单项选择题

Carpe Diem, the Latin term for "seize the day", is great advice for everyday living. If you seize the day, everyday, you (67) put your heart on the line and reach for your (68) . Life is meant to be spent actually striving to (69) your dreams. Whether it’s some-thing (70) like getting the courage to ask a girl on a (71) this Saturday, or something big like (72) for a new job, seizing the day allows you to go (73) your heart’s desire. One who stands as a shining (74) of courageous expression is John Keating, the teacher (75) by Robin Williams in Dead Poets Society. In this masterful motion picture, Keating takes a group of uptight and spiritually weak students (76) a rigid boarding school and (77) them to make their lives extraordinary. These young men, as Keating points out to them, have lost (78) of their dreams and ambitions. They are automatically living out their parents’ (79) for them. They plan to become doctors and lawyers (80) that is what their parents have expected. These fellows have given (81) any thought to what their hearts are calling them to express. Mr. Keating (82) photos of earlier graduating classes. "The young men you see had the same fire in their eyes that you do." Keating told the students. "They planned to make something magnificent of their lives." Then Mr. Keating whispers audibly, "Seize the day!" (83) the students do not know what to make of this (84) teacher. But soon they ponder the (85) of his words. They come to respect and revere Mr. Keating, who has given them a new vision -- or returned their (86) ones.

A.influence
B.importance
C.implication
D.indication
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