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雨果科幻小说英文原版

发布时间: 2021-10-04 20:08:34

1. 求雨果奖所有科幻小说,百度网盘资源

1953年长篇《被毁灭的人》阿尔弗雷德贝斯特科幻世界已经出版
1954年没有
1955年长篇:《他们相当正确》马克克里夫顿弗兰克瑞雷中篇:《达夫斯讲述者》小沃尔特M米勒短篇:《阿拉玛果沙》艾里克F.拉赛尔
1956年长篇:《双星》罗伯特A海因莱因中篇:《探险队》幕瑞雷因斯特短篇:《星》阿瑟C克拉克《双星》由科幻世界出版
1957年(小说奖未颁发)
1958年长篇:《大时代》弗里兹雷伯短篇:《或者所有有牡蛎的海洋》A.戴维逊
1959年长篇:《事关良心》詹姆斯布利什这个也由科幻世界出版了,经典之作中篇:《大前庭》克利福德D西马克短篇:《那地狱边缘的火车》罗伯特布罗赫这个刊登在科幻世界译文版2009.10月上
1960年长篇:《星船伞兵》罗伯特A海因莱因也已出版,星河舰队就改编自此电影短篇:《献给阿尔吉侬的花》丹尼尔凯斯这个在《经典的真身》里,即将出版
1961年长篇:《莱博维兹的赞歌》小沃尔特M米勒末世经典作品,文学与科幻的完美结合短篇:《最长的航程》波尔安德森这个刊登于2010年7月份的科幻世界译文版上
1962年长篇:《异乡异客》罗伯特A海因莱因这个很多人都知道,已由科幻世界出版,思想性很强的一部佳作短篇:《温室》布赖恩奥尔迪斯
1963年长篇:《高堡中的男人》菲利普K迪克这个好像是漓江出版社出版的吧短篇:《龙主》杰克万斯这个刊登于译文版2009.3月
1964年长篇:《星际驿站》克里福德D西马克田园科幻代表作,已经出版,语言优美短篇:《与国王们战斗到底》波尔安德森
1965年长篇:《流浪星》弗里兹雷伯短篇:《战士,不要问》戈登R迪克森
1966年长篇:《不朽》罗杰泽拉兹尼《沙丘》弗兰克赫伯特科幻世界已经出版,两部杰作都是不朽的短篇:《梯克托克曼说:“忏悔吧,哈勒昆!”》哈兰埃利森
1967年长篇:《月亮是一个严厉的女人(严厉的月亮)》罗伯特A海因莱因科幻世界已经出版,月球独立的故事,个人推荐中篇:《最后的城堡》杰克万斯短篇:《中子星》拉里尼文
1968年长篇:《光明王》罗杰泽拉兹尼科幻与奇幻结合的经典之作,科幻世界已经出版长中篇:《维乐搜索》安妮麦卡芙龘瑞《紫薪骑手》菲利普J法玛短中篇:《打算滚动石头》弗里兹雷伯短篇:《我没有嘴,我要呐喊》哈兰埃利森
1969年长篇:《站在桑给巴尔》约翰布鲁纳长中篇:《夜翼》罗伯特西尔弗伯格译文版过去刊载过短中篇:《肉体的分享》波尔安德森短篇:《在世界中心呼唤爱的野兽》哈兰埃利森

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1970年长篇:《黑暗的左手》厄休拉K勒吉因双奖作品,五星推荐中篇:《阴影之船》弗里兹雷伯短篇:《时间像假宝石的螺旋线》撒缪尔R狄兰尼
1971年长篇:《环形世界》拉里尼文双奖作品,围绕恒星的巨大天体中篇:《遭遇在兰克马》弗里兹雷伯短篇:《慢雕刻》西奥多斯特金
1972年长篇:《到你散乱的躯体中去》菲利普J法玛中篇:《空气与黑暗的女王》波尔安德森短篇:《不恒定的月亮》拉里尼文
1973年长篇:《神们自己》艾萨克阿西莫夫译文版2005.1月刊登过,超级想象长中篇:《世界之词乃森林》厄休拉K勒吉因短中篇:《山羊之歌》波尔安德森短篇:《伊瑞马水坝》拉菲尔A拉弗蒂《会见》弗雷德里克波尔&CM考恩布鲁斯
1974年长篇:《与拉玛相会》阿瑟C克拉克即将由科幻世界出版长中篇:《被龘插上插头的女孩》小詹姆斯梯普崔短中篇:《死鸟》哈兰埃利森短篇:《离开麦欧拉的人》厄休拉K勒吉因
1975年长篇:《一无所有》厄休拉K勒吉因双奖作品,反乌托邦作品代表作长中篇:《莱安娜之歌》乔治RR马丁2008年1月译文版马丁专辑里刊载短中篇:《兰格汉斯开始漂流》哈兰埃利森短篇:《洞人》拉里尼文
1976年长篇:《千年战争》乔霍尔德曼双奖作品,对战争的拷问,科幻世界出版长中篇:《家是刽子手》罗杰泽拉兹尼短中篇:《索尔的边疆》拉里尼文短篇:《抓住则皮林》弗里兹雷伯

2. 有哪些好看的英文科幻小说可以推荐

威尔斯这部发表于1898年的科幻小说《世界大战》,被斯皮尔伯格搬上大荧幕。小说对外星人的外貌特征进行了直接描写,这也成了后来20世纪美国科幻小说“黄金时代”的一大特征。

3. 求雨果《六月之夜》英文原著

When the summer's daytime is exhausted, the blooming flowers's plain
Direction all directions make the person the aroma that infatuate with;
The ear ring outs the near of far of the voice, and shut the double eyes,
According to sparse fallen asleep, enter transparent see the bottom's dream world.

The heavy star is more and more clean, a beautiful night of parties ,
the blue sky throw oned the 's color;
Soft pale of first light of day in hopes of time that be on the stage,
Imitate the over the night all in the faraway horizon on the prowl.

4. 如何评价科幻小说《三体》英文版

在第73届世界科幻小说大会(Sasquan)上,中国作家刘慈欣创作的科幻小说《三体》荣膺2015年雨果奖最佳小说奖。
《三体》英文版在海外亚马逊上获三星以上好评读92%,有407位读者留言热评。
2015年十月,Facebook创始人扎克伯格在社交网络上称自己正在读刘慈欣的《三体》,并有3万多人为这条消息点赞。
扎克伯格还简单介绍了自己阅读这本书的原因:“这是一本非常畅销的中国科幻小说,甚至现在好莱坞都将它作为剧本来拍摄电影。我最近一直在阅读经济学和社会学方面的书,《三体》可以让我很好地缓解阅读的疲惫,并且也不会无聊。
据美国ABC等主流媒体报道,奥巴马在2016年夏威夷新年休假期间正在看一些书,而这其中正有大刘的《三体》英文版!
"THE THREE BODY PROBLEM deserves all of its plaudits. It's an exceptional novel, and Ken Liu's translation is both smooth and unintrusive."
- Mike Resnick
《三体》当得起任何赞誉。它是一部超乎寻常的小说,刘宇昆流畅自然的翻译也一样。
Mike Resnick【著名科幻小说作家。他曾获得二十八次雨果奖提名并拿下其中五次,十一次星云奖提名与一次星云,并在法国、日本、西班牙、克罗地亚、波兰等地获得许多其它奖项。1993年获得科幻小说终身成就奖“云雀奖”。其小说高度关注科幻中的太空殖民与异文明接触等内容。】
"THE THREE BODY PROBLEM is a first for North American readers: a science fiction novel that gets into the hearts and minds of people in the most tumultuous period of Communist China's history. Liu Cixin gives us a rare view of the Bamboo Curtain of the 1960's and combines it with a mysterious conspiracy in presentday Earth. The result is a story where each answer creates more questions."

5. 雨果的作品简介 英语哦 快!!拜托了

Hugo, Victor

born Feb. 26, 1802, Besançon, Fr.
died May 22, 1885, Paris

poet, novelist, and dramatist who was the most important of the French Romantic writers. Though regarded in France as one of that country's greatest poets, he is better known abroad for such novels as Notre-Dame de Paris (1831) and Les Misérables (1862).

Early years (1802–30).

Victor was the third son of Joseph-Léopold-Sigisbert Hugo, a major and, later, general in Napoleon's army. His childhood was coloured by his father's constant traveling with the imperial army and by the disagreements that soon alienated his parents from one another. His mother's royalism and his father's loyalty to successive governments—the Convention, the Empire, the Restoration—reflected their deeper incompatibility. It was a chaotic time for Victor, continually uprooted from Paris to set out for Elba or Naples or Madrid, yet always returning to Paris with his mother, whose royalist opinions he initially adopted. The fall of the empire gave him, from 1815 to 1818, a time of uninterrupted study at the Pension Cordier and the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, after which he matriculated at the law faculty at Paris, where his studies seem to have been purposeless and irregular. Memories of his life as a poor student later inspired the figure of Marius in his novel Les Misérables.

From 1816, at least, Hugo had conceived ambitions other than the law. He was already filling notebooks with verses, translations—particularly from Virgil—two tragedies, a play, and elegies. Encouraged by his mother, Hugo founded a review, the Conservateur Littéraire (1819–21), in which his own articles on the poets Alphonse de Lamartine and André de Chénier stand out. His mother died in 1821, and a year later Victor married a childhood friend, Adèle Foucher, with whom he had five children. In that same year he published his first book of poems, Odes et poésies diverses, whose royalist sentiments earned him a pension from Louis XVIII. Behind Hugo's concern for classical form and his political inspiration, it is possible to recognize in these poems a personal voice and his own particular vein of fantasy.

In 1823 he published his first novel, Han d'Islande, which in 1825 appeared in an English translation as Hans of Iceland. The journalist Charles Nodier was enthusiastic about it and drew Hugo into the group of friends, all devotees of Romanticism, who met regularly at the Bibliothèque de L'Arsenal. While frequenting this literary circle, which was called the Cénacle, Hugo shared in launching a new review of moderate tendencies, the Muse Française (1823–24). In 1824 he published a new verse collection, Nouvelles Odes, and followed it two years later with an exotic romance, Bug-Jargal (Eng. trans. The Slave King). In 1826 he also published Odes et ballades, an enlarged edition of his previously printed verse, the latest of these poems being brilliant variations on the fashionable Romantic modes of mirth and terror. The youthful vigour of these poems was also characteristic of another collection, Les Orientales (1829), which appealed to the Romantic taste for Oriental local colour. In these poems it can be remarked that the poet, while skillfully employing a great variety of metres in his verse and using ardent and brilliant imagery, was also graally shedding the legitimist royalism of his youth. It may be noted, too, that “Le Feu ciel,” a visionary poem, forecast those he was to write 25 years later. The fusion of the contemporary with the apocalyptic was always a particular mark of Hugo's genius.

Hugo emerged as a true Romantic, however, with the publication in 1827 of his verse drama Cromwell and a once-famous preface. The subject of this play, with its near-contemporary overtones, is that of a national leader risen from the people who seeks to be crowned king; but the play's reputation rested largely on the long, elaborate preface, in which Hugo proposed a doctrine of Romanticism that for all its intellectual moderation was extremely provocative. He demanded a verse drama in which the contradictions of human existence—good and evil, beauty and ugliness, tears and laughter—would be resolved by the inclusion of both tragic and comic elements in a single play. Such a type of drama would abandon the formal rules of classical tragedy for the freedom and truth to be found in the plays of William Shakespeare. Cromwell itself, though immensely long and almost impossible to stage, was written in verse of great force and originality.

Success (1830–51).

The defense of freedom and the cult of an idealized Napoleon in such poems as the ode “À la Colonne” and “Lui” brought Hugo into touch with the liberal group of writers on the newspaper Le Globe, and his move toward liberalism was strengthened by the French king Charles X's restrictions on the liberty of the press as well as by the censor's prohibiting the stage performance of his play Marion de Lorme (1829), in which the character of Louis XIII was portrayed unfavourably. Hugo immediately retorted with Hernani, the first performance of which, on Feb. 25, 1830, gained victory for the young Romantics over the traditional Classicists in a now-famous literary battle. In this play he extolled the Romantic hero in the form of a noble outlaw at war with society, dedicated to a passionate love and driven on by inexorable fate. The actual impact of the play owed less to the plot than to the sound and beat of the verse, which was softened only in the elegiac passages spoken by Hernani and Doña Sol.

Hugo had derived his early renown from his plays; he gained wider fame in 1831 with his historical novel Notre-Dame de Paris (Eng. trans. The Hunchback of Notre-Dame), an evocation of life in medieval Paris ring the reign of Louis XI. The novel condemns a society that, in the persons of Frollo the archdeacon and Phoebus the soldier, heaps misery on the hunchback Quasimodo and the gypsy girl Esmeralda. The theme touched the public consciousness more deeply than had that of his previous novel, Le Dernier Jour d'un condamné (1829; The Last Days of a Condemned), the story of a condemned man's last day, in which Hugo launched a humanitarian protest against the death penalty. While Notre-Dame was being written, Louis-Philippe, a constitutional king, had been brought to power by the July Revolution. Hugo composed a poem in honour of this event, Dicté aprés juillet 1830; it was a forerunner of much of his political verse.

Four books of poems came from Hugo in the period of the July Monarchy: Les Feuilles d'automne (1831; “Autumn Leaves”), intimate and personal in inspiration; Les Chants crépuscule (1835; Songs of Twilight), overtly political; Les Voix intérieures (1837; “Inner Voices”), both personal and philosophical; and Les Rayons et les ombres (1840; “Sunlight and Shadows”), in which the poet, renewing these different themes, inlges his gift for colour and picturesque detail. But Hugo was not content merely to express personal emotions; he wanted to be the “sonorous echo” of his time. In his verse political and philosophical problems were integrated with the religious and social disquiet of the period; one poem evoked the misery of the workers, another praised the efficacy of prayer. He addressed many poems to the glory of Napoleon, though he shared with his contemporaries the reversion to republican ideals. Hugo restated the problems of his century and the great and eternal human questions, and he spoke with a warmhearted eloquence and reasonableness that moved people's souls.

So intense was Hugo's creative activity ring these years that he also continued to pour out plays. There were two motives for this: first, he needed a platform for his political and social ideas, and, second, he wished to write parts for a young and beautiful actress, Juliette Drouet, with whom he had begun a liaison in 1833. Juliette had little talent and soon renounced the stage in order to devote herself exclusively to him, becoming the discreet and faithful companion she was to remain until her death in 1883. The first of these plays was another verse drama, Le Roi s'amuse (1832; Eng. trans. The King's Fool), set in Renaissance France and depicting the frivolous love affairs of Francis I while antithetically revealing the noble character of his court jester. This play was at first banned but was later used by Giuseppe Verdi as the libretto of his opera Rigoletto. Three prose plays followed: Lucrèce Borgia and Marie Tudor in 1833 and Angelo, tyran de Padoue (“Angelo, Tyrant of Paa”) in 1835. Ruy Blas, a play in verse, appeared in 1838 and was followed by Les Burgraves in 1843.

Hugo's literary achievement was recognized in 1841 by his election, after three unsuccessful attempts, to the French Academy and by his nomination in 1845 to the Chamber of Peers. From this time he almost ceased to publish, partly because of the demands of society and political life but also as a result of personal loss: his daughter Léopoldine, recently married, was accidentally drowned with her husband in September 1843. Hugo's intense grief found some mitigation in poems that later appeared in Les Contemplations, a volume that he divided into “Autrefois” and “Aujourd'hui,” the moment of his daughter's death being the mark between yesterday and today. He found relief above all in working on a new novel, which became Les Misérables, published in 1862 after work on it had been set aside for a time and then resumed.

With the Revolution of 1848, Hugo was elected a deputy for Paris in the Constituent Assembly and later in the Legislative Assembly. He supported the successful candidacy of Prince Louis-Napoléon for the presidency that year. The more the president evolved toward an authoritarianism of the right, however, the more Hugo moved toward the assembly's left. When in December 1851 a coup d'état took place, which eventually resulted in the Second Empire under Napoleon III, Hugo made one attempt at resistance and then fled to Brussels.

Exile (1851–70).

Hugo's exile was to last until the return of liberty and the reconstitution of the republic in 1870. Enforced at the beginning, exile later became a voluntary gesture and, after the amnesty of 1859, an act of pride. He remained in Brussels for a year until, foreseeing expulsion, he took refuge on British territory. He first established himself on the island of Jersey, in the English Channel, where he remained from 1852 to 1855. When he was expelled from there, he moved to the neighbouring island of Guernsey. During this exile of nearly 20 years he proced the most extensive part of all his writings and the most original.

Immersed in politics as he was, Hugo devoted the first writings of his exile to satire and recent history: Napoléon le Petit (1852), an indictment of Napoleon III, and Histoire d'un crime, a day-by-day account of Louis Bonaparte's coup. Hugo's return to poetry was an explosion of wrath: Les Châtiments (1853; “The Punishments”). This collection of poems unleashed his anger against the new emperor and, on a technical level, freed him from his remaining classical prejudices and enabled him to achieve the full mastery of his poetic powers. Les Châtiments ranks among the most powerful satirical poems in the French language. All Hugo's future verse profited from this release of his imagination: the tone of this collection of poems is sometimes lyrical, sometimes epic, sometimes moving, but most often virulent, containing an undertone of national and personal frustration.

Despite the satisfaction he derived from his political poetry, Hugo wearied of its limitations and, turning back to the unpublished poems of 1840–50, set to work on the volume of poetry entitled Les Contemplations (1856). This work contains the purest of his poetry—the most moving because the memory of his dead daughter is at the centre of the book, the most disquieting, also, because it transmits the haunted world of a thinker. In poems such as “Pleurs dans la nuit” and “La Bouche d'ombre,” he reveals a tormented mind that struggles between doubt and faith in its lonely search for meaning and significance.

Hugo's apocalyptic approach to reality was the source of two epic or metaphysical poems, La Fin de Satan (“The End of Satan”) and Dieu (“God”), both of them confrontations of the problem of evil. Written between 1854 and 1860, they were not published until after his death because his publisher preferred the little epics based on history and legend contained in the first installment (1859) of the gigantic epic poem La Légende des siècles (The Legend of the Centuries), whose second and third installments appeared in 1877 and 1883, respectively. The many poems that make up this epic display all his spiritual power without sacrificing his exuberant capacity to tell a story. Hugo's personal mythology of the human struggle between good and evil lies behind each of the legends: Eve's motherhood is exalted in “Le Sacre de la femme”; mankind liberating itself from all religions in order to attain divine truth is the theme of “Le Satyre”; and “Plein Ciel” proclaims, through utopian prediction of men's conquest of the air, the poet's conviction of indefinite progress toward the final unity of science with moral awareness.

After the publication of three long books of poetry, Hugo returned to prose and took up his abandoned novel, Les Misérables. Its extraordinary success with readers of every type when it was published in 1862 brought him instant popularity in his own country, and its speedy translation into many languages won him fame abroad. The novel's name means “the wretched,” or “the outcasts,” but English translations generally carry the French title. The story centres on the convict Jean Valjean, a victim of society who has been imprisoned for 19 years for stealing a loaf of bread. A hardened and astute criminal upon his release, he eventually softens and reforms, becoming a successful instrialist and mayor of a northern town. Yet he is stalked obsessively by the detective Javert for an impulsive, regretted former crime, and Jean Valjean eventually sacrifices himself for the sake of his adopted daughter, Cosette, and her husband, Marius. Les Misérables is a vast panorama of Parisian society and its underworld, and it contains many famous episodes and passages, among them a chapter on the Battle of Waterloo and the description of Jean Valjean's rescue of Marius by means of a flight through the sewers of Paris. Les Misérables's plot is basically that of a detective story, but by virtue of its characters, who are sometimes a little larger than life yet always vital and engaging, and by its re-creation of the swarming Parisian underworld, the main theme of man's ceaseless combat with evil clearly emerges while the whole gives a faithful picture of the ebb and flow of life.

The remaining works Hugo completed in exile include the essay William Shakespeare (1864) and two novels: Les Travailleurs de la mer (1866; The Toilers of the Sea), dedicated to the island of Guernsey and its sailors; and L'Homme qui rit (1869; The Man Who Laughs), a curious baroque novel about the English people's fight against feudalism in the 17th century, which takes its title from the perpetual grin of its disfigured hero. Hugo's last novel, Quatrevingt-treize (1874; Ninety-three), centred on the tumultuous year 1793 in France and portrayed human justice and charity against the background of the French Revolution.

Last years (1870–85).

The defeat of France in the Franco-German War and the proclamation of the French Third Republic in 1871 brought Hugo back to Paris. He became a deputy in the National Assembly (1871) but resigned the following month. Though he still fought for his old ideals, he no longer possessed the same energies. The trials of recent years had aged him, and there were more to come: in 1868 he had lost his wife, Adèle, a profound sadness to him; in 1871 one son died, as did another in 1873. Though increasingly detached from life around him, the poet of L'Année terrible (1872), in which he recounted the siege of Paris ring the “terrible year” of 1870, had become a national hero and a living symbol of republicanism in France. In 1878 Hugo was stricken by cerebral congestion, but he lived on for some years in the Avenue d'Eylau, renamed Avenue Victor-Hugo on his 80th birthday. In 1885, two years after the death of his faithful companion Juliette, Hugo died and was given a national funeral; his body lay in state under the Arc de Triomphe and was buried in the Panthéon.

Reputation.

Victor Hugo's enormous output is unique in French literature; it is said that he used to write each morning 100 lines of verse or 20 pages of prose. “The most powerful mind of the Romantic movement,” as he was described in 1830, laureate and peer of France in 1845, he went on to assume the role of an outlawed sage who, with the easy consciousness of authority, put down his insights and prophetic visions in prose and verse, becoming at last the genial grandfather of popular literary portraiture and the national poet who gave his name to a street in every town in France.

This instinctive recognition of Hugo as a great poet at the time of his death was followed by a period of critical neglect. A few of his poems were remembered, and Les Misérables continued to be widely read. The generosity of his ideas and the warmth of their expression still moved the public mind, for Hugo was a poet of the common man and knew how to write with simplicity and power of common joys and sorrows. But there was another side to him—what Paul Claudel called his “panic contemplation” of the universe, the numinous fear that penetrates his sombre poems La Fin de Satan and Dieu. Hugo's knowledge of the resources of French verse and his technical virtuosity in metre and rhyme, moreover, rescued French poetry from the sterility of the 18th century. André Gide, when asked whom he considered the greatest French poet, replied “Victor Hugo, alas,” explaining that if it was a regrettable fact at least it was fact.

Jean-Bertrand Barrère
Additional Reading
Biographies include Andre Maurois, Olympio: The Life of Victor Hugo (1956, reissued 1985); Joanna Richardson, Victor Hugo (1976); and Elliott M. Grant, The Career of Victor Hugo (1945, reprinted 1969). John Porter Houston, Victor Hugo, rev. ed. (1988), is an introction, focusing especially on his poetry and its technical aspects. An analysis of Hugo's romantic drama is found in Charles Affron, A Stage for Poets: Studies in the Theatre of Hugo & Musset (1971). Victor Brombert, Victor Hugo and the Visionary Novel (1984), explores the symbolic and mythological character of Hugo's works and is illustrated with Hugo's drawings.

6. 雨果的著作

在雨果60多年的文学生涯中,共出版了26部诗集,12个剧本,21部理论著作,20部小说.他的全部作品,都以仁爱为万能的人道主义思想为核心.
小说: 《巴黎圣母院 》《笑面人》《 悲惨世界 》《海上劳工》《九三年》
诗集:《静观集》《惩罚集》《凶年集 》

7. 介绍几部经典的科幻小说!国外的!谢谢!

X档案

8. 雨果的《雏菊》的英文版

呵呵,希望能够帮到楼主~~~

Daisy
A few days ago, after I published the text of the road, connecting two of a six-storey high-rise wooden fence caught my attention. Projector it on the road, not tight together through the wood, the sun's shadow in the painting line, attractive Parallel gold stripes, like a beautiful Renaissance Heian last seen. I went to go, Feng Li to the plate to watch.

Today, surrounded by the fence, two years ago, in June 1839 burned the comic song and dance venues.

2 o'clock in the afternoon, it was extremely hot, depopulated space on the road.

A gray door, is probably the single door on both sides of the uplift dent in the middle, with rococo-style decorations, may be 100 years before the love of smart young woman's women's apartment door, is installed on the fence. So long as to bring a little plug on the bolt Opened. I went.

Qiqicancan, very desolate. Mortar on the floor, is full of large stones, were abandoned in waiting, such as pale headstone, like moldy ruins. No one in the market. Neighboring houses left on the wall clear of smoke and flame Signs.

However, the land, after the fire had been subjected to two in a row in the spring of destruction in its corner of the trapezoid, is a huge rock below the green, an extension of the worm and buried in the basement of the centipede. Boulder in the shade behind, grow A number of grass.

I sat on the rock looking down this plant. God! Grow in a world where the most beautiful little Daisy, a cute little flying insects around the beautiful daisy flying back and forth.

Cao Hua quietly allow that growth and better follow the law of nature, in the soil, in Paris, two in the street, two steps away from the palace, four steps from the arena Cavalry, pedestrians, shops, cab, Public carriage of the King and four-wheel carriage between the gorgeous, flower, and allow that street near the flower fields, I stirred up endless reverie.

Ten years ago, who can foresee the day when the future president out there in a daisy!

If this on the site, just next to the ground, not from anything else, many houses only, that is, real estate owners, tenants and the gatekeeper, as well as the bed at night carefully candle flame out residents, then There will never grow a field of flowers.

Flower condensation of the number of things, the number of failed and successful performances, the number of bankrupt people, the number of incidents of accidents, the number of adventure, all of a sudden fall in the number of disaster! For the night was attracted to the life we have here Zheban Ren, Two years ago, appeared in the eyes of flower, this group of people will be aghast it as a ghost! The fate of how people make fun of the maze, the number of mysterious, after all, finally clean this light into the eye in all directions little yellow sun!

There is a need to be a theater and fire, that is, a city of joy and terror of a city, is one of the most beautiful of human invention, one of the most terrible natural disaster, 30 years Kuangxiao and 30 hours of flame billowing Only allow that the growth of the daisy, which won the joy of flying insects!

For the good of the observed, the most insignificant things that is often the most important things.

Daisy

前几天我经过文宪路,一座联接两处六层高楼的木栅栏引起我的注意.它投影在路面上,透过拼合得不严紧的木板,阳光在影上画线,吸引人的平行金色条纹,像文艺复兴时期美丽的黑缎上所见的.我走近前去,往板缝里观看.

这座栅栏今天所围住的,是两年前,1839年6月被焚毁的滑稽歌舞剧院的场地.

午后2时,烈日炎炎,路上空无人迹.

一扇灰色的门,大概是单扇门,两边隆起中间凹下,还带洛可可式的装饰,可能是百年前爱俏的年轻女子的闺门,正安装在栅栏上.只要稍稍提起插栓就开了.我走了进去.

凄凄惨惨,无比荒凉.满地泥灰,到处是大石块,被遗弃在那里等待,苍白如墓石,发霉像废墟.场里没有人.邻近的房屋墙上留有明显的火焰与浓烟的痕迹.

可是,这块土地,火灾以后已遭受两个春天的连续毁坏,在它的梯形的一隅,在一块正在变绿的巨石下面,延伸着埋葬虫与蜈蚣的地下室.巨石后面的阴暗处,长出了一些小草.

我坐在石上俯视这棵植物.天啊!就在那里长出一棵世界上最美丽的小小的雏菊,一个可爱的小小的飞虫绕着雏菊娇艳地来回飞舞.

这朵草花安静地生长,并遵循大自然的美好的规律,在泥土中,在巴黎中心,在两条街道之间,离王宫两步,离骑兵竞技场四步,在行人,店铺,出租马车,公共马车和国王的四轮华丽马车之间,这朵花,这朵临近街道的田野之花激起我无穷无尽的遐想.

十年前,谁能预见日后有一天在那里会长出一朵雏菊!

如果说在这原址上,就像旁边的地面上一样,从没有别的什么,只有许多房屋,就是说房产业主,房客和看门人,以及夜晚临睡前小心翼翼地灭烛熄火的居民,那么在这里绝对不会长出田野的花.

这朵花凝结了多少事物,多少失败和成功的演出,多少破产的人家,多少意外的事故,多少奇遇,多少突然降临的灾难!对于每晚被吸引到这里来生活的我们这班人,如果两年前眼中出现这朵花,这帮人骇然会把它当做幽灵!命运是多么作弄人的迷宫,多少神秘的安排,归根结底,终于化为这洁光四射的悦目的小小黄太阳!

必须先要有一座剧院和一场火灾,即一个城市的欢乐和一个城市的恐怖,一个是人类最优美的发明,一个是最可怕的天灾,三十年的狂笑和三十小时的滚滚火焰,才生长出这朵雏菊,赢得这飞虫的喜悦!

对善于观察的人,最渺小的事物往往就是最重大的事物.

9. 世界上获得雨果奖的科幻小说

日前,第61届世界科幻大会在加拿大多伦多召开,大会揭晓了新一届“雨果奖”,《原始人类》、《卡萝琳》等作品在数十部提名小说中脱颖而出,获得了这项被称为科幻小说“诺贝尔奖”的科幻小说界的最高荣誉。

10. 雨果简介英文版

http://..com/question/17655348.html?si=2 这个有 发的时候因为有敏感词汇 所以发不上来 希望对你有帮助……

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