THE debt of Europe to the region we are considering is as great in the case of the so-called “minor1 arts” as it is elsewhere. Even the language preserves the record: Arras has given its name to the tapestries2 for which it was famous, linen3 woven in regular patterns is called diaper, or “linge d’Ypres,” cambric is simply the product of Cambrai, gauntlet preserves the fame of Ghent for its gloves, while the lost city of Dinant was once so famous for its work in copper4, brass5, bronze, and gilded6 metal that during the Middle Ages all products of this kind were called dinanderie. Tapestry7 weaving is, or was, an art essentially8 Flemish; illumination, if shared with Italy and in a measure every land where there were monks9 and monasteries10, reached peculiarly notable heights in Flanders, Brabant, and Champagne12; the casting of bells and the forming of them into carillons is peculiarly the province of this region, while metal work, whether of gold and silver, or of bronze and copper and brass,{257} was an art of distinction even from the time of Charlemagne.
It was he that was primarily responsible for the beginnings of many of these admirable arts. From his capital at Aix, where he had gathered all the art and learning he could glean13 from western Europe, went out the influences that persisted long beyond his day and that of his ill-fortuned dynasty. The Scandinavian tribes and the Celts of Gaul had always been craftsmen14 in metals, particularly bronze, and Charlemagne used them under the direction of his Roman and Byzantine artificers, developing an art that was neither one nor the other, but a new Christian15 mode of expression. When toward the close of the tenth century the young Princess Theophano came from the Bosporus as the bride of Otho II, she brought with her other artists, with a treasure of Byzantine craftsmanship16 in weaving, metals, enamels17, and ivory carving18; and a new impulse was given, so that, under the direction of a crescent Christianity, a local and racial art developed along many lines and extended itself through the whole region and into France, Normandy, England, and Germany as well. From Aix, Archbishop Willigis and Bishop19 Bernward carried into{258} Germany the art of metal working as they had learned it, one to Mainz, the other to Hildesheim, where their works still remain. To Dinant, Huy, and Liége the same impulse was given that later extended through Brabant and Flanders. In France the beginnings seem to have been at the hands of St. Eloi at Limoges and Abbot Suger of St. Denis, but it was all within the area to which our attention is confined.
From the time of Charlemagne the production of works of art in precious and common metals was an ever-increasing industry, lapsing20 during the second Dark Ages, beginning with new and unexampled vigour21 with the great religious revival22 of the first years of the eleventh century. It is impossible to form an adequate estimate either of the magnitude of the product or the degree of concrete beauty that came in these many lines of art out of the Middle Ages. For five hundred years craftsmen were busy over all that is now Rhenish Prussia, Holland, Belgium, France, and England, with the Scandinavian countries, Italy, and Spain in only a less degree, in producing an infinite number of exquisite23 things for an infinite number of churches; metal work of every kind and for every conceivable purpose—sacred vessels24,{259} crosses, crosiers, reliquaries, shrines26, tombs, and screens; woven tapestries to hang the walls of chateaux and cathedrals; embroidered28 and jewelled vestments for an unending series of bishops29, priests, altars; illuminated30 volumes whose every vellum page was a work of art and whose bindings were studded with jewels; carved wood and ivory in endless designs and for endless purposes; stained glass, enamels, tiles. Every church, abbey, and cathedral was by the beginning of the Hundred Years’ War as full of works of consummate31 art as the private museum of a modern millionaire, and were you to gather together the treasures of ecclesiastical crafts in the Cluny, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the Metropolitan32 in New York you might have about as much as at that time might have been found in a provincial33 cathedral of the second class or a minor monastery34. In France the sculpture has been largely, and the glass partially35, saved; in Flanders many of the pictures; in England a good proportion of the churches themselves, but the rest is gone, utterly36 and irrevocably, and we can hardly more than dimly imagine from a Gloucester candlestick, an Ascoli cope, a Shrine25 of St. Sebald the nature of what has been taken from us.{260}
Even from the first these things had three qualities that argued against their preservation37, the world being what it is. They were intrinsically valuable because of their bronze and silver and gold and precious gems38; therefore in the wars that followed the cresting39 of medi?valism they were stolen wholesale40 by one army after another and their jewels plucked out, and then they were broken up, melted down, and returned to their original estate of lumps of bullion41, or dead metal, all of which had its price. They were the most sacred material things possessed42 by the Church that had created them; part and parcel of the Catholic sacraments, memorials of the honoured dead, caskets for the reverent43 treasuring of the relics44 of the saints; therefore they were the particular object of the blind and furious hatred45 of Protestants, whether Huguenots, Calvinists, Presbyterians, or, in a less degree, Lutherans. They were Gothic in their inimitable art, hence anathema46 to the bewigged bishops, the worldly priests, and, most dangerous of all, the conceited47 canons of the eighteenth century. What the thief overlooked the fanatic48 destroyed, and what he forgot the ignorant and vulgar amateur purged49 away to make place for imitation marble and secular50{261} frippery. After four centuries of this it is a wonder that anything remains51, and, to tell the truth, there is little enough.
Nevertheless, it is surprising how much of this was still in our chosen territory in 1914, and how much that is in museums elsewhere came originally from the same place. Liége had its extraordinary bronze font, Hal a font, a lectern, and many other treasures of late Gothic and early Renaissance52 art; Louvain, Tirlemont, Xanten, Aix, and Trèves each had a few pieces of metal work of immense artistic53 value, while in Bruges, Ghent, Brussels, and Antwerp, in Laon, Noyon, Sens, and Reims were a few miraculously54 preserved shrines, tapestries, vestments, and sacred vessels. As for the treasures of the European and American museums, the greater part came from Flanders, Brabant, the Rhineland, or eastern France, for this was the great centre of industry, the fountainhead of artistic inspiration. Of the “dinanderie” that owed its existence to the influence of the four great leaders, St. Eloi, St. Willigis, Abbot Suger, and Bishop Bernward, absolutely nothing remains except the fine group of bronze masterpieces by the last at Hildesheim. Liége had, however, the extremely important{262} bronze font made by Regnier of Huy about 1112, and Lille possessed a censer of his workmanship, while in Maastricht was a great shrine of gilded and enamelled copper set with precious stones; the Convent of Notre Dame55 at Namur and the church of Walcourt had no less than eighteen specimens56 of the handicraft of Brother Hugh of the great but long ago destroyed Abbey at Oignies between the Meuse and the Sambre, representing the art of a century later, while later still we had the “Chasse de Notre Dame” and the reliquary of St. Eleutherus at Tournai, and the shrine of St. Gertrude of Nivelles made in 1272. Of the vast product of the fourteenth century there are a few fragments only, an eagle lectern and a great paschal candlestick at Tongres, some crosses, reliquaries, monstrances, and candlesticks at Aix, Tongres, Furnes, Mainz, Xanten, Bruges, and Ghent, but, fortunately it would now seem, the greater part of what remains is preserved in the museums of Paris and London and therefore safe for another period. Outside the museums the great treasures were to be found at Sens and Laon, the latter being particularly rich, as is proved by the fact that the cathedral is said to contain no less than eighty reliquaries covering the whole period of the Middle Ages. So far as monumental tombs are concerned, every church in France has been swept clear, chiefly by the Revolutionists, not one of the marvellous collections at St. Denis and Reims remaining, but in Bruges we still have the fine tomb of Mary of Burgundy, of black marble encased in a foliated tracery of gilded copper and coloured enamels.
In the bourdons of France and the carillons of the Low Countries the art of the metal-worker combines with that of music. Both the carillon and the English peal57 are late developments, the first of the sixteenth, the second of the seventeenth century, but from the beginning of the thirteenth century great bells, used singly or in small combinations, were in constant use. Most of the latter are gone, melted down in the Hundred Years’ War and the Revolution in France, and the wars of religion in the Rhineland and the Low Countries, though a few remain at Amiens, Sens, Metz, and Beauvais, with one weighing over a ton which hung at Reims until last year. The carillons of Belgium and Holland were intact until that time, though many have now fallen with the splendid towers that held them. Arras is gone and probably Dunkerque; Louvain and Ypres{264} are gone and possibly Mons; Malines, most beautiful of all, has been battered58 to pieces and its forty-five bells have been cracked, melted, hurled59 in ruin down through the many stories of the great tower. Time after time during the last generation from twenty thousand to forty thousand people have assembled to hear these bells rung by M. Denyn, the greatest master of the art, but they will hear them no more until, perhaps, when the world is made new the bells of Malines may ring out again to welcome the dawn of a better day.
Whether the English peal of an octave, with the bells attuned60 to the intervals61 of the diatonic scale, and swung by hand, a man to each rope, in accordance with the most intricate mathematical formulas and without recognised melodies, is better or worse art than the carillon of thirty-five to fifty-two bells, covering sometimes four octaves and a half, in accord with the chromatic62 scale, fixed63 in their head-stocks and struck by hammers manipulated by one man sitting before a keyboard, and reproducing the most elaborate musical compositions, is no part of the argument. Each has its place, each is a mode of musical art, and just because one may like the strange and{265} subtle variations of an English peal thundering out its vibrant64 tones from great bells swinging and clashing in a grey old tower, it does not follow that he must reject the floating and ethereal harmonies of the Belgian carillon pouring into the still evening air strange melodies that are eternally haunting in their poignant65 appeal. They are silent now, even those that still hang in their tall towers, and the roar of giant artillery66, splitting and harshly reverberating67, has taken their place. In the good beginnings iron was anathema and might not be used in the service of the Church; bronze alone was tolerable. Now iron is king and holds dominion68 over the world, transmuted69 into steel through the offices of its ally, coal. Bronze is rejected, shattered, dethroned, but some of the great bells yet remain, hanging silent and patient while hell rages around them and iron asserts its universal dominion. Perhaps by and by they will give tongue again, proclaiming the end of the iron age, calling in once more a better and more righteous sovereignty.
Some day the world will awaken70 to the fact that there are other great arts besides architecture, painting, and sculpture; already there is a suspicion abroad that music, poetry, and the drama{266} are arts also and not merely vehicles for the expression of temperament71, and there is even a preliminary waking of the subconsciousness72 which threatens to confess that ritual and ceremonial have been, and may be again, a great fine art in the same sense. Little by little the pharisaic phrase, “industrial art,” is yielding some of its component73 parts and offering them to the very superior haute noblesse of fine art, and amongst these are stained glass and tapestry. The recent discovery of the existence of Chartres Cathedral and its glass has settled one point, and much against their will the artist and the amateur and the commentator74 have had to admit that the art of these windows, and of those at Bourges and Le Mans and Angers, is of the highest, and quite in the class of the painters of Italy and Flanders, the sculptors75 of France and England (in the Middle Ages), and the master builders from Laon to Amiens.
Of this particularly glorious art, which has become more completely a lost art than any other ever revealed to man, there is little in the region under consideration. It did not issue from the Heart of Europe, but had its beginnings elsewhere and its culmination76 as well. It was an art of{267} the twelfth and thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, degenerating77 rapidly after the year 1300, and, while the churches and abbeys and cathedrals between the Seine and the Somme were once splendid with glass that almost rivalled that of Chartres, the Reformation and the Revolution had seen to it that the major part of this glory had been made to depart. Amiens retains a little in its chevet chapels78, and Reims only a year ago was blazing with an apocalyptic80 splendour that is now transformed into gaping81 and fire-swept openings, laced by distorted metal bars, and heaps of pulverised refuse ground into the blood and ashes on shattered pavements. Whatever the Low Countries may have had is long since gone the way of all the other beautiful things the Calvinists did not like and only fragments, imitations, and Renaissance absurdities82 remain.
With the other great art, that of tapestry, the case is fortunately different. This was almost the intimate art of the Heart of Europe, finding its beginnings in Aix when the Greek princess brought with her from the East the first examples of Byzantine needlework and weaving that had been seen in the West in her day, and going on to new glories in Arras, Brussels, Tournai, Audenaarde, Lille,{268} Enghien. The perfection of tapestry weaving came in the last half of the fifteenth century, but the advance was regular for a century before, and if we can judge from the few examples left the work of the fourteenth century had many fine and powerful qualities that were all its own. The collapse83 came suddenly, early in the sixteenth century, being marked by Raphael’s intrusion into a field where he had no place, and after this there was no more hope for tapestry than for the other arts, and it rapidly sank to the point where the products of the Gobelins, Beauvais, and Aubussons looms84 were much admired.
If Gothic tapestry had possessed a pecuniary85 value easily translated into cash, or if it had been closely associated with the most sacred religious things, we should have preserved less than is actually the case. As it is, it was seldom the victim of cupidity86 or fanaticism87, but by its very nature it was perishable88, and therefore nearly all the work antedating89 the fifteenth century has vanished. Its greatest enemy, however, was the ignorant and vulgar culture of the nineteenth century, and during the first fifty years of this destructive epoch90 it melted rapidly away. Just before the outbreak of the French Revolution it{269} is no exaggeration to say that there were in France alone enough tapestries to carpet a road from Paris to Arras; of course, many were of the Gobelins type and comparatively valueless as art, but every chateau27, every cathedral and monastery, almost every church had its sets of “arras,” and these were of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries; the curious products of the Renaissance were confined to kings, princes, great nobles, and to their respective palaces. With 1793 the massacre91 began; everything feudal92, even by implication, was burned, sometimes just out of pure deviltry, as when tapestries were consumed in heaps at the foot of the “Tree of Liberty”; sometimes through thrift93, as when in 1797 the Directory burned at one time nearly two hundred ancient works of art to recover the gold and silver bullion—which they did at this one holocaust94 to the value of $13,000. Mr. G. L. Hunter has reckoned the value of these destroyed tapestries at about $2,500,000 in the market of to-day. At this rate, the current value of all the tapestries in France at the Revolution would have been about $250,000,000.
No appreciation95 of this value developed until nearly the end of the nineteenth century. In 1852 a set of ten, formerly96 belonging to Louis{270} Philippe, with a total length of one hundred and twenty feet, sold for about $1,200, and at the same sale another set of six, running to eighty feet, was bought for $400. At present the intrinsic value of these wonderful creations is quite fully97 appreciated, and any one who can secure a fifteenth-century work for less than $300 a square yard is fortunate. And yet during the whole of the eighteenth century tapestries were ruthlessly cut up to form floor rugs, used for packing bales of merchandise, or, as at Angers, slashed98 into strips to protect the roots of orange-trees from the cold, or nailed on the stalls of the bishop’s stable so that the episcopal nags99 might not scar their precious flanks. This last outrage100, by the way, was perpetrated on the unique series of the Apocalypse, a sequence of panels eighteen feet high with a total length of four hundred and seventy-two feet, woven in Paris about 1370 from designs by Jean de Bruges, court painter to the Emperor Charles V, for the use of the Duke of Anjou in his private chapel79, and at a cost (in the money of to-day) of upward of $60,000. They had been given to the cathedral by King René in 1480, but by the beginning of the nineteenth century they were quite out of fashion and therefore useless;{271} so until a rag merchant sufficiently101 accommodating could be found they were used as noted102 above and finally sold (the opportunity at last offering) in 1843 for $60, the purchaser ultimately returning them to the cathedral when some glimmerings of intelligence came back to the ecclesiastical authorities.
When this sort of thing was the rule in France and England and Germany for more than a century during which civilisation103 and culture were progressing with such notable rapidity, it is a miracle that anything has come down to us, particularly when you remember what the Calvinists and Sansculottes and Reformers did to monasteries and chateaux and entire cities in the two preceding centuries; but a good deal did so come down, including even the poor remains of the very much domesticated104 tapestries of Angers. There is only one other fourteenth-century set woven at Arras that can positively105 be identified, and that is the series now (or recently) in the cathedral of Tournai, though we know from wills and inventories106 that at the beginning of the fifteenth century they existed in hundreds. The remains of this early work are fine and strong in design, powerful as decoration, clear but faded in{272} colour. With the fifteenth century there came an amazing advance, similar to the sudden appearance of the Van Eycks in painting at exactly the same moment. The “Burgundian Sacraments”—or what remains—now in the Metropolitan Museum as the gift of the late J. P. Morgan, is one of the finest examples in existence of this earliest of the great periods. Admirable as it is, it fails in perfection of beauty before the wonderful works of art that immediately followed. With the beginning of the fifteenth century tapestry weaving came suddenly to a level of supreme107 excellence108 that places it for a hundred years on a level with the other arts, however august they may be. Very few of these masterpieces remain in Belgium; you must search for them in Paris, in London, in Madrid, in New York, in the museums of all the world, but the search is rewarded by the discovery of an art that, however brief its day, was one of the great arts of the world.
Each art has its own medium of expression and to this medium it absolutely adheres in its periods of greatness, adapting itself to its limitations, working within them, and even making them tributary109 to its excellence. Limitations are, after{273} all, the greatest gift of God to man instead of being, as the last century feigned110, something that deplorably existed only to be transcended111; without them man would revert112 to the condition of the jellyfish or the primal113 ooze114 of the depths of the sea; with them he has an opportunity to demonstrate his divine elements through a development that is both in spite of and because of the firm lines they draw that cannot be overpassed. One of the great things in art is its revelation of the possibility of spiritual achievement by and through the narrowest physical limitations. When, on the other hand, architecture tries to assimilate the peculiar11 methods of bridge building; when painting intrudes115 into the province of sculpture, literature, photography, or even music; when music becomes mathematical or takes to itself the habits of the circus performer; when sculpture deliquesces into a sloppy116 kind of black-and-white illustration; when stained glass and tapestry become pictorial117; when, in fact, all the arts forsake118 their own provinces and deny their own limitations, as they have tended to do during the last century, splashing over, the one into the other, they cease to be arts at all and become unprofitable aberrations119.{274}
Only three great arts have come into existence during the last two thousand years—music, stained glass, and tapestry—and each developed its own exact and individual mode of expression. Music was as old as architecture, painting, sculpture, poetry, and the drama, but under the influences of Christianity it gradually transformed itself into what was almost a new art and one that has remained the only vital art through all the unfriendly influences of modern civilisation. Stained glass was an absolutely new art, taking its rise in the twelfth century, culminating in the thirteenth, decaying through the two following centuries, and entirely120 disappearing in the eighteenth century. It is an art of Christianity, of Frank genius, and of the ?le de France. Tapestry is also a new art, beginning about 1350, culminating a century later, dying almost in a day (as a great art), about 1520. It also is Christian, but, unlike glass, it is primarily secular, and it is explicitly121 and almost exclusively Flemish, the great contribution of a distinguished122 race to the imperishable art of the world.
It was the glorification123 of a national industry—weaving—and is significant as showing how, under wholesome124 impulses and in a stimulating125 envi{275}ronment, a simple industry may be transfigured and made into art. Its medium was peculiarly delicate, subtle, and beautiful, threads of spun126 wool, silk and gold and silver woven by hand into a fixed warp127 of strung threads. These filaments128 of silk (as in the finest work) had peculiar qualities of beauty, combining both lustrousness129 and depth, while the colours being entirely vegetable dyes, with none of the harsh horrors of the analine by-products of coal-tar, were infinitely130 varied131 and of unique richness and soft splendour. Fortunately, this new artistic mode was developed sufficiently prior to the breakdown132 of art which was signalised by the career of a man in himself a very great artist—Raphael—to permit a full century of life, and at the hands of a people who had a peculiar appreciation of decoration and of decorative133 methods. The result was startling, for a new art was born and one of the most distinguished quality. As colour decoration the tapestries of Flanders come near being the very finest things in the world, although we must judge them from a few examples only, the admittedly greatest having long since fallen victims to greed, fanaticism, and the stolid134 ignorance of the eighteenth century. Fortunately for the general public,{276} the remaining masterpieces are now widely scattered135 and may be studied with comparative ease, the Metropolitan Museum in New York being particularly rich and having, either in its own name or by loan, the Burgundian Sacraments, the matchless “Mazarin” Christ in Glory, the almost equally beautiful “Coronation of the Virgin,” as well as scores of others, many of them of supreme excellence.
It is as impossible to describe a tapestry in words as it is to do the same by a Chartres window. In point of composition the tapestries of the fifteenth century are matched only by the greatest pictures; even when they are crowded with figures there is the most masterly spacing of masses, the most consummate balance of form. When one realises that in every case the design is the work of the members of the guild136 and not of the more famous painters of the time, the wonder grows over the apparently137 universal feeling for the highest type of artistic expression. Compared with the best of the Flemish tapestries, the boasted and “much admired” composition of Raphael in the “Disputa” and the “School of Athens,” of Michael Angelo in the Sistine Chapel, is mathematical and academic. In line{277} and line composition there is the same exquisite sensitiveness that is almost Greek or Japanese in its subtlety138 and rhythm, while the colour, though in many cases faded, is as pure and musical in its several tones as it is resonant139 and splendid in combination. And through all this consummate mastery and this supreme artistic sense run a peculiar charm and distinction that are found only in such unique products as the pictures of Jan van Eyck, Fra Angelico, the Lorenzetti, Carpaccio, and their kind. Through them you enter into a dim and golden fairyland full of wistful music and haunting memories, where fair ladies, courteous140 knights141, delicate-winged angels, aureoled saints in blazing dalmatics pass like dreams through far countries, “where it is always afternoon” and where the land is always lovely, the skies serene142, the flowers and birds and little beasts friendly and well beloved. Chretien de Troyes and the troubadours and the Court of Love, King Arthur and Roland and King René, Guenivere, and the gracious queens and gentle ladies of all the Middle Ages live again, or rather prolong their lives through a passive immortality143 into which whoever understands is welcome to enter and sit him down in peace.
点击收听单词发音
1 minor | |
adj.较小(少)的,较次要的;n.辅修学科;vi.辅修 | |
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2 tapestries | |
n.挂毯( tapestry的名词复数 );绣帷,织锦v.用挂毯(或绣帷)装饰( tapestry的第三人称单数 ) | |
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3 linen | |
n.亚麻布,亚麻线,亚麻制品;adj.亚麻布制的,亚麻的 | |
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4 copper | |
n.铜;铜币;铜器;adj.铜(制)的;(紫)铜色的 | |
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5 brass | |
n.黄铜;黄铜器,铜管乐器 | |
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6 gilded | |
a.镀金的,富有的 | |
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7 tapestry | |
n.挂毯,丰富多采的画面 | |
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8 essentially | |
adv.本质上,实质上,基本上 | |
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9 monks | |
n.修道士,僧侣( monk的名词复数 ) | |
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10 monasteries | |
修道院( monastery的名词复数 ) | |
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11 peculiar | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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12 champagne | |
n.香槟酒;微黄色 | |
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13 glean | |
v.收集(消息、资料、情报等) | |
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14 craftsmen | |
n. 技工 | |
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15 Christian | |
adj.基督教徒的;n.基督教徒 | |
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16 craftsmanship | |
n.手艺 | |
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17 enamels | |
搪瓷( enamel的名词复数 ); 珐琅; 釉药; 瓷漆 | |
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18 carving | |
n.雕刻品,雕花 | |
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19 bishop | |
n.主教,(国际象棋)象 | |
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20 lapsing | |
v.退步( lapse的现在分词 );陷入;倒退;丧失 | |
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21 vigour | |
(=vigor)n.智力,体力,精力 | |
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22 revival | |
n.复兴,复苏,(精力、活力等的)重振 | |
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23 exquisite | |
adj.精美的;敏锐的;剧烈的,感觉强烈的 | |
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24 vessels | |
n.血管( vessel的名词复数 );船;容器;(具有特殊品质或接受特殊品质的)人 | |
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25 shrine | |
n.圣地,神龛,庙;v.将...置于神龛内,把...奉为神圣 | |
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26 shrines | |
圣地,圣坛,神圣场所( shrine的名词复数 ) | |
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27 chateau | |
n.城堡,别墅 | |
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28 embroidered | |
adj.绣花的 | |
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29 bishops | |
(基督教某些教派管辖大教区的)主教( bishop的名词复数 ); (国际象棋的)象 | |
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30 illuminated | |
adj.被照明的;受启迪的 | |
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31 consummate | |
adj.完美的;v.成婚;使完美 [反]baffle | |
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32 metropolitan | |
adj.大城市的,大都会的 | |
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33 provincial | |
adj.省的,地方的;n.外省人,乡下人 | |
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34 monastery | |
n.修道院,僧院,寺院 | |
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35 partially | |
adv.部分地,从某些方面讲 | |
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36 utterly | |
adv.完全地,绝对地 | |
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37 preservation | |
n.保护,维护,保存,保留,保持 | |
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38 gems | |
growth; economy; management; and customer satisfaction 增长 | |
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39 cresting | |
n.顶饰v.到达山顶(或浪峰)( crest的现在分词 );到达洪峰,达到顶点 | |
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40 wholesale | |
n.批发;adv.以批发方式;vt.批发,成批出售 | |
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41 bullion | |
n.金条,银条 | |
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42 possessed | |
adj.疯狂的;拥有的,占有的 | |
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43 reverent | |
adj.恭敬的,虔诚的 | |
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44 relics | |
[pl.]n.遗物,遗迹,遗产;遗体,尸骸 | |
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45 hatred | |
n.憎恶,憎恨,仇恨 | |
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46 anathema | |
n.诅咒;被诅咒的人(物),十分讨厌的人(物) | |
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47 conceited | |
adj.自负的,骄傲自满的 | |
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48 fanatic | |
n.狂热者,入迷者;adj.狂热入迷的 | |
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49 purged | |
清除(政敌等)( purge的过去式和过去分词 ); 涤除(罪恶等); 净化(心灵、风气等); 消除(错事等)的不良影响 | |
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50 secular | |
n.牧师,凡人;adj.世俗的,现世的,不朽的 | |
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51 remains | |
n.剩余物,残留物;遗体,遗迹 | |
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52 renaissance | |
n.复活,复兴,文艺复兴 | |
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53 artistic | |
adj.艺术(家)的,美术(家)的;善于艺术创作的 | |
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54 miraculously | |
ad.奇迹般地 | |
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55 dame | |
n.女士 | |
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56 specimens | |
n.样品( specimen的名词复数 );范例;(化验的)抽样;某种类型的人 | |
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57 peal | |
n.钟声;v.鸣响 | |
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58 battered | |
adj.磨损的;v.连续猛击;磨损 | |
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59 hurled | |
v.猛投,用力掷( hurl的过去式和过去分词 );大声叫骂 | |
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60 attuned | |
v.使协调( attune的过去式和过去分词 );调音 | |
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61 intervals | |
n.[军事]间隔( interval的名词复数 );间隔时间;[数学]区间;(戏剧、电影或音乐会的)幕间休息 | |
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62 chromatic | |
adj.色彩的,颜色的 | |
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63 fixed | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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64 vibrant | |
adj.震颤的,响亮的,充满活力的,精力充沛的,(色彩)鲜明的 | |
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65 poignant | |
adj.令人痛苦的,辛酸的,惨痛的 | |
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66 artillery | |
n.(军)火炮,大炮;炮兵(部队) | |
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67 reverberating | |
回响,回荡( reverberate的现在分词 ); 使反响,使回荡,使反射 | |
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68 dominion | |
n.统治,管辖,支配权;领土,版图 | |
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69 transmuted | |
v.使变形,使变质,把…变成…( transmute的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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70 awaken | |
vi.醒,觉醒;vt.唤醒,使觉醒,唤起,激起 | |
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71 temperament | |
n.气质,性格,性情 | |
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72 subconsciousness | |
潜意识;下意识 | |
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73 component | |
n.组成部分,成分,元件;adj.组成的,合成的 | |
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74 commentator | |
n.注释者,解说者;实况广播评论员 | |
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75 sculptors | |
雕刻家,雕塑家( sculptor的名词复数 ); [天]玉夫座 | |
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76 culmination | |
n.顶点;最高潮 | |
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77 degenerating | |
衰退,堕落,退化( degenerate的现在分词 ) | |
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78 chapels | |
n.小教堂, (医院、监狱等的)附属礼拜堂( chapel的名词复数 );(在小教堂和附属礼拜堂举行的)礼拜仪式 | |
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79 chapel | |
n.小教堂,殡仪馆 | |
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80 apocalyptic | |
adj.预示灾祸的,启示的 | |
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81 gaping | |
adj.口的;张口的;敞口的;多洞穴的v.目瞪口呆地凝视( gape的现在分词 );张开,张大 | |
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82 absurdities | |
n.极端无理性( absurdity的名词复数 );荒谬;谬论;荒谬的行为 | |
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83 collapse | |
vi.累倒;昏倒;倒塌;塌陷 | |
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84 looms | |
n.织布机( loom的名词复数 )v.隐约出现,阴森地逼近( loom的第三人称单数 );隐约出现,阴森地逼近 | |
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85 pecuniary | |
adj.金钱的;金钱上的 | |
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86 cupidity | |
n.贪心,贪财 | |
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87 fanaticism | |
n.狂热,盲信 | |
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88 perishable | |
adj.(尤指食物)易腐的,易坏的 | |
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89 antedating | |
v.(在历史上)比…为早( antedate的现在分词 );先于;早于;(在信、支票等上)填写比实际日期早的日期 | |
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90 epoch | |
n.(新)时代;历元 | |
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91 massacre | |
n.残杀,大屠杀;v.残杀,集体屠杀 | |
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92 feudal | |
adj.封建的,封地的,领地的 | |
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93 thrift | |
adj.节约,节俭;n.节俭,节约 | |
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94 holocaust | |
n.大破坏;大屠杀 | |
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95 appreciation | |
n.评价;欣赏;感谢;领会,理解;价格上涨 | |
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96 formerly | |
adv.从前,以前 | |
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97 fully | |
adv.完全地,全部地,彻底地;充分地 | |
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98 slashed | |
v.挥砍( slash的过去式和过去分词 );鞭打;割破;削减 | |
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99 nags | |
n.不断地挑剔或批评(某人)( nag的名词复数 );不断地烦扰或伤害(某人);无休止地抱怨;不断指责v.不断地挑剔或批评(某人)( nag的第三人称单数 );不断地烦扰或伤害(某人);无休止地抱怨;不断指责 | |
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100 outrage | |
n.暴行,侮辱,愤怒;vt.凌辱,激怒 | |
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101 sufficiently | |
adv.足够地,充分地 | |
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102 noted | |
adj.著名的,知名的 | |
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103 civilisation | |
n.文明,文化,开化,教化 | |
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104 domesticated | |
adj.喜欢家庭生活的;(指动物)被驯养了的v.驯化( domesticate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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105 positively | |
adv.明确地,断然,坚决地;实在,确实 | |
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106 inventories | |
n.总结( inventory的名词复数 );细账;存货清单(或财产目录)的编制 | |
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107 supreme | |
adj.极度的,最重要的;至高的,最高的 | |
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108 excellence | |
n.优秀,杰出,(pl.)优点,美德 | |
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109 tributary | |
n.支流;纳贡国;adj.附庸的;辅助的;支流的 | |
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110 feigned | |
a.假装的,不真诚的 | |
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111 transcended | |
超出或超越(经验、信念、描写能力等)的范围( transcend的过去式和过去分词 ); 优于或胜过… | |
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112 revert | |
v.恢复,复归,回到 | |
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113 primal | |
adj.原始的;最重要的 | |
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114 ooze | |
n.软泥,渗出物;vi.渗出,泄漏;vt.慢慢渗出,流露 | |
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115 intrudes | |
v.侵入,侵扰,打扰( intrude的第三人称单数 );把…强加于 | |
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116 sloppy | |
adj.邋遢的,不整洁的 | |
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117 pictorial | |
adj.绘画的;图片的;n.画报 | |
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118 forsake | |
vt.遗弃,抛弃;舍弃,放弃 | |
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119 aberrations | |
n.偏差( aberration的名词复数 );差错;脱离常规;心理失常 | |
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120 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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121 explicitly | |
ad.明确地,显然地 | |
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122 distinguished | |
adj.卓越的,杰出的,著名的 | |
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123 glorification | |
n.赞颂 | |
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124 wholesome | |
adj.适合;卫生的;有益健康的;显示身心健康的 | |
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125 stimulating | |
adj.有启发性的,能激发人思考的 | |
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126 spun | |
v.纺,杜撰,急转身 | |
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127 warp | |
vt.弄歪,使翘曲,使不正常,歪曲,使有偏见 | |
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128 filaments | |
n.(电灯泡的)灯丝( filament的名词复数 );丝极;细丝;丝状物 | |
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129 lustrousness | |
n.光亮,有光泽 | |
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130 infinitely | |
adv.无限地,无穷地 | |
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131 varied | |
adj.多样的,多变化的 | |
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132 breakdown | |
n.垮,衰竭;损坏,故障,倒塌 | |
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133 decorative | |
adj.装饰的,可作装饰的 | |
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134 stolid | |
adj.无动于衷的,感情麻木的 | |
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135 scattered | |
adj.分散的,稀疏的;散步的;疏疏落落的 | |
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136 guild | |
n.行会,同业公会,协会 | |
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137 apparently | |
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎 | |
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138 subtlety | |
n.微妙,敏锐,精巧;微妙之处,细微的区别 | |
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139 resonant | |
adj.(声音)洪亮的,共鸣的 | |
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140 courteous | |
adj.彬彬有礼的,客气的 | |
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141 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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142 serene | |
adj. 安详的,宁静的,平静的 | |
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143 immortality | |
n.不死,不朽 | |
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