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报告翻译问题

Becky Ford-Haffner
American Literature
20 November 2017
Concerning The Bluest Eye and Notes from the Underground
Inclusion and acceptance in society is necessary for the human psyche. Some individuals, while still living in and seemingly participating in their community, either seek or are forced into isolation. In Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s Notes from the Underground, the Underground Man, a self-proclaimed man of acute consciousness, has dug himself into a “social underground”, steeping in and examining his nihilism. While in Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, Pecola innocence fails to claw her out of her societal subordination, having been born “ugly”, black, and to a dysfunctional family.
The reason for the footlessness of snakes is that nature does nothing in vain but in every case looks out for the best possible arrangement for each thing, saving its special entity and essence. Besides, as we have said before, no blooded animal can move at more than four points [that is, they can have no more than four feet]. Clearly, those blooded animals that are disproportionately long in relation to the rest of their body, as are snakes, cannot have feet. For they are not the sort to have more than four—then they would be bloodless [such as insects, for instance]—but with two or four feet they would be practically immobile, so slow and useless the movement would have to be.
-Signed xXDarkstormelitematstereliteXx
President of the U.S
So you can build up