1.今天你阅读到的有价值的全文容链接
https://www.washingtonpost.com
2.今天你阅读到的有价值的内容段落摘录
WINDSOR, England — There are some things you come to expect from royal weddings: There will almost certainly be fabulously silly British hats, a horse-drawn carriage ride, and global media interest.
One thing you don’t expect: That sermon by the U.S. Bishop Michael Curry.
Curry, the first black leader of the Episcopal Church in the United States, delivered a 14-minute barnstorming address that people in Windsor and beyond were talking about long after Harry and Meghan officially tied the knot on Saturday afternoon.
[‘There’s power in love’: Read the fiery sermon at the royal wedding by the Episcopal Church’s Michael Curry]
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle personally asked Curry to give an address in front of 600 guests at their wedding in St George’s Chapel.
And did he ever. Curry was fiery, enthusiastic, passionate. He spoke in the style of black American preachers. He quoted Martin Luther King Jr.
3.今天你阅读到的有价值信息的自我思考点评感想Markle is a proud, biracial American who has spoken openly about her ethnicity, and her background wasn’t downplayed during the wedding. Sheku Kanneh-Mason, the 19-year-old cellist who played at their wedding, was the first black musician to win the BBC Young Musician of the Year Award. The Kingdom Choir, a Christian gospel group, sang a stirring rendition of “Stand By Me.”
4.昨日你阅读的时间量(小时计算,如0.5小时)1h
5.你参与活动至今的总时间量(小时计算,如20小时)50h