Betty: This is a photo of the Blues Boys playing in a concert last month. They are really great.
Tom: ?
Betty: Yes, they play really great music. , and the boy in the front is the one who sings. And at the back is the boy who plays the drums. .
Tom: What kind of music?
Betty: Well, if they are called the Blues Boys, and they get everyone dancing.
Tom: .
Betty: You can play the guitar?
Tom: No, I can't. But I'd like to learn!
A. They are really loud B. On the left is the boy who plays the guitar C. I guess they play the blues D.Is this the band which is playing at the school dance E. When I am in a band, I want to play the guitar F. What are they doing G. That's great |
Wherever travellers go, cameras are sure to follow Ir's great fun taking photos, and even more fun showing slides of the trip to friends and relatives when they come back home.
There's Aunt Sarah, smiling in front of Buckingham Palace. under the Eiffel Tower, and in Venice, Everyone knows what Aunt Sarah looks likes they also know what Europe's great landmarks look like.
But a young man named David, just back from a trip to Greece, asked a few friends over to see his slides. The young man had an artist's eye. His picture were not about familiar Greek buildings. Instead he took pictures of farmers at work in the fields, fishermen repairing their nets. and bearded priests (牧师) reading the Bible. He captured (抓住) the colour and character of the country. His friends were so interested that they asked for more.
Any amateur (外行) can do the same. All he needs is a simple camera and a little sensitivity. When he learns that a nation lives in its people as well as in its landmarks, he moves from an amateur to an artist.