《野性的呼唤英文读后感英文版7篇.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《野性的呼唤英文读后感英文版7篇.doc(7页珍藏版)》请在taowenge.com淘文阁网|工程机械CAD图纸|机械工程制图|CAD装配图下载|SolidWorks_CaTia_CAD_UG_PROE_设计图分享下载上搜索。
1、 野性的呼唤英文读后感英文版7篇 The Call of the Wild is Londons most-read book, and generally considered his best, the most masterpiece of his so-called “early period”。 The story was set in 19th-century Klondike Gold Rush, in which sled dogs were bought at generous prices. Buck was a domestic dog in Judge Millers
2、home and living a comfortable life until he was sold secretly by the poor gardener and became a sled dog. Buck was a Bernard dog weighed one hundred and forty pounds, tall, strong, and hea一vy muscled. He couldnt accommodate to the harsh condition at first. And he wanted to fight, to escape, to go ba
3、ck to his cozy home, but in vain. The man in red taught him the law of stick and club-one must first adjust himself to his surroundings and learn the rules, and only after that he can do what he wants to do. The club of the man in red called back Bucks nature as a dog. When he firstly served for Fra
4、n?ois and Perrault, two couriers, he showed his superior ability to adapt to the environment and his smartness to learn everything he wanted to learn. Curlys death astonished him and taught him to be cautious. And before he had recovered from the shock caused by the tragic passing of Curly, he was h
5、arnessed as a sled dog and step by step wanted to be the leader. But the leading dog, Spitz, was already an excellent one, who also considered Buck as enemy and potential competitor. At last, when Spitz once punished him, hurling backward Buck, he knew the time had come. He killed Spitz and took his
6、 place. When they pulled into Dawson, Buck was sold as useless thing to three gold diggers, who werent veteran in sledding and even didnt know how to get to their destination. Food was eaten up half way. So Charles, one of the three, decided to kill Buck when he couldnt get up. However, when he aime
7、d at Buck, John Thornton sprang upon him, knocked him down and told him that if Charles stroke Buck, Thornton would kill him. Thus, Thornton took Buck away. He was the only true friend of Buck. But Buck was a thing of the wild, especially when the calling of wolf from the hills. Once when he came ba
8、ck from hills, he found that Thornton was killed by Indians. What would you do if you were Buck when your beloved friend was killed? Buck became a nut and killed those headsmen and stayed with Thornton for two days and nights, never lea一ving Thornton out of his sight. And then a nearby wolf howl cap
9、tures his ears, and he follows the sound to an approaching wolf pack, battling several of these creatures to prove his worth. 野性的召唤英文读后感 篇三野性的召唤英文读后感英文版 篇六野性的召唤英文读后感 篇七 “ He sings a song of the younger world, which is the song of the pack.“ (Chapter VII The Sounding of the Wild) When the last senten
10、ce vanished from my eyes, I can still perceive an echo of a song - a wild song, which knocks up my dizzy mind that always cheerfully sink into the so-called civilized world without questioning. Wild, is no longer a symbol of the law of jungle but a headspring where streams out love, passion, bravery
11、, loyalty, friendship, venture, competition and tolerance all these virtues can easily be found in the Call of the Wild. Jack London (1876-1916) is a worldwide renowned novelist. His stories successfully reflect the contradictory views of mans nature and destiny in and against the wild, and his “fig
12、ht to survive“ notion has gained him and his works timeless popularity, particularly, the Call of the Wild It tells a story of a gigantic dog, named Buck, who is stolen from a rich and comfortable home and forced to learn to survive as an Alaskan sled dog. Buck, at first, is too savage for the compa
13、ny of man until he coincidently encounters his beloved master-kindhearted John Thornton. Finally, Johns incidental death breaks Bucks last tie to the man and drives him into his long-desired wild with his pack. In the story, Buck and John simply adopt themselves to answer the call of the wild. When
14、it comes to Bucks mind that one day he will eventually leave John- his master, all he wants to do is just to help him finish the gold-rush-trip. He “ from then on, night and day, never put a halt, in desperation, he burst into long stretch of flight, did not to stay him (John)“ (Chapter VII The Soun
15、ding of The Wild) Buck wished to remember Johns image forever, he “for two days and nights never left camp, never let Thornton out of his sight. He followed him about at his work, watched him while saw him into blankets at night and out of them in the morning“ (Chapter VII) When I read these words I
16、 just could not hold my tears bursting. Can a real man devote himself to loyalty and friendship in such a way? On the other hand, John Thornton is not only a dog-lover but also a brave and venturous man. He is so straightforward and simple that makes him an accommodating man. Once he firmly roots a
17、goal into his heart, it seems that nothing could prevent him from accomplishing it except death. I do not know whether the persistence is the most vital element to make a man successful, but what I know is that you are not far away from success once you occupy it. It is Jack London who plunges me in
18、to the animated wild from the hustle-and-bustle and from desperate city. There, I merely cannot deny the attraction of Bucks bark, which enlightens me to pursue another lost half of the nature in mankind, and to dig out a true meaning of life. Dare we imagine that London intentionally employs Buck t
19、o set us a model with perfect characters (count barbarity out)? The answer is affirmed. We, as animals, are from the wild but shedding off more and more wild signs, which demonstrate us as the “uncivilized“。 However, who can fully guarantee that we have not overlooked some essential wild-endowed vir
20、tues? Especially, nowadays, it seems more crucial for us to stop looking at the post-industrialized world and to ponder for a while. When cheats, betrayals, lies, lusts and crimes stuff a materialized society, whether London uses this novel to help himself escape the reality or warn the earthy peopl
21、e, to us, modern man, is all the same. It appears horrible that in modern society many people are enthusiastically talking about how to build up “special relations“ to the authority, deceiving and lying to each other. To them life is a mask-wearing process rather than a hard work. Every time, you br
22、owse WebPages, scandals in politics, business, the entertainment circle and even on campus crowd into your eyes. Oh, what is the essence of human beings? What is the civilization to us? Do we need to look back at where we came from? Is it good or bad for us to speak out what we think and to do what
23、the consciences demand us to? Are we wasting talents given by the mighty nature? Be an honest, straightforward, warmhearted, emotional and responsible man or be a shrewd, cold hearted and astute hypocrite? While embracing the “civilized“ rubbish, we are losing those good virtues, which are the calls
24、 of the wild. Once we lose them, we are to lose ourselves, and we will get nowhere. I wish this dreadful thought is totally a fallacy, but, now, it is chilling me hard. One day when I happen to stand on the top of a grand mountain to observe a boundless prairie enveloped by the sapphire firmament an
25、d combed by gusts of the rhythmical west wind, a morning sun sprinkles me her warmth and brilliance in a graceful way, however, at that moment, I am afraid that I cannot appreciate these beauties, I am a lost “ civilized man“ then. Please, please do not let come true while we are still able to answer the call of the wild.