A Chance in a Million

百万分之一的机遇

新概念英语第三册 培养技能 英音

语言学习

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第 36 集

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  • Lesson 36

  • A chance in a million

  • What was the chance in a million?

  • We are less credulous than we used to be.

  • In the nineteenth century, a novelist would bring his story to a conclusion

  • by presenting his readers with a series of coincidences -- most of them wildly improbable.

  • Readers happily accepted the fact that an obscure maidservant was really the hero's mother.

  • A long-lost brother, who was presumed dead, was really alive all the time

  • and wickedly plotting to bring about the hero's downfall. And so on.

  • Modern readers would find such naive solutions totally unacceptable.

  • Yet, in real life, circumstances do sometimes conspire to bring about coincidences which anyone but a nineteenth century novelist would find incredible.

  • When I was a boy, my grandfather told me how a German taxi driver, Franz Bussman,

  • found a brother who was thought to have been killed twenty years before.

  • While on a walking tour with his wife, he stopped to talk to a workman.

  • After they had gone on, Mrs. Bussman commented on the workman's close resemblance to her husband

  • and even suggested that he might be his brother.

  • Franz poured scorn on the idea,

  • pointing out that his brother had been killed in action during the war.

  • Though Mrs. Bussman was fully acquainted with this story,

  • she thought that there was a chance in a million that she might be right.