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2013年
04月20日
11:26 つららさん

オバマ大統領のボストン追悼演説(田中先生の注釈をつけました)

  • 英語の話題
  • 英語学習資料
  • その他
You will run again.

4月18日、ボストンの大聖堂で行なわれた追悼式での
オバマ大統領のスピーチです。
難しいけど言いたいことは伝わってきます。
涙が出てきそうな、すばらしいスピーチです。
ぜひ聞いてください。

追記(5/26)
田中先生がオンライン講義でこの演説を取り上げてくださり、
配布資料として注釈がつきましたので転載しました。
講義の詳細はこちらで。
http://w.livedoor.jp/cocone-extra-lessons/d/%c5%c4%c3%e6%...




Remarks by the President at Interfaith Service in Boston, MA
Cathedral of The Holy Cross
Boston, Massachusetts


Hello, Boston!

Scripture tells us to “run with endurance the race that is set before us.”
Run with endurance the race that is set before us.

On Monday morning, the sun rose over Boston.
The sunlight glistened off the Statehouse dome. (*2)
In the Common and the Public Garden, spring was in bloom. (*3)
On this Patriot’s Day, like so many before, fans jumped onto the T to see the Sox at Fenway. (*1) (*4) (*5)
In Hopkinton, runners laced up their shoes and set out on a 26.2-mile test of dedication and grit and the human spirit.
And across this city, hundreds of thousands of Bostonians lined the streets -- to hand the runners cups of water and to cheer them on.

It was a beautiful day to be in Boston -- a day that explains why a poet once wrote that this town is not just a capital, not just a place. Boston, he said, “is the perfect state of grace.” (*6)

(Applause.)

And then, in an instant, the day’s beauty was shattered.
A celebration became a tragedy.
And so we come together to pray, and mourn, and measure our loss. (*7) (*8)
But we also come together today to reclaim that state of grace -- to reaffirm that the spirit of this city is undaunted, and the spirit of this country shall remain undimmed. (*9) (*10) (*11)

To Governor Patrick; Mayor Menino; Cardinal O’Malley and all the faith leaders who are here; Governors Romney, Swift, Weld and Dukakis; members of Congress; and most of all, the people of Boston and the families who’ve lost a piece of your heart. (*12)
We thank you for your leadership.
We thank you for your courage.
We thank you for your grace. (*13)

I’m here today on behalf of the American people with a simple message:
Every one of us has been touched by this attack on your beloved city. (*14)
Every one of us stands with you.  (*15)

Because, after all, it’s our beloved city, too.
Boston may be your hometown, but we claim it, too. (*16)
It’s one of America’s iconic cities.
It’s one of the world’s great cities.
And one of the reasons the world knows Boston so well is that Boston opens its heart to the world.

Over successive generations, you’ve welcomed again and again new arrivals to our shores -- immigrants who constantly reinvigorated this city and this commonwealth and our nation. (*17) (*18) (*19)
Every fall, you welcome students from all across America and all across the globe, and every spring you graduate them back into the world -- a Boston diaspora that excels in every field of human endeavor. (*20)
Year after year, you welcome the greatest talents in the arts and science, research -- you welcome them to your concert halls and your hospitals and your laboratories to exchange ideas and insights that draw this world together.

And every third Monday in April, you welcome people from all around the world to the Hub for friendship and fellowship and healthy competition -- a gathering of men and women of every race and every religion, every shape and every size; a multitude represented by all those flags that flew over the finish line.

So whether folks come here to Boston for just a day, or they stay here for years, they leave with a piece of this town tucked firmly into their hearts. (*21)
So Boston is your hometown, but we claim it a little bit, too.

(Applause.)

I know this because there’s a piece of Boston in me.
You welcomed me as a young law student across the river; welcomed Michelle, too.

(Applause.)

You welcomed me during a convention when I was still a state senator and very few people could pronounce my name right.

(Laughter.)

Like you, Michelle and I have walked these streets.
Like you, we know these neighborhoods.
And like you, in this moment of grief, we join you in saying -- “Boston, you’re my home.”
For millions of us, what happened on Monday is personal.
It’s personal.

Today our prayers are with the Campbell family of Medford.
They're here today.
Their daughter, Krystle, was always smiling.
Those who knew her said that with her red hair and her freckles and her ever-eager willingness to speak her mind, she was beautiful, sometimes she could be a little noisy, and everybody loved her for it.
She would have turned 30 next month.
As her mother said through her tears, “This doesn’t make any sense.”

Our prayers are with the Lu family of China, who sent their daughter, Lingzi, to BU so that she could experience all this city has to offer.
She was a 23-year-old student, far from home. And in the heartache of her family and friends on both sides of a great ocean, we’re reminded of the humanity that we all share.

Our prayers are with the Richard family of Dorchester -- to Denise and their young daughter, Jane, as they fight to recover.
And our hearts are broken for 8-year-old Martin -- with his big smile and bright eyes.
His last hours were as perfect as an 8-year-old boy could hope for -- with his family, eating ice cream at a sporting event.
And we’re left with two enduring images of this little boy -- forever smiling for his beloved Bruins, and forever expressing a wish he made on a blue poster board:
“No more hurting people. Peace.”

No more hurting people.
Peace.

Our prayers are with the injured -— so many wounded, some gravely.
From their beds, some are surely watching us gather here today.
And if you are, know this:
As you begin this long journey of recovery, your city is with you.
Your commonwealth is with you.
Your country is with you.
We will all be with you as you learn to stand and walk and, yes, run again.
Of that I have no doubt.
You will run again.

(Applause.)

You will run again.

(Applause.)

Because that’s what the people of Boston are made of.
Your resolve is the greatest rebuke to whoever committed this heinous act. (*22)
If they sought to intimidate us, to terrorize us, to shake us from those values that Deval described, the values that make us who we are, as Americans -- well, it should be pretty clear by now that they picked the wrong city to do it. (*23)

(Applause.)

Not here in Boston.
Not here in Boston.

(Applause.)

You’ve shown us, Boston, that in the face of evil, Americans will lift up what’s good.
In the face of cruelty, we will choose compassion.
In the face of those who would visit death upon innocents, we will choose to save and to comfort and to heal.
We’ll choose friendship. We’ll choose love.

Scripture teaches us, “God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity, but of power, love, and self-discipline.” (*24)
And that’s the spirit you’ve displayed in recent days.

When doctors and nurses, police and firefighters and EMTs and Guardsmen run towards explosions to treat the wounded -- that’s discipline. (*25)

When exhausted runners, including our troops and veterans -- who never expected to see such carnage on the streets back home -- become first responders themselves, tending to the injured -- that’s real power.

When Bostonians carry victims in their arms, deliver water and blankets, line up to give blood, open their homes to total strangers, give them rides back to reunite with their families -- that’s love.

That’s the message we send to those who carried this out and anyone who would do harm to our people.
Yes, we will find you.
And, yes, you will face justice.

(Applause.)

We will find you.
We will hold you accountable.
But more than that; our fidelity to our way of life -- to our free and open society -- will only grow stronger.
For God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity, but one of power and love and self-discipline.

Like Bill Iffrig, 78 years old -- the runner in the orange tank top who we all saw get knocked down by the blast -- we may be momentarily knocked off our feet, but we’ll pick ourselves up. We’ll keep going. (*26)
We will finish the race.

(Applause.)

In the words of Dick Hoyt, who’s pushed his disabled son, Rick, in 31 Boston Marathons -- “We can’t let something like this stop us.”

(Applause.)

This doesn’t stop us.

(Applause.)

And that’s what you’ve taught us, Boston.
That’s what you’ve reminded us -- to push on.
To persevere.
To not grow weary.
To not get faint.
Even when it hurts.
Even when our heart aches.
We summon the strength that maybe we didn’t even know we had, and we carry on.
We finish the race.

(Applause.)

We finish the race.

(Applause.)

And we do that because of who we are.
And we do that because we know that somewhere around the bend a stranger has a cup of water. (*27)
Around the bend, somebody is there to boost our spirits.
On that toughest mile, just when we think that we’ve hit a wall, someone will be there to cheer us on and pick us up if we fall. (*28)
We know that.

(Applause.)

And that’s what the perpetrators of such senseless violence -- these small, stunted individuals who would destroy instead of build, and think somehow that makes them important -- that’s what they don’t understand. (*29) (*30)
Our faith in each other, our love for each other, our love for country, our common creed that cuts across whatever superficial differences there may be -- that is our power.
That’s our strength.

That’s why a bomb can’t beat us.
That’s why we don’t hunker down. (*31)
That’s why we don’t cower in fear. (*32)
We carry on.
We race.
We strive.
We build, and we work, and we love -- and we raise our kids to do the same.
And we come together to celebrate life, and to walk our cities, and to cheer for our teams. When the Sox and Celtics and Patriots or Bruins are champions again -- to the chagrin of New York and Chicago fans -- (laughter) -- the crowds will gather and watch a parade go down Boylston Street. (*33) (*34) (*35)

(Applause.)

And this time next year, on the third Monday in April, the world will return to this great American city to run harder than ever, and to cheer even louder, for the 118th Boston Marathon.

(Applause.)

Bet on it.

(Applause.)

Tomorrow, the sun will rise over Boston. Tomorrow, the sun will rise over this country that we love.
This special place.
This state of grace.

Scripture tells us to “run with endurance the race that is set before us.”
As we do, may God hold close those who’ve been taken from us too soon.
May He comfort their families.
And may He continue to watch over these United States of America.

(Applause.)

April 18, 2013

---- 田中先生の注釈 ----
https://docs.google.com/file/d/15hW0YzpV-2MjVjdd4ytWPVsPM...

(1) Patriots' Day
   in Massachusetts and Wisconsin
   (and Patriot's Day in Maine) is a civic holiday
   commemorating the anniversary of the Battles of
   Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775.
(2) the State House Dome -- 州議事堂
(3) the commons – ボストンコモンズ(公園)
(4) the T – Boston’s subway system
(5) the Socks at Fenway – フェンウエイ球場でのレッドソックス
(6) The perfect state of grace.
   E.B. White (author of Charlotte’s Web)
     When I am out of funds and sorts
     And life is all in snarls,
     I quit New York and travel east
     To Boston on the Charles.
     In Boston, life is smoother far,
     It’s easier and freer,
     Where every boy’s a Harvard man
     And every man’s a skier.
      <中省略>
     For Boston’s not a capital,
     And Boston’s not a place;
     Rather I feel that Boston is
     The perfect state of grace.
(7) pray and mourn – 祈り、哀悼の意を表す
(8) measure our loss – 失ったものの大きさを知る(量る・測る・計る)
(9) reclaim -- (失ったもの)を取り戻す
(10) undaunted – 憶することのない
(11) undimmed –薄暗くされていない
(12) Cardinal – 枢機卿
(13) grace【名】 〔形や動きなどの〕優雅さ、優美さ
       〔文体などの〕上品さ、美しさ
       〔人の性質や態度の〕品位、礼儀正しさ
       〔人の心の〕寛大さ、優しさ、柔軟性
  《金融》猶予期間◆【同】grace period
  《キリスト教》恩寵、神の愛
  《キリスト教》恩寵を受けていること◆
         罪から解放された状態を指す。(from 『英次郎』)
(14) touch – 触れる、影響を与える、感動させる
(15) stand with: stand with you(ともにいる),
        stand by you(寄り添って立つ),
        stand for you(~側に立つ)
          – He always stands for weak people.
(16) claim – ~であると主張する、(権利や所有)を主張する
(17) over successive generations – 何世代にも亘って
(18) successive – 連続して、継続して、代々の
(19) Commonwealth --コモンウェルスとは、
       アメリカ合衆国を構成する一部の州が、
       その政治的地位を指して用いる表現であり、
       通常、日本語では他の州の state と同じく「州」と訳される。
       (Wikipedia)
(20) diaspora – ディアスポラ (植物の種などの)「撒き散らされたもの」
      という意味のギリシャ語に由来する言葉で、
      元の国家や民族の居住地を離れて暮らす
      国民や民族の集団ないしコミュニティ、
      またはそのように離散すること自体を指す。(Wikipedia)
(21) tucked firmly into their hearts –
      心の中にしっかりと押し込む(しまいこむ)
(22) rebuke – けん責、非難
(23) Deval – Deval Patrick [1956 -- ] 71st Governor of Massachusetts;
     the state’s first African-American governor
(24) Scripture – the sacred writing of the Bible (Holy Script)
(25) EMT – Emergency Medical Technician or Ambulance Technician
     (the politically correct form of ambulance driver)
(26) knock off one’ feet – 驚かす
(27) around the bend – 曲がり角に
(28) hit a wall –壁に突き当たる
(29)perpetrator -- 犯人、加害者 
   関連語:criminal(犯罪者)、
       offender(違反者)、
       felon(重罪人)、
       convict(〔有罪宣告を受けた〕囚人)、culprit(被告人)など)
(30) stunted – 成長しきれていない、発育不全の
(31) hunker down – しゃがみこむ
(32) cower in fear – 恐怖で縮こまる
(33) Celtics – the Boston Celtics (basketball team)
(34) Patriots – the New England Patriots (football team)
(35) Bruins – the Boston Bruins (hockey team)
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2013年
05月08日
23:41
でぃさんさん

You’ve shown us, Boston, that in the face of evil, Americans will lift up what’s good.
In the face of cruelty, we will choose compassion.
ボストンよ、この地は我々に諭してくれる。闇のなかにおかれても、アメリカ人としての気質を忘れさせるなということを。この苦渋を目の前にしても、お互いを思いやる心を忘れるなということを。

In the face of those who would visit death upon innocents, we will choose to save and to comfort and to heal.
罪なき人々に死の影が忍び寄ろうとするならば、その影をはらい、いたわり、傷を癒そうとする心を。

We’ll choose friendship. We’ll choose love.
友愛、そして愛情

Scripture teaches us, “God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity, but of power, love, and self-discipline.”
神は我々に言っている。「恐れ臆病になってはいけない。強い心を備え、愛しむ心を持ち、克己するのだ。」と。

And that’s the spirit you’ve displayed in recent days.
そう、これは、この地ボストンが今改めて、我々に諭してくれた精神なのだ。

2013年
05月09日
21:29
でぃさんさん

When doctors and nurses, police and firefighters and EMTs and Guardsmen run towards explosions to treat the wounded -- that’s discipline.
医師、看護師、警察官、消防士、救命士、州兵、全員が、爆発の中、傷ついた人々を助けに向かった。この精神なのだ。

When exhausted runners, including our troops and veterans -- who never expected to see such carnage on the streets back home -- become first responders themselves, tending to the injured -- that’s real power.
この通りで、帰路に向かっていた者たち、その中には、兵士も兵士であった者もいたが・・・、突然の戦慄 ― 帰路の中、疲弊していたはず体を奮起させ、皆々に声を掛けあい、自らも傷ついた人に肩を貸す。この精神、まさに本当の力。

2013年
05月11日
00:24
でぃさんさん

When Bostonians carry victims in their arms, deliver water and blankets, line up to give blood, open their homes to total strangers, give them rides back to reunite with their families -- that’s love.
ボストンよ、ここの者は傷ついた者を抱きかかえ、水を与え毛布を配り、血を分け与えようとに列をなし、どんな見知らぬ者にも家を開放し、負傷した者を自分の車で家まで送り届ける。

That’s the message we send to those who carried this out and anyone who would do harm to our people.
その精神を持った者に賛美の言葉を送りたい。そして、この惨劇をもたらした者にも聞かせてやろう。

Yes, we will find you.
逃げても無駄だ。

And, yes, you will face justice.
そう、忘れるな、正義の鉄槌が下されることを。

2013年
05月11日
19:19
でぃさんさん

We will find you.
どこにいてもその姿を露わにさせる。

We will hold you accountable.
そして、この代償を払わせる。

But more than that; our fidelity to our way of life -- to our free and open society -- will only grow stronger.
言っておいてやろう、このことで我々はより一つとなったことを、自由のために、開かれた社会のために、そう、我々は、一層強くなるに至ったのだ。

For God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity, but one of power and love and self-discipline.
神の言葉をもう一度借りる、そう、恐れるな、たじろぐな、力を、愛を、そして強い心を、その言葉通りになったのだ。

Like Bill Iffrig, 78 years old -- the runner in the orange tank top who we all saw get knocked down by the blast -- we may be momentarily knocked off our feet, but we’ll pick ourselves up. We’ll keep going.
ビル・イフリン、78歳にして風を切り、その風を感じる装いにして、爆風に打たれた。
その一瞬、身を封じられたにもかかわらず、再び起き上がり、前に進むことを忘れなかった。その姿は我々に諭している。


We will finish the race.
ゴールを目指すのだと。

2013年
05月12日
14:48
でぃさんさん

In the words of Dick Hoyt, who’s pushed his disabled son, Rick, in 31 Boston Marathons -- “We can’t let something like this stop us.”
ディック・ホイット、彼は体の不自由な息子と一緒に、この地で31回を数える風になった。その彼が言う。「何が起ころうと止まるわけにはいかない。」

This doesn’t stop us.
我々を止めることができようか。

And that’s what you’ve taught us, Boston.
ボストンよ、そう、まさにこの地が、我々にそれを諭し続け

That’s what you’ve reminded us -- to push on.
心にそれを留めろと言っている。そうだ、止まることなく、邁進せよと。

To persevere.
やり抜くのだと、

To not grow weary.
倦むことなく

To not get faint.
気を強く持ち、

Even when it hurts.
どれほどに傷を負ったとしても

Even when our heart aches.
そう、心に痛みを抱えながらも、止まることなく、邁進せよと。

We summon the strength that maybe we didn’t even know we had, and we carry on.
我々が持つ力、そしてそれは、かつてないほどまでに漲る。そしてそれを持ち続けることが我々にはできるのだ。

We finish the race.
ゴールはもう目の前だ。

2013年
05月13日
23:51
でぃさんさん

We finish the race.
ゴールを目指すのだ。

And we do that because of who we are.
前に歩む、それが我々の姿なのだ。

And we do that because we know that somewhere around the bend a stranger has a cup of water.
我々の誰しもが、きっとどこかで、いつであっても、だれかれに関係なく、助けの手を差し伸べている。それこそが我々の姿なのだ。

Around the bend, somebody is there to boost our spirits.
いくら時を経たとしても、きっと誰かが我々の精神を称える。

On that toughest mile, just when we think that we’ve hit a wall, someone will be there to cheer us on and pick us up if we fall.
長く険しい道のりのなか、もうこれ以上前に進めない、倒れそうだ、そう思ったとき、心からの声援が届き、我々を奮い立たせてくれる。

We know that.
それこそが我々の姿なのだ。

2013年
05月16日
00:36
でぃさんさん

And that’s what the perpetrators of such senseless violence -- these small, stunted individuals who would destroy instead of build, and think somehow that makes them important -- that’s what they don’t understand.
まさに常軌を逸したこの行為、この行為を行った者は、創造すべくを破壊しながも、自分たちが正しいと考えている。卑小で卑屈で、何も理解していない輩どもよ、

Our faith in each other, our love for each other, our love for country, our common creed that cuts across whatever superficial differences there may be -- that is our power.
That’s our strength.
我々は、常にお互いを信じ、愛し合い、愛国の意を唱え、人を人として敬意を払う教義をもつ勇者、これが我々の力、そう強さだとうことを覚えておけ。

2013年
05月17日
01:09
でぃさんさん

That’s why a bomb can’t beat us.
爆破ぐらいで我々を止めることなんてできない。

That’s why we don’t hunker down.
そんなことで挫ける我々ではない。

That’s why we don’t cower in fear.
立ちすくむような我々ではない。

We carry on.
絶対にやり遂げる。

We race.
前を向き、そして進む

We strive.
戦う気持ちを忘れたことはない。

We build, and we work, and we love -- and we raise our kids to do the same.
常に創造し、労力を惜しまない。人を敬愛する心を忘れない。それを何世代にも渡って伝えてきたのだ。

And we come together to celebrate life, and to walk our cities, and to cheer for our teams.
人生の喜びを分かち合い、佇む町のなか、仲間に声を掛ける。

When the Sox and Celtics and Patriots or Bruins are champions again -- to the chagrin of New York and Chicago fans -- (laughter) -- the crowds will gather and watch a parade go down Boylston Street
レッドソックス、セルティクス、パトリオッツ、ブルーインズが再び凱旋する。ライバルニュヨーカーは悔しがる中シカゴの人は祝杯を挙げる。ボーイルストンストリートでの優勝パレードに皆が歓喜するのだ。

2013年
05月18日
15:35
でぃさんさん

And this time next year, on the third Monday in April, the world will return to this great American city to run harder than ever, and to cheer even louder, for the 118th Boston Marathon.
来年のこの日このとき、4月の第3月曜日、ここボストンは再び世界に名を馳せる。アメリカの偉大な街として。そして、刻苦にも勇往邁進する者へ、一層の激励の声が飛ぶ。118回目の疾風が駆け抜ける。

Bet on it.
ここに誓詞としてこの言葉を残す。

Tomorrow, the sun will rise over Boston. Tomorrow, the sun will rise over this country that we love.
明日という日は必ず来る。ボストンには輝く光が降り注ぐ。その光は我らが愛してやまない祖国、そうこのアメリカ全土に広がる。

This special place.
ボストン、ここは至極の地。

This state of grace.
ボストン、ここは神の寵愛を受けた地

2013年
05月18日
18:38
でぃさんさん

Scripture tells us to “run with endurance the race that is set before us.”
神は、さらに言い給う。「この試練を乗り越え、光に向かって進め。」と。

As we do, may God hold close those who’ve been taken from us too soon.
そうだ、我々は前に進むのだ。突然に引き離された者の悲しみを癒さんと、前に進むのだ。

May He comfort their families.
そして、その家族には、天からの恩恵が舞い降りんことを。

And may He continue to watch over these United States of America.
さらに、この愛国アメリカには、天からの恩寵が舞い降りんことを。

April 18, 2013
2003年4月18日

2013年
05月18日
18:45
でぃさんさん

つららさん

我儘を聞いていただいて、本当にありがとうございました・・。
途中の例文は割愛しましたが、改めてここで、お礼を言わせてください。
つららさん、ありがとう・・・。

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