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Jim Thorpe, an American Indian, is generally accepted as the greatest all-round athlete of the first half of the 20th century. Yet the man, who brought glory to his nation, had a heartbreaking life. What caused his sadness and poverty?
JIM THORPE
Steve Gelman
The railroad station was jammed. Students from Lafayette College were crowding onto the train platform eagerly awaiting the arrival of the Carlisle Indian school's track and field squad. No one would have believed it a few months earlier. A school that nobody had heard of was suddenly beating big, famous colleges in track meets. Surely these Carlisle athletes would come charging off the train, one after another, like a Marine battalion.
The train finally arrived and two young men — one big and broad, the other small and slight — stepped onto the platform.
"Where's the track team?" a Lafayette student asked.
"This is the team," replied the big fellow.
"Just the two of you?"
"Nope, just me," said the big fellow. "This little guy is the manager."
The Lafayette students shook their heads in wonder. Somebody must be playing a joke on them. If this big fellow was the whole Carlisle track team, he would be competing against an entire Lafayette squad.
He did. He ran sprints, he ran hurdles, he ran distance races. He high-jumped, he broad-jumped. He threw the javelin and the shot. Finishing first in eight events, the big fellow beat the whole Lafayette team.
The big fellow was Jim Thorpe, the greatest American athlete of modern times. He was born on May 28,1888, in a two-room farmhouse near Prague, Oklahoma. His parents were members of the Sac and Fox Indian tribe and he was a direct descendant of the famous warrior chief, Black Hawk.
As a Sac and Fox, Jim had the colorful Indian name Wa-Tho-Huck. Which, translated, means Bright Path. But being born an Indian, his path was not so bright. Although he had the opportunity to hunt and fish with great Indian outdoorsmen, he was denied opportunity in other ways. The United States government controlled the lives of American Indians and, unlike other people, Indians did not automatically become citizens. It was almost impossible for an Indian to gain even a fair education and extremely difficult, as a result, for an Indian to rise high in life.
Young Bright Path seemed destined to spend his life in the Oklahoma farmland. But when he was in his teens, the government gave him the chance to attend the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania. Soon Carlisle was racing along its own bright path to athletic prominence. In whatever sport Jim Thorpe played, he excelled, He was a star in baseball, track and field, wrestling, lacrosse, basketball and football. He was so good in football, in fact, that most other small schools refused to play Carlisle. The Indian school's football schedule soon listed such major powers of the early twentieth century as Pittsburgh, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Penn State and Army.
Thorpe was a halfback. He was six feet one inch tall, weighed 185 pounds and had incredible speed and power. He built upon these natural gifts daily. He would watch a coach or player demonstrate a difficult maneuver, then he would try it himself. Inevitably, he would master the maneuver within minutes.
During every game, opponents piled on Thorpe, trampled him, kicked him and punched him, trying to put him out of action. They were never successful. Years later someone asked him if he had ever been hurt on the field. "Hurt?" Thorpe said. "How could anyone get hurt playing football?"
But Jim never played his best when he felt he would have to no fun playing. "What's the fun of playing in the rain?" he once said. And his Carlisle coach, Pop Warner, once said, "There's no doubt that Jim had more talent than anybody who ever played football, but you could never tell when he felt like giving his best."
Football, though, did not provide Thorpe with his finest hour. He was selected for the United States Olympic track team in 1912, and went to Sweden with the team for the Games. On the ship, while the other athletes limbered up, Thorpe slept in his bunk. In Sweden, while other athletes trained, Thorpe relaxed in a hammock. He never strained when he didn't feel it necessary.
Thorpe came out of his hammock when the Games began, to take part in the two most demanding Olympic events. He entered the pentathlon competition, a test of skill in five events: 200-meter run, 1500-meter run, broad jump, discus and javelin; and the decathlon competition, a series of ten events: 100-meter run, 400-meter run, 1500-meter run, high hurdles, broad jump, high jump, pole vault, discus, javelin and shot put. Though most athletes were utterly exhausted by the decathlon alone, Thorpe breezed through both events, his dark hair flopping, his smile flashing, his muscled body gliding along the track. He finished first in both the pentathlon and decathlon, one of the great feats in Olympic history.
"You sir," King Gustav V of Sweden told Thorpe as he presented him with two gold medals, "are the greatest athlete in the world." And William Howard Taft, the President of the United States, said, "Jim Thorpe is the highest type of citizen."
King Gustav V was correct, but President Taft was not. Though Jim Thorpe had brought great glory to his nation, though thousands of people cheered him upon his return to the United States and attended banquets and a New York parade in his honor, he was not a citizen. He did not become one until 1916. Even then, it took a special government ruling because he was an Indian.
Jim Thorpe was a hero after the Olympics and a sad, bewildered man not too much later. Someone discovered that two years before the Olympics he had been paid a few dollars to play semiprofessional baseball. Though many amateur athletes had played for pay under false names, Thorpe had used his own name. As a result, he was not technically an amateur when he competed at Stockholm as all Olympic athletes must be. His Olympic medals and trophies were taken away from him and given to the runners-up.
After this heartbreaking experience, Thorpe turned to professional sports. He played major league baseball for six years and did fairly well. Then he played professional football for six years with spectacular success. His last professional football season was in 1926. After that, his youthful indifference to studies and his unwillingness to think of a nonsports career caught up with him. He had trouble finding a job, and his friends deserted him. He periodically asked for, but never was given back, his Olympic prizes. From 1926 until his death in 1953, he lived a poor, lonely, unhappy life.
But in 1950 the Associated Press held a poll to determine the outstanding athlete of the half-century. Despite his loss of the Olympic gold medals and a sad decline in fortune during his later years, Thorpe was almost unanimously chosen the greatest athlete of modern times.
New Words
jam
v. fill or block up (the way) by crowding; (cause to ) be packed, pressed, or crushed tightly into a small space 堵塞;(使)塞滿
platform
n. a raised flat surface built along the side of the track at a railway station for travellers getting on or off a train 月臺(tái)
await
vt. wait for; look forward to
track
n. a course for running or racing; track-and-field sports, esp. those performed on a running track 跑道;徑賽運(yùn)動(dòng);田徑運(yùn)動(dòng)
field
n. an area, esp. circled by a track where contests such as in jumping or throwing are held; the sports contested in this area 田賽場(chǎng)地;田賽運(yùn)動(dòng)
squad
n. a small group of persons working, training, or acting together; the smallest military unit, usually made up of eleven men and a squad leader 小隊(duì);班
charge
vi rush in or as if in an attack 向前沖;沖鋒
Marine
n. a member of the U.S. Marine Corps (美國(guó))海軍陸戰(zhàn)隊(duì)士兵或軍官
battalion
n. military unit made up of several companies 營(yíng)
broad
a. wide, large across 寬的,廣闊的
nope
ad. (AmE sl.) no
compete
vi. take part in a race, contest, etc.' try to win sth. in competition with sb. else 比賽;競(jìng)爭(zhēng)
sprint
n. short race; dash 短跑
vi. run at one's fastest speed, esp. for a short distance
hurdle
n. a light frame for people or horses to jump over in a race 欄;跳欄
broad(-) jump
n.& vi. (AmE) (do) a long jump 跳遠(yuǎn)
javelin
n. light spear for throwing (usu. in sport) 標(biāo)槍
shot
n. the heavy metal ball used in the shot put 鉛球
tribe
n. 部落
descendant
n. a person descended from another or from a common stock 子孫;后裔
warrior
n. a man who fights for his tribe; a soldier or experienced fighter 斗士,勇士;(老)戰(zhàn)士
colorful
a. full of color; exciting the senses or imagination 艷麗的;豐富多彩的
hunt
v. go after (wild animals) for food or sport; search (for) 追獵,打獵;搜尋
outdoorsman
n. a man, such as a hunter, fisherman, or camper, who spends much time outdoors for pleasure
deny
vt. say that (sth.) is not true; refuse to give 否認(rèn);拒絕給予
destine
vt. (usu. passive) intend or decide by fate; intend for some special purpose 命中注定;預(yù)定
farmland
n. land used or suitable for farming 農(nóng)田
teens
n. the period of one's life between and including the ages of 13 and 19
prominence
n. the quality or fact of being prominent or distinguished 凹出;杰出
prominent a.
excel
vi. be very good (in or at sth) 突出,超常
wrestling
n. a sport or contest in which each of two opponents tries to throw or force the other to the ground 摔跤(運(yùn)動(dòng))
wrestle v.
lacrosse
n. 長(zhǎng)曲棍球(運(yùn)動(dòng))
football
n. 橄欖球(運(yùn)動(dòng))
power
n. a person, group or nation that has authority or influence 握有大權(quán)的人物;有影響的機(jī)構(gòu);強(qiáng)國(guó)
halfback
n. (橄欖球、足球等)前衛(wèi)
incredible
a. too extraordinary to be believed, unbelievable 難以置信的
coach
n. a person who trains sportsmen for games, competitions, etc. 教練
demonstrate
vt. explain by carrying out experiments or by showing examples 用實(shí)驗(yàn)或?qū)嵗f(shuō)明;演示
maneuver
n. a skillful move or trick, intended to deceive, to gain sth., to escape, or to do sth. 機(jī)動(dòng)動(dòng)作;策略;花招
opponent
n. a person who is on the other side in a fight, game, or discussion 對(duì)手;反對(duì)者
trample
vt. step heavily with the feet on; crush under the feet 踩;踐踏
punch
vt. strike (sb. or sth.) hard with the fist 用拳猛擊
Olympic
a. of or connected with the Olympic Games
limber
v. make or become flexible (使)變得柔軟靈活
bunk
n. a narrow bed fixed on the wall, e.g. of a cabin in a ship or in a train 床鋪,鋪位
hammock
n. a hanging bed of canvas or rope network, e.g. as used by sailors, or in gardens (帆布或網(wǎng)狀)吊床
strain
vi. make violent efforts; strive hard 盡力,使勁
demanding
a. making severe demands 要求高的;苛求的
pentathlon
n. an athletic contest in which each contestant takes part in five events 五項(xiàng)運(yùn)動(dòng)
competition
n. competing; contest; match
discus
n. a heavy, circular plate of rubber, plastic or wood with a metal rim 鐵餅
decathlon
n. an athletic contest consisting of ten events 十項(xiàng)運(yùn)動(dòng)
shot put
n. a competition to throw a heavy metal ball the furthest distance 推鉛球
utterly
ad. completely; totally
utter a.
breeze
vi. move or go quickly and in a carelessly confident way 輕快地行動(dòng)
flop
vi. move or bounce loosely 撲動(dòng)
flash
vi. give out sudden, brief light or flame; shine or gleam 閃光;閃爍
glide
vi. move in a smooth continuous manner which seems easy and without effort 滑動(dòng),滑行
feat
n. an act showing great skill, strength, or daring; a remarkable deed, notable esp. for courage 武功;技藝;功績(jī)
glory
n. high fame and honour won by great achievements; sth. deserving respect and honour 光榮,榮譽(yù);榮譽(yù)的事
banquet
n. a dinner for many people, at which speeches are made, in honour of a special person or occasion 宴會(huì)
ruling
n. an official decision 裁決
Olympic
n. Olympic Games 奧林匹克運(yùn)動(dòng)會(huì)
professional
a. done by, played by, or made up of people who are paid 職業(yè)的
n. a person who lives on the money he earns by practising a particular skill or sport 以特定職業(yè)謀生的人
amateur
n. a person playing a game, taking part in sports, etc. without receiving payment 業(yè)余愛(ài)好者
a. of, by, or with amateurs; not paid lacking skill 業(yè)余的
technically
ad. in technical terms; in a technical sense; according to fixed rules 技術(shù)上;按規(guī)則
trophy
n. a prize given for winning a race, competition, or test of skill 獎(jiǎng)品
runner-up
n. a player or team that comes second in a contest 亞軍
heartbreaking
a. causing great sorrow or grief; extremely distressing 令人心碎的
league
n. a group of sports clubs or teams that play matches among themselves 聯(lián)賽協(xié)會(huì)
spectacular
a. strikingly grand or unusual 壯觀的;驚人的
season
n. the period of time during which a sport is played 賽季
youthful
a. young; having the qualities of young people
indifference
n. absence of interest or feeling 不關(guān)心,冷漠
indifferent a.
periodically
ad. at regular intervals, every now and then
outstanding
a. much better than most others; very good 杰出的
despite
prep. in spite of
decline
n. losing of power, strength, wealth, or beauty; falling to a lower level 衰落;下降
unanimously
a. with complete agreement; without a single opposing vote 一致地;無(wú)異議地區(qū)性
Phrase & Expressions
track and field
the sport or athletic events, such as running, jumping and weight throwing performed on a running track and on the adjacent field 田徑運(yùn)動(dòng)
play a joke on sb.
do sth. to make other people laugh at someone 同某人開(kāi)玩笑
put……out of action
stop……working, make……unfit for a typical activity 使停止工作;使不再起作用;使失去戰(zhàn)斗力
limber up
make the muscles stretch easily by exercise, esp. before violent exercise (比賽等前)做準(zhǔn)備活動(dòng)
take part in
have a share or part in; join in 參加
breeze through
proceed with effortlessly in a carefree manner 輕而易舉地完成
in one's hono(u)r/in
向……表示敬意;為慶祝……;為紀(jì)念……
hono(u)r of
catch up with
have the expected ill effect or result on 對(duì)……產(chǎn)生預(yù)期惡果
Proper Names
Thorpe
索普
Lafayette College
拉斐德學(xué)院
Carlisle Indian School
卡爾印第安人學(xué)校
Prague
布拉格(文中指美國(guó)地名)
Oklaboma
俄國(guó)拉何馬(美國(guó)州名)
Sac and Fox
印第安人部落之一
Black Hawk
黑隼(印第安人首領(lǐng)名)
pennsylvania
賓夕法尼亞(美國(guó)州名)
Pittsburgh
匹茲堡(美國(guó)城市)
Penn
(short for) Pennsylvania
Pop Warner
波伯.沃納
Sweden
瑞典
Gustav V
古斯塔夫五世
William Howard Taft
威謙.霍華德.塔夫脫
Stockholm
斯德哥爾摩(瑞典首都)
the Associated Press
聯(lián)合通訊(簡(jiǎn)稱美聯(lián)社)(美國(guó)通訊社名)