首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
William "Bendigo" Thompson, heavyweight champion of England in the old bare-knuckle days was one of the dirtiest and most treach
William "Bendigo" Thompson, heavyweight champion of England in the old bare-knuckle days was one of the dirtiest and most treach
admin
2013-06-12
62
问题
William "Bendigo" Thompson, heavyweight champion of England in the old bare-knuckle days was one of the dirtiest and most treacherous fighters ever to step into a prize ring. Yet he was se popular that a town, a racehorse and a liqueur were named Bendigo in his honor during his lifetime.
Bendigo Thompson was one of triplets born in Nottingham, England, on October 11, 1811. His mother was a coarse and violent woman. However, she was apparently acquainted with the Book of Daniel, for she nicknamed her three sons Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. As a child, the latter’s name was corrupted to Bendigo.
He was raised in the slums. His mother was the terror of the neighborhood. She cursed like a fishwife and fought like an outraged army. When she lost her temper--a circumstance that occurred two or three times a day--she boat up, impartially, her children, her husband and any indignant neighbor who thrust his head in the door to protest the noise. But in her own savage way she loved her fighting son and he loved her.
She taught Bendigo never to lead with his right and to fight from a crouch--a boxing style which he pioneered in the ring.
When he was 21 years old he had attained his full height and weight: just over 5’9"’ and 164 pounds. (Though no heavyweight by modern standards, in those days they didn’t bother about division classifications.) His complexion was clear and fresh, his gray eyes bright and sparkling, his manner eccentric but confident.
In October of 1832 he embarked upon his professional career. When he fought one Ned Smith the following March for a purse of five pounds, he cut Smith to pieces for six rounds, and knocked him out in the seventh. Ringside sports writers described him as quick, agile and muscular, with tremendous hitting power.
By the time Bendigo began to make a name for himself, the sport of boxing, once the "pride and boast of England," had come into disrepute. Brutality in the ring had caused an increasing number of deaths among fighters; critics complained the fighters accepted bribes to throw matches. The sport was attracting a great following of hoodlums and cutthroats.
As might be expected, this was precisely the kind of atmosphere in which Bendigo could--and did--thrive. During the next two years, he fought eight opponents without a loss.
Bendigo’s 13th fight took him out of what today would be called the "preliminary boy"- classification. It was in July of 1835. His opponent was Ben Caunt. They hated each other on sight. C. aunt was them 22, stood 6’3"and weighted 210 pounds. Bendigo looked like a pygmy compared with Caunt. As one baffled sports writer of the period wrote. "Bendigo is the favorite at six to four, a state of odds which seems unaccountable when the disparity of size is considered." But the odds proved correct.
Bendigo enraged his gigantic opponent by his peculiar bending, weaving and crouching techniques; and the spectators roared disapproval when he "accidentally" slipped or fell (thus ending a round) whenever Count was getting the better of him.
Caunt finally lost his head, rushed across the ring and struck Bendigo while he was seated in his corner between rounds. This foul cost Caunt the fight.
Bendigo continued his unbeaten career, whipping men almost twice his size, through skill and skullduggery. Bendigo’s fame spread. A racehorse was christened for him. The gold mining town of Sandhurst, in Australia, proudly changed its name to Bendigo. A distiller put on the market a liqueur called Bendigo.
Caunt, unable to tolerate the idea that Bendigo held the title, hurled challenge after challenge at him. Bendigo fought others, but ignored him.
Then, in the early 1840s Bendigo severely injured his knee while turning somersaults for the amusement of his friends. At this point, he announced his retirement from the ring and devoted himself to whisky, reminiscences and the management of a London public house, The Coach and Horses, which he had bought with his winnings.
With Bendigo retired, the championship went by default and eventually was won by Caunt. His repeated taunts finally brought Bendigo out of retirement in September of 1845. The fight created extraordinary excitement and the crowd that gathered for it was estimated at over 10,000. Because the police were determined to prevent the fight, the ring was moved three separate times.
It proved one of the most scandalous brawls in boxing history. Both men committed every known foul and invented a good many others. Frequently one or the other was tossed out of the ring onto the ringsiders.
In the 93rd round, after two hours and ten minutes, the referee declared that Caunt went down without a blow, thus forfeiting the fight to Bondigo.
The scandal of it all kept London clubmen in a state of excitement for months. Nevertheless, it is generally agreed that this disgraceful match had much to do with the reforms in the ’50s and ’60s that sent boxing on the read to respectability and made it once more a favorite sport of the aristocracy.
Bendigo permanently retired from the ring after defeating Tom Paddock in 1850. He returned to Nottingham where his acrobatic feats, even in his old age, were remarkable and delighted children, with whom he was kind and gentle. He spent his sober moments gardening and fishing.
An egocentric braggart, Bendigo oddly refused to discuss feats about which he could have boasted with reason, such as the three separate occasions when he saved persons from drowning--at the risk of his own life. When the townsfolk proposed to reward him for his courage, he indignantly refused to accept even a farthing.
Bondigo died on August 23, 1880, after falling down a flight of steps and fracturing three ribs. A bony splinter perforated one of his lungs. It is said that his last words were: "I don’t mind dying. I’ll soon join my mother in heaven."
In Bendigo’s time, the length of a fight was ______.
选项
A、5 rounds
B、10 rounds
C、50 rounds
D、unlimited
答案
D
解析
也是细节题。倒数第五段的开头作者提到In the 93rd round,after two hours and ten minutes然后裁判宣判比赛结束,Bondigo赢得比赛,次数及比赛时间告诉我们,那时拳击比赛没有时间限制,比赛可以一直持续下去,直到输赢定局为止。D的内容正确反映了文章的事实,而A,B,C的时间、次数都是假想出来的。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/v84O777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Underthe1996constitution,all11ofSouthAfrica’sofficiallanguages"mustenjoyequalityofesteemandbetreatedequitabl
Underthe1996constitution,all11ofSouthAfrica’sofficiallanguages"mustenjoyequalityofesteemandbetreatedequitabl
Aftertakingabriefhiatustoweathertherecession,aninvasionofBritainbysomeofAmerica’sbest-knownretailbrands—incl
AllofthefollowingworksarewrittenbyJamesJoyceEXCEPT
ThelargestuniversityinCanadais
Whichofthefollowingisanexampleofclipping
ThebombingofthePearlHarborin1941waslaunchedby______.
ThelargestcityinNewZealandis
WhatmarkedthebeginningoftheRomanticAge?
"big"and"small"areapairof______opposites.
随机试题
根据《城市道路交通规划设计规范》,公共交通车站服务面积,以300m半径计算,不得小于城市用地面积的()
某工程项目建成投产后,正常生产年份的总成本费用为1000万元,其中期间费用150万元,借款利息20万元,固定资产折旧80万元,无形资产摊销费50万元,则其经营成本为()万元。
方针目标横向展开应用的主要方法是()。
被告人顾某(男,36岁,某市公安分局行政拘留所看守人员),2008年8月18日在某市公安局看守所值班时,违反公安人员执行任务时严禁饮酒的规定,私自将该所招待修建工人喝的白酒倒出半瓶(约3两)自饮,醉倒在值班室的床上,造成关押在该所7号监号内的叶某、余某等1
下列情形可能发生的是:
2010年11月份,全国餐饮业实现零售额823.1亿元,比2004年同期增长14.5%,占全社会消费品零售总额的13.9%,其增幅高出社会消费品零售总额4个百分点。预计2011年全年餐饮业零售额将达到8800亿元,2011年将突破万亿元大关。从2
党的十八届三中全会通过的《中共中央关于全面深化改革若干重大问题的决定》强调,全面深化改革必须坚持我国改革开放成功实践的重要经验,其中很重要的一条就是:“坚持以人为本,尊重人民主体地位,发挥群众首创精神,紧紧依靠人民推动改革,促进人的全面发展。”全面深化改革
设A为n阶矩阵,满足AAT=E(E为n阶单位阵,AT是A的转置矩阵),丨A丨
Okay.YourememberthatI’vementionedthatit’simportanttoreadthe【B1】______poemsaloud,soyoucandevelopanappreciation
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbooksellerinthecountry,reportedonMay19thatitisnowsellingmorebook
最新回复
(
0
)