Ever since the purple sails of Ph?nicia first flaunted15 along its coasts the history of Tripolitania has been one [Pg 81] of invasion and conquest. In the very dawn of history the galleys of Greece dropped anchor off this shore, in the belief that it was the Garden of the Hesperides, and the vestiges16 of their colony of Cyrenaica lure17 the arch?ologists to-day. The Greeks, who, because of its three leagued cities of O?a, Sabrata, and Leptis, named their new possession Tripolis, just as Decapolis signified the region of ten cities and Pentapolis of five, retreated before Carthage's colonial expansion, and the Carthaginians gave way in turn to the conquering Romans, who included the captured territory within their province of Africa and called it Regio Tripolitana—whence the name it bears to-day. Christianity was scarcely four centuries old when the hordes19 of fierce-faced, skin-clad Vandals, sweeping20 down from their Germanic forests, burst into Gaul, poured through the passes of the Pyrenees, overran Spain, and, crossing the Strait of Gibraltar, carried fire and sword and torture from end to end of the Mediterranean. Before another century had rolled around, however, Belisarius, the great captain of Byzantium, had broken the Vandal power forever, and the troubled land of Tripolitania once again came under the shadow of the cross. Then the wave of Arab conquest came, rolling across North Africa, breaking upon the coasts of Spain, and not subsiding21 until it reached the marches of France, supplanting22 the feeble Christianity of the natives of all this region with the vigorous and fanatical faith of Islam. Though Ferdinand the Catholic, not content with expelling the Moors24 from Spain, continued his crusade [Pg 82] against the infidel by capturing the Tripolitan capital, the Knights26 of Saint John, to whom he turned the city over, surrendered to the beleaguering27 Turks just as the sixteenth century had reached its turning-point, and Turkish it has remained, at least in name, ever since.
We of the West can never be wholly indifferent to the fate and fortunes of this much-harassed land, for our flag has fluttered from its ramparts and the bayonets of our soldiers and the cutlasses of our sailors have served to write some of the most stirring chapters of its history. So feeble and nominal29 did the Turkish rule become that the beginning of the last century found Tripolitania little more than a pirate stronghold, ruled by a pasha who had not only successfully defied, but had actually levied30 systematic31 tribute upon, every sea-faring nation in the world. It was not, however, until the Pasha of Tripoli overstepped the bounds of our national complaisance32 by demanding an increase in the annual tribute of eighty-odd thousand dollars which the United States had been paying as the price of its maritime33 exemption34 that the American consul35 handed him an ultimatum36 and an American war-ship backed it up with the menace of its guns. Standing37 forth38 in picturesque39 and striking relief from the tedium40 of the four years' war which ensued was the capture by the Tripolitans in 1803 of the frigate41 Philadelphia, which had run aground in the harbour of Tripoli, and the enslavement of her crew; her subsequent recapture and destruction by a handful of blue-jackets under the intrepid42 [Pg 83] Decatur; and the heroic march across the desert to Derna of General William Eaton and his motley army.
Eaton's exploit, like that of Reid and the General Armstrong at Fayal, seems to have been all but lost in the mazes43 of our national history. With the object of placing upon the Tripolitan throne the reigning45 Pasha's exiled elder brother, who had agreed to satisfy all the demands of the United States, William Eaton, soldier of fortune, frontiersman, and former American consul at Tunis, recruited at Alexandria what was thought to be a ridiculously insufficient46 expeditionary force for the taking of Derna, a strongly fortified47 coast town six hundred miles due west across the Libyan desert. With a handful of adventurous48 Americans, some two-score Greeks, who fought the Turk whenever opportunity offered, and a few squadrons of Arab mercenaries—less than five hundred men in all—he set out under the blazing sun of an African spring. Though his Arabs mutinied, his food and water gave out, and his animals died from starvation and exhaustion49, Eaton pushed indomitably on, covering the six hundred miles of burning sand in fifty days, carrying the city by storm, and raising the American flag over its citadel—the first and only time it has ever floated over a fortification on that side of the Atlantic.
A territory larger than all the Atlantic States, from Florida to Maine, put together; a dry climate as hot in summer and as cold in winter as that of New Mexico; a surface which varies between the aridity50 of the Staked [Pg 84] Plains and the fertility of the San Joaquin Valley of California; so sparsely52 populated that its fanatic23, turbulent, poverty-stricken population averages but two inhabitants to the square mile—that is Tripolitania. Bounded on the west by Tunisia and the French and on the east by Egypt and the English, the hinterland of the regency stretches into the Sahara as far as the Tropic of Cancer. Its eleven hundred miles of coast-line set squarely in the middle of the north African littoral53; its capital almost equidistant from the Straits, the Dardanelles, and the Suez Canal; and half the great ports of the Mediterranean not twelve hours' steam away, the strategical, political, and commercial position of Tripolitania is one of great importance.
Tripolitania, as the regency should properly be called, or Libya, as the Italians have classically renamed it, consists of four more or less distinctly defined divisions: Tripoli, Fezzan, Benghazi, and the Saharan oases54. Under the Turkish régime the districts of Tripoli and Fezzan have formed a vilayet under a vali, or governor-general; Benghazi has been a separately administered province under a mutes-sarif directly responsible to Constantinople, while the oases have not been governed at all. The district of Tripoli, which occupies the entire northwestern portion of the regency, is for the most part an interminable stony55 table-land, riverless, waterless, and uninhabited save along the fertile coast. The stretches of yellow sand which the traveller sees from the deck of his ship are not, as he fondly imagines, the edge of the Sahara, but merely [Pg 85] sand dunes56 blown in by the sea, such as may be seen elsewhere on the Mediterranean coast.
Sloping from these coastal57 sand dunes up to the barren interior plateau is a zone, averaging perhaps five miles in width, of an altogether remarkable58 fertility, for its deep ravines, filled with considerable streams during the winter rains, continue to send down a supply of subterranean59 water even during the dry season. By means of countless60 wells, round and round which blindfolded61 donkeys and oxen plod62 ceaselessly, the water is drawn63 up into reservoirs and conducted thence to the fields. In this coast oasis64 it is harvest-time all the year round, for, notwithstanding the primitive65 agricultural implements66 of the natives and their crude system of irrigation, the soil is amazingly productive. From April to June almonds, apricots, and corn are gathered in; in July and August come the peaches; from July to September is the vintage season, and the Tripolitan grapes vie with those of Sicily; from July to September the black tents of the nomad67 date and olive pickers dot the fields, though the yellow date of the coast is not to be spoken of in the same breath with the luscious68, mahogany-coloured fruit of the interior oases; from November to April the orange groves69 are ablaze70 with a fruit which rivals that of Jaffa; the early spring sees the shipment of those “Malta potatoes” which are quoted on the menus of every fashionable hostelry and restaurant in Europe; while lemons are to be had for the picking at almost any season of the year.
Southward into the Sahara from the southern borders of Tripoli stretches the province of Fezzan, its inaccessibility71, its prevalent malaria72, and its deadly heat having popularised it with Abdul-Hamid, of unsavoury memory, as a place of exile for disgraced courtiers and overpopular officials, presumably because of the exceeding improbability of any of them ever coming back. Artesian wells and scientific farming have proved in other and equally discouraging quarters of Africa, however, that the words “desert” and “worthless” are no longer synonymous, so there is no reason to believe that the agricultural miracles which France has performed in Algeria and Tunisia on the one hand, and England in Egypt and the Sudan on the other, could not be successfully attempted by the Italians in Fezzan. Arid51 and inhospitable as this region appears to-day, it should be remembered that its Greek and Roman colonists74 boasted of it as “the granary of Europe.” What has been done once may well be done again. All that this soil needs, after its centuries of impoverishment75 and neglect, is decent treatment, and any one who has seen those vineyards on the slopes of Capri and those farmsteads clinging to the rocky hill-sides of Calabria, where soil of any kind is so precious that every inch is tended with pathetic care, will predict a promising76 agricultural future for an Italian Tripolitania. In its physical aspects, northern Tripolitania resembles Europe much more than it does Africa; its climate is no warmer than southern Italy in summer and not nearly as unhealthy as the Campagna [Pg 87] Romana; while its soil, as I have already remarked, holds great possibilities for patient, hardy77, frugal78, industrious79 agriculturists of the type of those twenty thousand Sicilians who are forced by poverty to emigrate each year to America or the Argentine. Keeping these facts in mind, one does not have to seek far for the causes which underlay80 Italy's sudden aggression81.
SUNRISE ON THE GREAT SANDS.
For sheer majesty82 and grandeur83, the only thing that is at all comparable with a Saharan sunrise is daybreak in the Grand Ca?on of the Colorado.
Reaching Egyptward in the form of a mighty85 fist is the peninsula of Barka, the Cyrenaica of the ancients, officially known as the Mutessariflik of Benghazi, its many natural advantages of climate, soil, and vegetation making it the most favoured region in the regency, if not, indeed, in all North Africa. While the climate and vegetation of southern Tripoli and of Fezzan are distinctly Saharan, the date-palm being the characteristic tree, Benghazi is just as decidedly Mediterranean, its fertile, verdure-clad uplands being covered with groves of oak, cypress87, olive, fig88, and pine. Though well supplied with rain and, as I have said, extremely fertile, the Benghazi province, once the richest of the Greek colonies, is now but scantily89 populated. Scattered90 along its coasts are Benghazi, the capital, with an inextricably mixed population and one of the worst harbours in the world; Tobruk, which, because of its excellent roadstead and its proximity91 to the Egyptian frontier and the Canal, Germany has long had a covetous92 eye on; and the insignificant93 ports of Derna and Khoms, the lawless highlands of the interior being occupied by hordes of warlike and nomadic94 Arabs [Pg 88] who acknowledge no authority other than their tribal95 sheikhs.
South by east into the Libyan Desert straggle the Aujila and Kufra chains of oases, marking the course of the historic caravan96 route to Upper Egypt and presenting the aspect of a long, winding97 valley, extending from the Benghazi plateau almost to the banks of the Nile. Underground reservoirs lie so near the surface of the desert that all of these sand-surrounded islands have water in abundance, that of Jof, for example, supporting over a million date-palms and several thousand people, together with their camels, horses, and goats.
Such, in brief, bold outline, are the more salient characteristics—climatic, agricultural, and geographical—of the region which Italy has seized. Everything considered, it was not such a long look ahead that the Italian statesmen took when they decided86 to play their cards for such a stake. Though neither soil nor climate has changed since the days of Tripolitania's ancient prosperity, centuries of wretched and corrupt99 Turkish rule, with its system of absentee landlords and irresponsible officials, has reduced the peasantry to the same state of dull and despairing apathy100 in which the Egyptian fellaheen were before the English came. If Tripolitania is to be redeemed101, and I firmly believe that it will be, the work of regeneration cannot be done by government railways and subsidised steam-ship lines and regiments102 of brass103-bound officials, but by patient, painstaking104, plodding105 men with artesian-well drilling machines and steam-ploughs and barrels of fertiliser. It [Pg 89] may well be, as the Italian expansionists enthusiastically declare, that Tripolitania constitutes a “New Italy” lying at the very ports of old Italy, but it is going to take many, many millions of lire and much hard work to make it worth the having.
To those unaccustomed to the sights and sounds and smells of the East, a visit to the town of Tripoli is more interesting than enjoyable. Both its harbour and its hostelry are so incredibly bad that no one ever visits them a second time if he can possibly help it. The harbour of Jaffa, in Palestine, is a trifle worse, if anything, than that of Tripoli; but the only hotel I know of which deserves to be classed with the Albergo Minerva in Tripoli is the one next door to the native jail in Aden. Picture a cluster of square, squat107, stuccoed houses, their tedious sky-lines broken by the minarets108 of mosques109 and the flagstaffs of foreign consulates110, facing on a crescent-shaped bay. Under the sun of an African summer the white buildings of the town blaze like the whitewashed111 base of a railway-station stove at white heat; the stretch of yellow beach which separates the harbour from the town glows fiery112 as brass; while the waters of the bay look exactly as though they had been blued in readiness for the family washing. Within the crumbling113 ramparts of the town is a network of dim alleys10 and byways, along which the yashmaked Moslem114 women flit like ghosts, and vaulted115, trellis-roofed bazaars116 where traders of two-score nationalities haggle117 and gesticulate and doze118 and pray and chatter119 the while they and their wares120 and the passing camels [Pg 90] smell to heaven. Scattered here and there among the shops are native bakeries, in the reeking121 interiors of which, after your eyes become accustomed to the darkness, you can discern patient camels plodding round and round and round, grinding the grain in true Eastern fashion between the upper and the nether122 millstones.
Follow the narrow Strada della Marina past the custom-house, where the Italian sentry123 peers at you suspiciously from beneath the bunch of cock's feathers which adorns124 his helmet; past the odorous fish-market and so into the unpaved, unlighted, foul-smelling quarter of the Jews, and your path will be blocked eventually by the sole remaining relic125 of Tripoli's one-time greatness, the marble arch of triumph erected126 by the Romans in the reign44 of Antoninus Pius, now half-buried in débris, its chiselled127 boasts of victory mutilated, and its arches ruthlessly plastered up, the shop of a dealer128 in dried fish. In that defaced and degraded memorial is typified the latter-day history of Tripolitania. Before the Italian occupation disrupted the commerce of the country and isolated129 Tripoli from the interior, by long odds130 the most interesting of the city's sights were the markets, which were held upon the beach on the arrival of the trans-Saharan caravans131, for they afforded the foreigner fleeting132 but characteristic glimpses, as though on a moving-picture screen, of those strange and savage133 peoples—Berbers, Hausas, Tuaregs, Tubbas, and Wadaians—who are retreating farther and farther into the recesses134 of the continent before the white man's implacable advance.
All down the ages Tripoli has been the gateway135 through which weapons, cutlery, and cotton have entered, and slaves, ostrich136 feathers, and ivory have come out of inner Africa by plodding caravan. Since the sons of Ham first found their way across the wilderness137 of Shur, this region has been the terminus of three historic trade routes. The first of these runs due south across the desert to Lake Tchad and the great native states of Kanem, Sokoto, Bagirmi, and Wadai; the second follows a southwesterly course across the Sahara to the Great Bend of the Niger and the storied city of Timbuktu; while the third, going south by east, long carried British cottons and German jack-knives to the natives of Darfur and the Sudan. Is it any wonder, then, that, fired by the speeches of the expansionists in the Roman senate, all Italy should dream of a day when the red-white-and-green banner should float over this gateway to Africa and endless lines of dust-coloured camels, laden with glass beads138 from Venice and cotton goods from Milan, should go rolling southward to those countries which lie beyond the great sands? But, lost in the fascination139 of their dream, the Italians forgot one thing: modern commerce cannot go on the back of a camel. No longer may Tripolitania be reckoned the front door, or even the side door, to central Africa. As the result of French and British encroachment140 and enterprise, not only has nearly all of the Tripolitanian hinterland been absorbed by one or the other of these powers, but, what is of far more commercial importance, they have succeeded in diverting the large and important [Pg 92] caravan trade of which the Italians dreamed, and which for centuries has found its way to the sea through Tripoli, to their own ports on the Nile, the Senegal, and the Niger, leaving to Tripolitania Italiana nothing but its possibilities as an agricultural land.
The statesmen who planned, and the soldiers and sailors who executed, the seizure141 of Tripolitania, were obeying a voice from the grave. Though the overwhelming disaster to the Italians at Adowa in 1896, when their army of invasion was wiped out by Menelik's Abyssinian tribesmen, caused the political downfall of Crispi, the greatest Italian of his time, his dream of Italian colonial expansion, like John Brown's soul, went marching on. With the vision of a prophet that great statesman saw that the day was not far distant when the steady increase in Italy's population and production would compel her to acquire a colonial market oversea. Crispi lies mouldering142 in his grave, but the Italian Government, in pursuance of the policy which he inaugurated, has been surreptitiously at work in Tripolitania these dozen years or more.
Never has that forerunner143 to annexation144 known as “pacific penetration145” been more subtly or more systematically146 conducted. Even the Pope lent the government's policy of African aggrandisement his sanction, for is not the Moslem the hereditary147 foe148 of the church, and does not the cross follow close in the wake of Christian18 bayonets? Italian convents and monasteries149 dot the Tripolitanian littoral, while cowled and sandalled missionaries150 from the innumerable Italian [Pg 93] orders have carried the gospel, and the propaganda of Italian annexation, to the oppressed and poverty-stricken peasantry of the far interior. Under the guise151 of scientists, Italian political and commercial agents have been quietly investigating the problems and possibilities of the regency from end to end, while the powerful Banco di Roma, an institution backed with the funds of the Holy See, through its branches in Tripoli and Benghazi, has been systematically buying up arable84 farm-lands from the impoverished152 peasantry at a few lire the hectare, which quadrupled in value with the landing of the first Italian soldier.
Though prior to the war there were probably not two thousand native-born Italians in the whole of Tripolitania, the numerous Jews, in whose hands was practically the entire trade of the country, were offered inducements of one kind and another to become Italian subjects, Italy thus laying a foundation for her claims to predominating interests in that region. On the pretext153 that the Turkish authorities had tampered154 with the foreign mail-bags, Italy demanded and obtained permission to establish her own post-offices at the principal ports, so that for many years past the anomalous155 spectacle has been presented, just as in other portions of the Turkish Empire, of letters from a Turkish colony being franked with surcharged Italian stamps. The most ingenious stroke, however, was the establishment of numerous Italian schools—and very good schools they are—where the young idea, whether Arab, Maltese, or Jew, has been taught to shoot—along Italian lines.
To those really conversant156 with the situation, Italy's pretexts157 that the activities of her subjects resident in Tripolitania had been interfered158 with and their lives and interests seriously endangered sound somewhat hollow. To tell the truth, Italians have had a freer rein159 in the regency—and, incidentally, have caused more trouble—than any other people. Italy's real reasons for the seizure of Tripolitania were two, and only two: first, she wanted it; and second, she could get it.
Now that she has Tripolitania in her grasp, however, her task is but begun, for setting forward the hands of progress by occupation of Moslem territory has ever been a perilous160 proceeding161. Though France shouldered the white man's burden in Algeria with alacrity162, she paid for the privilege with just forty years of fighting; it took England, with all the resources of her colonial experience and her colonial army, sixteen years to conquer the ill-armed Arabs of the Sudan, while the desperate resistance of the Mad Mullah and his fanatic tribesmen has compelled her practically to evacuate163 Somaliland; overthrown164 ministries165, depleted166 war-chests, and thousands of unmarked graves in the hinterland bear witness to the deep solicitude167 displayed for the cause of civilisation168 in Morocco by both France and Spain; Russia spent a quarter of a century and the lives of ten thousand soldiers in forcing her beneficent rule on the Moslems of Turkestan. Italy will be more fortunate than her colonising neighbours, therefore, if she emerges unscathed from her present Tripolitanian adventure, [Pg 95] for every page of the history of latter-day colonisation proves that seizure of Moslem territory never ends with a naval169 demonstration170, a landing party, a staff with a descending171 and an ascending172 flag, and the flash and thunder of a national salute173.
When Italy pointed174 the noses of her transports Tripoliward she committed the incredible blunder of underestimating for a second time the resistance that she would encounter. She made just such a mistake some years ago in Abyssinia, and the plain of Adowa is still sprinkled with the bleaching175 bones of her annihilated176 army. The Italian agents in Tripolitania had assured their government that, as a result of Turkish oppression, corruption177, and overtaxation, the Turks were heartily178 disliked by the Tripolitanians—all of which was perfectly179 true. But when they went on to say that the Tripolitanians would welcome the expulsion of the Turks and the substitution of an Italian régime, they overshot the mark. In other words, the Tripolitanians much preferred to be ill-treated by the Turks, who are their coreligionists, than to be well-treated by the Italians, who are despised unbelievers. The Italians, having had no previous experience with Moslem peoples, landed at Tripoli with every expectation of being welcomed as saviours180 by the native population. It is quite true that the natives gave the Italians an exceedingly warm reception—with rifles and machine guns. Here, then, were some sixty thousand Italian soldiers, who had anticipated about as much trouble in taking Tripolitania as we should in taking Hayti, instead [Pg 96] of being permitted to play the jaunty182 and picturesque r?les of deliverers from oppression, being forced to battle desperately183 for their lives against the very people whom they had come to save and civilise. It was a graphic98 instance of the workings of Mohammedanism. How Kitchener and Cromer, those two grim men who have had more experience than any other Europeans in fighting and governing Mohammedans, must have smiled to themselves when they read the Italian statements that the taking of Tripolitania meant only a campaign of a fortnight.
To comprehend thoroughly184 the peculiar185 situation in which Italy finds herself, you should understand that the portly, sleepy-eyed, good-natured old gentleman who theoretically rules Turkey under the title of Mohammed V is, politically speaking, as much a dual186 personality as Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde. As Sultan of Turkey, or, to give him his proper title, Emperor of the Ottomans, he is the nominal ruler of some twenty-four millions of divided, discontented, and disgruntled Turkish subjects—Osmanlis, Arabs, Syrians, Armenians, Circassians, Bulgars, Greeks, Jews—and in that capacity plays no great part in ordering the affairs of the world. But Mohammed V is more than Sultan of Turkey: he is likewise Successor of the Prophet, Commander of the Faithful, and Caliph of all Islam, and as such is the spiritual and temporal leader of the two hundred and twenty millions who compose the Moslem world. Nor is there any way of disassociating the two offices. In making war on the Sultan of Turkey, therefore, [Pg 97] Italy automatically made war on the chief of all Mohammedans, thus shaking her fist in the face not alone of a nation but of a religion—and the most militant187 and fanatical of all religions at that. There is not a wearer of turban or tarboosh between the Gold Coast and the China coast, be he Hausa, Tuareg, Berber, Moor25, Algerian, Tunisian, Tripolitanian, Egyptian, Sudanese, Somali, Arab, Kurd, Turk, Circassian, Persian, Turkoman, Afghan, Sikh, Indian, Malay, or Moro, who does not regard Italy's aggression in Tripolitania as an affront188 to himself and to his faith.
Among all Moslems there is growing an ominous189 unrest, a fierce consciousness that the lands which they have for centuries regarded as their own are gradually slipping from them, and a decision that they must fight or disappear. On the Barbary coast, the Nile, the Congo, the Niger, and the Zambezi they see the turbans and the tarbooshes retreating before the white helmets' implacable advance, and now they see even the Ottoman throne, to them a great throne, shaking under the pressure. Hence there is not a Moslem in the world to-day who will remain indifferent to any action which hints at the dismemberment of Turkey, for he knows full well that the fate of the Ottoman Empire and the political fortunes of Islam are inextricably interwoven.
That Italy can hold the Tripolitanian coast towns as long as her ammunition190, her patience, and her public purse hold out, no one acquainted with the conditions of modern warfare191 will attempt to deny. Unless, however, the militant section of Islam, of which this region [Pg 98] is the very focus, can be induced to acquiesce192 in an Italian occupation, the life of an Italian soldier who ventures out of range of his war-ships' guns will not be worth an hour's purchase. Hordes of fanatical, desert-bred Arabs, inured193 to hardship, deadly sun, scanty194 food, and dearth195 of water, mounted on swift camels and as familiar with the trackless desert as the woodsman is with the forest in which he works, ablaze with a religion which assures them that the one sure way to paradise is to die in battle with the unbelievers, can harass28 the Italian army of occupation for years to come by a guerilla warfare. Even though Turkey agrees to surrender Tripolitania and to withdraw her garrisons196 from that province, Italy will still have far from smooth sailing, for the simple reason that she is not fighting Turks alone, but Moslems, and, as a result of her ill-advised slaughter197 of the Arabs, she has made the Moslem population of Tripolitania permanently198 hostile. Most significant of all, the Arab resistance to an Italian advance into the interior of the country will be directed, controlled, and financed by that sinister199 and mysterious power known as the Brotherhood200 of the Senussiyeh.
To American ears the word “Senussiyeh” doubtless conveys but little meaning, but to the French administrateurs in Algeria and Tunisia, and to the officers of the Military Intelligence Department in Egypt and the Sudan, it is a word of ominous import. Though the Brotherhood of the Senussiyeh is, without much doubt, the most powerful organisation201 of its kind in the world, so complete is the veil of secrecy202 behind which it works [Pg 99] that comparatively little is definitely known as to its designs, ramifications203, and resources. Briefly204, it is a secret Moslem society, organised about a century ago by an Algerian dervish, Mohammed ben Ali ben Es Senussi, from whom it takes its name; its object is the restoration of the Mohammedan religion to its original purity, austerity, and political power, the first step toward which is the expulsion of the Christian from Moslem lands; its initiated205 members, scattered throughout the Mohammedan world, have been variously estimated at from five to fifteen millions; the present grand master of the order, Senussi Ahmed-el-Sherif, the third of the succession, is admittedly a man of exceptional intelligence, resource, and sagacity; his monastic court at Jof, in the oasis of Kufra, five hundred miles, as the camel goes, south of Benghazi and about the same distance from the Nile, is the capital of a power whose boundaries are the boundaries of Islam.
It is no secret that the growing power of the Senussiyeh is causing considerable concern to the military and political officials of those European nations that have possessions in North Africa, for, in addition to the three-hundred-odd zawias, or monasteries, scattered along the African littoral from Egypt to Morocco, the long arm of the order reaches down to the mysterious oases which dot the Great Sahara, it embraces the strange tribes of the Tibesti highlands, it controls the robber Tuaregs and the warlike natives who occupy the regions adjacent to Lake Tchad, and is, as the [Pg 100] French and British have discovered, a power to be reckoned with in the protected states of Kanem, Sokoto, Bagirmi, Bornu, and Wadai.
The organisation of the order is both strong and simple. The khuan, or brothers, whose names are carefully recorded in the books of the mother lodge206 at Jof, owe unquestioning obedience207 to the mokaddem, or prefect, in charge of the district to which they belong. Each mokaddem has under his orders a corps208 of secret agents, known as wekils, whose duty is to keep him constantly in touch with all that is going on in his district and to communicate his instructions to the brothers. On Grand Bairam—the Mohammedan Easter—the mokaddems meet in conclave209 at Jof, on which occasion the spiritual and political condition of the order is discussed and its course of action decided on for the ensuing year. Above the mokaddems, and acting210 as an intermediary between them and the veiled and sacred person of the Senussi himself, is a cabinet of viziers, who, by means of a remarkable system of camel couriers, are enabled to keep constantly in touch with all the districts of the order.
At Jof, from which no European investigator211 has ever returned, are centred all the threads of this vast organism. There is kept the war-chest of the order, constantly increased by large and small contributions from true believers all over the world, for every member of the Senussiyeh who has a total income of more than twenty dollars a year must contribute two and one half per cent of it to the order annually212; there the Senussi [Pg 101] has established depots213 of stores and war material and factories for the manufacture, or rather the assembling, of modern fire-arms; thither214 come to him from the obscure harbours of the Tripolitanian coast cargoes215 of arms and ammunition; thither flock pilgrims from North and West Africa, from the Niger and from the Nile, to receive his orders and to seek his blessing216; there is centred one of the most remarkable secret-service systems in the world, its agents not alone in every corner of the Mohammedan world, but likewise keeping their fingers ever on the political pulse of Europe.
A place better fitted for its purpose than Jof it would be hard to imagine. Here, surrounded by inhospitable desert, with wells a long day's camel-ride apart, and the route known only to experienced and loyal guides, the Senussi has been free to educate, drill, and arm his disciples217, to accumulate great stores of arms and ammunition, and to push forward his propaganda of a regenerated and reinvigorated Islam, without any possibility of interference from the Christian nations. There seems to be but little doubt that factories have been erected at Jof for the assembling of weapons of precision, the materials for which have been systematically smuggled219 across the Mediterranean from Greece and Turkey for years past. Strange as it may sound, these factories are under the direction of skilled engineers and mechanics, for so well laid are the plans of the order that it annually sends a number of Moslem youths to be educated in the best technical schools of Europe. Upon completing their courses of instruction [Pg 102] they return to Jof, or other centres of Senussiyeh activity, to place their trained services at the disposal of the order, others being sent Europeward to be educated in their turn. The Senussiyeh's military affairs are equally well organised, the Arabs, than whom there is admittedly no finer fighting material in the world, being instructed along European lines, modified for desert warfare, by veteran drill-masters who have learned their trade in the native armies of England and France. The nucleus220 of this mobile and highly effective force is, so I am told by French officials in Africa, an admirably mounted and equipped camel corps of five thousand men which the Senussi keeps always on a war footing in the Kufra oases. These facts in themselves prove definitely that it would be no sporadic221 resistance, but a vast, organised movement, armed with improved weapons, trained by men who learned their business under European drill-masters, and directed by a high intelligence, with which Italy would have to reckon should she attempt the hazardous222 experiment of an advance in the real hinterland of Tripolitania.
Let me make it perfectly clear that the grand master of the Senussiyeh is a man of altogether exceptional ability. Under his direction the order has advanced with amazing strides, for he is a remarkable organiser and administrator223, two qualities rarely found among the Arabs. The destruction of the Mahdi and of the Khalifa, and the more recent dethronement of Abdul-Hamid, resulted in bringing a large accession of force to his standard by the extinction224 of all religious authority [Pg 103] in Africa except his own. Though the Sultan of Turkey is, as I have said, the titular225 head of the Moslem religion, and is venerated226 as such wherever praying-rugs are spread, the chief of this militant order is undoubtedly227 regarded by the average Mohammedan as the most actively228 powerful figure, if not as the saviour181, of Islam. The first Senussi was powerful enough to excommunicate the Sultan Abdul-Medjid from the order because of his intimacy229 with the European powers; the father of the present Khedive of Egypt was accustomed to address the second Senussi in such terms as a disciple218 would use to a prophet, while Abbas Hilmi II, the reigning Khedive, a few years ago journeyed across the Libyan desert to pay his respects to the present head of the order.
Those who are in a position to know whereof they speak believe that the Senussiyeh would actively oppose any attempt on the part of the Italians to occupy the hinterland of Tripolitania, for it is obvious that such an occupation would not alone bring the Christian in dangerous proximity to the chief stronghold of the order, but it would effectually cut off the supplies of arms and ammunition which caravans in the pay of the Senussiyeh have regularly been transporting to Jof from obscure ports on the Tripolitanian coast. It has been the policy of the Senussiyeh, supported by the Turkish administration in Tripolitania, to close the regions under its control to Christians230, so it is scarcely likely that it would do other than resist an Italian penetration of the country, even in the face of a Turkish [Pg 104] evacuation. Though the order encouraged resistance to the French advance in the Sudan, considering that the extension of the French sphere of influence threatened its own prestige in those regions, it has, as a rule, refrained from displaying antagonism231 toward the rulers of the adjoining regions. Aside from proselytism, the Senussiyeh has performed a great work in the Sahara in the colonisation and cultivation232 of the oases, the encouragement of trade, the building of rest-houses, the sinking of wells, and the protection of trans-Saharan caravans.
Stripped of the glamour233 and exaggeration with which sensational234 writers and superficial travellers have invested the subject, it is apparent that the Senussi controls a very wide-spread and powerful organisation—an organisation probably unique in the world. As a fighting element his followers235 are undoubtedly far superior to the wild and wretchedly armed tribesmen who charged the British squares so valorously at Abu Klea and Omdurman and who wiped out an Italian army in the Abyssinian hills. Their remarkable mobility236, their wonderful powers of endurance, their large supplies of the swift and hardy racing-camel known as hegin, and their marvellous knowledge of this great, inhospitable region, coupled with the fact that they can always retreat to their bases in the desert, where civilised troops cannot follow them, are all advantages of which the Senussi and his followers are thoroughly aware.
Although the Senussi is, as I have shown, amply [Pg 105] capable of causing the Italians serious trouble, it is very unlikely that he will prove actively hostile if they refrain from encroaching upon those remote regions which he looks upon as his own. Italy will have her hands full with the development of the coastal regions for many years to come, so, if she is wise, she will leave the interior of the country severely237 alone, recognise the religious authority of the Senussi, and, if possible, effect some such working agreement with him as England has done with an equally dangerous neighbour, the Amir of Afghanistan.
From the glimpses which I have given you of the inhospitable character of Tripolitania and the still more inhospitable people who inhabit it, it will be seen that Italy's task does not end with the ousting238 of the Turk. She has set her hand to the plough, however, and started it upon a long and arduous239 and very costly240 furrow241, the end of which no man can see. For a nation to have a colony, or colonies, wherein she can turn loose the overflow242 of her population and still keep them under her own flag, is an undeniable asset, particularly when the colony is as accessible from the mother country as Libya [1] (for we must accustom106 ourselves to the new name sooner or later) is from Italy. But if Italy is to be a success as a colonising nation she must school herself to do things differently in Tripolitania from what she has in her other African dependencies of Eritrea and Italian Somaliland.
[1] The Italians have given their new possession the historic name of Libya.
First and foremost, she must pick the men who are to settle her new colony as carefully as she picks the men [Pg 106] for her carabinieri, choosing them with a view to their intelligence, industry, energy, and sobriety, for to flood Tripolitania with such a class of emigrants243 as every vessel244 from Italy dumps on our hospitable73 shores is but to invite disaster.
Secondly245, she must impress on these colonists the imperative246 necessity of keeping on friendly terms with the natives, who are, after all, the real owners of the soil, and of obtaining their co-operation in the development of the country. The Arab, remember, unlike the negro, cannot be bullied247 and domineered with impunity248, Germany's African colonies providing significant examples of the failures which invariably result from ill-treatment of the native population.
Thirdly, there must be no “absentee landlordism,” the future of the colony largely depending, to my way of thinking, upon frugal, hard-working peasant farmers, owning their own farms, whose prosperity will thus be indissolubly linked with that of the colony.
Lastly, all local questions of administration should be taken entirely249 out of the hands of Rome and left to “the man on the spot,” for history is filled with the chronicles of promising colonies which have been ship-wrecked on the rocks of a highly centralised form of government.
If the Italians will take these things to heart, I believe that their conquest of Tripolitania will prove, in the end, for the country's own best good, contributing to its peace and to the welfare of its inhabitants, native as well as foreign, and that it will promote the opening [Pg 107] up of the dark places to civilisation, if not to Christianity—for the Moslem does not change his faith. When, therefore, all is said and done, I cannot but feel that the cross of the House of Savoy portends250 more good to Africa in general, and to Tripolitania in particular, than would ever the star and crescent.
点击收听单词发音
1 Mediterranean | |
adj.地中海的;地中海沿岸的 | |
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2 mirage | |
n.海市蜃楼,幻景 | |
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3 beckoned | |
v.(用头或手的动作)示意,召唤( beckon的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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4 haze | |
n.霾,烟雾;懵懂,迷糊;vi.(over)变模糊 | |
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5 interim | |
adj.暂时的,临时的;n.间歇,过渡期间 | |
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6 crumbled | |
(把…)弄碎, (使)碎成细屑( crumble的过去式和过去分词 ); 衰落; 坍塌; 损坏 | |
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7 laden | |
adj.装满了的;充满了的;负了重担的;苦恼的 | |
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8 regenerated | |
v.新生,再生( regenerate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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9 galleys | |
n.平底大船,战舰( galley的名词复数 );(船上或航空器上的)厨房 | |
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10 alleys | |
胡同,小巷( alley的名词复数 ); 小径 | |
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11 disastrous | |
adj.灾难性的,造成灾害的;极坏的,很糟的 | |
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12 imbued | |
v.使(某人/某事)充满或激起(感情等)( imbue的过去式和过去分词 );使充满;灌输;激发(强烈感情或品质等) | |
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13 predecessors | |
n.前任( predecessor的名词复数 );前辈;(被取代的)原有事物;前身 | |
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14 dominion | |
n.统治,管辖,支配权;领土,版图 | |
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15 flaunted | |
v.炫耀,夸耀( flaunt的过去式和过去分词 );有什么能耐就施展出来 | |
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16 vestiges | |
残余部分( vestige的名词复数 ); 遗迹; 痕迹; 毫不 | |
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17 lure | |
n.吸引人的东西,诱惑物;vt.引诱,吸引 | |
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18 Christian | |
adj.基督教徒的;n.基督教徒 | |
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19 hordes | |
n.移动着的一大群( horde的名词复数 );部落 | |
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20 sweeping | |
adj.范围广大的,一扫无遗的 | |
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21 subsiding | |
v.(土地)下陷(因在地下采矿)( subside的现在分词 );减弱;下降至较低或正常水平;一下子坐在椅子等上 | |
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22 supplanting | |
把…排挤掉,取代( supplant的现在分词 ) | |
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23 fanatic | |
n.狂热者,入迷者;adj.狂热入迷的 | |
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24 moors | |
v.停泊,系泊(船只)( moor的第三人称单数 ) | |
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25 moor | |
n.荒野,沼泽;vt.(使)停泊;vi.停泊 | |
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26 knights | |
骑士; (中古时代的)武士( knight的名词复数 ); 骑士; 爵士; (国际象棋中)马 | |
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27 beleaguering | |
v.围攻( beleaguer的现在分词 );困扰;骚扰 | |
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28 harass | |
vt.使烦恼,折磨,骚扰 | |
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29 nominal | |
adj.名义上的;(金额、租金)微不足道的 | |
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30 levied | |
征(兵)( levy的过去式和过去分词 ); 索取; 发动(战争); 征税 | |
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31 systematic | |
adj.有系统的,有计划的,有方法的 | |
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32 complaisance | |
n.彬彬有礼,殷勤,柔顺 | |
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33 maritime | |
adj.海的,海事的,航海的,近海的,沿海的 | |
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34 exemption | |
n.豁免,免税额,免除 | |
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35 consul | |
n.领事;执政官 | |
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36 ultimatum | |
n.最后通牒 | |
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37 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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38 forth | |
adv.向前;向外,往外 | |
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39 picturesque | |
adj.美丽如画的,(语言)生动的,绘声绘色的 | |
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40 tedium | |
n.单调;烦闷 | |
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41 frigate | |
n.护航舰,大型驱逐舰 | |
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42 intrepid | |
adj.无畏的,刚毅的 | |
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43 mazes | |
迷宫( maze的名词复数 ); 纷繁复杂的规则; 复杂难懂的细节; 迷宫图 | |
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44 reign | |
n.统治时期,统治,支配,盛行;v.占优势 | |
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45 reigning | |
adj.统治的,起支配作用的 | |
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46 insufficient | |
adj.(for,of)不足的,不够的 | |
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47 fortified | |
adj. 加强的 | |
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48 adventurous | |
adj.爱冒险的;惊心动魄的,惊险的,刺激的 | |
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49 exhaustion | |
n.耗尽枯竭,疲惫,筋疲力尽,竭尽,详尽无遗的论述 | |
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50 aridity | |
n.干旱,乏味;干燥性;荒芜 | |
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51 arid | |
adj.干旱的;(土地)贫瘠的 | |
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52 sparsely | |
adv.稀疏地;稀少地;不足地;贫乏地 | |
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53 littoral | |
adj.海岸的;湖岸的;n.沿(海)岸地区 | |
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54 oases | |
n.(沙漠中的)绿洲( oasis的名词复数 );(困苦中)令人快慰的地方(或时刻);乐土;乐事 | |
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55 stony | |
adj.石头的,多石头的,冷酷的,无情的 | |
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56 dunes | |
沙丘( dune的名词复数 ) | |
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57 coastal | |
adj.海岸的,沿海的,沿岸的 | |
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58 remarkable | |
adj.显著的,异常的,非凡的,值得注意的 | |
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59 subterranean | |
adj.地下的,地表下的 | |
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60 countless | |
adj.无数的,多得不计其数的 | |
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61 blindfolded | |
v.(尤指用布)挡住(某人)的视线( blindfold的过去式 );蒙住(某人)的眼睛;使不理解;蒙骗 | |
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62 plod | |
v.沉重缓慢地走,孜孜地工作 | |
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63 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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64 oasis | |
n.(沙漠中的)绿洲,宜人的地方 | |
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65 primitive | |
adj.原始的;简单的;n.原(始)人,原始事物 | |
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66 implements | |
n.工具( implement的名词复数 );家具;手段;[法律]履行(契约等)v.实现( implement的第三人称单数 );执行;贯彻;使生效 | |
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67 nomad | |
n.游牧部落的人,流浪者,游牧民 | |
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68 luscious | |
adj.美味的;芬芳的;肉感的,引与性欲的 | |
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69 groves | |
树丛,小树林( grove的名词复数 ) | |
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70 ablaze | |
adj.着火的,燃烧的;闪耀的,灯火辉煌的 | |
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71 inaccessibility | |
n. 难接近, 难达到, 难达成 | |
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72 malaria | |
n.疟疾 | |
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73 hospitable | |
adj.好客的;宽容的;有利的,适宜的 | |
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74 colonists | |
n.殖民地开拓者,移民,殖民地居民( colonist的名词复数 ) | |
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75 impoverishment | |
n.贫穷,穷困;贫化 | |
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76 promising | |
adj.有希望的,有前途的 | |
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77 hardy | |
adj.勇敢的,果断的,吃苦的;耐寒的 | |
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78 frugal | |
adj.节俭的,节约的,少量的,微量的 | |
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79 industrious | |
adj.勤劳的,刻苦的,奋发的 | |
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80 underlay | |
v.位于或存在于(某物)之下( underlie的过去式 );构成…的基础(或起因),引起n.衬垫物 | |
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81 aggression | |
n.进攻,侵略,侵犯,侵害 | |
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82 majesty | |
n.雄伟,壮丽,庄严,威严;最高权威,王权 | |
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83 grandeur | |
n.伟大,崇高,宏伟,庄严,豪华 | |
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84 arable | |
adj.可耕的,适合种植的 | |
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85 mighty | |
adj.强有力的;巨大的 | |
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86 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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87 cypress | |
n.柏树 | |
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88 fig | |
n.无花果(树) | |
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89 scantily | |
adv.缺乏地;不充足地;吝啬地;狭窄地 | |
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90 scattered | |
adj.分散的,稀疏的;散步的;疏疏落落的 | |
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91 proximity | |
n.接近,邻近 | |
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92 covetous | |
adj.贪婪的,贪心的 | |
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93 insignificant | |
adj.无关紧要的,可忽略的,无意义的 | |
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94 nomadic | |
adj.流浪的;游牧的 | |
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95 tribal | |
adj.部族的,种族的 | |
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96 caravan | |
n.大蓬车;活动房屋 | |
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97 winding | |
n.绕,缠,绕组,线圈 | |
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98 graphic | |
adj.生动的,形象的,绘画的,文字的,图表的 | |
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99 corrupt | |
v.贿赂,收买;adj.腐败的,贪污的 | |
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100 apathy | |
n.漠不关心,无动于衷;冷淡 | |
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101 redeemed | |
adj. 可赎回的,可救赎的 动词redeem的过去式和过去分词形式 | |
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102 regiments | |
(军队的)团( regiment的名词复数 ); 大量的人或物 | |
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103 brass | |
n.黄铜;黄铜器,铜管乐器 | |
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104 painstaking | |
adj.苦干的;艰苦的,费力的,刻苦的 | |
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105 plodding | |
a.proceeding in a slow or dull way | |
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106 accustom | |
vt.使适应,使习惯 | |
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107 squat | |
v.蹲坐,蹲下;n.蹲下;adj.矮胖的,粗矮的 | |
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108 minarets | |
n.(清真寺旁由报告祈祷时刻的人使用的)光塔( minaret的名词复数 ) | |
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109 mosques | |
清真寺; 伊斯兰教寺院,清真寺; 清真寺,伊斯兰教寺院( mosque的名词复数 ) | |
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110 consulates | |
n.领事馆( consulate的名词复数 ) | |
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111 whitewashed | |
粉饰,美化,掩饰( whitewash的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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112 fiery | |
adj.燃烧着的,火红的;暴躁的;激烈的 | |
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113 crumbling | |
adj.摇摇欲坠的 | |
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114 Moslem | |
n.回教徒,穆罕默德信徒;adj.回教徒的,回教的 | |
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115 vaulted | |
adj.拱状的 | |
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116 bazaars | |
(东方国家的)市场( bazaar的名词复数 ); 义卖; 义卖市场; (出售花哨商品等的)小商品市场 | |
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117 haggle | |
vi.讨价还价,争论不休 | |
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118 doze | |
v.打瞌睡;n.打盹,假寐 | |
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119 chatter | |
vi./n.喋喋不休;短促尖叫;(牙齿)打战 | |
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120 wares | |
n. 货物, 商品 | |
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121 reeking | |
v.发出浓烈的臭气( reek的现在分词 );散发臭气;发出难闻的气味 (of sth);明显带有(令人不快或生疑的跡象) | |
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122 nether | |
adj.下部的,下面的;n.阴间;下层社会 | |
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123 sentry | |
n.哨兵,警卫 | |
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124 adorns | |
装饰,佩带( adorn的第三人称单数 ) | |
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125 relic | |
n.神圣的遗物,遗迹,纪念物 | |
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126 ERECTED | |
adj. 直立的,竖立的,笔直的 vt. 使 ... 直立,建立 | |
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127 chiselled | |
adj.凿过的,凿光的; (文章等)精心雕琢的v.凿,雕,镌( chisel的过去式 ) | |
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128 dealer | |
n.商人,贩子 | |
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129 isolated | |
adj.与世隔绝的 | |
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130 odds | |
n.让步,机率,可能性,比率;胜败优劣之别 | |
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131 caravans | |
(可供居住的)拖车(通常由机动车拖行)( caravan的名词复数 ); 篷车; (穿过沙漠地带的)旅行队(如商队) | |
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132 fleeting | |
adj.短暂的,飞逝的 | |
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133 savage | |
adj.野蛮的;凶恶的,残暴的;n.未开化的人 | |
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134 recesses | |
n.壁凹( recess的名词复数 );(工作或业务活动的)中止或暂停期间;学校的课间休息;某物内部的凹形空间v.把某物放在墙壁的凹处( recess的第三人称单数 );将(墙)做成凹形,在(墙)上做壁龛;休息,休会,休庭 | |
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135 gateway | |
n.大门口,出入口,途径,方法 | |
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136 ostrich | |
n.鸵鸟 | |
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137 wilderness | |
n.杳无人烟的一片陆地、水等,荒漠 | |
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138 beads | |
n.(空心)小珠子( bead的名词复数 );水珠;珠子项链 | |
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139 fascination | |
n.令人着迷的事物,魅力,迷恋 | |
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140 encroachment | |
n.侵入,蚕食 | |
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141 seizure | |
n.没收;占有;抵押 | |
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142 mouldering | |
v.腐朽( moulder的现在分词 );腐烂,崩塌 | |
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143 forerunner | |
n.前身,先驱(者),预兆,祖先 | |
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144 annexation | |
n.吞并,合并 | |
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145 penetration | |
n.穿透,穿人,渗透 | |
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146 systematically | |
adv.有系统地 | |
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147 hereditary | |
adj.遗传的,遗传性的,可继承的,世袭的 | |
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148 foe | |
n.敌人,仇敌 | |
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149 monasteries | |
修道院( monastery的名词复数 ) | |
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150 missionaries | |
n.传教士( missionary的名词复数 ) | |
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151 guise | |
n.外表,伪装的姿态 | |
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152 impoverished | |
adj.穷困的,无力的,用尽了的v.使(某人)贫穷( impoverish的过去式和过去分词 );使(某物)贫瘠或恶化 | |
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153 pretext | |
n.借口,托词 | |
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154 tampered | |
v.窜改( tamper的过去式 );篡改;(用不正当手段)影响;瞎摆弄 | |
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155 anomalous | |
adj.反常的;不规则的 | |
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156 conversant | |
adj.亲近的,有交情的,熟悉的 | |
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157 pretexts | |
n.借口,托辞( pretext的名词复数 ) | |
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158 interfered | |
v.干预( interfere的过去式和过去分词 );调停;妨碍;干涉 | |
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159 rein | |
n.疆绳,统治,支配;vt.以僵绳控制,统治 | |
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160 perilous | |
adj.危险的,冒险的 | |
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161 proceeding | |
n.行动,进行,(pl.)会议录,学报 | |
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162 alacrity | |
n.敏捷,轻快,乐意 | |
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163 evacuate | |
v.遣送;搬空;抽出;排泄;大(小)便 | |
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164 overthrown | |
adj. 打翻的,推倒的,倾覆的 动词overthrow的过去分词 | |
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165 ministries | |
(政府的)部( ministry的名词复数 ); 神职; 牧师职位; 神职任期 | |
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166 depleted | |
adj. 枯竭的, 废弃的 动词deplete的过去式和过去分词 | |
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167 solicitude | |
n.焦虑 | |
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168 civilisation | |
n.文明,文化,开化,教化 | |
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169 naval | |
adj.海军的,军舰的,船的 | |
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170 demonstration | |
n.表明,示范,论证,示威 | |
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171 descending | |
n. 下行 adj. 下降的 | |
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172 ascending | |
adj.上升的,向上的 | |
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173 salute | |
vi.行礼,致意,问候,放礼炮;vt.向…致意,迎接,赞扬;n.招呼,敬礼,礼炮 | |
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174 pointed | |
adj.尖的,直截了当的 | |
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175 bleaching | |
漂白法,漂白 | |
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176 annihilated | |
v.(彻底)消灭( annihilate的过去式和过去分词 );使无效;废止;彻底击溃 | |
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177 corruption | |
n.腐败,堕落,贪污 | |
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178 heartily | |
adv.衷心地,诚恳地,十分,很 | |
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179 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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180 saviours | |
n.救助者( saviour的名词复数 );救星;救世主;耶稣基督 | |
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181 saviour | |
n.拯救者,救星 | |
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182 jaunty | |
adj.愉快的,满足的;adv.心满意足地,洋洋得意地;n.心满意足;洋洋得意 | |
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183 desperately | |
adv.极度渴望地,绝望地,孤注一掷地 | |
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184 thoroughly | |
adv.完全地,彻底地,十足地 | |
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185 peculiar | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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186 dual | |
adj.双的;二重的,二元的 | |
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187 militant | |
adj.激进的,好斗的;n.激进分子,斗士 | |
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188 affront | |
n./v.侮辱,触怒 | |
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189 ominous | |
adj.不祥的,不吉的,预兆的,预示的 | |
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190 ammunition | |
n.军火,弹药 | |
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191 warfare | |
n.战争(状态);斗争;冲突 | |
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192 acquiesce | |
vi.默许,顺从,同意 | |
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193 inured | |
adj.坚强的,习惯的 | |
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194 scanty | |
adj.缺乏的,仅有的,节省的,狭小的,不够的 | |
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195 dearth | |
n.缺乏,粮食不足,饥谨 | |
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196 garrisons | |
守备部队,卫戍部队( garrison的名词复数 ) | |
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197 slaughter | |
n.屠杀,屠宰;vt.屠杀,宰杀 | |
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198 permanently | |
adv.永恒地,永久地,固定不变地 | |
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199 sinister | |
adj.不吉利的,凶恶的,左边的 | |
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200 brotherhood | |
n.兄弟般的关系,手中情谊 | |
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201 organisation | |
n.组织,安排,团体,有机休 | |
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202 secrecy | |
n.秘密,保密,隐蔽 | |
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203 ramifications | |
n.结果,后果( ramification的名词复数 ) | |
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204 briefly | |
adv.简单地,简短地 | |
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205 initiated | |
n. 创始人 adj. 新加入的 vt. 开始,创始,启蒙,介绍加入 | |
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206 lodge | |
v.临时住宿,寄宿,寄存,容纳;n.传达室,小旅馆 | |
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207 obedience | |
n.服从,顺从 | |
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208 corps | |
n.(通信等兵种的)部队;(同类作的)一组 | |
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209 conclave | |
n.秘密会议,红衣主教团 | |
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210 acting | |
n.演戏,行为,假装;adj.代理的,临时的,演出用的 | |
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211 investigator | |
n.研究者,调查者,审查者 | |
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212 annually | |
adv.一年一次,每年 | |
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213 depots | |
仓库( depot的名词复数 ); 火车站; 车库; 军需库 | |
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214 thither | |
adv.向那里;adj.在那边的,对岸的 | |
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215 cargoes | |
n.(船或飞机装载的)货物( cargo的名词复数 );大量,重负 | |
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216 blessing | |
n.祈神赐福;祷告;祝福,祝愿 | |
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217 disciples | |
n.信徒( disciple的名词复数 );门徒;耶稣的信徒;(尤指)耶稣十二门徒之一 | |
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218 disciple | |
n.信徒,门徒,追随者 | |
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219 smuggled | |
水货 | |
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220 nucleus | |
n.核,核心,原子核 | |
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221 sporadic | |
adj.偶尔发生的 [反]regular;分散的 | |
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222 hazardous | |
adj.(有)危险的,冒险的;碰运气的 | |
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223 administrator | |
n.经营管理者,行政官员 | |
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224 extinction | |
n.熄灭,消亡,消灭,灭绝,绝种 | |
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225 titular | |
adj.名义上的,有名无实的;n.只有名义(或头衔)的人 | |
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226 venerated | |
敬重(某人或某事物),崇敬( venerate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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227 undoubtedly | |
adv.确实地,无疑地 | |
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228 actively | |
adv.积极地,勤奋地 | |
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229 intimacy | |
n.熟悉,亲密,密切关系,亲昵的言行 | |
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230 Christians | |
n.基督教徒( Christian的名词复数 ) | |
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231 antagonism | |
n.对抗,敌对,对立 | |
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232 cultivation | |
n.耕作,培养,栽培(法),养成 | |
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233 glamour | |
n.魔力,魅力;vt.迷住 | |
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234 sensational | |
adj.使人感动的,非常好的,轰动的,耸人听闻的 | |
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235 followers | |
追随者( follower的名词复数 ); 用户; 契据的附面; 从动件 | |
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236 mobility | |
n.可动性,变动性,情感不定 | |
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237 severely | |
adv.严格地;严厉地;非常恶劣地 | |
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238 ousting | |
驱逐( oust的现在分词 ); 革职; 罢黜; 剥夺 | |
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239 arduous | |
adj.艰苦的,费力的,陡峭的 | |
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240 costly | |
adj.昂贵的,价值高的,豪华的 | |
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241 furrow | |
n.沟;垄沟;轨迹;车辙;皱纹 | |
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242 overflow | |
v.(使)外溢,(使)溢出;溢出,流出,漫出 | |
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243 emigrants | |
n.(从本国移往他国的)移民( emigrant的名词复数 ) | |
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244 vessel | |
n.船舶;容器,器皿;管,导管,血管 | |
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245 secondly | |
adv.第二,其次 | |
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246 imperative | |
n.命令,需要;规则;祈使语气;adj.强制的;紧急的 | |
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247 bullied | |
adj.被欺负了v.恐吓,威逼( bully的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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248 impunity | |
n.(惩罚、损失、伤害等的)免除 | |
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249 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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250 portends | |
v.预示( portend的第三人称单数 );预兆;给…以警告;预告 | |
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