adolf Hitler sprawled on the sofa dripping blood. He had shot himself in the mouth. At this side lay Eva Braun. Two revolvers had fallen to the floor, but the bride had not used hers. She had swallowed poison.
    It was 3:30 PM on Monday, April 30, 1945, ten days after Adolf Hitler's fifty-sixth birthday, and twelve years and three months to the day since he had become Chancellor of Germany and had instituted the Third Reich. It would survive him but a week.
    NEW WORDS
    bunker
    n. strongly-built shelter for soldiers, esp. one built underground 地堡
    fascist
    a. 法西斯主義的
    n. 法西斯分子
    dictator
    n. a ruler who has absolute power over a country, esp. one who has obtained such power by force *者
    partner
    n. 伙伴
    aggression
    n. the starting of a war, fight, or quarrel without just cause 侵略
    mistress
    n. 情婦
    Italian
    a. 意大利的
    n. 意大利人;意大利語
    guer(r)illa
    n. 游擊隊員
    execute
    vt. kill (sb.) by law; carry out, perform 處死;實施,執(zhí)行
    executive
    a. & n.
    dump
    vt. drop or unload (sth.) in a heap or carelessly 傾倒
    string
    vt. hang with a string or rope
    heel
    n. (腳)后跟
    lamppost
    n. post for a street lamp 路燈柱
    pauper
    n. a person with no means of livelihood, esp. one who is supported by charity 貧民
    plot
    n. a piece of land (usu. small)
    cemetery
    n. place for burying the dead 公墓;墓地
    horrible
    a. causing a feeling of great shock, fear or dislike
    horror n.
    climax
    n. the point of greatest interest or intensity 高潮
    degradation
    n. 羞辱
    Fascism
    n. 法西斯主義
    shabby
    a. dishonourable; mean; worn out 不光彩的;卑鄙的;破舊的
    Fuehrer
    n. (德)元首
    strengthen
    v. make or become strong(er) 加強
    resolve
    n. resolution 決心
    bride
    n. a girl or woman just married or about to be married 新娘
    spectacle
    n. an object of contempt or disrespect; a public show or scene 引入鄙視的對象;場面
    preparation
    n. things done to get ready for sth.
    Alsatian
    a. 阿爾薩斯的
    n. 阿爾薩斯狼犬
    poison
    vt. 毒死,放毒
    n. 毒藥
    farewell
    n. goodbye
    appreciation
    n. understanding of the qualities or worth of sth.; grateful feelings 欣賞;感激
    loyal
    a. true to one's friends, group, country, etc. faithful 忠誠的
    instruct
    vt. give orders or directions to 命令;指示
    file
    n. 卷宗;檔案
    word
    n. order
    interpret
    vt. explain or tell the likely meaning of (sth.)
    interpretation n.
    private
    a. personal; one's own 私人的;個人的
    mostly
    ad. chiefly; almost all
    associate
    n. a person connected with another, esp. in work
    assemble
    vt. gather or collect together 集合
    inaudible
    a. that can not be heard
    moisture
    n. slight wetness; water or other liquid spread in small drops in the air or on a surface 潮濕,濕氣
    retire
    vi. withdraw; go away 退出
    unendurable
    a. unbearable
    canteen
    n. a place in a military camp, factory, etc. where people may buy and eat food, meals, drinks, sweets, etc. 食堂
    weird
    a. strange; unnatural
    request
    vt. Demand politely 請求
    meantime
    n. & ad. (in) the time between
    spell
    n. a period of time
    strict
    a. rigid 嚴厲的
    relief
    n. the fact or state of lessening or freeing from anxiety, fear, or pain (憂慮等的)減輕,解除
    enormous
    a. very large
    defensible
    a. that can be defended
    doom
    vt. cause to suffer sth. unavoidable and unpleasant, such as death or destruction
    noon
    n. midday
    apparently
    ad. evidently; it seems (that)
    apparent a.
    vegetarian
    a. relating to a person who eats vegetables but no meat (有關(guān))素食的
    chauffeur
    n. a person employed to drive someone's car
    liter
    n. (容量單位)升
    gasoline
    n. 汽油
    fuel
    n. 燃料
    intimate
    a. close in relationship 親密的
    collaborator
    n. partner in an activity 協(xié)作者,同伙
    passageway
    n. 走廊
    revolver
    n. 左輪手槍
    decent
    a. right and suitable 合宜的;得休的
    interval
    n. time between two events 間隔
    sofa
    n. 沙發(fā)
    drip
    v. fall or let fall in drops
    swallow
    vt. 吞咽
    chancellor
    n. chief minister of state (in some countries e.g. Germany)總理(或首相)
    institute
    vt. set up for the first time 建立
    PHRASES & EXPRESSIONS
    meet one's end
    die
    string up
    hang (sth.) high with strings; put to death by hanging 用繩吊起;吊死
    call in
    ask to come or go in
    break in
    enter a building by force (非法)強行進入
    build up
    increase, strengthen gradually
    in the meantime
    meanwhile
    in charge of
    responsible for
    round up
    collect, gather together 集攏
    have done with
    finish with; stop doing or using 結(jié)束;終止
    to a/ the day
    exactly (in time)
    PROPER NAMES
    Adolf Hitler
    阿道夫.*
    Eva Braun
    愛娃.勃勞恩
    Benito Mussolini
    本尼托.墨索里尼
    Clara Petacci
    克拉拉.貝塔西
    Switzerland
    瑞士
    Milan
    米蘭(意大利城市)
    May Day
    勞動節(jié)
    the Fuehrer
    元首(納粹統(tǒng)治時期對*的稱呼)
    Junge
    榮格(姓氏)
    Berlin
    柏林(德國首都)
    the Chancellery
    (德國)總理府
    Bormann
    鮑曼(姓氏)
    Erich Kempka
    埃里希.肯普卡
    Viking
    (八至十世紀劫掠歐洲海岸的)北歐海盜
    Goebbels
    戈培爾(姓氏)
    Krebs
    克萊勃斯(姓氏)
    Burgdorf
    布克道夫(姓氏)
    Manzialy
    曼齊阿里(姓氏)
    the Third Reich
    第三帝國