翻訳と辞書
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・ Tell Me (White Lion song)
・ Tell Me (Wonder Girls song)
・ Tell Me a Lie
・ Tell Me a Lie (disambiguation)
・ Tell Me a Riddle (film)
・ Tell Me a Story
・ Tell Me About It
・ Tell Me All About Yourself
・ Tell Me Another Morning
・ Tell Me Baby
・ Tell Me Baby (album)
・ Tell Me Do U Wanna
・ Tell Me Everything
・ Tell Me Goodbye
・ Tell Me How Are Ya
Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone
・ Tell Me I Was Dreaming
・ Tell Me I'm Dreaming
・ Tell Me I'm Not Dreamin' (Too Good to Be True)
・ Tell Me I'm Not Dreaming
・ Tell Me I'm Pretty
・ Tell Me If You Still Care
・ Tell Me It's Not Over
・ Tell Me It's Over
・ Tell Me It's Real
・ Tell Me Lies
・ Tell Me More
・ Tell Me My Lying Eyes Are Wrong
・ Tell Me O Kkhuda
・ Tell Me on a Sunday


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Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone : ウィキペディア英語版
Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone

''Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone'' is James Baldwin's fourth novel, first published in 1968.
==Plot==
Leo Proudhammer, an African-American actor who grew up in Harlem and later moved into Greenwich Village, has a heart attack while on stage. This event creates the present tense setting for the novel, which is mostly narrated in retrospect, explaining each relationship with a story from the actor's life.
Barbara, a white woman, and Leo, a black man, are artistic partners for life—sometimes sexual partners, sometimes not. Jerry, their white friend, was Barbara's partner for a while, before Barbara revealed her love for Leo. Their life stories are intertwined, but not joined, due both to the racial pressures of society and Leo's bisexuality. One of Leo's lovers, "Black Christopher", is a significant political and emotional figure in the novel. Christopher's friends are all African-American, and his life centers on the struggle for racial justice. Barbara and Christopher have one sexual encounter, but, like much of the sex in the book, it is exploratory, and only significant for what it reveals to each of them.
Barbara, Leo, and Christopher remain friends throughout the novel. Caleb, Leo's brother, a World War II vet, was falsely imprisoned when he is a young man, and eventually conquers his anger at white society through his conversion to fundamentalist Christianity. He judges Leo harshly for choosing "the world" over "the kingdom of God". Caleb's religion painfully isolates him from Leo. Black Christopher, the foil for Caleb, advocates violent revolution as the means for creating a just society. Leo recovers from his heart attack and returns to the stage at the end of the novel.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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