They had got to that point in their walk and talk where the talk might be best carried forward by arresting the walk; and they sat down on a bench of the Ramble1 in Central Park, and provisionally watched a man feeding a squirrel with peanuts. The squirrel had climbed up the leg of the man's trousers and over the promontory2 above, and the man was holding very still, flattered by the squirrel's confidence, and anxious not to frighten it away by any untoward3 movement; if the squirrel had been a child bestowing4 its first intelligent favors upon him the man could not have been prouder. He was an old fellow, one of many who pamper5 the corrupt6 rodents7 of the Park, and reduce them from their native independence to something like the condition of those pauper8 wards9 of the nation on our Indian Reservations, to whom a blurred10 image of the chase offers itself at stated intervals11 in the slaughter12 of the Government's dole13 of beef-cattle.
The friend to whom this imperfect parallel occurred recalled his thoughts from it and said, with single reference to the man and the squirrel: "I suppose that's an expression of the sort of thing we've been talking about. Kindness to animals is an impulse, isn't it, of the 'natural piety14' embracing the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood15 of man?"
central park
THE MALL, CENTRAL PARK
"I don't think it's quite so modern as that formulation," the other friend questioned. "I was thinking it was very eighteenth-century; part of the universal humanitarian16 movement of the time when the master began to ask himself whether the slave was not also a man and a brother, and the philanthropist visited the frightful17 prisons of the day and remembered those in bonds as bound with them."
"Yes, you may say that," the first allowed. "But benevolence18 toward dumb creatures originated very much further back than the eighteenth century. There was St. Francis of Assisi, you know, who preached to the birds, didn't he? and Walter von der Vogelweide, who pensioned them. And several animals—cats, crocodiles, cows, and the like—enjoyed a good deal of consideration among the Egyptians. The serpent used to have a pretty good time as a popular religion. And what about the Stoics19? They were rather kind to animals, weren't they? Why should Pliny's Doves have come down to us in mosaic20 if he cultivated them solely21 for the sake of broiled22 squabs? It's true that the modern Roman, before the extension of the S.P.C.A. to his city, used his horse cruelly upon the perfectly23 unquestionable ground that the poor beast was not a Christian24."
"I don't remember about the Stoics exactly," the second friend mused25 aloud; and the first let this go, though they both understood that very likely he not only did not remember, but had never known. "They had so many virtues26 that they must have been kind to brutes27, but I taste something more Cowperian, more Wordsworthian, than Marcus-Aurelian in our own kindness. These poets taught me, so far as I could learn, not to
'enter on my list of friends the man
Who needlessly sets foot upon a worm,'
and
'Never to mix my pleasure or my pride
With sorrow of the meanest thing that breathes.'"
"Yes, but I don't like giving up the Stoics; we may have to come back to their ground if things keep on going the way they have gone for the last generation. The Stoics had a high ideal of duty; it's hard to see that the Christian ideal is higher, though they taught themselves to be proudly good, and we (if we may still say we when we say Christians) are always trying to teach ourselves to be humbly29 good."
"What do you mean," the second of the friends demanded, "by coming back to their ground?"
"Why," the first responded, picking up a twig30 that opportunely31 dropped at his feet, and getting out his knife to whittle32 it, "I suppose they were the first agnostics, and we who don't so much deny the Deity33 as ignore Him——"
"I see," the second answered, sadly. "But aren't you throwing up the sponge for faith rather prematurely34? The power of believing has a tremendous vitality35. I heard a Catholic once say to a Protestant friend, 'You know the Church has outlived schisms36 much older than yours.' And inside of Protestantism as well as Catholicism there is a tremendous power of revival37. We have seen it often. After an age of unbelief an age of belief is rather certain to follow."
"Well, well, I'm willing. I'm no more agnostic than you are. I should be glad of an age of faith for the rest to my soul, if for no other reason. I was harking back to the Stoics not only because they were good to animals, if they were good, but because they seemed to have the same barren devotion to duty which has survived my faith as well as my creed38. But why, if I neither expect happiness nor dread39 misery40, should I still care to do my duty? And I certainly always do."
"What, always?"
"Well, nearly always."
The friends laughed together, and the first said, "What a pity the Gilbertian humor has gone out so; you can't adapt it to a daily need any longer without the risk of not being followed."
The other sighed. "Nearly everything goes out, except duty. If that went out, I don't think I should have much pleasure in life."
"No, you would be dead, without the hope of resurrection. If there is anything comes direct from the Creative Force, from
'La somma sapienza e il primo amore,'
it is the sense of duty, 'the moral law within us,' which Kant divined as unmistakably delivered from God to man. I use the old terminology41."
"Don't apologize. It still serves our turn; I don't know that anything else serves it yet. And you make me think of what dear old M.D. C—— told me shortly after his wife died. He had wished, when they both owned that the end was near, to suggest some comfort in the hope of another life, to clutch at that straw to save his drowning soul; but she stopped him. She said, 'There is nothing but duty, the duty we have wished to do and tried to do.'"
The friends were silent in the pathos42 of the fact, and then the first said, "I suppose we all wish to do our duty, even when we don't try or don't try hard enough."
The other conjectured43, "Perhaps, after all, it's a question of strength; wickedness is weakness."
"That formula won't always serve; still, it will serve in a good many cases; possibly most. It won't do to preach it, though."
"No, we must cultivate strength of character. I wonder how?"
"Well, your Stoics—"
"My Stoics?"
"Anybody's Stoics—did it by self-denial. When they saw a pleasure coming their way they sidestepped it; they went round the corner, and let it go by while they recruited their energies. Then when they saw a duty coming they stepped out and did it."
"It seems very simple. But aren't you rather cynical44?"
"That's what people call one when one puts ethics45 picturesquely46. But perhaps I've rather overdone47 it about the Stoics. Perhaps they wouldn't have refused to enjoy a pleasure at their own expense, at their cost in some sort of suffering to themselves. They really seem to have invented the Christian ideal of duty."
"And a very good thing. It may be all that will be left of Christianity in the end, if the Christian hope of reward goes as the Christian fear of punishment has gone. It seems to have been all there was of it in the beginning."
The second of the friends said at this, "I don't know that I should go so far as that."
The first returned, "Well, I don't know that I should ask you. I don't know that I go that far myself," he said, and then they laughed together again.
The man who was feeding the squirrel seemed to have exhausted48 his stock of peanuts, and he went away. After some hesitation49 the squirrel came toward the two friends and examined their countenances50 with a beady, greedy eye. He was really glutted51 with peanuts, and had buried the last where he would forget it, after having packed it down in the ground with his paws.
"No, no," the first of the friends said to the squirrel; "we are on the way back to being Stoics and practising the more self-denying virtues. You won't get any peanuts out of us. For one thing, we haven't got any."
"There's a boy," the second friend dreamily suggested, "down by the boat-house with a basketful."
"But I am teaching this animal self-denial. He will be a nobler squirrel all the rest of his life for not having the peanuts he couldn't get. That's like what I always try to feel in my own case. It's what I call character-building. Get along!"
The squirrel, to which the last words were addressed, considered a moment. Then it got along, after having inspected the whittlings at the feet of the friends to decide whether they were edible52.
"I thought," the second of the friends said, "that your humanity included kindness to animals."
"I am acting53 for this animal's best good. I don't say but that, if the peanut-boy had come by with his basket, I shouldn't have yielded to my natural weakness and given the little brute28 a paper of them to bury. He seems to have been rather a saving squirrel—when he was gorged54."
The mellow55 sunlight of the November day came down through the tattered56 foliage57, and threw the shadows of the friends on the path where they sat, with their soft hats pulled over their foreheads. They were silent so long that when the second of them resumed their conversation he had to ask, "Where were we?"
"Cultivating force of character in squirrels."
"I thought we had got by that."
"Then we had come round to ourselves again."
"Something like that," the first friend reluctantly allowed.
"What a vicious circle! It seems to me that our first duty, if that's what you mean, is to get rid of ourselves."
"Whom should we have left? Other people? We mustn't pamper their egotism in chastising58 our own. We must use a great deal of caution in doing our duty. If I really loved that squirrel, if I were truly kind to animals, if I studied their best good, as disagreeable friends say they study ours, I should go after him and give him a hickory-nut that would wear down his teeth as nature intended; civilization is undermining the health of squirrels by feeding them peanuts, which allow their teeth to overgrow."
"That is true. Isn't it doing something of the same sort in other ways for all of us? If I hadn't lost my teeth so long ago, I'm sure I should feel them piercing from one jaw59 to another in their inordinate60 development. It's duty that keeps down the overgrowths that luxury incites61. By-the-way, what set you thinking so severely62 about duty this beautiful Sunday morning? The neglected duty of going to church?"
"Ah, I call going to church a pleasure. No, I suppose it was an effect, a reverberation63, of the tumult64 of my struggle to vote for the right man on Tuesday, when I knew that I was throwing my vote away if I did vote for him."
"But you voted for him?"
The first friend nodded.
"Which man was it?"
"What's the use? He was beaten—
'That is all you know or need to know.'"
"Of course he was beaten if it was your duty to vote for him," the second friend mused. "How patient the Creator must be with the result of His counsel to His creatures! He keeps on communing, commanding, if we are to believe Kant. It is His one certain way to affirm and corroborate65 Himself. Without His perpetual message to the human conscience, He does not recognizably exist; and yet more than half the time His mandate66 sends us to certain defeat, to certain death. It's enough to make one go in for the other side. Of course, we have to suppose that the same voice which intimates duty to us intimates duty to them?"
"And that they would like to obey it, if they could consistently with other interests and obligations?"
"Yes, they juggle67 with their sense of it; they pretend that the Voice does not mean exactly what it says. They get out of it that way."
"And the great, vital difference between ourselves and them is that we promptly68 and explicitly69 obey it; we don't palter with it in the slightest; 'we don't bandy words with our sovereign,' as Doctor Johnson said. I wonder," the speaker added, with the briskness70 of one to whom a vivid thought suddenly occurs, "how it would work if one went and did exactly the contrary of what was intimated to the human conscience?"
"That's not a new idea. There are people who habitually71 do so, or, rather, to whom an inverted72 moral law is delivered."
"You mean the people who beat you at the polls last Tuesday?"
"No, I mean the people in the asylums73, some of them. They are said to hear the voice that bids us do right commanding them to do wrong. 'Thou shalt kill,' they hear it say, 'thou shalt steal, thou shalt bear false witness, thou shalt commit adultery, thou shalt not honor thy father and thy mother,' and so on through the Decalogue, with the inhibition thrown off or put on, as the case may be."
"How very hideous74!" the second friend exclaimed. "It's like an emanation from the Pit. I mean the Pit that used to be. It's been abolished."
"And a very good thing. The noises from it went far to drown the voice of God, and bewildered some men so that they did not rightly know what the voice was saying. Now when people hear a voice bidding them do evil, we know what to do with them."
"And you think that the fellows who outvoted you on Tuesday heard the same voice that you heard; and they disobeyed it?"
"Ah, it's hard to say. We haven't got to the bottom of such things yet. Perhaps they disobeyed the voice provisionally, expecting to make a satisfactory explanation later on. Or perhaps they had put their civic75 consciences in the keeping of others, who gave them an official interpretation76 of the command, with instructions not to take it literally77."
"That's very interesting," the second friend said. "Then it's your idea that no one really prefers to do wrong?"
"Not outside of the asylums. And even there they can plead authority. No, no, no! In a world pretty full of evil there isn't any purely78 voluntary evil among the sane79. When the 'wicked,' as we call them, do wrong, it is provisionally only; they mean to do right presently and make it up with the heavenly powers. As long as an evil-doer lives he means to cease some time to do evil. He may put it off too long, or until he becomes ethically80 unsound. You know Swedenborg found that the last state of sinners was insanity81."
"Dreadful!"
"But I've always thought very few reached that state. There's this curious thing about it all: we are not only ethically prompted by that inner voice, we are ?sthetically prompted; it's a matter of taste as well as of conduct, too. The virtues are so clean, the vices82 so repulsively83 dirty. Justice is beautifully symmetrical; injustice84 is so shapeless, so unbalanced. Truth is such a pure line; falsehood is so out of drawing. The iniquities85 make you uncomfortable. The arts deny them."
The second friend drew a long breath. "Then I don't see why there are so many."
"Well," the first friend suggested, "there seems to be a difficulty. Some say that they have to be employed as antitheses86; we can't get on without them, at least at this stage of the proceedings87. Perhaps we shall advance so far that we shall be able to use historical or accomplished88 evil for the contrasts by which we shall know actual good."
"I don't see how you make that out."
"Why, there are already some regions of the globe where the summer does not require the antithesis89 of winter for its consciousness. Perhaps in the moral world there will yet be a condition in which right shall not need to contrast itself with wrong. We are still meteorologically very imperfect."
"And how do you expect to bring the condition about? By our always doing our duty?"
"Well, we sha'n't by not doing it."
点击收听单词发音
1 ramble | |
v.漫步,漫谈,漫游;n.漫步,闲谈,蔓延 | |
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2 promontory | |
n.海角;岬 | |
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3 untoward | |
adj.不利的,不幸的,困难重重的 | |
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4 bestowing | |
砖窑中砖堆上层已烧透的砖 | |
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5 pamper | |
v.纵容,过分关怀 | |
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6 corrupt | |
v.贿赂,收买;adj.腐败的,贪污的 | |
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7 rodents | |
n.啮齿目动物( rodent的名词复数 ) | |
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8 pauper | |
n.贫民,被救济者,穷人 | |
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9 wards | |
区( ward的名词复数 ); 病房; 受监护的未成年者; 被人照顾或控制的状态 | |
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10 blurred | |
v.(使)变模糊( blur的过去式和过去分词 );(使)难以区分;模模糊糊;迷离 | |
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11 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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12 slaughter | |
n.屠杀,屠宰;vt.屠杀,宰杀 | |
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13 dole | |
n.救济,(失业)救济金;vt.(out)发放,发给 | |
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14 piety | |
n.虔诚,虔敬 | |
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15 brotherhood | |
n.兄弟般的关系,手中情谊 | |
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16 humanitarian | |
n.人道主义者,博爱者,基督凡人论者 | |
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17 frightful | |
adj.可怕的;讨厌的 | |
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18 benevolence | |
n.慈悲,捐助 | |
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19 stoics | |
禁欲主义者,恬淡寡欲的人,不以苦乐为意的人( stoic的名词复数 ) | |
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20 mosaic | |
n./adj.镶嵌细工的,镶嵌工艺品的,嵌花式的 | |
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21 solely | |
adv.仅仅,唯一地 | |
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22 broiled | |
a.烤过的 | |
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23 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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24 Christian | |
adj.基督教徒的;n.基督教徒 | |
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25 mused | |
v.沉思,冥想( muse的过去式和过去分词 );沉思自语说(某事) | |
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26 virtues | |
美德( virtue的名词复数 ); 德行; 优点; 长处 | |
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27 brutes | |
兽( brute的名词复数 ); 畜生; 残酷无情的人; 兽性 | |
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28 brute | |
n.野兽,兽性 | |
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29 humbly | |
adv. 恭顺地,谦卑地 | |
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30 twig | |
n.小树枝,嫩枝;v.理解 | |
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31 opportunely | |
adv.恰好地,适时地 | |
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32 whittle | |
v.削(木头),削减;n.屠刀 | |
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33 deity | |
n.神,神性;被奉若神明的人(或物) | |
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34 prematurely | |
adv.过早地,贸然地 | |
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35 vitality | |
n.活力,生命力,效力 | |
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36 schisms | |
n.教会分立,分裂( schism的名词复数 ) | |
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37 revival | |
n.复兴,复苏,(精力、活力等的)重振 | |
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38 creed | |
n.信条;信念,纲领 | |
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39 dread | |
vt.担忧,忧虑;惧怕,不敢;n.担忧,畏惧 | |
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40 misery | |
n.痛苦,苦恼,苦难;悲惨的境遇,贫苦 | |
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41 terminology | |
n.术语;专有名词 | |
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42 pathos | |
n.哀婉,悲怆 | |
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43 conjectured | |
推测,猜测,猜想( conjecture的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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44 cynical | |
adj.(对人性或动机)怀疑的,不信世道向善的 | |
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45 ethics | |
n.伦理学;伦理观,道德标准 | |
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46 picturesquely | |
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47 overdone | |
v.做得过分( overdo的过去分词 );太夸张;把…煮得太久;(工作等)过度 | |
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48 exhausted | |
adj.极其疲惫的,精疲力尽的 | |
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49 hesitation | |
n.犹豫,踌躇 | |
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50 countenances | |
n.面容( countenance的名词复数 );表情;镇静;道义支持 | |
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51 glutted | |
v.吃得过多( glut的过去式和过去分词 );(对胃口、欲望等)纵情满足;使厌腻;塞满 | |
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52 edible | |
n.食品,食物;adj.可食用的 | |
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53 acting | |
n.演戏,行为,假装;adj.代理的,临时的,演出用的 | |
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54 gorged | |
v.(用食物把自己)塞饱,填饱( gorge的过去式和过去分词 );作呕 | |
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55 mellow | |
adj.柔和的;熟透的;v.变柔和;(使)成熟 | |
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56 tattered | |
adj.破旧的,衣衫破的 | |
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57 foliage | |
n.叶子,树叶,簇叶 | |
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58 chastising | |
v.严惩(某人)(尤指责打)( chastise的现在分词 ) | |
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59 jaw | |
n.颚,颌,说教,流言蜚语;v.喋喋不休,教训 | |
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60 inordinate | |
adj.无节制的;过度的 | |
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61 incites | |
刺激,激励,煽动( incite的第三人称单数 ) | |
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62 severely | |
adv.严格地;严厉地;非常恶劣地 | |
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63 reverberation | |
反响; 回响; 反射; 反射物 | |
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64 tumult | |
n.喧哗;激动,混乱;吵闹 | |
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65 corroborate | |
v.支持,证实,确定 | |
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66 mandate | |
n.托管地;命令,指示 | |
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67 juggle | |
v.变戏法,纂改,欺骗,同时做;n.玩杂耍,纂改,花招 | |
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68 promptly | |
adv.及时地,敏捷地 | |
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69 explicitly | |
ad.明确地,显然地 | |
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70 briskness | |
n.敏捷,活泼 | |
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71 habitually | |
ad.习惯地,通常地 | |
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72 inverted | |
adj.反向的,倒转的v.使倒置,使反转( invert的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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73 asylums | |
n.避难所( asylum的名词复数 );庇护;政治避难;精神病院 | |
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74 hideous | |
adj.丑陋的,可憎的,可怕的,恐怖的 | |
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75 civic | |
adj.城市的,都市的,市民的,公民的 | |
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76 interpretation | |
n.解释,说明,描述;艺术处理 | |
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77 literally | |
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实 | |
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78 purely | |
adv.纯粹地,完全地 | |
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79 sane | |
adj.心智健全的,神志清醒的,明智的,稳健的 | |
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80 ethically | |
adv.在伦理上,道德上 | |
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81 insanity | |
n.疯狂,精神错乱;极端的愚蠢,荒唐 | |
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82 vices | |
缺陷( vice的名词复数 ); 恶习; 不道德行为; 台钳 | |
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83 repulsively | |
adv.冷淡地 | |
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84 injustice | |
n.非正义,不公正,不公平,侵犯(别人的)权利 | |
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85 iniquities | |
n.邪恶( iniquity的名词复数 );极不公正 | |
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86 antitheses | |
n.对照,对立的,对比法;对立( antithesis的名词复数 );对立面;对照;对偶 | |
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87 proceedings | |
n.进程,过程,议程;诉讼(程序);公报 | |
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88 accomplished | |
adj.有才艺的;有造诣的;达到了的 | |
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89 antithesis | |
n.对立;相对 | |
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