Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an...

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Page 1: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Lesson 14

• Argentia Bay•

• By Herman Wouk

Page 2: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.
Page 3: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Background about the author

• Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war novels.

• After graduation from Columbia University, he became a radio scriptwriter. Though he achieved considerable social and financial success in the radio show business world, he found both the work and environment unsatisfying. He enlisted in the navy after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and spent three years as an officer on a destroyer-minesweeper in the pacific.

Page 4: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.
Page 5: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Background about the author

• Much of Aurora Dawn (1947 极光 ), the first novel of the New York advertising world, was written while Wouk was in service.

• With the publication of his first novel in 1947, Herman Wouk began a career in letters which has brought him renown, the Pulitzer Prize and a long international audience for his books and plays.

• His latest book is War and Remembrance (1978) which is the sequel to The Winds of War (1971), a work of equal size and scope, picturing the global conflict from Pearl Harbor to the fall of Nazi Germany and the Japanese surrender.

Page 6: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Background about the author

• He has published nine additional works of fiction, nonfiction and drama, including The City Bay (1948), The Caine Mutiny (1951, Pulitzer Prize), Marjorie Morningstar (1955), This is My God (1959), Youngblood Hawke (1962), and Don’t Stop the Carnival (1965).

Page 7: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.
Page 8: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Pulitzer Prize:

• Joseph Pulitzer was an American newspaper publisher and the founder of the Pulitzer Prize. Today there are Pulitzer Prizes for distinguished works in American fiction, drama, history, biography and autobiography, nonfiction, poetry and music. Joseph Pulitzer founded the Pulitzer Prize in 1903 because he believed in encouraging excellence in the arts and journalism. He gave Columbia University $2, 000,000. Part of it was for the Prizes and part for the creation of the Columbia School of Journalism. Joseph Pulitzer died on Oct. 29, 1911.

Page 9: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

About the book:

• The Winds of War is fiction, and all the characters and adventures involving the Henry family are imaginary. But the history of the war in this romance is offered as accurate; the statistics, as reliable; the words and acts of the great personages, as either historical or derived from accounts of their words and deeds in similar situations. (from Herman Wouk’s Foreword to The Winds of War).

Page 10: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

A note on the story:

• The story describes the Roosevelt-Churchill conference in August 1941.

• Understandably, it was held in the utmost secrecy, and it was not given to anybody but the top few what was going on inside the conference room—nor to Victor Pug Henry, a navy captain and presidential aide, but not ranking high enough to be a participant.

Page 11: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

A note on the story:

• However, Victor Henry is in a way the narrator of this story, which develops only as he, a mid-ranking officer, sees it develop.

• If the story had been told through the eyes of Roosevelt or Churchill or Harry Hopkins for that matter, it could have achieved a lot more grasp and made a more factual narrative; but it would not have been imaginative literature, but a workaday journalism.

Page 12: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• The Winds of War, this story has been shown on the television. It follows an American naval family that is caught up in the events preceding the attack on Pearl Harbor which got the U.S. involved in the Second World War. It is a great miniseries because it blends fact and fiction so well.

Page 13: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Questions:

• What was the book about?

• Where and when did the story take place?

• Who were the main characters?

• What was the author showing through the story?

• Who told the story?

• What do you think of the book?

Page 14: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Detailed study

• 1. Argentia Bay

• What do you get to know from the section?

• Background / introduction.

• The story took place at Argentia Bay in Newfoundland, Canada. The time was at nine o’clock. The story involved Winston Churchill and American President Roosevelt.

Page 15: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 2. Gray peace…Argentia Bay• Gray peace, Haze and mist, and in primeval hush: Th

e three expressions in this para. gives us an idea a quite, significant place.– pervade: to spread through, saturate or permeate every part

of it; spread all over the place; fill in air

A heavy, musty odor pervades the railroad waiting room.

It is pleasant to live in the environment where this positive spirit pervades.

The odor of jasmine pervades the room.

An unpleasant smell pervades the house.

He worked so hard that weariness pervaded his whole body.

A strong sense of patriotism pervades his writings.

Page 16: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -wildness: desolate expanse, waste, uninhabited land

• -ring: Here it means to make a ring round or surround

• Ring the spelling mistakes with red ink.

• Police ringed the building.

• An old house ringed with trees

• Argentia Bay was surrounded by a vast expanse of wild uninhabited land where there was no human activity. The whole place looked gray and it was very quiet there.

Page 17: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 3. to await the arrival of Winston Churchill

• “Wait,” the commoner word, can be followed by an infinitive but not a gerund while “await” can be followed by a gerund but not an infinitive.

• I shall await hearing from you.

• I shall wait to hear from you.

• 4. Haze… a tint of green.

• -haze: light thin mist or smoke

• Haze… mist… fog:

• Fog is the thickest in degree

Page 18: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -blend: go well together; cause to mix together

• How well their voices blend!

• Those two colors blend well.

• A blends with B.

• These houses seem to bend well with the trees and the countryside.

• Their voices blend well with each other.

• How well the new curtains blend with the rug!

Page 19: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Thin smoke and mist mixed making everything look gray.

• -tint of green: shade or slight degree of green color (esp. pale or delicate).

• Sailors and officers… loudspeaker squawks.• -go about their chores: be in the habit of doing their

routine work.• go about: move from place to place; to do; to

perform• He often goes about in public.• Working for an international company he goes about

quite a lot.• Be careful not to catch the flu! There is a lot of it

going about this winter.

Page 20: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -piping: the sound of a boatswain’s whistle

• a chief seaman’s

• -squawk: (esp. of some birds) to make a loud rough sounding cry; loud harsh sound

• Sailors and officers were carrying on their routine duties with whistling and loudspeaker noises in the background. (It gives a vivid description of the orderly peaceful life of the American sailors, which stands sharply in contrast to the life on the war-battered British warships).

Page 21: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 6. But a primeval hush… normal ships noises:

• -primeval: ancient; primitive

• -a primeval hush: like the silence in very ancient times when the world was first created

• -lie heavy:

• Money lying idle in the bank

• The snow lay thick on the ground.

• The escaped prisoners had to lie low for months.

• The book lay open on the table.

Page 22: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• With the routine chores going on, some noise could be heard on the ships in the Bay, but beyond that (but outside the range of the noise) it was all tranquility.

• Note the author’s description of Argentia Bay: Peace pervaded/ tinged by wilderness/ a primeval hush outside the range of the ships’ noises.

• The author took great pains to describe the peace and hush of the Bay to prepare the readers for the coming of a big event, just like the momentary silence before a thunderstorm.

Page 23: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 7. At nine o’clock…like snakeskin:• -battleship: the largest kind of warship, with the bigg

est guns and heaviest armour• -camouflage: disguised, concealed• The military vehicles were camouflaged.• The hunters were camouflaged with branches.• -swirls: twists and curls• At nine o’clock, three destroyers came rapidly in sig

ht, immediately followed by a camouflaged battleship painted in snakeskin-colored twists and curls.

Page 24: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 8. This was HMS Prince of Wales, bigger… Bismarck.

• -HMS: His (Her) Majesty’s Service, Ship, or Steamer• Prince of Wales: The ship was sunk by the Japanese

in the South China Sea in December 1941.• Bismarck: German battleship of 45,000 tons,

completed early in 1940, for operations against British convoys in the North Atlantic. In an encounter with British fleet on 24 May, 1940, it sank the British cruiser Hood and damaged the Prince of Wales; the Bismarck was also hit by the guns of the Prince of Wales. The Bismarck was finally sunk on 27 May, 1940.

• By mentioning “hit the Bismarck” the author indicates the battleship was not only majestic-looking, but also battle-proven.

Page 25: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 9. As it steamed past… “God Save the King.”:• - the Augusta: the American cruiser• -a brass band: a body of musicians, performs

on wind and striking instruments • -symphony orchestra: a body of musicians

chiefly on string instruments• - The Star-Spangled Banner: This is the

official national anthem of the United States, by a Bill which passed the Senate on 3 March, 1931.

• -quarter-deck: part of the highest level of a ship, used only by officers

Page 26: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -strike up: to begin to play; to start to make a friendship with

• We struck up an acquaintance with each other on the ship.

• Note: Salutes at sea originally took two forms, the firing of guns and the striking of topsails, the latter when within the territorial waters of the warship being saluted. Navies have a variety of salutes for officers of rank and ships of foreign nations, varying between gun salutes, guards and bands, guards without bands, bugle calls, and piping the side, according to rank and circumstances. Here the playing of the national anthem was not a welcoming ceremony. It was a mutual salute since the two heads of states were on board the ships.

Page 27: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -God Save the King: the British national anthem. It is usual in Britain to play the tune whenever the monarch appears in public.

• 10. Pug Henry…Summer Wells: • -Pug Henry: Victor Pug Henry, a navy captain

and presidential aide• He is in a way the narrator of this story, and th

e hero of the book The Winds of War.• -awning: movable covering, esp. one made of

canvas used to protect shop windows, shipdecks, etc. from sun or rain

Page 28: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -rig(ged): to supply (esp. a person or ship) with necessary things (ropes, sails, etc.). Here, to set up hastily or as a makeshift

• -turret: a low heavy-armoured steel dome, that spins round to allow its guns to aim in any direction

• -august: causing feelings of great respect; noble and grand; venerable for reasons of age or high rank

• -admiral: a man who commands a large number of warships and who holds a very high rank or the highest rank in the navy

• -general: an officer of very high rank in the army or American air force

Page 29: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 11. Churchill was plain to see…gesturing with a big cigar.

• Churchill could be seen clearly since he was only five hundred yards away….

• -odd blue costume: Actually Churchill was wearing a Navy uniform but here the author used “odd/ strange or rather, to mean fanny” and “costume” to achieve a kind of comical effect.

• -gesturing with a big cigar: movement of the hand holding a cigar to convey friendly feeling

Page 30: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 12. The president towered over everybody,… resembled him.

• -stiff on braced legs: Roosevelt was stiff on braced legs. That is, he had to wear steel braces on his legs, because an attack of polio in 1921 had paralysed him from the waist.

• -brace: to make stronger (something used fro supporting, stiffening or fastening)

• His weak back was heavily braced.• A brace is a metal device that is sometimes fastened t

o a child’s teeth in order to help them grow straight.• A brace is a device attached to a part of a person’s bo

dy, for example to a weak leg, in order to strengthen or support it.

Page 31: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 13. Roosevelt’s large pink face was self-consciously grave:

• Roosevelt put on a grave expression because the band was playing the national anthem and he knew he was wearing a grave expression.

• 14. “Well! I’ve never heard… and Roosevelt laughed too.

• “My country ‘Tis of thee’” is the first line of “America” which is sung to the music of the British national anthem, “God Save the King (Queen). (The tune of “America” is the same with the tune of “God Save the King.” When the band played the British anthem, Roosevelt humorously took it for “America.”

• This is where the joke lies. Actually, some American patriots claim the tune was American in origin, and was appropriated by the British.

Page 32: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 15. The squeal of boatswain’s pipes…deck.• -squeal: to make a long very high sound or cry• The children squealed with delight.• -compare: • squeal: long and sharp sound• squawk: loud and rough sound• scream: thin and sharp sound• shriek: sudden loud sound• screech: unpleasant high-pitched sound• -boatswains’ pipes: boatswains’ whistle; silver

whistle used in giving orders to the crew of a ship

Page 33: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -dress parade: requiring or permitting formal dress, a dress affair, a dress dinner

• -broke up the dress parade: ended the formal inspection

Page 34: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

2. Harry Hopkins

• Why was Pug sent over to the Prince of Wales?• 16. Harry Hopkins: (1890-1946)• American social worker and public administrator,

intimate associate and adviser of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and U.S. Secretary of Commerce (1938-40). As the personal representative of President Roosevelt, he went on missions to London and Moscow, conferring with Churchill and Stalin. He also attended the major war conferences at Washington, Casablanca, Quebec, Cairo, Tehran, and Yalta ( in Russia).

Page 35: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 17. Admiral King beckoned to Pug.

• -Admiral King: Ernest Joseph King (1878-1956), American naval officer. He was appointed commander in chief of the U.S. Atlantic fleet (1949) and of the entire U.S. fleet (Dec. 1941). He served (March, 1942- Dec., 1945) as chief of naval operations during World War II. He was appointed (Dec. 1944) admiral of the fleet (five-star rank).

Page 36: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

18. Take my barge… put yourself at Mr. Harry Hopkins’s service.

• - A barge is a boat with a flat bottom. Barges are used for carrying heavy loads, esp. on canals.

• - a motorboat carried by naval ships for the use of officers

• - put sb. at sb’s service: to get ready to obey orders or be used by sb. ; to get ready to serve or cooperate with one; to put sb./sth. at sb’s disposal

• Do whatever Mr. Harry Hopkins might ask you to do.

Page 37: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -at one’s service:

• I’ll be entirely at your service in three minutes.

• “Now I am at your service,” the dentist told the next patient.

• My car is at your service.

• He put a car and driver at the visitor’s service.

19. expedite: fml. to make (a plan or arrangement) go faster; to do or perform sth. quickly and efficiently

Page 38: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

Notice Admiral King’s words: “beckoned,”

“Put you at Mr Harry Hopkins service. The president desires to…so expedite.” His words are serious, formal and show his position.

Here we have the first of the personalities whom the author took great pains to describe.

These indicate the gesture, the language, of a superior officer, very mindful of his rank and very aloof/reserved/not friendly.

20. Aye aye, sir.

Aye is a nautical term, meaning yes.

Page 39: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

21. Why did Henry think he went from peace to war when he passed from the Augusta to the Prince of Wales?

The author has employed a few metaphors here to bring out the complete change of atmosphere. The Augusta is an American cruiser and at that time the United States nominally was not at war with Hitler while the Prince of Wales was a British battleship and Britain had been fighting against Hitler’s Germany for over a year. Hence the statement “from America to England and from peace to war.”

Page 40: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

22. It was a shocking jump: pun

• This refers to the crossing from the Augusta to the Prince of Wales, from Peace to War.

• 23. King’s spick-and-span flagship belonged to a different world than the storm-whipped British vessel.

• - spick-and-span: (only in the phrase) bright, clean, and tidy; neat and clean; very neat or smart and new

• He moved in a spick-and-span flat.• The house should always be kept spick-and-

span.

Page 41: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Why did King’s spick-and-span flagship belong to a different world?

• - flagship: the ship that carries the commander of a fleet and displays his flag.

• Paraphrase: Compared with the British vessel which had gone through many a battle and weathered the storm, the Augusta which was new and clean and which carried King seemed to be from another world.

• Henry wanted to show that the contrast between the two ships was such that they seemed to be from entirely different worlds.

Page 42: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 24. the accommodation ladder was salt-crusted: a ladder or stairway hung over a ships’ side, usu. at the gangway (opening in a ship’s side movable bridge from this to the land 跳板通道 )

• salt-crusted /covered

• There was a hard layer of salt on the surface of the accommodation ladder, showing that is had been through a long sea-voyage.

Page 43: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

25. Even the main battery guns looked pitted and rusty:

• -battery guns: a number of big guns fixed in a warship or fort.

• -pit: mark with small scars

• The deeply pitted surface of the metal.

• Why is the word “even” used here? The main battery guns are the main weapons on a battleship so it was most surprising that there was rust on these guns. This probably shows that they have no time to clean the battery. They were busy.

Page 44: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

26. Pug was aghast to see cigarette butts… scuppers.

• -aghast: adj. suddenly filled with great surprise, fear, and shock

• She was aghast when she was told of her husband’s huge gambling debts.

• -scupper: n. opening in a ship’s side to allow water to run off the deck.

Page 45: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 27. droves of bluejackets were doing an animated scrub-down:• -drove: 1) a moving crowd of people cf. throng• Droves of people are very large numbers of them.• They came in droves to see Australian’s natural wonder. Drov

es of sightseers• The tourists came in droves.• 2) a group of esp. farm animals driven in a body: a drove of c

attle• -bluejacket: an enlisted man in the U.S. or British army; meto

nymy• A group of British navy men were cleaning the deck in a spirit

ed way.• animated scrub-down: transferred epthet

Page 46: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

28. On the superstructure… Bismark’s salvos

• - superstructure: that part of a ship, esp. of a warship, above the main deck

• -raw: imperfectly prepared; lacking normal or usual finish

• -welded: jointed• -sticking plaster: adhesive material for covering a

slight wound, usu. a thin cloth gummed on one side• Cf. Band-aid; bandage• -salvos: simultaneous discharge of artillery or other

firearms, esp. as salute, or in sea-fight.

Page 47: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• At places on the part above the main deck there were new welds. These were damages caused by the gunfire of the German battleship Bismarck. The welds looked like sticking plaster put to new wounds.

• The author is comparing the steel patches to sticking plasters and the damages on the ship to wounds of the human body. Metaphor.

Page 48: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

29. “Ah, yes Captain Henry”: Ah, so you are Captain Henry.

• 30. quartermaster: a nautical /sailing term, meaning a petty officer or mate who attends to the ship’s compass, navigation, signals etc.

• 31. fittings: the fixtures, furnishings or decorations of a house, office, automobile, etc.;

pl. sth. necessary that is fixed into a building but able to be moved

• 32: “Hello there, Pug.” there, an interjection, calling the attention of someone

Page 49: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

33. …in a blaze of worldwide newspaper attention

• Hopkins flew to London in late July and arranged with Churchill the date and rendezvous of the conference between Roosevelt and Churchill. Then he took a British flying boat to Moscow to hold talks with Stalin. His visits to London and Moscow were widely covered by newspapers all over the world.

• -in a / the blaze of: metaphor; in the blaze of publicity/fury /anger/effort

Page 50: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

34. Am I riding over with you? Am I to take the barge and go over to the Augusta with you?

• 35. on his bunk in a small cabin off the wardroom

• -bunk: a narrow bed that is usu. fixed to the wall (as on a ship or train)

• -wardroom: room on a warship for an officer to live in

• -off the wardroom: next to the wardroom; not attached to the wardroom

• off the main street, not on the main street

Page 51: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

35. in one he carefully placed…; in the other he threw… as they came to hand:

• Note the contrast between “he carefully placed papers..” and “he threw clothes…as they came to hand”: He was very careful, very meticulous about official papers but very careless about his own things. This throws light on the character of Hopkins.

• -come to hand: to be found without one’s having to make a special search.

Page 52: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

36. A bent figure with a gray double-breasted suit flapping loosely on him:

• -double-breasted suit: a suit with a double row of buttons

• -flapping: moving slowly up and down or backwards and forwards

• This shows that Hopkins was very thin and the suit was loose on him.

• 37. He’s having the time of his life.• He’s having a rare experience of pleasure in his life;

he’s having the best time of his life.• The time of one’s life: (colloq.) an experience of

great pleasure for one

Page 53: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

38. Churchill’s like a boy going on his 1st date:

• Churchill was very anxious to meet Roosevelt. The anxiety was similar to that one had when one was going to meet a girl friend for the 1st time. Churchill’s mood (state of mind) was that of a boy going on his first date with a girl.

Page 54: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 39. Well, it’s quite a historic moment at that. • -at that (give the reason)• (colloq.) all things considered• This is adverbial phrase having different meanings:• Our footballers were off form, but we won the game

at that (anyway).• I like the style but I don’t care much for the color. W

ell, let it go at that (as it is).• This color TV is poor in quality, and very expensive

at that (in addition).

Page 55: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 40. scrounge more in London: had to get more shirts from friends in London

• to get (sth.) without work or payment or by persuading others

• he is always scrounging off his friends.

• Can I scrounge a cigarette off you?

• 41. Will they hold?

• Will they be able to fight on? Will they be able to fight against German?

Page 56: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 42. a stack of papers in his hand, and pursed his mouth

• -a stack of papers/ dishes/ coins: a pile of

• -purse: to bring (esp. the lips) together in little folds

• She pursed (up) her lips with disgust.

• Then Hopkins gives his opinion.

Page 57: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 43. The Russians will hold. But it’ll be a near thing. • -a near thing: a narrow escape; sth. achieved only by a narrow

margin• The Russians will be able to fight on but there’s a very small

margin between success and failure. They will barely mange to carry on the fight.

• Suppose you’ve a friend who has travelled here to visit you. When you meet him and ask about his journey, whether he got his train on time. Your friend say “It’s a near thing.” It means he almost missed the train..

• If a man was almost run over by a car, he said “Terrible, it’s a near thing.”

• We can use “It’s a near thing” to describe a race, match, etc.

Page 58: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• We have at least four phrases expressing the same meaning: a narrow escape, a narrow squeak, a close shave, a narrow margin.

• He had a narrow escape from being run over by a bus this morning.

• We won the game, but it was a narrow squeak.

• What a near thing that was! The enemies nearly got me.

• The machine missed me, but it was a close shave.

Page 59: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 44. Archangel: city in USSR• Here “you” refers to any one.• 45. swamp: (an area of ) land which always full of or

covered with water, marsh• 46. from horizon to horizon: • -horizon: the limit of one’s view across the surface of

the earth, where the sky seems to meet the earth or sea

• 47. Hitler’s bitten off a big bite this time:• This time Hitler has attacked a country too big for

him to conquer or to put it idiomatically, he has bitten off more than he can chew. He has taken more than he can manage. (a comparison). Russian is difficult for Germans to control in comparison with other countries such as Poland.

Page 60: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 48. He was struggling with the clasps on his suitcase and Pug gave him a hand.

• He was trying hard to lock his suitcase and Pug helped him.

• 49. the stern rose high on a swell, then dropped away from under him:

• -stern: the back end of a ship /c.f. brow• -swell: slow rise and fall of the sea’s surface

with large but unbroken waves• A wave raised the tail of the barge high and

when the wave subsided, the tail of the barge dropped down suddenly.

Page 61: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Was Hopkins a good sailor? • How do you know?• 50. coxswain: a petty officer or other person

in charge of a ship’s boat and acting as a steersman

• 51. Oops-a-daisy: It’s a consolatory phrase used by an adult when he pick up a child who has fallen over. Here it means “Oh, my dear sir, stand up, please.”

• 52. Hopkins staggered inside, settling with a sigh on the cushions: Hopkins walked unsteadily inside and was greatly relieved when he sat down on the seat.

Page 62: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 53. flop: to move or fall heavily or awkwardly• cf. flap• 54. that nearly ended my mission right there: • When he boarded the plane, he fell. If he were

seriously hurt, he could not have gone on to Moscow and that would have been the end of his mission.

• 55. at the flawlessly appointed barge• -appointed; furnished and arranged barge• The perfectly arranged barge• 56. Well, well, America! Peace-time!• Make a comparison. Hopkins had been with

Churchill in the war, he almost forgot peace.

Page 63: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 57. in War Plans: work in that area

• 58. you might bear in mind what our friends will be after:

• You’d better make a mental note of what the British will be trying to get.

• 59. Hopkins held out one wasted hand and ticked off points on skeletal fingers.

• Hopkins held out one of his weak and feeble hands and used his thin bony (stretched out) fingers to count the things the British want to have .

Page 64: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 60. press for: to urge or request earnestly or persistently

• They’ll persistently urge us to declare war on Germany.

• 61. it softens the ground for the second demand.• It will make it difficult for the Americans to reject

their second demand.• -soften: to weaken, to become soft, less severe• We have found a way to soften the water here.• They bombarded the town for hours to soften the

enemy’s position.• Only you can soften his attitude.• Adverse developments have softened the price of

products.• The market softened because of oversupply.

Page 65: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 62. the real reason Winston Churchill has crossed the ocean (the Atlantic ocean)

• The real reason Churchill has come to meet Roosevelt here.

• What’s the purpose for the meeting?• Churchill wants America to give a warning to Japan

that any move against the British in Asia means war with America.

• 63. Their empire is mighty rickety at this point.• Their empire is very weak in that area (in Asia). The

British do not have the naval strength or the necessary manpower to defend its colonies in Asia.

Page 66: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 64. to shore up: to add support to (sth.) where weakness is shown; make (sth.) stronger where support is needed.

• Go and find sth. To shore up the wall.• They shored up the damaged fence this morni

ng.• They’ve taken some measures to shore up the

flagging/weakening economies.• The peasants hope the government polices wil

l shore up farm prices.• 65. What’s the 3rd thing Britain wants?• They want big war supplies.

Page 67: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 66. If Hitler pokes down there…strangles: • If Hitler strikes there• -poke: prod• (sl.) making trouble down there in the Middle East• -strangle: suffocate, choke, stifle, smother, squeeze, c

onstrict• strangle: to kill by pressing on the throat with hands ,

a rope etc. to stop breathing• He strangled his victim with a nylon stocking.• The government policies are slowly strangling the ec

onomy.

Page 68: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 67. They’ll also try, subtly but hard… they come ahead of Russia.

• The last point, the most important is try for an understanding that in getting American aid they come ahead of Russia.

• The British will try for an understanding / to reach an agreement.

• They’ll also try hard, though not obviously, to reach an agreement that having American aid they become stronger than Russia.

Page 69: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 68. to bomb the hell out of Germany• -to bomb Germany heavily, bomb a lot so that Hitler

has finished• 69. build up for the final assault: strengthen the

military forces• to build up has several meanings:• He dissipated all the money his father had built up

for life (accumulate gradually).• He has built up a flourishing business (establish and

develop).• Promote physical culture and build up the people’s

health (strengthen or to increase).• She has built up a good reputation in her small

factory( set up or establish).• The singer has been built up into a great success.

(praise)

Page 70: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 70. On the problem of aid to Russia, did Churchill and Roosevelt see eye to eye? In what way did their opinions differ?

• 71. The President isn’t thinking that way.• The implication is the President got a different idea.• 72. The fight over there is of inconceivable magnitud

e.• The fight in Russia is unbelievably big.• 73. The Russians have taken a shellacking so far.• -shellacking: a severe defeat • to shellack: to defeat decisively; to thrash soundly• The Russians have suffered decisive defeat so far.

Page 71: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 74. That’s the war now.

• That’s my analysis of the war.

• 75. Then this conference is almost pointless.

• Then there isn’t much sense in holding this conference.

• 76. That’s achievement enough for now.

• The holding of the conference itself is a great achievement at present.

Page 72: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 77. Hopkins gave Victor Henry a sad smile: Why?

• Hopkins meant that this was all the United States could do at present, that the United States could only go thus far at present and he was sorry about that.

• 78. He pulled himself to his feet in the rocking boat.

• He managed to stand up in the rocking boat.

Page 73: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 79. this is the changing of the guard.

• The phrase, the changing of the guard comes from the changing of the guard outside Buckingham Palace. The Queen’s guard is changed every morning at 11:30 and the ceremony lasts for about half an hour. The new guard enters the palace courtyard at exactly 11:30. The band then starts to play the tune of the regiment’s slow march, and the new guard advances slowly towards the old guard.

Page 74: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• The captain of the old guard hands the key of Buckingham Palace, and also St. Jame’s Palace, to the captain of the new guard. The new sentries are then marched off to relieve the old sentries. The old sentries get down from their horses, and the new ones take up their posts. While this is happening, the band plays regimental music, and perhaps also some tunes from the latest show. After the guard has been changed, the old guard leaves the courtyard and marches away.

Page 75: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Here Hopkins was hinting that a transfer of power from London to Washington was taking place. Britain was no longer the Number One power of the “free democracies.” The United States was taking over this position.

• Note the characterization of Hopkins, infml and familiar: “Hello there, Pug,” couldn’t be bothered about personal things, thin, bent, his suit flapping loosely on him, view on aid to Russia, etc.

Page 76: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

3. Churchill calls

• 80. which saw the dramatic handshake…gangway:• - saw: witnessed, personification• 81. Why is the dramatic handshake?• It was dramatic because this was the first time the tw

o leaders met each other. Roosevelt very tall, physically strong, but paralysed while Churchill was fat and short. The two great leaders diminished each other. The conference itself, under the circumstances, was dramatic enough. The critical time: the war will go the way or that way.

Page 77: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 82. They prolonged…smiling words:

• The two leaders made their handshake last longer than usual to give photographers time to take pictures. At the same time they smiled and greeted each other.

• - smiling words: transferred epithet

• 83. In an odd way… each other.

• When they met face to face, the two leaders made each other less imposing in stature or in importance.

Page 78: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -diminish: making or becoming perceptibly smaller by removal. The word stresses the idea of removing part of sth. so that there is a manifest and sometimes progressive lessening, but not to the point of total disappearance. The word may suggest each other the loss of sth. valuable or a lessening of that which is undesirable.

• His illness diminished his strength.• As people approach old age their energy may

diminish. • As his confidence in his work increased, his a

nxieties about it diminished.

Page 79: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 84. Roosevelt stood a full head taller.• Pay attention to this short sentence in which there are

two grammatical points. 1) This is an excellent example of the so-called “double-predicate” structure. The function played by the verb “stood”; the sentence corresponds to “Roosevelt stood and was a full head taller than Churchill.” So “stood” here also has a function of a linking verb, hence called “double predicate.”

• The sun rose red from the east.• She left the village a girl and returned a mother of

three children.

Page 80: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -a full head: here is used as a noun adverbial which is gaining ground in modern English

• He is world famous.

• The miracle chip is easy to mass produce.

• The whole process of experiment is computer controlled.

• In the above 3 sentences “world, mass, computer” are regarded as noun adverbial.

Page 81: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 85. he was pathetically braced on lifeless leg frames:

• -pathetically: sadly, pitifully, causing a feeling of sorrow

• cf. sympathetic: showing sympathy

• She was sympathetic when my father died.

• If you describe sb. or sth. as pathetic, you mean that they are sad and weak or helpless, and that they make you feel pity and sadness.

• The kitten was so tiny and pathetic.

• He looked pathetically defenseless.

Page 82: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -brace: to equip or support with devices for supporting a weak or deformed part of the body

• -frame: basic or skeletal structure around which a thing is built and that gives the thing its shape

• He managed to stand only with the help of the leg frames. This was a pitiful sight.

• 86. his full trousers drooped and flapping• -full: wide• His wide trousers hung downward and were

too big for his thin legs.

Page 83: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 87. a bent Pickwick in blue uniform: Pickwick is the central character in the novel the Pickwick papers by the world famous writer Charles Dickens. In this novel Pickwick is described as a bent, stout, short benevolent old gentleman. Pickwick is used here as antonomasia, the use of a proper name to designate a member of a class. It means like Pickwick in navy uniform.

• Antonomasia[ 代称 ]: the term for some common figurative uses of names.

• the use of a proper name to designate a member of a class (as a Solomon for a wise ruler, Judas for a traitor). He is our Gorky (for a famous writer).

Page 84: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 88. looked up at him with majestic good humor, much old, more dignified, more assured /confident.

• 89. a trace of deference• -deference: fml. regard for the wishes, opinion

s, etc. of another person, because of respect or love, or because of the other person’s higher position or greater power [ 顺从 , 听从 , 遵从 ,敬意 ]

• giving way to the wishes, accepting the opinions or judgments of another or others; yielding in opinion, judgment, wishes; courteous regard or respect.

Page 85: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• We treated her advice with due deference.• They were married in church out of/ in deference to

their parents’ wishes.• -Yet there was… Prime Minister.• You could sense a trace of deference about the Prime

Minister. i.e. the Prime Minister was either ready to yield to the wishes and opinions of the President, or was somehow respectful of him. The latter sense is the more likely one.

• 90. by a shade of a shade: very slight difference or variation

• cf. There’s a shade of difference between the two; a new shade of meaning, etc.

• Churchill and Roosevelt were both Number One men, but somehow Roosevelt looked just a little more of a Number One man.

Page 86: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 91. The erect… to Pug: Frontpage refers to the pictures that appeared on the front-pages of newspapers; the usual image of the President people had. On the frontpage of magazine or newspapers President Roosevelt might be seen standing upright, but in real life he was a cripple. Pug was more familiar with the crippled President than the one on the front-pages standing upright.

• 92. hobbling a step or two…chair.• - hobble: to walk or move awkwardly or with difficul

ty; to limp• Roosevelt was glad that the strain and discomfort of

standing came to an end and he could sit down. Hence “sinking with relief.”

Page 87: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 93. got right to business: got down right away to business

• 94. conferred: talked together

• 95. Victor Henry… their advisers: There were meetings going on at three different levels:

• 1) the Summit 2) Chiefs of staff 3) planners

• Victor Henry was with the third.

• -Burne-Wilke: representative of the British Chief of staff, Pug Henry’s counterpart

Page 88: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 96. Familiar problems…fouled communications• -the British services: the British service department

of public work• -unreal plans: plans put forward not on a realistic

basis• -unfilled contracts: contacts that failed to be carried

out• -jumbled priorities: many different items all listed as

top priority• -jumble: mixed in a confused, disorderly heap• -fouled communications: coded messages wrongly

deciphered (decoded or translated); message mislaid or not clearly stated

Page 89: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 97. One cardinal point the planners hammered out first.

• -cardinal: chief, principal, of main importance• -hammer out: to develop or work out by careful thou

ght or repeated effort or serious discussion • 98. to replace U-boat sinkings:• Sinkings refer to the ships which had been sunk by th

e Axils.• -U-boat: the German undersea boat, or submarine.• During the Second World War the term was used to

describe all submarines Italian, Japanese and German operating against the allied forces, while those of the allies were always called submarines.

Page 90: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Here it is also a grammatical point, i.e. the use of noun attribute, which is one of the trends of the development of the modern English language. Noun attribute may be used instead of all the other forms of attribute.

• adj. a luxurious hotel—a luxury hotel a prestigious university—a prestige university• a participle: a launching pad—a launch pad• apostrophe s’ readers’ interest—reader interest• a post-position attribute: trade with China—China tra

de• Sinkings by U-boat—U-boat sinkings• an attributive clause: my brother who is a doctor –my

doctor brother

Page 91: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 99. No war… the ocean• War material had to be shipped to England if they we

re to be used in the fight against Hitler. This could be done only if they had enough ships and the Atlantic Ocean was made safe for the Allies. The sentence indicates the importance of building new ships to replace those being sunk in great numbers, because at that time the Allies still could not successfully defend their ships against U-boats. Later, new technology broke the blockade.

• -material: weapons, equipment, supplies of armed forces (distinguished from personnel)

• cf. material: of matter; of substance, • e.g. raw materials, dress materials (distinguished fro

m spiritual)

Page 92: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 100. This plain truth…every projection.• As soon as the two parties agreed that priority

should be given to the building of ships, all other requests and programs would have to be crossed out.

• -once: not an adverb be a conjunction here, meaning as soon as; if ever, wherever

• -projection: project put forward/ on the basis of physical science

• 101. valves: (sorts of ) mechanical device for controlling the flow of air, liquid, or gas into or through a tube, pipe etc. by opening or closing a passage

Page 93: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 102. This simple yardstick… and tools.• This simple yardstick rapidly revealed what were

lacking in the US war industry at the time and showed the urgent need for building new steel mills and plants.

• -arsenal of democracy: referring to the United States, first used by F D. Roosevelt in this Fireside Chat broadcast on 29 December, 1940.

• Steel, aluminum, rubber… all the thousand things of war were urgently needed, but the US was found to be poor and weak in steel-making capacity and plants to make steel into machines and tools of war.

• -dictate: lay down authoritatively (things to be down)

Page 94: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 103. Through all… thousand rifles.

• -hypothetical plans: suppositional plans, tentatively put forward

• hypothetical, hypothesis, hypocrisy, hypocrite, hypocritical

• -pathetic: causing a feeling of pity or sorrow

• Through all the talk of suppositional plans, one modest and almost pitiable request kept cropping up, that is an immediate need for a hundred fifty thousand rifles.

Page 95: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 104. If Russia collapsed… from the air.• Crete-like invasion: Crete, Greek island in

East Mediterranean Sea, captured by German airborne forces May 20-30, 1941, first successful use of airborne forces in a major campaigns in W. W. II.

• A large-scale airborne attack was successfully launched by the Germans on this eastern Mediterranean Island, May 1941, the 1st of its kind in history.

• -wrap up: to bring to a successful end; to complete or finish; to conclude successfully.

Page 96: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Pay attention the following meanings of this multi-word verb:

• It’s getting cold, and the mother wrapped her child up well.

• She wrapped up her meaning in obscure language.

• Now that the agreement is wrapped up, all we have to do is to wait for the 1st order.

• The technician is deeply wrapped up in reforming.

• Wrap up! Don’t say anything.

Page 97: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 105. The stupendous material… rifles now.

• - stupendous adj. tremendous, amazing (in size, degree)

• Compared with the huge figures for future joint British-U.S. invasion of North Africa or the French coast, the present request of a hundred fifty thousand rifles immediately was sadly small.

• -joint: concerted, coordinated, cooperated

Page 98: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

4. Roosevelt hobbles across

• 106. boats from … Prince of Wales.• -boats… came grouping around the Prince of

Wales.• -cluster around: • Roses clustering round the window• The children clustered around their teacher.• The village clusters round the church.• 108. in sunlight that seemed almost blinding• The sun shone so brightly that one could

hardly see. The sunlight was most dazzling.

Page 99: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 109. in sunlight… the forests of larch and fir glowed a rich green

• -glow: to show brilliant, conspicuous colors• -rich: deep, intense, vivid colors• The forest showed a brilliant, deep green in

the sunshine.• 110. an American destroyer slowly nosed

its… thrown across.• -nose: to make or push (a way, etc.) with the

front forward• It’s interesting to see the ship nosing her way

through the river.

Page 100: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Nose also is used to form multi-word verbs.• You seem to be fond of nosing about for grape

vine news.• (nose about=search for. Am. E.)• Don’t nose into our affairs. • (nose into=pry into)• He has nosed out the actual situation.• (nose out=discover)• In text “nose” is used symbolically, meaning t

o stretch out.

Page 101: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -bridge: a platform above the main deck of a ship, from which it is controlled, as by the commanding officer

• An American destroyer slowly moved parallel with the battleship so that its bridge was side by side with the main deck of the battleship.

• 111. lurched out on the gangplank… then the other.

• Staggered out onto the movable platform bridging the two ships and with difficulty moved one leg forward jerkingly, then the other.

Page 102: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -gangplank: a narrow, movable platform or ramp forming a bridge by which to board or leave a ship.

• -hitch: to move, pull or shift with jerks; pull suddenly

• Roosevelt’s legs could not function so he had to rely on the movement of the hip to hitch his leg forward.

• 112. both boats were moving on long swells.• Both boats were tossed slightly up and down by

waves that moved steadily without breaking.• 113. tottered and swayed• To move in an unsteady way from side to side as if

about to fall

Page 103: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 114. crowding the destroyer bridge

• coming together to; clustering to

• 115. Pug observed… this crippled walk.

• -shoot: to take a picture with a camera

• 116. Churchill… offered his hand: Churchill held out his hand to help.

• 117. burst forth with: struck up; played

• 118. His face stiff with strain: It was with great effort that he stood at attention, hence a stiff face.

Page 104: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 119. chaplain: a. priest or clergyman, esp. in the navy, army or air force

• 120. crimson vestments: red garment esp. one worn by a priest in church; red ceremonial robe

• 121. preserve us from the dangers of the sea.• Protect us so that we would not get drowned,/sunk• 122. that we may be a security for… occasions:• This is biblical English, meaning so that we may give

protection to those who sail upon the sea on lawful business.

• 123. the blessings of the land: the special favors of the land (referring to favourable climate, fertile soil, rich products etc. )

Page 105: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 124. ranks: lines, rows• 125. sneaked cameras from their blouses.• -blouses: the coat or jacket of a service uniform or dr

ess uniform of the sailors; with square collar• We sneak into the classroom.• -sneak sth. out of some place• took out secretly cameras from their jackets (jumper

s)• 126. cameras appeared by the dozens:• -by: expressing measure or extent• Books coming in by the hundreds• What was the atmosphere? Good feeling of it.

Page 106: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 127. swarmed into a laughing, cheering ring round the two men.

• More and more sailors came and they surrounded the two men, laughing, cheering.

• - “a laughing, cheering ring” is a transferred epithet• 128. Pug Henry,… felt a touch on his elbow• -unwonted disorder: unusual confusion• -with mixed feelings of amusement and outrage: amu

sement because the two leaders themselves smiled and took it in good humour, and the sailors were cheering and laughing; outrage because such a rush and disorder, in his view, should not be permitted on a warship

Page 107: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -a touch on his elbow

• -a tap on the shoulder

• -a slap in the face

• -a blow on the head

• 129. A word with you? May I have a word with you?

• May I speak to you?

Page 108: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

5. A request from the British

• 130. a library den: (colloq.) a small secluded room for study or relaxation

• Father’s in his den now. (his quiet, private and undisturbed room)

• “Den” first and foremost refers to an animal’s cave, or hidden lying place. (a den of wolves). Then it is used to mean a secret resort for some bad people . A den of thieves

• In colloq. English, it is also used to mean a small easy, comfortable room for study. Here it refers to Burne Wilke’s cabin looking very much like a small secluded room for study in the library.

Page 109: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

131. “I say, Henry”• Note, Burne-Wilke did not say “Pug” nor Victor. Wh

y not Mr. Henry?By Henry, it indicates that they are not strangers. They’re not so intimate that Pug is called nor too fml called as Mr. Henry.

• Study the following forms of address for a man called Robert Wilson:

• Fml. Mr. Robert Wilson• Less fml but still quite fml. Mr. Wilson• Acceptable (between. Equals) Wilson• His friends: Robert• His wife: Robert dear.• (When a child) Bob, Bertie, Bobby, etc.

Page 110: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• I say: 1) to attract the attention of the person addressed

• I say, Jack, bring me a book of stamps if you are going to the post office, will you, please?

• 2) to express surprise

• I say! It’s nearly six o’clock.

• 3) to combine surprise and warning

• I say! There’s someone coming.

• 132. position: view/ attitude towards drinking on board?

Page 111: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 133. I have a fair bottle of sherry here: I have nearly a full bottle of sherry here.

• -sherry: yellow or brown wine of southern Spain, south Africa, Cyprus, England

• 134. I’m for it: I’m in favor of drinking on board

• -be for:

• Members of the committee split on the resolution: five for, four against, and five abstention.

Page 112: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 135. You’re dry as a bone in your service, aren’t you?

• Wines and spirits are forbidden in your Navy or You are not allowed to drink on board, are you?

• You can put on your socks now; they are as dry as a bone (perfectly dry).

• He is as dry as stick. (rather thirsty)

• His lecture is as dry as dust (rather boring)

Page 113: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 136. …served us an excellent wine: Wine is an uncountable noun, but here an indefinite article is used to indicate a particular kind of wine.

• 137. The President… his desires: The President is the man who lays down all Navy regulations (as Commander-in-chief of all U.S. armed forces) and he can adapt them as he wishes. That is, if the President wishes to serve wine on board ship, then it’s all right for him to do so, rules and regulations against it not withstanding.

• -tailor: to alter, adapt for a particular end

Page 114: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 137. jolly: old-fashioned British upper-class word meaning “very”

• 138. they both sipped wine• -sip: to drink, taking a very small quantity at a time• cf. gulp: swallow quickly• 139.air commodore: a rank in the Royal Air Force eq

uivalent to that of Brigadier in the American Army• -commodore: a naval rank [ 海军准将 ]• Air commodore: a rank in the Royal Air Force equiv

alent to that of Brigadier in the American Army.

Page 115: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 140. We ran into a whole gale.

• We entered an area where there was a strong wind.

• wind: breeze, gale, storm, whirlwind, tornado /waterspout, hurricane Typhoon, cyclone

• 141. our destroyers couldn’t maintain speed.

• The destroyers could not keep up their original speed because of the gale.

• 142. zigzagged on alone: make wide diversion from side to side so as to avoid German submarines.

Page 116: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 143. I was appalled to hear about it:

• Appall suggests terror or (now more commonly) dismay at a shocking but apparently unalterable situation.

• hear sth.

• hear about

• hear of

• hear from

Page 117: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 144. Rather sporting of the British Prime Minister… on the open sea:

• -sporting: offering the kind of fair risk that is usual in a game

• willing to take a risk of losing

• I take off my hat to your sporting conduct.

• It’s very sporting of you to laugh at the trick we played on you.

• It’s rather risky or daring of Churchill to give the German soldiers a good chance to attack him on the high seas.

Page 118: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• It was most dangerous for Churchill to run such a risk yet Burne-Wilke tried to show that the Prime Minister took the whole ting in good cheer.

• Here Burne-Wilke employed a rhetorical device—periphrasis: (runabout way of speaking) the use of long words or phrases, or of unclear expressions, when short simple ones, are all that is needed. [ 正式 ] 迂说法 , 迂回曲折的话

• What do you think of NATO’s bombing?• Periphrasis: I don’t think it’s right.• To the point: It’s wrong to bomb the Embassy. • -fair: without any hadicap

Page 119: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 145. Three thousand… submarine fleet. • The ship went three thousand miles without air cover

or surface escort and went straight through the entire submarine fleet (referring to U-boats).

• It was rather sporting of Churchill to have come three thousand miles.

• -air cover: force of aircraft protecting a land or sea operation

• 146. You had your good angels… I can say:• The only reason I can offer is that some sort of

supernatural force was helping you.• You’re lucky not to be hit.

Page 120: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 147. But it might be prudent…what?

• -what? At the end, means Don’t you think so?

• What do you think of it?

• We would have to be careful not to make excessive use of those good angels, otherwise they would refuse to protect us.

• It might be better for us not to make those good angels feel too tired, otherwise they might get angry and desert us.

Page 121: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Please try to master the following 4 colloquial expressions with “what” as the key word:

• -what? Come tomorrow, what?• -or what: Shall we go or what?• I’ve not seen her recently—I don’t know whether sh

e’s moved away, whether I’ve upset her, or what.• -so what:• He can have his suspicions if he wants—so what? W

e don’t care.• -you what:• A: A Mr. Wang is waiting for you.• B: You what?

Page 122: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 148. on battle alert: on the lookout and ready to attack

• 149. We shall have to run the gamut.• -gamut: (whole series of notes in modern music);

whole range of musical notes ; complete extent or scope of anything

• Seeing this, he ran the gamut of emotion.• He’s run the gamut of human experience.• A writer wants to experience the whole gamut of

feeling from greatest joy to deepest misery.• We shall have to face all the U-boat risks that will be

there on our way back.• We shall have to be prepared to fight all the way

back home.

Page 123: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 150. We’re stretched thin for escorts:• We lack destroyers for escorts on our return

journey.• We have a very weak, insufficient escort

force;• We are in dire need of escorts as a result of

wide deployment.• There are too many claims on the limited

naval force so we are badly in need of destroyers for escorts.

• E.g. The U.S. navy is stretched thin. • Budgetary restrictions means we are stretched

mighty thin.

Page 124: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 151. We have rounded up four destroyers.

• We have collected four destroyers.

• 152. Admiral Pound would be happier with six.

• What’s he saying here? What is the implied meaning?

• We could do with two more destroyers on the escort force on our return journey. (This surely is a very tactful form of putting forward a request. Note the use of would be happier, meaning if you would kindly oblige)

Page 125: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 153. You understand… downright annoyed: • “Us” refers to the British side. Lord Burne-Wilke wa

s asking for two more destroyers here, with or without the knowledge and the approval of Churchill but most likely without. It was a request from the British to the Americans through Pug, but Lord Burne-Wilke did not want to make it a formal and official one, just to leave some leeway [ 留有余地 ] in case it be rejected, for dignity and face-saving of the Empire, and its representative Winston Churchill. Also, since the U.S. was not yet at war, there were too many things involved if U.S. ships actually took part in a military action.

• -downright: thoroughly, positively

Page 126: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 154. He is hoping we’ll meet the Tirpite and get into a running gun fight.

• -Tirpite: a 42,500-ton German battleship, sister ship of the Bismarck. From Jan. 1942 to Nov. 1944 she served in Norwegian waters, where she constituted a permanent threat to the British convoys to North Russia. It was finally sunk on 12 Nov. 1944.

• -get into a running gun fight• -running: continuous• A running battle• A running commentary

Page 127: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 155. let me start on this now, sir.• Let me go and talk to Admiral King now.• -start to do; start sth. • start doing• start on sth.=start dealing with it• She put the forks in a neat pile and started on the kni

ves.

• 156. Thanks awfully: British upper class English

• 157. afterdeck• in the back part; on the after deck

• in the back part of the deck

Page 128: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 158. glum chiefs of staff• -glum adj. sad; in low spirits, esp. because of disappointment• You look very glum. –I’ve just lost my money.

• 159. Hopkins, squinting out at the sunny water, wore a pained expression

• -squint: look with half closed eyes• -pained: distressed; showing hurt feelings or resentment • cf. painful• The pained expression is a distressed expression.• The painful expression is an expression caused by pain or

suffering.• -Hopkins considered the shouldering aside of the sailors a

breach/ break of etiquette. Hence a pained expression.

Page 129: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 160. Admiral King, who stood woodenly apart.And look at King’s reactions. Why didn’t he speak to

Pug? To show his character that he’s not very friendly to

people. He perhaps wanted to show his higher position.Pug Henry, knowing the man well enough, reported to

him in the fewest words possible. The Admiral nodded twice and then strolled away without a word. He strolled away just to show Pug had been summarily dismissed. These details indicate the gesture, the language, the presence of mind of a senior officer, very mindful of his rank and very aloof, and treating a matter of great delicacy with the utmost calmness.

The lines along King’s lean jaws deepened. This shows King realized how critical the situation was.

-a convincing one: gesture that Pug was dismissed.

Page 130: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 161. “much wining and dining” means good entertainment

• to entertain lavishly with food, drink, etc.• 162. take the floor: to speak either in a debate

or on some occasion, make the speech or deliver a lecture

• 163. a rolling rich word picture of • “word” modifies “picture,” meaning a picture

described in words, a vivid description of … uttered in vibratory organlike tones. This is a good description of Churchill’s public-speaking style.

Page 131: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 164. subversion… on Europe• destroy, overthrow • The author here compares Nazi Germany to a ferocious

animal, gripping Europe in its claws. A metaphor• 165. close a ring: surround, form an encirclement• 166. inexorably: relentlessly; unyieldingly; without pity• 167. full-fledged• -fledged, adj. (of birds) with fully grown wing feathers, able

to fly• in the full sense of the word “ally,” fully mobilized and

armed, with the whole nation put on a war footing /condition,/position/ the state of the army,

• Committed and contributing to the war effort as an ally should

Page 132: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 168. No big… in the west:• -invasion may be used in good and bad sense. In bad

sense it means aggression. In good sense it means advance, attack. In text it means attack in a large scale. Invasion here means entering a country with armed forces in order to attack.

• No introduction of big armed forces or no long war on land would be needed.

• Churchill put it this way to console his American counter-part. He knew that in the United States people feared that if the U.S. joined the war large numbers of soldiers would have to be sent to fight in Europe. Hence his promise that there would be no big land campaign.

Page 133: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 169. Landing of … mass uprisings• -armoured column 装甲纵队• The landing of a few tank or motorized units i

n the European countries occupied by Nazi Germany would result in large scale uprisings of the people in these countries.

• 170. Hitler’s black empire would … flame.• Hitler is completely destroyed.• Hitler’s evil empire would be completely destr

oyed.• Rubble, blood and flame are used metaphorica

lly.

Page 134: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 170. Franklin Roosevelt… smiling attention

• -bright-eyed, so excited, so inspired that his eyes were shining

• -bright-eyed smiling attention : transferred epithet

• 171. heartily and happily

• -heartily is enthusiastically or warmly happily; while happily is in manner of feeling pleasure and contentment

• Applauding heartily

• Impressed very much

Page 135: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 172. saying nothing: why saying nothing?• America didn’t want to take part in the war.• 173. “Task Unit… has been formed”: The U.S. side

has agreed to send two destroyers to escort the Prince of Wales to Iceland, designated in code as Task Unit 26.3.1. Task Unit 26 point 3 point 1, the name for a group of ships.

• Iceland island between North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans, became an independent republic in June, 1944; placed under British and American military occupation in W. W. II. British forces landed on May 10, 1940, American marines on July 7, 1941.

Page 136: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 173. You’ll have no written orders: Why?• This is because a written order authorizing

two American destroyers as escorts for a British battleship would, if discovered by the Germans, be regarded as an act of belligerency. American public opinion, prevailingly isolationist, must also be considered. In fact, of course the United States had already decided to convoy all ships to Iceland, and Iceland itself would soon be occupied by U.S. marines.

Page 137: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 174. In confidence: privately; secretly

• 175. ensign: a naval rank in the US and some other navies equivalent to that of midshipman or sub-lieutenant 海军少尉

• 176. How are you at languages?

• How did you do in language study?

• Are you good at language?

• How is your command of foreign language?

Page 138: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• “at” as a preposition may be used to denote a variety of things. Structure “to be at sth.” is used here in the sense “to be engaged in sth.”

• In the classroom there are 3 students at work on chemistry.

• He is an expert at chess.• This kind of use has given rise to colloquial expressi

ons. It is used in the sense of “doing.”• You must go and see what those long-haired fellows

are at?• She is at it again.

Page 139: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 177. It’s a long time since I tried a new one.• 我曾学习过一种语言,不过, 那已经是很就以前

的事情了 .• 我们不在西安一起工作已经 3 年了 .• It’s 3 years since we worked together in Xi’an.• 178. a military supply mission (delegation)• -mission: a group of people sent abroad for a special

reason esp. to act for their country.• The British trade mission has just reached Moscow.• 179. if Russian’s still in the war by then, that is .• This is said as an additional point, an after thought.

Page 140: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 180. has brought up your name.

• mentioned your name

• I hope you won’t mind my bringing up the subject of money again.

• At the meeting we brought up many problems and discussed them one by one.

• The child is very well brought up.

• They had been brought up to go to church.

• She keeps bringing up everything she ate.

• Do you bring up anything when you cough? (spit)

Page 141: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

181. by your expertise on landing craft and so forth.

• -expertise: expert knowledge and skill• jobs which require a great deal of managerial experti

se• cf. expert: a person who is very skilled at doing sth.

And knows a lot about it.• She is an expert in beautiful costumes.• Alice is an expert at fancy skating.• He is an expert in economics. /mathematics• on foreign affairs.• in /at/ on teaching small children• When we express expert in some respect, we always

use “in” or “at”, when we refer to a conclusion or an opinion of evaluation, we use “on”

Page 142: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• His business expertise will be of great help to us.• She displayed considerable expertise in bringing the

horse under control.• His expertise saved the business from failing. • 182. you claim a “poor- to fair” knowledge of Russia

n.• “poor to fair” knowledge of Russian, ranging from p

oor to fairly good; neither too bad nor too good, average; passable 中下

• Excellent 5 优• Good 4 良• Fair 3 中• Poor (failure) 2 差• These are the five grades of registering a student’s m

arks.

Page 143: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 183. chum: close friends (among boys), roommates.• Pug had as his boyhood buddies a few boys from

Russian immigrant families, and learned some Russian from them.

• 184. Sonoma: county in California• 185. be detached from: be transferred from • be dismissed; to fire, to sack, to take away from job• That engineer is hoping to be detached to another

city.• Mr. Smith, you are dismissed (fired)!• In the text, you are (transferred,) taken away from

war plans (for some purposes).• cf. detached duty• separate duty

Page 144: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 184. smattering: slight or superficial knowledge; limited knowledge: a smattering of German

• 185. intelligence value: Here it means Pug’s value in the gathering of secret information for military purposes

• 186. favoured him with a smile• A smile from Admiral King was considered not only

a kind, friendly act, but a generous one.• This sentence reveals that King is not an easy going

person.• 187. extension of the draft 延长征兵法案• 188. by one vote: with a majority of only one vote

Page 145: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 189.Whew: whew or similar sounds roughly breathed out are dismay, fatigue or surprise.

• Whew! That was a close shave!• 190. No, nor the President…right now: • Americans didn’t want to go to war because life was

much too pleasant. The one-vote majority would please neither Churchill nor Roosevelt.

• 191. it maybe,… it is.• But that is the fact: The fact was passed in the House

of Representatives only by one vote, that is, among Representative the numbers of pros and cons were almost equal with the pros winning by only one vote. But “The Winds of War” were gathering over the USA, so it looked as if America’s delay in getting mobilized might be suicidal/ pity was, this was how things (popular sentiments) stood there.

Page 146: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

6. U-boat sightings

• 196. U-boat sightings. Locations of the U-boats• -sighting: n. a case of someone or sth. being sighted• There have been several sightings of these rare birds/

of the escaped murderer in this area.• 197. To brass… Argentia Bay:• - “To” here is used to mean “to accompaniment of”.

e.g. They danced to the music of the band.• In our text, the sentence is inverted in order. It should

go like this: The Prince of Wales left Argentia Bay to the accompaniment of brass band anthems and booming gun salutes.

Page 147: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -in a brisk breeze smelling of green hills and gunpowder

• -brisk (breeze): 1) pleasantly cool and strong• 2) quick and active: a brisk manner, a brisk walk, bri

sk business• In a cool, bracing breeze with the smell of green hills

and gunpowder.• H. M.S. Prince of Wales left Argentia Bay to the acc

ompaniment of brass band anthems, booming gun salutes and in a cool, bracing breeze with the smell of green hills and gunpowder. The conference at which serious war matters were discussed, was ended with grand ceremonies and in a peaceful environment.

Page 148: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 198. The great conference was over: The Roosevelt-Churchill conference ended on August 12. At the conclusion of their conference they issued the 8-point Atlantic Charter committing both countries to certain general principles in any peace settlement that might come.

• 199. In the wardroom…bad sign.• Mood of British officers on board the Prince of

Wales: There was a dismal atmosphere. They had bad vague hopes, but no real confidence. The reason nobody had disclose to them what aid and how much, had been promised by the United States, and this was taken by them as a bad omen. If generous help had been promised, the news would have been made known.

Page 149: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -sense the subtle gloom hanging over the ship:• be vaguely aware of a feeling of helplessness which

was difficult to perceive but which permeated the place

• - in itself…as a bad sign: the fact itself made them believe that it was a bad omen (gave them an impression)

• -strike …(as)…• His proposal strikes me as ridiculous.• The thing that struck me most when I first came to C

hina was the numberless bikes in the street.• The sentence means the undisclosure of the result of t

he conference itself was a bad sign which caused a deep worry to the battleship’s officers.

Page 150: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

200. Veterans of two combat years

• Britain had already been at war with the Germans for two years.

• 201. …had a subdued dismal air despite the… wardroom

• -dismal : gloomy• A dismal song• Dismal weather• A dismal failure• -grandeur: great beauty or power, often combined

with great size• You can’t help being impressed by the grandeur of

the scenery in the Alps.

Page 151: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Although the battleship was big and magnificent and the officers dining room was richly and heavily furnished, there was a kind of repressed miserable feeling (among the officers).

• 201. the predicament… in their bones:

• -the predicament: refers to the difficult situation

• -soaked (in their bones): to pass or penetrate as a liquid does; permeate

• They were over conscious of their country’s plight.

Page 152: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 202. they could not believe… only to return empty-handed:

• - strained navy: the navy which is already hard pressed; the navy which had suffered great losses.

• They could not believe that Churchill had risked the best ship in their already inadequate, weak navy and his own life for nothing.

• -only to do sth.: an adverbial phrase of result meaning in the end.

• He went to the lake for a swim only to be drowned.• She got up early this morning only to find her house

had been burgled.

Page 153: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 203. That wasn’t Winnie’s style.

• That wasn’t Churchill’s way of doing things.

• Winnie: diminutive form of Churchill’s 1st name; pet name

• 204. the note (in their conversation):

• the quality (esp. of voice) indicating the nature of sth.

• There was a note of self-satisfaction in his speech.

• His voice held (carried) a menacing note.

Page 154: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 205. Major-General Tillet: British officer• 海军少将 / 陆战队少将• 206. Red secrecy warnings blazed on the steel door t

hat Tillet opened.• Take note of the difference between a secret warning

(wouldn’t visible) and a secrecy warning (blazed). Please compare the difference between a noun attribute and an adjective in following pairs of expressions:

• Riot police 防暴警察• Riotous police 闹事的警察• Economy measure 节约措施• Economic measure 经济措施

Page 155: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -secrecy and secret• Secrecy is that can be seen clearly, telling people that

is a secret thing or place; secret is that can not be seen, kept from the view of others.

• 207. Dressed in one- across one bulkhead:• -portrait of Churchill: a short, stooped stout figure,

always puffing at his cigar, or gesturing with his cigar, often in an old costume.

• -coverall (usu. pl.) a one piece, loose-fitting outer garment with sleeves and legs, worn often over regular clothing as to protect against dirt. Churchill designed and wore his “boiler-suit,” an extremely outlandish (strange)-looking garment, during the war and made it famous.

• -coverall: boiler-suit: overall

Page 156: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 208. dispatches: a message sent by wire• 209. There.• It is stressed here and is an adverb with full

special meaning, not a meaningless symbol like the “there” in the “there be” structure. It refers to the development on the Russian front.

• 210. “There is an awful unfolding picture.”• There in the Soviet Union things are going

badly for the Russians. (The developments on the Russian front look quite gloomy.) Churchill’s view on the Russian front was reflected in his June 21 speech.

• “There” is stressed as the above.

Page 157: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 211. two fresh bulge: indicate two new places where Germans have attacked and pushed the Russians back towards Moscow.

• -bulge: a swelling of a surface caused by pressure from, within or below; a sudden unusual increase in quantity, which does not last

• 212. basing myself on very exact intelligence

• supporting myself, my view by very exact intelligence/ information

Page 158: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 213. Surely no government… surprised• -surprise: to attack or capture suddenly and without

warning • The Soviet Union was surprised by the Germans. She

could not find the least excuse not to have been ready for the German surprise attack.

• The Soviet Union had little excuse to be surprised.• Surely no government ever had less excuse to be

surprised than the Soviet Union.• The Soviet Union could not find the least excuse not

to get well prepared against the likely coming of the German surprise attack.

Page 159: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Stalin had been forewarned by F.D Roosevelt and Churchill and also by his own spies like Sorge. The Russians should have been well-prepared against the German blitz, still, they suffered a lot under the blitz, so Churchill said that the Soviets had no excuse at all.

• Litotes (understatement) [ 缩小 ]• -e.g. This is no small accomplishment. (It means this

is an accomplishment of considerable magnitude.)• The German fleet was not an unworthy opponent. (It

means the German fleet was a formidable opponent). • This is not at all unpleasant. (It means it is quite plea

sant).

Page 160: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 214. ruddy, springy• -ruddy: red; healthy looking• -springy: elastic as if on springs, with plenty of

bounce in the legs.• -e.g. to walk with a youthful springy step• 215. Now his cheeks were ashy with red patches.• -ashy: gray, covered with ashes• Churchill was running a fever.• 216. Don’t we have a development here?• So new U-boats have been detected here?• There has been a new discovery of the concentration

of U-boats around this area?

Page 161: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 217. Little black…blue pins:

• Black coffin-shaped markers, red pins, and blue pins, are stuck here and there on the map obviously to indicate the U-boats and the conveys. A group of U-boats was scattered along the planned route of the battleship the Prince of Wales.

• -in a cluster close to the battleship’s projected course: A group of U-boats was scattered along the planned route of the Prince of Wales.

• -the wide blue spaces: stand for the high seas.

Page 162: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 218. sighted: caught sight of by the eye or by some device; discovered.

• 219. So Admiral Pound advised me.

• I was told so by Admiral Pound

• -advise: inform, often used in business or official communication

• We were advised of the dangers before we began this work.

• We have advised her that we are coming.

• We write to advise you of the dispatch of the goods on your order of yesterday’s date.

Page 163: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 220.-evading: avoiding• The lion evaded the hunters.• 221. Convoy H-67 is almost home, I see.• A group of ships is reaching Britain, I see.• 222. We will be pulling those pins tonight.• Convoy H-67 will be home tonight. By then we will

take those red and blue pins off the chart since they are no longer on the high sea.

• 223. We may have some sport for you yet.• -sport: adventure. It refers to the encountering of U-

boats.• You may be able to experience some adventure

during the voyage. The German submarines might attack at any time and then there will be a fierce battle to repulse/drive back their attack.

Page 164: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 224. It won’t … Captain?• -lively: spirited; exciting• Victor Henry had met Churchill in London as a U.S.

war-planning officer; he had been on a British bomber raid over Berlin, and had been through heavy German antiaircraft fire, Churchill, remembering this, asked him how he enjoyed the ride.

• 225. It was a rare privilege: It was not easy to have such a chance. I’m most grateful. I appreciated your kindness for letting me have such an experience.

• 226. Any time at all.• Since you enjoy the ride, I’ll be glad to provide you

with another chance at any time.• You may have another ride of this kind at any time.

Page 165: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -at all: for emphasis• There was nothing to worry about at all. ( 完全不,

一点也不)• If you do it at all, do it well. (如果…真的;确实)• I’m sure it’s most kind of you to receive me at all.

(到底;真的;竟然)• It’s a miracle that you returned at all.• I’m surprised you came at all.• 227. Too much honour sir. Once was plenty.• Another chance would be too much honor, once was

quite enough.• A diplomatic refusal to risk his life a second time on

such a venture.• 228. hoarse– harsh

Page 166: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 229. I daresay once was enough for you.• I suppose (that) I think probably/ perhaps so.• We have run out of sugar, but I daresay there is some

in the cupboard.• I daresay there is a filling station at the corner.• 230. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy: an American film

team (1926-1952) whose comedies were among the most popular in the world.

• -Saps at Sea is the name of a film.• The name of a film should be italicised. • Saps: A stupid person likely to be tricked or treated u

nfairly.• Laurel was extremely thin whereas Hardy was fat. La

urel often tried to take advantage of Hardy, but Hardy was often saved by his good luck.

Page 167: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 231. Surgeon-General: the title of the chief of the Army Medical Service and of the United States Public Health Service.

• 232. Not inappropriate. Litotes: It will be quite suitable for us to see such a film while we are on the high seas.

• 233. Pug Henry’s enjoyment…. A U-boat pack/group

• The knowledge that they might at any time be engaged in a running battle with U-boats made it impossible for Henry to enjoy the film.

• -be shadowed by/ darkened by• The later part of his life was shadowed by his son’s

tragic death.

Page 168: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Henry could not possibly sit back at ease, enjoying the film since he knew very well that a running battle with U-boats might take place at any time.

• -U-boat pack: a group (collection) of U-boats hunting together like a pack of wolves

• 234. German skippers… screens• -skipper: a captain of a ship or a sports team • -screen: a formation of destroyers intended as a cover

around (a convoy or) a fleet of heavier warships• Sth. that protects, shelters or hides• -adept at: thoroughly proficient; expert

Page 169: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 235. Where was Pug Henry now?

• He was on the Prince of Wales.

• 236. The film spun… uninterrupted.

• The film was shown to the end without anything happening.

• 237. A gay… entertainment.

• The film was great fun, but lacking in substance. The film was interesting but without any important meaning.

• 238. rheumy voice: the voice with cold

Page 170: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

7. We’ll have to pay the price

• 239. Clement Attlee’s broadcast… the wardroom:• -clement Attlee (1883-1967): English politican, Labo

ur Party leader, and prime minister (1945-51). In W. W II he served in Churchill’s cabinet as Lord privy seal (1940-42), deputy prime mister (1942-45), dominions secretary (1942-43), and Lord president of the council (1943-45)

• Obviously the broadcast cannot pack the wardroom: It means people crowded into the wardroom to listen to Attlee over the radio.

• Attlee broadcast the news of the conference and the Charter while Churchill was still at sea.

Page 171: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 240. on watch: on duty. Officers and men on board a ship are divided into groups (called “watches”) and take turns to be on duty about the ship.

• 241. plowing through a wild storm: cutting a way through the stormy ocean

• 242. rolled and pitched with slow long groans• The ship turned from side to side and tossed in the

sea with slow long groans (noise like that of groaning). If fitted in with the moon of the officers. To roll is to rotate around the longitudinal axis, and to pitch is to rotate around a crosswise axis. Here “roll” means “move from side to side” “Pitch means “move up and down (toss)

Page 172: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 243. Why it was a bad half hour?• Because the situation on the ship was gloomy for the

British, Pug alone was American in addition to the weather.

• 244. He saw… “Atlantic Charter”• -perplexed looks: puzzled looks• -lengthening forces: expressions showing

disapproval disappointment• -read off: read out loud (paragraph by paragraph)• All negative expressions showing that the British

were greatly disappointed in their expectations and they were all in low spirits.

Page 173: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Note: The Atlantic Charter, jointly signed by Roosevelt and Churchill (August 12, 1941), lists 8 points of which the sixth point says “After the final destruction of the Nazi tyranny they hope to see established a peace… which will afford assurance that all the men in all the lands may live out their lives in freedom from fear and want.” There was no mention of the “four freedom” MENTIONED BY THE AUTHOR. ALSO THERE WAS NO DIRECT MENTION OF German apart from Nazi tyranny, since the United States was technically still a neutral country.

• 245. The high-flown… American commitment • bespeak: to show; to be indicative of • The efficiency of the organization bespoke careful planning. • -high-flown adj. refers to the language which is grand

sounding though lacking in meaning

Page 174: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -not a shred of: not a trace/sign /not a small piece; not a bit

• There is not a shred of truth in his statement.

• Her tears hadn’t a shred of evidence of great sorrow for what she had done.

• This sentence means that the charter was in high-sounding words but contained absolutely nothing of aid to Britain by the U.S.

• The declaration is in high-sounding words, but contains nothing substantial in terms of aid to Britain by the U.S.

Page 175: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 246. Abuse of …flat zero.• There was clear-cut (clear/ definite) condemnation of the Nazi

regime… but no promise of more U.S. aid.• The Declaration mentioned everything but more U.S. aid for

the British.• Abuse of Nazi regime…, Yes; more aid, no .• The Four Freedoms: These were defined by President

Roosevelt in his messages to Congress, 6 January, 1941, as the freedom of speech and expression, the freedom of worship, and the freedom from fear and want. they were to be the aims of the U.S.A. and ultimately of the world. The occasion was his proposal to extend Lend-Lease to Britain.

• (Note: This was far from the truth. Churchill wrote to Attlee on August 12: “They are sending us immediately 150,000 more rifles.” But of course Victor Henry and the British officers would have no way of knowing this at that time.)

Page 176: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 247. Some, sentences… anything.• By free trade the Americans meant the tearing down

of tariff barrier, including the breaking up of the sterling area. Without the sterling area, which was a measure taken by Britain to protect her interest and avoid foreign competition, the wide market of the British Empire would be penetrated by the United States and this would mean the end of the British Empire. And naturally the independence of the British colonies would mean the end of the British Empire.

• -tariff: a tariff is a tax that a government collects on goods coming into a country.

• -sterling: British money

Page 177: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Some sentences, if they are meaningful, about free trade and independence for all peoples meant that the British Empire would be finished.

• 248. a tough customer: a firm, very hard to influence customer, a hard-line bargainer, a customer hard to deal with.

• 249. I’d venture… than that:• I’d venture: I would think • -venture: v. risk• If you venture sth. such as an opinion, you say it in a

cautious, hesitant manner because you are afraid it might be foolish or wrong.

• -e.g. “Anyway,” Marsha ventured. “If we want to know what’s going on, we’ll have to do our own research.”

• No one has ventured to suggest why this should be.

Page 178: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• I boldly think the Roosevelt-Churchill conference might have decided on more things than that (broadcast).

• 250. How about it, Henry? What do you say to this estimation, Henry? What’s your opinion, Henry?

Page 179: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 251. Pug saw no virtue in equivocating.• -no virtue: no advantage, no benefit, no good.• -equivocate: to use ambiguous terms in order to decei

ve, mislead, etc. to be deliberately ambiguous about• -in equivocating means to use ambiguous terms in or

der to deceive, mislead; in obscure language.• The sentence means “Pug thought it is no good answ

ering ambiguously.”• Pug thought it better to give a clear, direct answer. A

mbiguity would not bring any good, only more illusions and disappointments.

Page 180: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 252. I’d guess that was it.• That’s all there is to it, I think.• I would think this was the only decision they had co

me to.• 253. pledge… to destroy:• -to pledge to do sth.: to promise to do sth.

Page 181: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 254. It means Lend-lease:

• Lend-lease: An agreement by which the United States lent or leased arms and military supplies, etc. to British and other powers during W.W. II (in some cases in return for the use of certain base, etc. ). The Lend-Lease Act was passed by Congress on 11 March 1941, and terminated on 22 August 1945. During this period the U.S.A. spent about 12, 000,000,000 and received back about $1, 836,000,000. Over 60% of the total went to the British Commonwealth.

Page 182: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 255. Questions…sides.• People all over the wardroom started asking him que

stions.• 256. But isn’t the Pacific your fight, pure and simple?• -pure and simple: a cliché, as a way of saying sth. is

plain and obvious; that which it is and clearly nothing else.

• This is robbing the state, pure and simple.• 257. He can’t, without Congress behind him.• The President may not give a war warning to another

country without the support of the Congress. Only Congress can declare war, the President may only take action as Chief Executive.

Page 183: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 258. it came within one vote… the United States Army:

• Here Pug referring to the debate on the act of extension of the draft in the Congress. Just the day before, one vote fewer might have brought about a disaster, the breaking up of the U.S. army. (Note: This was incredible, but actually a fact, and Churchill saw fit to comment on it several times in its Memoirs. The Draft Act was a law authorizing compulsory military conscription (recruitment) which was passed by the majority of one vote. Nearly half of the Congressmen voted against it, although the Pacific War was only 4 months a way.)

• -dissolve: to cause (an association, group etc.) to end or break up.

• The military government dissolved the country’s parliament and suspended all political activity.

Page 184: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 259. They vote… political hides:• They vote in such a manner as to save their skins,

basing their votes on their guess of what the electorate want.

• -electorate: all the people in a country or an area who have the right to vote.

• The politicians do things only for their political interests, voting in Congress just for more votes in election.

• They try to figure out what the electorate want and then vote accordingly. In this way they hope the electorate will be pleased and they will be able to be re-elected.

Page 185: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• -hunch: (colloq.) a feeling about sth. not based on known; an idea based on feeling rather than on reason or facts.

• How did you know that horse was going to win?• It was just a hunch.• -hide: (colloq.) the skin of a person, to protect one’s

hide= to save one’s skin.•

Page 186: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 260. Our people… the Munich Pact:

• The state of our people is just like that of your people at the time of the Munich Pact, when they cheered Chamberlain when he came back from Munich after having sold out Czechoslovakia.

• Munich Pact: the pact of September 29, 1938, a solemn agreement between two opposing groups or nations signed by Nazi Germany, Great Britain, France, and Italy, in which the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia was ceded to Germany.

Page 187: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• Munich: A potentially disastrous, humiliating, or dishonourable act of appeasement( 让步 ) or surrender. So called from the unfortunate act of appeasement, the Munich Pact or Agreement concluded between Great Britain, France, and Italy (30, Sept. 1938) whereby the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia was ceded to Germany, and Czechoslovakia was thus betrayed!)

• Chamberlain: Arthur Neville Chamberlain (1869-1940), Prime minister of Great Britain (1937-1940), main advocate of the policy of appeasement toward Nazi Germany that culminated in the Munich Agreement of 1938.

Page 188: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 261. We’re paying the price: Chamberlain at the time of the Munich Pact failed to see through Hitler. Now we are suffering, paying the price (prolonged global war, lives, defends, etc.) for that gross mistake.

• 262. We’ll have to pay the price: Note the use of the future tense. The same thing that happened to you will now happen to us.

• 263. “We had Chamberlain… You have Roosevelt.• -fresh-faced: bright and pure in colour; youthful• He means that Roosevelt was a much wiser leader th

an Chamberlain and should have been able to avoid what Chamberlain did.

Page 189: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 264. Roosevelt can’t help that.• Roosevelt can’t change the present feelings of the American p

eople. There is nothing Roosevelt can do about it.• 265. You’re the home team…language• The Beijing football team is the home team in Beijing, and th

e football fans here all support the team and against the teams from other cities.

• The sentence means: You’re our favorite. We feel kinship with you. You’re the players from our side, all right; we are the spectators, we stand on your side. We have sympathy for you. When you play, we cheer you.

• Pug here, gives a very appropriate metaphor. The Americans were sympathetic towards the British, but they were not ready to enter the war. So there was Lend-Lease and the Atlantic Charter, but there were no war warnings to Japan until Pearl Harbour.

Page 190: Lesson 14 Argentia Bay By Herman Wouk. Background about the author Herman Wouk (1915- ) is an American novelist. He is better known for his epic war.

• 266. Lend-Lease if no sweat.• -no sweat: (sl.) no trouble or difficulty at all; easily done• 267. more jobs and money: and the American people would b

e happy about the war-boom it brought about.• 268. steep roll: a sudden sharp roll of the ship• 269. crockery ( 陶器 ): earthen-ware, pots, jars, dishes • -cf. vessels, utensils• 270. crossfire: situation in which questions are pour to sb. fro

m all directions; firing of guns from two or more points so that the lines of fire cross.

• 271. he did not talk much, etc.• He felt ashamed that the U.S. was not going to give these brav

e people the kind of help they urgently needed, and he was not up to answering their questions and reproaches.