READINGA.doc

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1、READING AIntroductionQueen is the female ruler of a kingdom or the crowned wife of a king. 皇后是国王领域的女统治者Queen consort is the proper title of the wife of a reigning king. 皇后是国外给妻子最恰当的头衔A dowager queen is a former queen consort whose daughter or married son rules. 继承前王后的女儿或者嫁给 A queen regnant rules in

2、her own name. For example, when King George Vl of Great Britain came to the throne in 1936, his wife, Elizabeth, became queen consort and his mother, Queen Mary, widow of George V, became dowager queen. When George Vl died, his older daughter became queen regnant as Elizabeth I1. George Vls widow th

3、en took the title Queen Mother because Queen Mary, the dowager queen, was still alive. With gritty determination and good humor, Elizabeth served crown and country as a Duchess, Royal Consort and Queen Mother. Through scandal and war, her husbands death and her familys tough times, she endured, earn

4、ing deep respect and affection in the United Kingdom.A Maam for All Seasons - the Queen Mother(1900-2002)1 For decades she seemed the fairy godmother of an entire adoring nation. Elizabeth, Queen Consort to King George VI and mother of Queen Elizabeth II, was, historians will doubtless record, the w

5、oman who helped restore the majesty of the throne after the abdication of Georges brother Edward VIII in 1936. But the Queen Mothers former subjects will be more likely to remember her as the sprightly Queen Mum who seemed almost a part of everyones family.2 Merry and maternal, always ready with a b

6、andage or a bag of sweets, she extended herself so easily and so warmly to her people that the circumspect London Times in 1980 judged her to be probably the most popular royal personage of all time. Britons were inclined to believe her resplendent smile would never fade.3 She was sporting that smil

7、e as well as walking sticks and a bandaged right leg last November, at one of her final public appearances. The 101-yea-old arrived by helicopter to relauneh the aircraft carrier Ark Royal and, spurning a ride in her blue-and gold-striped motorized buggy, told 2,000 sailors and dignitaries: Im so ha

8、ppy to be once again onboard Ark Royal. You see, I launched her and her predecessor in 1950. So its wonderful to feel that now shes going to be at sea and guarding our shores. On the day before Easter, the Queen Mother died peacefully in her sleep at Royal Lodge, her residence at Windsor, with her d

9、aughter, Queen Elizabeth II, at her bed side.4 She had been weak and frail since Christmas, when she con- tracted a chest infection at Sandringham, the royal retreat in Norfolk. She was dependent on a wheelchair and still had a worrying cough in early February, when her second daughter, Margaret, di

10、ed in Lon don at age 71 after a series of strokes. Nevertheless, the Queen Mother insisted on attending the Princesss funeral at Windsor. The Archbishop of Canterbury recalled that at the St. Georges Chapel service, she stood in tribute as Margarets coffin passed.5 St. Georges will also be the final

11、 resting place for the Queen Mother. First will come several days of private mourning, which will be followed by a period of public mourning, during which her body will lie in state at Westminster Hall in the Houses of Parliament complex. After services at Westminster Abbey - the first state funeral

12、 since that of Winston Churchill in 1965 and a private service at the royal chapel in Windsor, she will be laid to rest beneath a simple slab of black marble beside her husband, King George VI.6 Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, was not born to the royal life.The ninth of 10 children, she passed her childh

13、ood in her Scottish an eestral home of Glamis Castle, the gloomy fortress where Shake speares Macbeth is said to have murdered Duncan. There she devel oped a lifelong passion for horses and dogs and a gift for dealing with people. Sometimes she would guide tourists around her stately home, and when

14、the castle was turned into a military hospital during World War I, she helped entertain the troops.7 Life as a royal, however, was not a role she coveted. Youll be a lucky fellow if she accepts you, King George V is .said to have warned his second son, Prince Albert, Duke of York, when he embarked u

15、pon courting the small, sapphir-eyed Lady Elizabeth. Sure enough, a persistent rumor has it that she rejected the princes first proposal in 1921. Two years later, however, she decided to accept, and the two were wed amid a trumpeting of pageantry in Westminster Abbey. Elizabeth and Albert were in th

16、eir 14th year of a quiet mar riage and were the parents of two girls when Alberts older brother Edward VIII gave up his crown to marry Wallis Simpson, an American who divorced her second husband to wed the former King. (To the end of her days, the otherwise indulgent Elizabeth regarded the abdicatio

17、n as an unpardonable dereliction of duty. ) Albert thereupon became King George VI and Elizabeth his Queen Consort.8 Accession to the throne made Elizabeth no less approachable. As mother to the Princesses Elizabeth Margaret, she schooled them in such ladylike arts as dancing and drawing. As wife to

18、 the shy and stammering King, she encouraged him through his speeches and put him at ease with her outgoing charm. Dressed often in flamboyant wide brimmed hats, Britains first commoner Queen in almost four centuries never stood on ceremony. She came into royalty from the outside, remembered an old

19、friend, and she brought a naturalness and spontaneity that are trained out of royalty.”9 Those qualities blossomed during World War II, when the Queen revealed a doughty spirit. Eager to set an example for her subjects, she visited hospitals and slums and delivered broadcasts in fluent French to the

20、 women of occupied France. The Queen recognized that war would prove to be a great democratic leveler. Im glad we have been bombed, she said in 1940, after Buckingham Palace weathered the first in a series of air attacks. It makes me feel I can look the East End in the face.” Hitler was to have said

21、, She is the most dangerous woman in Europe,”10 But the end of the war did not bring an end to Elizabeths challenges. Her husband fell ill in 1947 and five years later died of lung cancer at 56. As the Kings young widow, she found solace in her be loved Scotland, where she purchased the Castle of Me

22、y, which be- came a favorite retreat. The new role she chose for herself was to help her daughter, then just 25, shoulder the burdens attendant upon a queen.11 The two Elizabeths were said to be very fond of, and extreme0ly deferential to, each other. When I went to preach at Sandring- ham, recalled

23、 a bishop, I was standing beside the Queen Mother before she went up to bed on the Sunday night, and she said: Its been so lovely having you, do come again. Then she turned to the Queen and immediately apologized: Oh how rude of me, darling! It isnt for me to invite anyone to Sandringharn. “The Quee

24、n was said to be equally solicitous of her mother, though she really seemed to need the attention. The smiling Duchess glided with resilient good humor through roughly 10 engagements each month until she was mid-way into her 80s. She was patron or president of more than 300 organizations. And in rec

25、ent years, she kept up an amazing public and private schedule for a person her age= she attended a performance of the Roval Ballet on her 101st birthday, reveling as the orchestra played and audience sang Happy Birthday. In the last weeks of her life, she even hosted a small party on the occasion of

26、 the Cheltenham races at her Windsor residence.12 As Queen Mother, Elizabeth was an implacable defender of the Royal Family against modernity and change. For instance, she objected to the notion that the royals should pay taxes. And still smarting from the scandal of Edward and Mrs. Simpson, she in

27、turn demanded of family members the highest standards of morality and behavior. So the sexual, social and financial shenanigans of the past two decades, floodlit by a prurient and deference-be damned press, strained her relationship with the younger royals. When the extra marital affairs of the Prin

28、ce and Princess of Wales became common gossip, both got a dressing down. The Queen Mother came to feel that Diana was a very silly girl and had a poor sense of duty, or devoir, as she often calls it, a lady-in-waiting once said. Diana sensed that the Queen Mother saw her as a second Mrs. Simpson, wh

29、o was threatening to undermine the whole show, said another aide. Still, she must have been shocked and saddened by Dianas tragic death in 1997. Throughout it all, grandson Charles was her favorite and she his.13 Elizabeth, the Queen Mum, never ceased to think of herself as a country lass from Scotl

30、and. She spent each August at the Castle of Mey, listening to her bagpipe records and fishing for salmon with Prince Charles. Sometimes she would simply tramp through the rain, chatting with the locals. Once, it is said, she noticed a farmhand struggling to herd his lambs into a pen. Instantly she c

31、lambered over a stone wall to help out. It seemed, she later said, the neighborly thing to do.14 The images that lodged in the British heart were of the Queen Mum singing gaily as a chauffeur whizzed her through Rhodesia in 1960, porte ring around her beloved garden in baggy trousers, following the

32、fortunes of her racehorses on a telephone results service used by bookies.15 That lively spirit and unaffected dignity disarmed even her en- emies. A trouble making South African once approached her with this challenge: I dont think much of royalty. I think South Africa ought to be a republic. Witho

33、ut skipping a beat, Elizabeth replied, Thats how we feel in Scotland too, but the English wont allow it. Such remarks were rarely for public consumption and often self-deprecating: You think Im a nice person, she told her friend Woodrow Wyatt in the 1980s. Im really not a nice person. 16 Prime Minis

34、ter Tony Blair was among the many who came for ward last Saturday to disagree; vehemently. In his tribute he described her as a symbol of Britains decency and courage. Much earlier the populist Sunday Mirror had similarly gushed, She has almost be- come a symbol of all that Britain wants to stand fo

35、r., something safe, sane, stable and as everlasting as the Tower of London. And as re- assuringly familiar. Generations from now, her performance in that most deceptively difficult of jobs will be the standard by which the worlds remaining monarchs are judged. The Queen Mother blended a sense of majesty and a sense of fun so comfortably that national feeling and natural feeling chimed. In the end, she made royalty seem human and humanity downright regal.

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