和合之声广播稿(12月02日)
Groove in the school(第十期)
C: Hey guys, welcome to our channel—Groove in the school. This is Cher from senior 2 international department.
L: This is Ledger from senior 2 international department. First, Let’s see some news.
L:That’s all for today’s news. Now we are going to enjoy a beautiful article called “Work and Pleasure”
C:To be really happy and really safe, one ought to have at least two or three hobbies,
L:and they must all be real. It is no use starting late in life to say:
C: “I will take an interest in this or that.”Such an attempt only aggravates the strain of mental effort.
L:A man may acquire great knowledge of topics unconnected with his daily work,
C: and yet hardly get any benefit or relief. It is no use doing what you like; you have got to like what you do.
L: Broadly speaking, human beings may be divided into three classes:
C:those who are toiled to death, those who are worried to death, and those who are bored to death.
L: It is no use offering the manual labourer, tired out with a hard week’s sweat and effort,
C:the chance of playing a game of football or baseball on Saturday afternoon.
L:It is no use inviting the politician or the professional or business man,
C:This beauty is so precious, and so congenial to our tenderest and noblest feelings,
L: who has been working or worrying about serious things for six days, to work or worry about trifling things at the weekend.
C:It may also be said that rational, industrious, useful human beings are divided into two classes:
L:first, those whose work is work and whose pleasure is pleasure; and secondly,
C:those whose work and pleasure are one. Of these the former are the majority.
L:They have their compensations. The long hours in the office or the factory bring with them as their reward,
C:not only the means of sustenance, but a keen appetite for pleasure even in its simplest and most modest forms.
L:But Fortune’s favoured children belong to the second class. Their life is a natural harmony.
C:For them the working hours are never long enough.
L:Each day is a holiday, and ordinary holidays when they come are grudged as enforced interruptions in an absorbing vacation.
C:Yet to both classes the need of an alternative outlook, of a change of atmosphere, of a diversion of effort, is essential.
L:Indeed, it may well be that those whose work is their pleasure are those who most need the means of banishing it at intervals from their minds.
Together:That’s all for today’s broadcast,see you next week at the same time.thank you!
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