Hermits - 6 Minute English

79,718 views ・ 2021-05-20

BBC Learning English


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Hello. This is 6 Minute
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English from BBC Learning
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English. I'm Neil.
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And I'm Rob.
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Do you enjoy your own
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company, Rob? Do you like
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being alone? Or do you
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prefer spending time
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with friends?
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Well, recently I haven't
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seen my friends much
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because of coronavirus - in
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fact, I've hardly seen
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anyone this past year!
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It sounds like Rob has
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become a bit of a hermit -
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someone who lives alone
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and apart from society.
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Yes, I've been forced to
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spend time alone - but it
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wouldn't be my choice.
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I'd much rather be
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socialising and visiting friends.
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If, like Rob, the idea of
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being alone does not
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appeal to you, it might
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be hard to understand
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why anyone would
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choose to be a hermit.
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But some people do - and
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in this programme we'll
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be hearing some of
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the reasons why.
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Throughout history and
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across all cultures, there
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have been people who
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choose to leave behind
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the life and people the
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know to live in isolation
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and silence.
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People like Christopher
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Wright - an American man
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who lived in complete isolation
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in the forests of Maine for
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nearly 30 years! When
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hikers discovered his tent
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all they found was
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an alarm clock. So my
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quiz question is this:
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why did Christopher Wright,
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the hermit of the Maine
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woods, need an
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alarm clock? Was it:
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a) to remind him when
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to hide his tent?, b) to
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frighten away wild animals?,
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or c) to wake him up at
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the coldest part of the
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night so he didn't
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freeze to death?
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Well, if he wanted to
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be alone so much I
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guess he needed to
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be invisible, so I'll
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say a) to remind
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him to hide his tent.
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OK, Rob, we'll find out
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the answer later.
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Christopher Wright
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may be an extreme
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example of someone
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seeking solitude, but
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there are many other
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motivations for
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becoming a hermit.
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Some people are
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looking for peace and
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silence, and for others
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it's about being closer
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to God, focusing on
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what's inside and
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finding a sense of joy.
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Meng Hu is a former
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librarian who now runs
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a website all about
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hermits. He says that
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in ancient times, many
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Chinese hermits seeking
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solitude were followers of
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the philosopher, Confucius.
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Here's Meng Hu talking
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about Confucius to BBC
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World Service programme,
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The Why Factor:
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His dictum was
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something like, 'When
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the Emperor is good,
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serve. When the
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Emperor is evil, recluse'.
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And so over a
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thousand years at least
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there were a lot of
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recluses, a lot of
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educated men who
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simply couldn't
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tolerate any more
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evil - they simply
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dropped out and
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they would migrate
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to small villages,
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to farms.
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Meng Hu mentions
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Confucius's dictum. A
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dictum is a short
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statement or saying
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which expresses some
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wise advice or a
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general truth about life.
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Confucius's dictum
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advised that when
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the Emperor was evil,
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people should become
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recluses - people, like
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hermits, who live alone
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and avoid contact
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with others.
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In the interview,
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Meng Hu uses 'recluse'
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as a verb - to recluse -
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but this is very
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uncommon. A more
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modern way of saying
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this is, to drop out -
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to reject the normal
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ways society works
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and live outside
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the system.
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A bit like the hippies
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in the 1960s, you mean?
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Right. Although most
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hippies weren't looking
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for isolation, they did
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have something in
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common with hermits -
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the desire to challenge
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society's rules
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and conventions.
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Someone who
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combines the hippie
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and the hermit is
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Catholic writer, Sara
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Maitland. Part of a
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long tradition of
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Christian hermits, Sara
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spent forty days and
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nights alone on the Isle
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of Skye, seeking God in
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the silence of the
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remote Scottish island.
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For her, the magic of
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silence is something to
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be embraced and
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taught to children.
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Here she explains
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more to BBC World
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Service's, The Why Factor:
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Most people first
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encounter silence in
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bereavement, in
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relationship breakdown
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and in death and that
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seems to be about
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the worst place to
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start. People say,
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'But what should we do?'
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Never, ever use 'Go to
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your room on your own'
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as a punishment. You
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use it as a reward -
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'Darling, you've been
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so good all day, you've
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been so helpful,
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why don't you go
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to your room for half
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an hour now and
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be on your own?'
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A treat! A reward!
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Sara says that
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most people experience
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silence after a
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bereavement - the
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death of a relative
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or close friend.
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She also thinks
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that parents should
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never tell their children,
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'Go to your room!' as
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a punishment. Instead,
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being alone should be
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a treat - a reward or
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gift of something special
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and enjoyable. That way,
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children learn that
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being alone can
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actually be enjoyable.
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I'm still wondering
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about that American,
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Christopher Wright - I
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suppose living alone
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in the woods was
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a treat for him...
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I suppose so - but
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why did he need
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an alarm clock?
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Ah yes, your quiz
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question, Neil. I
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thought maybe it
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was to remind him
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to hide his tent.
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Was I right?
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Well incredibly,
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Rob, the answer
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was c) to wake him
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up at the coldest
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part of the night
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so he didn't
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freeze to death!
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That's someone
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who really wants to
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be left alone! A
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hermit in other
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words, or a recluse -
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two ways of
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describing people
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who live alone
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and avoid others.
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OK, let's recap the
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rest of the vocabulary,
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starting with dictum -
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a short saying often
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giving wise advice or
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expressing a general
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truth about life.
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People who
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drop out reject
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the normal rules
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of society and live
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outside the system.
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Many people
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experience solitude
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after a bereavement -
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the death of a close
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friend or relative.
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And finally a
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treat is reward
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or gift of something
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special and enjoyable.
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That's all for now,
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but whether you're
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listening alone or
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with others, we
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hope you'll join us
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again soon, here at
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6 Minute English.
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Don't forget - you'll
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find us on our
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website or you can
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download our free app,
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so you won't miss
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And we are on
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Bye bye!
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Bye for now!
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