汤姆索亚历险记的感想?

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汤姆索亚历险记的感想?
汤姆索亚历险记的感想?

汤姆索亚历险记的感想?
《汤姆索亚历险记》是美国大文豪马克·吐温以美国少年生活为主体写成的.故事的时代背景,是十九世纪美国密西西比河的圣彼得堡.
故事的主人公汤姆是个天真、活泼而又顽皮的典型美国少年.他和野孩子夏克,各干出了许多令人捧腹的妙事.像汤姆被罚粉刷围墙,竟施出诡计,不但使别的孩子心甘情愿代替他工作,还自动奉上谢礼.后来和夏克逃到荒岛去,人们以为他们淹死了,正在教堂为他们举行丧礼,而他们却躲在教堂的钟楼上偷听.这些顽皮的举动,虽然不能给我们做模范,但是,他为了正义,毅然地挺身出来作证人,拯救那无辜的罪犯沫夫彼得.并在顽皮之余,居然和夏克破获了一桩谋杀案,成为众人钦佩的小英雄.看来,汤姆也有值得我们学习的地方.
其实孩子的顽皮有时候正好体现了孩子的天真烂漫.这种童真过了孩童时代就很难再寻,能让我们找到的,就只有一点点偶尔才会想起的甜蜜回忆.我相信,即使你的童年再艰苦,回想起来你也会很开心.谁没有在小时候做过一件半件的傻事?当你越长大,你就会越觉得这些傻事有趣.我说童年就像一罐甜酒,时隔越久,尝起来就越香,越纯,越让人回味.
人总是会长大的,除了个儿长高了,身子强壮了以外,人的思想也在长.你对世界的看法不同了,懂事了,不再幼稚了.不过人是要越变越好才是.千万不能像历险记里的那个心狠手辣的坏蛋卓伊一样,他坏事做尽,人见人憎.但最后他还是恶有恶报,得到了一个活活饿死在山洞里的下场.
看完《汤姆索亚历险记》,我真羡慕汤姆能有如此有趣的经历.这本书让人看起来津津有味,甚至废寝忘食.我想,《汤姆索亚历险记》在你烦闷的时候或许能让你一笑解千愁.

A review by William Dean Howells (The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain )
你用自己的话再改动一下,否则写的就太完美了。
Mr. Samuel Clemens has taken the boy of the Southwest for the hero of his new book, The ...

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A review by William Dean Howells (The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain )
你用自己的话再改动一下,否则写的就太完美了。
Mr. Samuel Clemens has taken the boy of the Southwest for the hero of his new book, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and has presented him with a fidelity to circumstance which loses no charm by being realistic in the highest degree, and which gives incomparably the best picture of life in that region as yet known to fiction. The town where Tom Sawyer was born and brought up is some such idle shabby Mississippi River town as Mr. Clemens has so well described in his piloting reminiscences, but Tom belongs to the better sort of people in it, and has been bred to fear God and dread the Sunday-school according to the strictest rite of the faiths that have characterized all the respectability of the West. His subjection in these respects does not so deeply affect his inherent tendencies but that he makes himself a beloved burden to the poor, tender-hearted old aunt who brings him up with his orphan brother and sister, and struggles vainly with his manifold sins, actual and imaginary. The limitations of his transgressions are nicely and artistically traced. He is mischievous, but not vicious; he is ready for almost any depredation that involves the danger and honor of adventure, but profanity he knows may provoke a thunderbolt upon the heart of the blasphemer, and he almost never swears; he resorts to any strategem to keep out of school, but he is not a downright liar, except upon terms of after shame and remorse that make his falsehood bitter to him. He is cruel, as all children are, but chiefly because he is ignorant; he is not mean, but there are very definite bounds to his generosity; and his courage is the Indian sort, full of prudence and mindful of retreat as one of the conditions of prolonged hostilities. In a word, he is a boy, and merely and exactly an ordinary boy on the moral side. What makes him delightful to the reader is that on the imaginative side he is very much more, and though every boy has wild and fantastic dreams, this boy cannot rest till he has somehow realized them. Till he has actually run off with two other boys in the character of a buccaneer and lived for a week on an island in the Mississippi, he has lived in vain; and this passage is but the prelude to more thrilling adventures, in which he finds hidden treasures, traces the bandits to their cave, and is himself lost in its recesses. The local material and the incidents with which his career is worked up are excellent, and throughout there is scrupulous regard for the boy's point of view in reference to his surroundings and himself, which shows how rapidly Mr. Clemens has grown as an artist. We do not remember anything in which this propriety is violated, and its preservation adds immensely to the grown-up reader's satisfaction in the amusing and exciting story. There is a boy's love-affair, but it is never treated otherwise than as a boy's love-affair. When the half-breed has murdered the young doctor, Tom and his friend, Huckleberry Finn, are really in their boyish terror and superstition, going to let the poor old town-drunkard be hanged for the crime, till the terror of that becomes unendurable. The story is a wonderful study of the boy-mind, which inhabits a world quite distinct from that in which he is bodily present with his elders, and in this lies its great charm and its universality, for boy-nature, however human nature varies, is the same everywhere.
The tale is very dramatically wrought, and the subordinate characters are treated with the same graphic force that sets Tom alive before us. The worthless vagabond, Huck Finn, is entirely delightful throughout, and in his promised reform his identity is respected: he will lead a decent life in order that he may one day be thought worthy to become a member of that gang of robbers which Tom is to organize. Tom's aunt is excellent, with her kind heart's sorrow and secret pride in Tom; and so is his sister Mary, one of those good girls who are born to usefulness and charity and forbearance and unvarying rectitude. Many village people and local notables are introduced in well-conceived character; the whole little town lives in the reader's sense, with its religiousness, its lawlessness, its droll social distinctions, its civilization qualified by its slave-holding, and its traditions of the wilder West which has passed away. The picture will be instructive to those who have fancied the whole Southwest a sort of vast Pike County, and have not conceived of a sober and serious and orderly contrast to the sort of life that has come to represent the Southwest in literature.

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《汤姆索亚历险记》的主人翁汤姆是个有理想有抱负也有烦恼的男孩,他和他的小伙伴讨厌牧师骗人的鬼话,不喜欢学校枯燥刻板的教育,与循规蹈矩的人们唱对台戏,为了摆脱枯燥无味的功课、虚伪的教条和呆板的生活环境,他们作了种种冒险来改变自身的环境。...

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《汤姆索亚历险记》的主人翁汤姆是个有理想有抱负也有烦恼的男孩,他和他的小伙伴讨厌牧师骗人的鬼话,不喜欢学校枯燥刻板的教育,与循规蹈矩的人们唱对台戏,为了摆脱枯燥无味的功课、虚伪的教条和呆板的生活环境,他们作了种种冒险来改变自身的环境。

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