https://www.thisamericanlife.org/3/transcript
杰瑞发布于2022-11-22
https://www.thisamericanlife.org/3/transcript
But once I grasped the heart of the matter, I began to see the rooster in another light. I felt sorry for this fowl with an identity problem. And I wondered how it must react when its owners threw chicken bones to the dogs. Would it nibble on the remains of its favorite hen? I shuddered at the thought.
但一旦我抓住了问题的核心,我开始从另一个角度看待公鸡。我为这只身份有问题的鸡感到难过。我想知道,当主人把鸡骨头扔给狗时,它会做出什么反应。它会啃它最喜欢的母鸡的残骸吗?我一想到就发抖。 Yet despite the revelation of the rooster's bark, the problem of sleep didn't end. Then one day, a new neighbor, a young lady, who often drank herself to bliss, got a gun and blew the rooster away. She became somewhat of a local hero.
然而,尽管公鸡的叫声被揭露,睡眠问题并没有结束。然后有一天,一位新邻居,一位年轻女士,她经常喝得酩酊大醉,拿起一把枪,把公鸡吹走了。她多少成了当地的英雄。 July 19, 1992. This afternoon, at the 26th Street Flea Market, I had one of those experiences that remind me why I shop in the first place. Not shop like grocery shop, but step out into the world searching for that one thing I cannot name.
1992年7月19日。今天下午,在26街跳蚤市场,我有一次这样的经历,让我想起了当初购物的原因。不要像杂货店那样购物,而是走出去寻找一件我无法说出名字的东西。 I pass the usual objects, the grinning mammies offering themselves up as salt and pepper shakers, the coffee table made from dice, another head carved from a coconut. "That's collectible," the dealers say, referring to an ashtray in the shape of a doll-sized toilet bowl. Collectible to who?
我路过那些平常的东西,咧嘴大笑的奶妈们把自己当盐和胡椒摇瓶,用骰子做成的咖啡桌,还有一个椰子雕刻的脑袋。“这很有收藏价值,”经销商说,指的是一个洋娃娃大小的马桶形状的烟灰缸。谁可以收藏? Last weekend at the flea market, I saw this thing, a taxidermied turkey's head attached to its own foot. This turkey was equipped with that length of flesh that spills from the top of its beak and fell to its neck. Stiff red hair stood out from the head and shoulders, and the claws were really sharp. You'd think that something armed like that might be able to protect itself. I was hypnotized by this object and asked the price as if I were under a spell. "$45," the dealer said. My tongue was dry from hanging in the open air, and I tried to fit it back into my mouth. "All right," she said, "$35. $30." But she could have gone up. "All right. $85. $120. $370." I had no choice but to follow wherever she led me. I handed over my wallet in a trance, just gave it to her, thinking she could take the whole thing, the cash, blank checks, library card, whatever. Take it all.
我被这个物体催眠了,像被咒语一样问起了价格。“45美元,”经销商说。我的舌头因为悬挂在户外而干燥,我试着把它放回嘴里。“好吧,”她说,“35美元。30美元。”但她本可以涨的。“好吧。85美元。120美元。370美元。”我别无选择,只能跟着她带我去的任何地方。我恍惚地把钱包交给了她,以为她可以拿走所有东西,现金、空白支票、借书卡等等。全部接受。 On the way home I felt giddy and confident that I could approach anyone at all and say, "I'll give you one hundred-- no, $500,000 if you can guess what I've got in this paper sack." And I swear that not one of them could have come up with the right answer. I walked home 30 blocks, looking everyone square in the eye and thinking, "Sucker." Ira Glass Well, David Sedaris is the author of Barrel Fever, often heard on NPR's Morning Edition.
在回家的路上,我感到头晕,自信地说,我可以接近任何人,说:“如果你能猜到我在这个纸袋里有什么,我会给你100美元——不,50万美元。”我发誓,他们中没有一个人能想出正确的答案。我走了30个街区回家,看着每个人的眼睛,心想:“笨蛋。”Ira Glass Well,David Sedaris是《桶热》的作者,经常在NPR的早间节目中听到。