John Verney married Elizabeth in 1938, but it was not until the winter of 1945 that he came to hate her steadily1 and fiercely. There had been countless2 brief gusts3 of hate before this, for it was a thing which came easily to him. He was not what is normally described as a bad-tempered4 man, rather the reverse; a look of fatigue5 and abstraction was the only visible sign of the passion which possessed6 him, as others are possessed by laughter or desire, several times a day.
During the war he passed among those he served with as a phlegmatic7 fellow. He did not have his good or his bad days; they were all uniformly good and bad; good, in that he did what had to be done, expeditiously8 without ever “getting in a flap” or “going off the deep end”; bad, from the intermittent9, invisible sheet-lightning of hate which flashed and flickered10 deep inside him at every obstruction11 or reverse. In his orderly room when, as a company commander, he faced the morning procession of defaulters and malingerers; in the mess when the subalterns disturbed his reading by playing the wireless12; at the Staff College when the “syndicate” disagreed with his solution; at Brigade H.Q. when the staff-sergeant mislaid a file or the telephone orderly muddled13 a call; when the driver of his car missed a turning; later, in hospital, when the doctor seemed to look too cursorily14 at his wound and the nurses stood gossiping jauntily15 at the beds of more likeable patients instead of doing their duty to him—in all the annoyances16 of army life which others dismissed with an oath and a shrug17, John Verney’s eyelids18 drooped19 wearily, a tiny grenade of hate exploded and the fragments rang and ricocheted round the steel walls of his mind.
There had been less to annoy him before the war. He had some money and the hope of a career in politics. Before marriage he served his apprenticeship21 to the Liberal party in two hopeless by-elections. The Central Office then rewarded him with a constituency in outer London which offered a fair chance in the next General Election. In the eighteen months before the war he nursed this constituency from his flat in Belgravia and travelled frequently on the continent to study political conditions. These studies convinced him that war was inevitable22; he denounced the Munich agreement pungently23 and secured a commission in the territorial24 army.
Into this peacetime life Elizabeth fitted unobtrusively. She was his cousin. In 1938 she had reached the age of twenty-six, four years his junior, without falling in love. She was a calm, handsome young woman, an only child, with some money of her own and more to come. As a girl, in her first season, an injudicious remark, let slip and overheard, got her the reputation of cleverness. Those who knew her best ruthlessly called her “deep.”
Thus condemned25 to social failure, she languished26 in the ballrooms27 of Pont Street for another year and then settled down to a life of concert-going and shopping with her mother, until she surprised her small circle of friends by marrying John Verney. Courtship and consummation were tepid28, cousinly, harmonious29. They agreed, in face of the coming war, to remain childless. No one knew what Elizabeth felt or thought about anything. Her judgments30 were mainly negative, deep or dull as you cared to take them. She had none of the appearance of a woman likely to inflame31 great hate.
John Verney was discharged from the Army early in 1945 with an M.C. and one leg, for the future, two inches shorter than the other. He found Elizabeth living in Hampstead with her parents, his uncle and aunt. She had kept him informed by letter of the changes in her condition but, preoccupied33, he had not clearly imagined them.
Their flat had been requisitioned by a government office; their furniture and books sent to a repository and totally lost, partly burned by a bomb, partly pillaged34 by firemen. Elizabeth, who was a linguist35, had gone to work in a clandestine36 branch of the Foreign Office.
Her parents’ house had once been a substantial Georgian villa37 overlooking the Heath. John Verney arrived there early in the morning after a crowded night’s journey from Liverpool. The wrought-iron railings and gates had been rudely torn away by the salvage38 collectors, and in the front garden, once so neat, weeds and shrubs39 grew in a rank jungle trampled40 at night by courting soldiers. The back garden was a single, small bomb-crater; heaped clay, statuary and the bricks and glass of ruined greenhouses; dry stalks of willow-herb stood breast high over the mounds41. All the windows were gone from the back of the house, replaced by shutters42 of card and board, which put the main rooms in perpetual darkness. “Welcome to Chaos43 and Old Night,” said his uncle genially45.
There were no servants; the old had fled, the young had been conscribed for service. Elizabeth made him some tea before leaving for her office.
Here he lived, lucky, Elizabeth told him, to have a home. Furniture was unprocurable, furnished flats commanded a price beyond their income, which was now taxed to a bare wage. They might have found something in the country, but Elizabeth, being childless, could not get release from her work. Moreover, he had his constituency.
This, too, was transformed. A factory, wired round like a prisoner-of-war camp, stood in the public gardens. The streets surrounding it, once the trim houses of potential Liberals, had been bombed, patched, confiscated46, and filled with an immigrant proletarian population. Every day he received a heap of complaining letters from constituents47 exiled in provincial48 boardinghouses. He had hoped that his decoration and his limp might earn him sympathy, but he found the new inhabitants indifferent to the fortunes of war. Instead they showed a sceptical curiosity about Social Security. “They’re nothing but a lot of reds,” said the Liberal agent.
“You mean I shan’t get in?”
“Well, we’ll give them a good fight. The Tories are putting up a Battle-of-Britain pilot. I’m afraid he’ll get most of what’s left of the middle-class vote.”
In the event John Verney came bottom of the poll, badly. A rancorous Jewish schoolteacher was elected. The Central Office paid his deposit, but the election had cost him dear. And when it was over there was absolutely nothing for John Verney to do.
He remained in Hampstead, helped his aunt make the beds after Elizabeth had gone to her office, limped to the greengrocer and fishmonger and stood, full of hate, in the queues; helped Elizabeth wash up at night. They ate in the kitchen, where his aunt cooked deliciously the scanty50 rations51. His uncle went three days a week to help pack parcels for Java.
Elizabeth, the deep one, never spoke52 of her work, which, in fact, was concerned with setting up hostile and oppressive governments in Eastern Europe. One evening at a restaurant, a man came and spoke to her, a tall young man whose sallow, aquiline53 face was full of intellect and humour. “That’s the head of my department,” she said.
“He’s so amusing.”
“Looks like a Jew.”
“I believe he is. He’s a strong Conservative and hates the work,” she added hastily, for since his defeat in the election John had become fiercely anti-Semitic.
“There is absolutely no need to work for the State now,” he said. “The war’s over.”
“Our work is just beginning. They won’t let any of us go. You must understand what conditions are in this country.”
It often fell to Elizabeth to explain “conditions” to him. Strand55 by strand, knot by knot, through the coalless winter, she exposed the vast net of government control which had been woven in his absence. He had been reared in traditional Liberalism and the system revolted him. More than this, it had him caught, personally, tripped up, tied, tangled56; wherever he wanted to go, whatever he wanted to do or have done, he found himself baffled and frustrated57. And as Elizabeth explained she found herself defending. This regulation was necessary to avoid that ill; such a country was suffering, as Britain was not, for having neglected such a precaution; and so on, calmly and reasonably.
“I know it’s maddening, John, but you must realize it’s the same for everyone.”
“That’s what all you bureaucrats58 want,” he said. “Equality through slavery. The two-class state—proletarians and officials.”
Elizabeth was part and parcel of it. She worked for the State and the Jews. She was a collaborator59 with the new, alien, occupying power. And as the winter wore on and the gas burned feebly in the stove, and the rain blew in through the patched windows, as at length spring came and buds broke in the obscene wilderness60 round the house, Elizabeth in his mind became something more important. She became a symbol. For just as soldiers in far-distant camps think of their wives, with a tenderness they seldom felt at home, as the embodiment of all the good things they have left behind, wives who perhaps were scolds and drabs, but in the desert and jungle become transfigured until their trite61 air-letters become texts of hope, so Elizabeth grew in John Verney’s despairing mind to more than human malevolence62 as the archpriestess and maenad of the century of the common man.
“You aren’t looking well, John,” said his aunt. “You and Elizabeth ought to get away for a bit. She is due for leave at Easter.”
“The State is granting her a supplementary63 ration49 of her husband’s company, you mean. Are we sure she has filled in all the correct forms? Or are commissars of her rank above such things?”
Uncle and aunt laughed uneasily. John made his little jokes with such an air of weariness, with such a droop20 of the eyelids that they sometimes struck chill in that family circle. Elizabeth regarded him gravely and silently.
John was far from well. His leg was in constant pain so that he no longer stood in queues. He slept badly; as also, for the first time in her life, did Elizabeth. They shared a room now, for the winter rains had brought down ceilings in many parts of the shaken house and the upper rooms were thought to be unsafe. They had twin beds on the ground floor in what had once been her father’s library.
In the first days of his homecoming John had been amorous64. Now he never approached her. They lay night after night six feet apart in the darkness. Once when John had been awake for two hours he turned on the lamp that stood on the table between them. Elizabeth was lying with her eyes wide open staring at the ceiling.
“I’m sorry. Did I wake you?”
“I haven’t been asleep.”
“I thought I’d read for a bit. Will it disturb you?”
“Not at all.”
She turned away. John read for an hour. He did not know whether she was awake or asleep when he turned off the light.
Often after that he longed to put on the light, but was afraid to find her awake and staring. Instead he lay, as others lie in a luxurious65 rapture66 of love, hating her.
It did not occur to him to leave her; or, rather, it did occur from time to time, but he hopelessly dismissed the thought. Her life was bound tight to his; her family was his family; their finances were intertangled and their expectations lay together in the same quarters. To leave her would be to start fresh, alone and naked in a strange world; and lame32 and weary at the age of thirty-eight, John Verney had not the heart to move.
He loved no one else. He had nowhere to go, nothing to do. Moreover he suspected, of late, that it would not hurt her if he went. And, above all, the single steadfast67 desire left to him was to do her ill. “I wish she were dead,” he said to himself as he lay awake at night. “I wish she were dead.”
Sometimes they went out together. As the winter passed, John took to dining once or twice a week at his club. He assumed that on these occasions she stayed at home, but one morning it transpired68 that she too had dined out the evening before. He did not ask with whom, but his aunt did, and Elizabeth replied, “Just someone from the office.”
“The Jew?” John asked.
“As a matter of fact, it was.”
“I hope you enjoyed it.”
“Quite. A beastly dinner, of course, but he’s very amusing.”
One night when he returned from his club, after a dismal69 little dinner and two crowded Tube journeys, he found Elizabeth in bed and deeply asleep. She did not stir when he entered. Unlike her normal habit, she was snoring. He stood for a minute, fascinated by this new and unlovely aspect of her, her head thrown back, her mouth open and slightly dribbling70 at the corner. Then he shook her. She muttered something, turned over and slept heavily and soundlessly.
Half an hour later, as he was striving to compose himself for sleep, she began to snore again. He turned on the light, looked at her more closely and noticed with surprise, which suddenly changed to joyous71 hope, that there was a tube of unfamiliar72 pills, half empty, beside her on the bed table.
He examined it. “24 Comprimés narcotiques, hypnotiques,” he read, and then in large, scarlet73 letters, “NE PAS DEPASSER DEUX.” He counted those which were left. Eleven.
With tremulous butterfly wings Hope began to flutter in his heart, became a certainty. He felt a fire kindle74 and spread inside him until he was deliciously suffused75 in every limb and organ. He lay, listening to the snores, with the pure excitement of a child on Christmas Eve. “I shall wake up tomorrow and find her dead,” he told himself, as once he had felt the flaccid stocking at the foot of his bed and told himself, “Tomorrow I shall wake up and find it full.” Like a child, he longed to sleep to hasten the morning and, like a child, he was wildly, ecstatically sleepless76. Presently he swallowed two of the pills himself and almost at once was unconscious.
Elizabeth always rose first to make breakfast for the family. She was at the dressing77 table when sharply, without drowsiness78, his memory stereoscopically clear about the incidents of the night before, John awoke. “You’ve been snoring,” she said.
Disappointment was so intense that at first he could not speak. Then he said, “You snored, too, last night.”
“It must be the sleeping tablet I took. I must say it gave me a good night.”
“Only one?”
“Yes, two’s the most that’s safe.”
“Where did you get them?”
“A friend at the office—the one you called the Jew. He has them prescribed by a doctor for when he’s working too hard. I told him I wasn’t sleeping, so he gave me half a bottle.”
“Could he get me some?”
“I expect so. He can do most things like that.”
So he and Elizabeth began to drug themselves regularly and passed long, vacuous79 nights. But often John delayed, letting the beatific80 pill lie beside his glass of water, while, knowing the vigil was terminable at will, he postponed81 the joy of unconsciousness, heard Elizabeth’s snores, and hated her sumptuously82.
One evening while the plans for the holiday were still under discussion, John and Elizabeth went to the cinema. The film was a murder story of no great ingenuity83 but with showy scenery. A bride murdered her husband by throwing him out of a window, down a cliff. Things were made easy for her by his taking a lonely lighthouse for their honeymoon84. He was very rich and she wanted his money. All she had to do was confide85 in the local doctor and a few neighbours that her husband frightened her by walking in his sleep; she doped his coffee, dragged him from the bed to the balcony—a feat54 of some strength—where she had already broken away a yard of balustrade, and rolled him over. Then she went back to bed, gave the alarm next morning, and wept over the mangled87 body which was presently discovered half awash on the rocks. Retribution overtook her later, but at the time the thing was a complete success.
“I wish it were as easy as that,” thought John, and in a few hours the whole tale had floated away in those lightless attics88 of the mind where films and dreams and funny stories lie spider-shrouded for a lifetime unless, as sometimes happens, an intruder brings them to light.
Such a thing happened a few weeks later when John and Elizabeth went for their holiday. Elizabeth found the place. It belonged to someone in her office. It was named Good Hope Fort, and stood on the Cornish coast. “It’s only just been derequisitioned,” she said: “I expect we shall find it in pretty bad condition.”
“We’re used to that,” said John. It did not occur to him that she should spend her leave anywhere but with him. She was as much part of him as his maimed and aching leg.
They arrived on a gusty89 April afternoon after a train journey of normal discomfort90. A taxi drove them eight miles from the station, through deep Cornish lanes, past granite91 cottages and disused, archaic92 tin-workings. They reached the village which gave the house its postal93 address, passed through it and out along a track which suddenly emerged from its high banks into open grazing land on the cliff’s edge, high, swift clouds and sea-birds wheeling overhead, the turf at their feet alive with fluttering wild flowers, salt in the air, below them the roar of the Atlantic breaking on the rocks, a middle-distance of indigo94 and white tumbled waters and beyond it the serene95 arc of the horizon. Here was the house.
“Your father,” said John, “would now say, ‘Your castle hath a pleasant seat.’”
“Well, it has rather, hasn’t it?”
It was a small stone building on the very edge of the cliff, built a century or so ago for defensive96 purposes, converted to a private house in the years of peace, taken again by the Navy during the war as a signal station, now once more reverting97 to gentler uses. Some coils of rusty98 wire, a mast, the concrete foundations of a hut, gave evidence of its former masters.
They carried their things into the house and paid the taxi.
“A woman comes up every morning from the village. I said we shouldn’t want her this evening. I see she’s left us some oil for the lamps. She’s got a fire going, too, bless her, and plenty of wood. Oh, and look what I’ve got as a present from father. I promised not to tell you until we arrived. A bottle of whisky. Wasn’t it sweet of him. He’s been hoarding99 his ration for three months ...” Elizabeth talked brightly as she began to arrange the luggage. “There’s a room for each of us. This is the only proper living room, but there’s a study in case you feel like doing any work. I believe we shall be quite comfortable ...”
The living room was built with two stout100 bays, each with a french window opening on a balcony which overhung the sea. John opened one and the sea-wind filled the room. He stepped out, breathed deeply, and then said suddenly: “Hullo, this is dangerous.”
At one place, between the windows, the cast-iron balustrade had broken away and the stone ledge101 lay open over the cliff. He looked at the gap and at the foaming102 rocks below, momentarily puzzled. The irregular polyhedron of memory rolled uncertainly and came to rest.
He had been here before, a few weeks ago, on the gallery of the lighthouse in that swiftly forgotten film. He stood there, looking down. It was exactly thus that the waves had come swirling103 over the rocks, had broken and dropped back with the spray falling about them. This was the sound they had made; this was the broken ironwork and the sheer edge.
Elizabeth was still talking in the room, her voice drowned by wind and sea. John returned to the room, shut and fastened the door. In the quiet she was saying “... only got the furniture out of store last week. He left the woman from the village to arrange it. She’s got some queer ideas, I must say. Just look where she put ...”
“What did you say this house was called?”
“Good Hope.”
“A good name.”
That evening John drank a glass of his father-in-law’s whisky, smoked a pipe and planned. He had been a good tactician104. He made a leisurely105, mental “appreciation of the situation.” Object: murder.
When they rose to go to bed he asked: “You packed the tablets?”
“Yes, a new tube. But I am sure I shan’t want any tonight.”
“Neither shall I,” said John, “the air is wonderful.”
During the following days he considered the tactical problem. It was entirely106 simple. He had the “staff-solution” already. He considered it in the words and form he had used in the army. “... Courses open to the enemy ... achievement of surprise ... consolidation107 of success.” The staff-solution was exemplary. At the beginning of the first week, he began to put it into execution.
Already, by easy stages, he had made himself known in the village. Elizabeth was a friend of the owner; he the returned hero, still a little strange in civvy street. “The first holiday my wife and I have had together for six years,” he told them in the golf club and, growing more confidential108 at the bar, hinted that they were thinking of making up for lost time and starting a family.
On another evening he spoke of war-strain, of how in this war the civilians109 had had a worse time of it than the services. His wife, for instance; stuck it all through the blitz; office work all day, bombs at night. She ought to get right away, alone somewhere for a long stretch; her nerves had suffered; nothing serious, but to tell the truth he wasn’t quite happy about it. As a matter of fact, he had found her walking in her sleep once or twice in London.
His companions knew of similar cases; nothing to worry about, but it wanted watching; didn’t want it to develop into anything worse. Had she seen a doctor?
Not yet, John said. In fact she didn’t know she had been sleep-walking. He had got her back to bed without waking her. He hoped the sea air would do her good. In fact, she seemed much better already. If she showed any more signs of the trouble when they got home, he knew a very good man to take her to.
The golf club was full of sympathy. John asked if there was a good doctor in the neighbourhood. Yes, they said, old Mackenzie in the village, a first-class man, wasted in a little place like that; not at all a stick-in-the-mud. Read the latest books; psychology110 and all that. They couldn’t think why Old Mack had never specialized111 and made a name for himself.
“I think I might go and talk to Old Mack about it,” said John.
“Do. You couldn’t find a better fellow.”
Elizabeth had a fortnight’s leave. There were still three days to go when John went off to the village to consult Dr. Mackenzie. He found a grey-haired, genial44 bachelor in a consulting room that was more like a lawyer’s office than a physician’s, book-lined, dark, permeated112 by tobacco smoke.
Seated in the shabby leather armchair he developed in more precise language the story he had told in the golf club. Dr. Mackenzie listened without comment.
“It’s the first time I’ve run up against anything like this,” he concluded.
At length Dr. Mackenzie said: “You got pretty badly knocked about in the war, Mr. Verney?”
“My knee. It still gives me trouble.”
“Bad time in hospital?”
“Three months. A beastly place outside Rome.”
“There’s always a good deal of nervous shock in an injury of that kind. It often persists when the wound is healed.”
“Yes, but I don’t quite understand ...”
“My dear Mr. Verney, your wife asked me to say nothing about it, but I think I must tell you that she has already been here to consult me on this matter.”
“About her sleep-walking? But she can’t ...” then John stopped.
“My dear fellow, I quite understand. She thought you didn’t know. Twice lately you’ve been out of bed and she had to lead you back. She knows all about it.”
John could find nothing to say.
“It’s not the first time,” Dr. Mackenzie continued, “that I’ve been consulted by patients who have told me their symptoms and said they had come on behalf of friends or relations. Usually it’s girls who think they’re in the family-way. It’s an interesting feature of your case that you should want to ascribe the trouble to someone else, probably the decisive feature. I’ve given your wife the name of a man in London who I think will be able to help you. Meanwhile I can only advise plenty of exercise, light meals at night ...”
John Verney limped back to Good Hope Fort in a state of consternation113. Security had been compromised; the operation must be cancelled; initiative had been lost ... all the phrases of the tactical school came to his mind, but he was still numb114 after this unexpected reverse. A vast and naked horror peeped at him and was thrust aside.
When he got back Elizabeth was laying the supper table. He stood on the balcony and stared at the gaping115 rails with eyes smarting with disappointment. It was dead calm that evening. The rising tide lapped and fell and mounted again silently among the rocks below. He stood gazing down, then he turned back into the room.
There was one large drink left in the whisky bottle. He poured it out and swallowed it. Elizabeth brought in the supper and they sat down. Gradually his mind grew a little calmer. They usually ate in silence. At last he said: “Elizabeth, why did you tell the doctor I had been walking in my sleep?”
She quietly put down the plate she had been holding and looked at him curiously116. “Why?” she said gently. “Because I was worried, of course. I didn’t think you knew about it.”
“But have I been?”
“Oh yes, several times—in London and here. I didn’t think it mattered at first, but the night before last I found you on the balcony, quite near that dreadful hole in the rails. I was really frightened. But it’s going to be all right now. Dr. Mackenzie has given me the name ...”
It was possible, thought John Verney; nothing was more likely. He had lived night and day for ten days thinking of that opening, of the sea and rock below, the ragged86 ironwork and the sharp edge of stone. He suddenly felt defeated, sick and stupid, as he had as he lay on the Italian hillside with his smashed knee. Then as now he had felt weariness even more than pain.
“Coffee, darling.”
Suddenly he roused himself. “No,” he almost shouted. “No, no, no.”
“Darling, what is the matter? Don’t get excited. Are you feeling ill? Lie down on the sofa near the window.”
He did as he was told. He felt so weary that he could barely move from his chair.
“Do you think coffee would keep you awake, love? You look quite fit to drop already. There, lie down.”
He lay down and, like the tide slowly mounting among the rocks below, sleep rose and spread in his mind. He nodded and woke with a start.
“Shall I open the window, darling, and give you some air?”
“Elizabeth,” he said, “I feel as if I have been drugged.” Like the rocks below the window—now awash, now emerging clear from falling water; now awash again, deeper; now barely visible, mere117 patches on the face of gently eddying118 foam—his brain was softly drowning. He roused himself, as children do in nightmare, still scared, still half asleep. “I can’t be drugged,” he said loudly, “I never touched the coffee.”
“Drugs in the coffee?” said Elizabeth gently, like a nurse soothing119 a fractious child. “Drugs in the coffee? What an absurd idea. That’s the kind of thing that only happens on the films, darling.”
He did not hear her. He was fast asleep, snoring stertorously120 by the open window.
1 steadily | |
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2 countless | |
adj.无数的,多得不计其数的 | |
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4 bad-tempered | |
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5 fatigue | |
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6 possessed | |
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7 phlegmatic | |
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8 expeditiously | |
adv.迅速地,敏捷地 | |
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9 intermittent | |
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11 obstruction | |
n.阻塞,堵塞;障碍物 | |
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12 wireless | |
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13 muddled | |
adj.混乱的;糊涂的;头脑昏昏然的v.弄乱,弄糟( muddle的过去式);使糊涂;对付,混日子 | |
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14 cursorily | |
adv.粗糙地,疏忽地,马虎地 | |
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15 jauntily | |
adv.心满意足地;洋洋得意地;高兴地;活泼地 | |
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16 annoyances | |
n.恼怒( annoyance的名词复数 );烦恼;打扰;使人烦恼的事 | |
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17 shrug | |
v.耸肩(表示怀疑、冷漠、不知等) | |
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18 eyelids | |
n.眼睑( eyelid的名词复数 );眼睛也不眨一下;不露声色;面不改色 | |
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19 drooped | |
弯曲或下垂,发蔫( droop的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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20 droop | |
v.低垂,下垂;凋萎,萎靡 | |
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21 apprenticeship | |
n.学徒身份;学徒期 | |
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22 inevitable | |
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23 pungently | |
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24 territorial | |
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25 condemned | |
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26 languished | |
长期受苦( languish的过去式和过去分词 ); 受折磨; 变得(越来越)衰弱; 因渴望而变得憔悴或闷闷不乐 | |
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27 ballrooms | |
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28 tepid | |
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29 harmonious | |
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30 judgments | |
判断( judgment的名词复数 ); 鉴定; 评价; 审判 | |
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31 inflame | |
v.使燃烧;使极度激动;使发炎 | |
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32 lame | |
adj.跛的,(辩解、论据等)无说服力的 | |
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33 preoccupied | |
adj.全神贯注的,入神的;被抢先占有的;心事重重的v.占据(某人)思想,使对…全神贯注,使专心于( preoccupy的过去式) | |
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34 pillaged | |
v.抢劫,掠夺( pillage的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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35 linguist | |
n.语言学家;精通数种外国语言者 | |
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36 clandestine | |
adj.秘密的,暗中从事的 | |
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37 villa | |
n.别墅,城郊小屋 | |
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38 salvage | |
v.救助,营救,援救;n.救助,营救 | |
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39 shrubs | |
灌木( shrub的名词复数 ) | |
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40 trampled | |
踩( trample的过去式和过去分词 ); 践踏; 无视; 侵犯 | |
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41 mounds | |
土堆,土丘( mound的名词复数 ); 一大堆 | |
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42 shutters | |
百叶窗( shutter的名词复数 ); (照相机的)快门 | |
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43 chaos | |
n.混乱,无秩序 | |
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44 genial | |
adj.亲切的,和蔼的,愉快的,脾气好的 | |
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45 genially | |
adv.亲切地,和蔼地;快活地 | |
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46 confiscated | |
没收,充公( confiscate的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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47 constituents | |
n.选民( constituent的名词复数 );成分;构成部分;要素 | |
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48 provincial | |
adj.省的,地方的;n.外省人,乡下人 | |
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49 ration | |
n.定量(pl.)给养,口粮;vt.定量供应 | |
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50 scanty | |
adj.缺乏的,仅有的,节省的,狭小的,不够的 | |
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51 rations | |
定量( ration的名词复数 ); 配给量; 正常量; 合理的量 | |
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52 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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53 aquiline | |
adj.钩状的,鹰的 | |
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54 feat | |
n.功绩;武艺,技艺;adj.灵巧的,漂亮的,合适的 | |
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55 strand | |
vt.使(船)搁浅,使(某人)困于(某地) | |
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56 tangled | |
adj. 纠缠的,紊乱的 动词tangle的过去式和过去分词 | |
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57 frustrated | |
adj.挫败的,失意的,泄气的v.使不成功( frustrate的过去式和过去分词 );挫败;使受挫折;令人沮丧 | |
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58 bureaucrats | |
n.官僚( bureaucrat的名词复数 );官僚主义;官僚主义者;官僚语言 | |
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59 collaborator | |
n.合作者,协作者 | |
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60 wilderness | |
n.杳无人烟的一片陆地、水等,荒漠 | |
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61 trite | |
adj.陈腐的 | |
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62 malevolence | |
n.恶意,狠毒 | |
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63 supplementary | |
adj.补充的,附加的 | |
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64 amorous | |
adj.多情的;有关爱情的 | |
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65 luxurious | |
adj.精美而昂贵的;豪华的 | |
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66 rapture | |
n.狂喜;全神贯注;着迷;v.使狂喜 | |
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67 steadfast | |
adj.固定的,不变的,不动摇的;忠实的;坚贞不移的 | |
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68 transpired | |
(事实,秘密等)被人知道( transpire的过去式和过去分词 ); 泄露; 显露; 发生 | |
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69 dismal | |
adj.阴沉的,凄凉的,令人忧郁的,差劲的 | |
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70 dribbling | |
n.(燃料或油从系统内)漏泄v.流口水( dribble的现在分词 );(使液体)滴下或作细流;运球,带球 | |
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71 joyous | |
adj.充满快乐的;令人高兴的 | |
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72 unfamiliar | |
adj.陌生的,不熟悉的 | |
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73 scarlet | |
n.深红色,绯红色,红衣;adj.绯红色的 | |
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74 kindle | |
v.点燃,着火 | |
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75 suffused | |
v.(指颜色、水气等)弥漫于,布满( suffuse的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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76 sleepless | |
adj.不睡眠的,睡不著的,不休息的 | |
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77 dressing | |
n.(食物)调料;包扎伤口的用品,敷料 | |
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78 drowsiness | |
n.睡意;嗜睡 | |
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79 vacuous | |
adj.空的,漫散的,无聊的,愚蠢的 | |
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80 beatific | |
adj.快乐的,有福的 | |
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81 postponed | |
vt.& vi.延期,缓办,(使)延迟vt.把…放在次要地位;[语]把…放在后面(或句尾)vi.(疟疾等)延缓发作(或复发) | |
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82 sumptuously | |
奢侈地,豪华地 | |
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83 ingenuity | |
n.别出心裁;善于发明创造 | |
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84 honeymoon | |
n.蜜月(假期);vi.度蜜月 | |
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85 confide | |
v.向某人吐露秘密 | |
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86 ragged | |
adj.衣衫褴褛的,粗糙的,刺耳的 | |
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87 mangled | |
vt.乱砍(mangle的过去式与过去分词形式) | |
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88 attics | |
n. 阁楼 | |
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89 gusty | |
adj.起大风的 | |
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90 discomfort | |
n.不舒服,不安,难过,困难,不方便 | |
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91 granite | |
adj.花岗岩,花岗石 | |
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92 archaic | |
adj.(语言、词汇等)古代的,已不通用的 | |
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93 postal | |
adj.邮政的,邮局的 | |
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94 indigo | |
n.靛青,靛蓝 | |
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95 serene | |
adj. 安详的,宁静的,平静的 | |
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96 defensive | |
adj.防御的;防卫的;防守的 | |
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97 reverting | |
恢复( revert的现在分词 ); 重提; 回到…上; 归还 | |
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98 rusty | |
adj.生锈的;锈色的;荒废了的 | |
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99 hoarding | |
n.贮藏;积蓄;临时围墙;囤积v.积蓄并储藏(某物)( hoard的现在分词 ) | |
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101 ledge | |
n.壁架,架状突出物;岩架,岩礁 | |
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102 foaming | |
adj.布满泡沫的;发泡 | |
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103 swirling | |
v.旋转,打旋( swirl的现在分词 ) | |
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104 tactician | |
n. 战术家, 策士 | |
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105 leisurely | |
adj.悠闲的;从容的,慢慢的 | |
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106 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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107 consolidation | |
n.合并,巩固 | |
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108 confidential | |
adj.秘(机)密的,表示信任的,担任机密工作的 | |
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109 civilians | |
平民,百姓( civilian的名词复数 ); 老百姓 | |
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110 psychology | |
n.心理,心理学,心理状态 | |
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111 specialized | |
adj.专门的,专业化的 | |
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112 permeated | |
弥漫( permeate的过去式和过去分词 ); 遍布; 渗入; 渗透 | |
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113 consternation | |
n.大为吃惊,惊骇 | |
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114 numb | |
adj.麻木的,失去感觉的;v.使麻木 | |
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115 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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116 curiously | |
adv.有求知欲地;好问地;奇特地 | |
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117 mere | |
adj.纯粹的;仅仅,只不过 | |
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118 eddying | |
涡流,涡流的形成 | |
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119 soothing | |
adj.慰藉的;使人宽心的;镇静的 | |
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120 stertorously | |
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