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教科书上的基(激)情(我从各种贴吧摘来的,共5篇)

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上次有个同学在贴吧说道:初三历史上册第18课讲美国南北战争的,书中有这么一句话,“1864年,北方军队开始向南方进军,长途跋涉一千多米,直插南方军队后方。”
于是我兴致勃勃地上度娘查了,果然又查出很多基情,与大家分享一下
1、杜甫-江南逢李龟年配图,擦泪!基情文化已渗入小学语文课本了啊!有图有真相 2、生物课本上的基情 有图有真相(有点模糊) 海姆力克急救法(Heimlich Maneuver) 一九七四年美国海姆立克医师发明了海姆立克急救法。 主要的原理为将横隔膜往上快速挤压,使肺内空气往上冲而将异物排出。 哈姆力克急救法 姿势就是这样↓
3、这是本贴吧的同学发的,我再发一遍:初三历史上册第18课讲美国南北战争的,书中有这么一句话,“1864年,北方军队开始向南方进军,长途跋涉一千多米,直插南方军队后方。”
最后一句是重点,有书的孩纸们可以翻一翻
4、这篇很有爱 我在某贴吧上看到的,以下是楼主叙述: 标题:人间正道是基情!基情无限的思想深入了教材课本~有图有真相~ 楼主:话说,我是英语师范专业大二的学生。。这不是关键,关键是我们精读课本的第二课, 那个基情无限,那个无限基情!搞的我都没办法好好学习那篇美丽的文章了呢。。。= =。。 图片在此:

其实故事是这样的。 图片里是父亲和儿子。如果没有读课文的时候,看起来是很邪恶吧。但是当我学习了本课之后,我发现更加邪恶了!! 课文大概讲的是一个本来不理解父亲的孩子在一个与父亲亲密接触的雨夜中顿然领悟了父亲的难处并理解了父亲,在结尾处,终于由之前的不喜欢父亲转变为喜欢父亲。 如果文章可以写的稍微正常一点的话,我还是愿意读这样的亲情意味很浓郁的文章的。但是,但是,这句句离奇古怪的话语让我实在很难克制自己。。 文章是用第一人称写的,开头的时候,作者也就是“我”说,不喜欢自己父亲总是一副不务正业无所事事的样子。整天和人开玩笑还被别人当成笑料一样,而母亲不仅没有生气还总是谅解着父亲,此时的 我 十分不喜欢父亲。 中间是一些事例表示 我 不喜欢父亲,以至于都有希望自己的亲生父亲不是这个人等等。 但是,情绪的转折点出来了,那是一个雨夜。。。。 父亲换掉了以往开心的笑颜,一脸阴郁忧伤的回到家,看着 我 ,说,“come on with me”,【跟我来。】然后 我 十分好奇,于是就跟在父亲身后,不知道今天的他到底发生了什么事情。我们走着走着就走到一个很大的池塘边上,此时风雨交加,电闪雷鸣,我愈加奇怪的望着停下来的父亲。 父亲幽幽的说“take off your clothes,”【把衣服脱下来,】我虽然很奇怪,但还是照他说的做了。天空滑出一道闪电,在那一瞬间的光亮中,我看到了他已经全身赤裸了。 我们俩人全身赤裸的进入了池塘,他抓着我的手把我拉进去了。我由于吃惊和好奇迟迟没有开口说话,但我脑子里却不禁想到一件事:在这个雨夜之前的日子里,父亲仿佛没有注意到我的存在。。这样的事是第一次发生。。 


1楼2011-12-03 21:28回复
    knew he was lying, but they
    seemed to like him just the same. As a boy, that was what I couldn’t
    understand. And there was Mother. How could she stand it? I wanted to ask
    but never did. She was not the kind you asked such questions.
    I’d be upstairs in my bed, in my room above the porch, and
    Father would be telling some of his tales. A lot of Father’s stories
    were about the Civil War. To hear him tell it, he’d been in about
    every battle. He’d known Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, and I don’t
    know how many others. He’d been particularly intimate with
    General Grant, so that when Grant went East, to take charge of all
    the armies, he took Father along. “I was an orderly at headquarters, and Sam Grant said to me,
    ‘Irve,’ he said, ‘I’m going to take you along with me.’ ”
    It seems he and Grant used to slip off sometimes and have a
    quiet drink together. That’s what my father said. He’d tell about
    the day Lee surrendered and how, when the great moment came,
    they couldn’t find Grant. “You know,” my father said, “about General Grant’s book, his
    memoirs. You’ve read of how he said he had a headache and how,
    when he got word that Lee was ready to call it quits, he was
    suddenly and miraculously cured.”
    “Huh,” said Father. “He was in the woods with me.
    “I was in there with my back against a tree. I was drinking. I had
    got hold of a bottle. “They were looking for Grant. He had got off
    his horse and come into the woods. he found me. He was covered
    with mud. I had the bottle in my hand. What’d I care? The war was over. I
    knew we had them licked.”
    My father said that he was the one who told Grant about Lee. An
    orderly riding by had told him, because the orderly knew how thick
    he was with Grant. Grant was embarrassed.
    “But, Irve, look at me. I’m all covered with mud,” he said to
    Father. And then, my father said, he and Grant decided to have a drink
    together. They took a couple of drinks and then, because he didn’t
    want Grant to show up drunk before the immaculate Lee, he
    smashed the bottle against the tree.
    “Sam Grant’s dead now, and I wouldn’t want it to get out on
    him,” my father said. That’s just one of the kind of things he’d tell. Of course the men
    knew he was lying, but they seemed to like it just the same.
    When we got broke, down and out, do you think he ever brought
    anything home? Not he. If there wasn’t anything to eat in the house, he’d go off visiting around at farmhouses. They all wanted
    him. Sometimes he’d stay away for weeks, Mother working to keep
    us fed, and then home he’d come bringing, let’s say, a ham. He’d
    got it from some farmer friend. He’d slap it on the table in the
    kitchen. “You bet I’m going to see that my kids have something to
    eat,” he’d say, and Mother would just stand smiling at him. She’d
    never say a word about all the weeks and months he’d been away,
    not leaving us a cent for food. Once I heard 


    4楼2011-12-03 21:28
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      2026-03-03 18:11:29
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      her speaking to a
      woman in our street. Maybe the woman had dared to sympathize
      with her. “Oh,” she said, “it’s all right. He isn’t ever dull like most
      of the men in this street. Life is never dull when my man is about.” But often I was filled with bitterness, and sometimes I wished he
      wasn’t my father. I’d even invent another man as my father. To
      protect my mother, I’d make up stories of a secret marriage that for
      some strange reason never got known. As though some man, say
      the president of a railroad company or maybe a Congressman, had
      married my mother, thinking his wife was dead and then it turned
      out she wasn’t . So they had to hush it up, but I got born just the same. I wasn’t
      really the son of my father. Somewhere in the world there was a
      very dignified, quite wonderful man who was really my father. I
      even made myself half believe these fancies. And then there came a certain night. Mother was away from
      home. Maybe there was church that night. Father came in. He’d
      been off somewhere for two or three weeks. He found me alone in
      the house, reading by the kitchen table. It had been raining, and he was very wet. He sat and looked at
      me for a long time, not saying a word. I was startled, for there was
      on his face the saddest look I had ever seen. He sat for a time, his
      clothes dripping. Then he got up.
      “Come on with me,” he said. I got up and went with him out of the house. I was filled with
      wonder, but I wasn’t afraid. We went along a dirt road that led
      down into a valley, about a mile out of town, where there was a
      pond. We walked in silence. The man who was always talking had
      stopped his talking. I didn’t know what was up and had the queer feeling that I was
      with a stranger. I don’t know whether my father intended it so. I
      don’t think he did. The pond was quite large. It was still raining hard, and there were
      flashes of lightning followed by thunder. We were on a grassy bank
      at the pond’s edge when my father spoke, and in the darkness and
      rain his voice sounded strange. “Take off your clothes,” he said. Still filled with wonder, I
      began to undress. There was a flash of lightning, and I saw that he
      was already naked. Naked, we went into the pond. Taking my hand, he pulled me in.
      It may be that I was too frightened. too full of feeling of
      strangeness, to speak. Before that night my father had never seemed
      to pay any attention to me.“And what is he up to now?” I kept asking myself. I did not
      swim very well, but he put my hand on his shoulder and struck out
      into the darkness. He was a man with big shoulders, a powerful swimmer. In the
      darkness I could feel the movement of his muscles. We swam to the
      far edge of the pond and then back to where we had left our
      clothes. The rain continued and the wind blew. Sometimes my
      father swam on his back and when he did he took my hand in his
      large powerful one and moved it over so that it rested always on 


      5楼2011-12-03 21:28
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