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Unit 7 The Chaser

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Title: Unit 7 The Chaser


1
Unit 7 The Chaser
2
Contents
  • Pre-reading questions
  • Background information
  • Structural analysis of the text
  • Comprehensive questions
  • Language points
  • Sentence highlights
  • Language appreciation
  • Grammar points
  • Comprehensive questions of Text II

3
Pre-reading questions
  • 1. Do you believe love can be fostered? How can
    you lure one into love with you?
  • 2. What is likely to happen when a couple no
    longer love each other?

4
Background information
  • About the author and the text
  • John Collier (1901-1980), British playwright,
    poet, and novelist. He was famous for numerous
    fantasies he had written in his lifetime. The
    Chaser was originally published in The New
    Yorker in 1940.

5
  • Siren(??)
  • In Greek mythology, the Sirens were three
    dangerous bird-women, portrayed as seductresses.
    Roman poets placed them on an island called
    Sirenum scopuli. In some later, rationalized
    traditions the literal geography of the "flowery"
    island of Anthemoessa, or Anthemusa,1 is fixed
    sometimes on Cape Pelorum and at others in the
    Sirenusian islands near Paestum or in Capreae.2
    All such locations were surrounded by cliffs and
    rocks. Sailors who sailed near were compelled by
    the Sirens' enchanting music and voices to
    shipwreck on the rocky coast. (From Wikipedia,
    the free encyclopedia)

6
Structure analysis of the Text
  • This short story, which combines elements of
    horror
  • and love, is built almost entirely through
    dialogue
  • between a young man, Alan Austen, who is deeply
    in
  • love and wants to possess his lover entirely, and
    an
  • unnamed old man who believes in a life free of
  • romantic involvement. As the dialogue develops,
  • Austens attitude towards the potion changes from
  • skeptical and hesitant to excited and overwhelmed.

7
  • Part I
  • Paragraph 1
  • In this part, the protagonist, Alan Austen, has
    been introduced.
  • Part II
  • Paragraphs 2-12
  • The old man is trying to sell his mixture.
  • Part III
  • Paragraphs 13-45
  • Dialogue between the old man and Alan Austen.

8
Questions for comprehension
  • 1.  What is the implied meaning of the old mans
    remark. Young people who need a love potion very
    seldom have five thousand dollars. Otherwise they
    would not need a love potion? (para. 13)
  • What the old man means is that the young men who
    fall in love one-sidedly are seldom rich enough
    to win a young girls heart. If they are rich, it
    will be easier for them to gain girls hearts,
    and they dont need to buy love potions. The old
    man suggests that money is an important factor
    for love.

9
  • 2. What are the effects of the love potion?
    Describe them in detail .
  • The love potion has a powerful, everlasting
    effect. It will make a gay girl care nothing but
    her lover. She will feel jealous of him when her
    lover is with other girls. She will want to be
    everything to him. She will be only interested in
    her lover and take every concern of his. Even if
    he slips a little, she will forgive him in the
    end. In a word, she will love him deeply if she
    drinks the love potion.

10
  • 3.Why is the love potion priced so low while the
    glove-cleaner so high?
  • The author seems to stress the great gap between
    the price of the love potion and the
    glove-cleaner. It is easy for people to fall in
    love, but it hard to keep it. Thats why he has
    to pay a colossal amount to get himself out of
    it. The other reason for the low price of the
    love potion may be that by doing so, the old man
    can attract more customers to his primary
    commodity, the glove-cleaner.

11
  • 4. What moral lessons can be drawn from the
    story?
  • One of the moral lessons we can draw from the
    story is that anything precious, love included,
    is most likely to have an end. A person can
    easily fall in love and get married, but what
    awaits him/her could be endless remorse, and a
    wish tha tit might end as soon as possible. So
    one should be wise and keep their eyes open when
    they are in love though love is said to be blind.

12
  • 5. How do the speeches of the young man and the
    old man differ? How does that help to build up
    the theme?
  • The young mans speech is short and changing. At
    first, he speaks in short sentences with
    hesitation, but later on his speech changes into
    a succession of cries with excitement. In
    contrast, the old mans speech tends to be long,
    stable and well-developed throughout the story.
    Their speeches form a sharp contrast which helps
    to bring out the two characters. The yound man is
    green, passionate, and hopelessly in love, while
    the old man is calm, sensible, and a bit
    satirical. It is by this contrast that the theme
    of the story is brought out more effectively.

13
Language points
  • Paragraph 1
  • 1. peer to look very carefully or with
    difficulty, especially as if not able to see
    clearly
  • She peered over my shoulder at the computer
    screen and asked about the figures. C.f. peep
  • peep to look at something quickly and
    secretly, especially through a hole or other
    small openings
  • e.g. Now and then she peeped to see if he
    was noticing her.

14
  • Paragraphs 2-12
  • 2. make somebodys acquaintance to meet somebody
    for the first time
  • e.g. He made her acquaintance at a dance.
  • 3. imperceptible that cannot be noticed or felt
    because so small, slight or gradual
  • e.g. an imperceptible change in temerature
  • perceive v. , perception n. , perceptible a. ,
    imperceptible a., imperceptibly ad.

15
  • 4. Apprehensively full of anxiety about the
    future
  • They looked at each other apprehensively.
  • apprehensive a., apprehension n.
  • e.g. She was apprehensive about/for her sons
    safety every tome he went out on his motorcycle.
  • Students are waiting with apprehension for their
    final examination results.

16
  • Paragraphs 13-45
  • 5. oblige
  • do something a favor to fulfill the wishes of
  • e.g. She asked him to lend his car, and he
    willingly obliged her.
  • I should/would be obliged if you could speak
    louder.

17
  • (2) to make it necessary for somebody to do
    something
  • e.g. The heavy snow obliged me to abandon the car
    and continued on foot.
  • Eric felt obliged to resign after such an
    unpleasant quarrel with the vice president.

18
  • 6. substitute to put something or somebody in
    place of another.
  • They were expected to substitute violence for
    dialogue.
  • to substitute A for Bto replace B with A

19
  • 7. overwhelm
  • to give somebody a particular feeling very
    strongly.
  • e.g. The family of the victim was overwhelmed
    by/with grief.
  • (2)  to make powerless by using force
  • e.g. Government troops overwhelmed the rebels.

20
  • Overwhelming a. very large or very great
  • e.g. The overwhelming majority of small
    businesses went broke within the first twelve
    months.

21
  • 8. fervently (formal) with deep sincere feelings
  • e.g. It is a cause for which we have campaigned
    fervently these past four years.
  • Fervent a., fervency n.

22
  • 9. be better off to have more money than one
    used to have or most other people
  • e.g. Mr. Cooper was much better off when he
    got promoted, and even could afford foreign
    travel.
  • Shell be 50 pounds better off.
  • be better off doing/ to do something to be
    wiser to do something specified
  • e.g. If youve got you bags you are better
    off taking/to take a taxi.
  • be better off with somebody/something to be
    happier or more at ease with somebody/something
  • e.g. Youd be better off with her as a roommate.

23
Sentence highlights
  • 1. Alan Austen, as nervous as a kitten, went up
    certain dark and creaky stairs in the
    neighborhood of Pell Street, one of the doors.
    (Para. 1)
  • Paraphrase

24
  • 2. For indifference, they substitute devotion.
    For scorn, adoration. Give one tiney measure of
    this to the young lady- its flavour is
    imperceptible in orange juice, soup or
    cocktails-and however gay and giddy she is, she
    will change altogether. She will want nothing bu
    tsolitude and you. (para.23)
  • Paraphrase

25
Language Appreciation
  • 1. He pushed open this door, as he had been told
    to do, and found himself in a tiny room, which
    contained no furniture but a plain kitchen table,
    a rocking chair, and an ordinary chair. On one of
    the dirty, buff-coloured walls were a couple of
    shelves, containing in all perhaps a dozen
    bottles and jars. (Para.2)
  • This short description of the house depicts a
    gloomy atmosphere

26
  • 2) a. Do you mean it is a poison? cried Alan,
    very much horrifed.
  • Call it a glove-cleaner if you like, said the
    old man indifferently. Lives need cleaning
    sometimes.
  • I hope all your mixtures are not as expensive,
    said Alan apprehensively.
  • (Paras. 8-17)
  • Wonderful! cried Alan. (Para. 30)
  • That is love! cried Alan. (Para. 32)
  • I can hardly imagine Diana like that! cried
    Alan, overwhelmed with joy. (Para.34)
  • That will not happen, said Alan fervently.
  • Note the italicized words. They all reveal the
    emotional change of Alan

27
  • b. How carefully she will look after you! She
    will never allow you to be tired, to sit in a
    draught, to neglect your food. If you are an hour
    late, she will be terrified. She will think you
    are killed, or that some siren has caught you.
  • The remark of the old man fully reveals the kind
    of love longed for by Alan and many other young
    people.

28
Grammar points
  • Nominal Clauses
  • Nominal clause are clauses that are used as nouns
    in a sentence.
  • e.g. My failure to pass the exam has brought an
    earthquake to my family.
  • What made her so angry is now still a mystery.
  • That she was chosen as the monitor made us happy.

29
  • Inversion
  • I. Inversion of predicative
  • An expensive thing it was.
  • II. Inversion of object
  • This conception of a hollow earth we know to be
    false.
  • III. Inversion of adverbial
  • At the corner stood a drug store, brilliant with
    electric lights.

30
Comprehensive questions of Text II
  • 1. How was the hero vastly different from his
    roommate Petey Burch?
  • The hero was a highly intelligent man as his
    brain was extremely powerful, precise and
    penetrating while Petey Burch was a very dumb man
    as he was emotional, unstable, impressionable
    and, worst of all, crazy about the fashion.
  • 2. Why did the hero love Polly Espy?
  • She was a beautiful and gracious girl, almost the
    right kind of wife in promoting a lawyers
    career, which was what he desired to pursue as
    his profession in the future, despite the fact
    that she was not intelligent enough, but he was
    determined that she would become smart under his
    guidence.

31
  • 3. What happened and how did the hero feel when
    he wasw working hard to get the girls mind up to
    the standard he required?
  • The girl constantly missed the point in his
    instructions and made a lot of silly mistakes. He
    felt disappointed and vaguely felt that this
    project had no hope of success. A wave of despair
    swept over him and he almost concluded that he
    would not possible instill logic into her mind.
  • 4. What happened when the hero believed that he
    should proceed to shift the focus of smartening
    the girl up to fostering the mutual love between
    them?
  • When he tried various menas to suggest a knid of
    intimate relationship between them, the girl
    refuted him by pointing out different fallacies
    in his logic. He felt very much dismayed as very
    fallacy the girl pointed out was what he had just
    tried to make the girl recognize while he was
    teaching her how to be smart.

32
  • 5. What have you learnt from the text?
  • One of the very important lessons contained in
    the text is that one should not be too calculated
    in everything, particularly in love which is th
    eresult of natural affection developed over a
    long period of time.
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