Now that we have given a rough sketch4 of the main events of the war as it affected5 the economic life of the people, and have devoted6 a chapter to that sinister7 crime, the Armenian persecutions, we shall leave the Young Turks for a moment and turn to an examination of German propaganda methods.
It is a very painful task for a German who does not profess8 to be a "World Politician," but really thinks in terms of true "world-politics," to deal with the many intrigues9 and machinations of our Government in their rela[Pg 127]tion to the so-called "Holy War" (Arab. Djihad), where in their quest of a vain illusion they stooped to the very lowest means. Practically all their hopes in that direction have been sadly shattered. Their costly10, unscrupulous, thoroughly11 unmoral efforts against European civilisation in Mohammedan countries have resulted in the terrific counter-stroke of the defection of the Arabs and the foundation of a purely12 Arabian Chaliphate under English protection. Thus England has already won a brilliant victory against Germany and Turkey in spite of Gallipoli and Kut-el-Amara, although it seems probable that even these will be wiped out by greater deeds on the part of the Entente13 before long. One could not have a better example of Germany's total inability to succeed in the sphere of world-politics.
The so-called "Holy War," if it had succeeded, would have been one of the greatest crimes against human civilisation that even Germany has on her conscience, remembering as we do her recent ruthless "frightfulness14" at sea, and her attempt to set Mexico and the Japanese against the land of most modern civilisation and of greatest liberty. A success[Pg 128]ful "Djihad" spreading to all the lands of Islam would have set back by years all that civilisation so patiently and so painfully won; it would not have been at all comparable with the Entente's use of coloured troops in Europe which Germany deprecated so loudly, for in the Holy War it would have been a case of letting the wildest fanaticism16 loose against the armies of law and order and civilisation; in the case of the Entente it was part of a purely military action on the part of England and France, who held under their sway all the inhabitants, coloured and otherwise, of those Colonial regions from which troops were sent to Europe and to which they will return.
But the attempt against colonial civilisation did not succeed. The "Djihad," proclaimed as it was by the Turanian pseudo-Chaliph and violently anti-Entente, was doomed17 to failure from the very start from its obvious artificiality. It was a miserable18 farce, or rather a tragicomedy, the present ending of which, namely the defection of the Arabian Chaliphate, is the direct contrary of what had been aimed at with such fanatical urgency and the use of such immoral19 propaganda.
[Pg 129]
The attempt to "unloose" the Holy War was due primarily to the most absurd illusions. It would seem that in Germany, the land of science, the home of so many eminent20 doctors of research, even the scholars have been attacked by that disease of being dazzled by wild political illusions, or surely, knowing the countries of Islam outside-in as they must, they would long ago have raised their voices against such arrant21 folly22. It would seem that all her inherent knowledge, all her studies, have been of little or no avail to Germany, so that mistake after mistake has been committed in the realm of world politics. It may be said that Germany, even if she were doubtful of the issue, should still not have left untried this means of crippling her opponents. To that I can only reply by pointing to the actual position of affairs, well known to Germany, not only in English, but also in French and Russian Islamic colonial territory, which should have rendered the "Djihad" entirely23 and absolutely out of the question.
Let us take for example Egypt, French North-West Africa, and Russian Turkestan, not to speak of the masterly English colonial[Pg 130] rule in India, which has now been tested and tried for centuries. Anyone who has ever seen Egypt with the area under culture practically doubled under modern English rule by the help of every kind of technical contrivance for the betterment of existing conditions, and the skilful24 utilisation of all available means at an expense of millions of pounds, with its needy25 population given an opportunity to earn a living wage and even wealth through a lucrative26 cultivation27 of the land under conditions that are a paradise compared with what they were under the Turkish rule of extortion and despotism—anyone who has seen that must have looked from the very beginning with a very doubtful eye on Germany's and Turkey's illusions of stirring up these well-doing people against their rulers.
The same thing occurs again in the extended territory of North-West Africa from the Atlas28 lands to the Guinea coast and Lake Chad, where France, as I know from personal experience, stands on a high level of colonial excellence29, developing all the resources of the country with consummate30 skill, shaping her "empire colonial" more and more into a shining[Pg 131] gem31 in the crown of colonial endeavour, and, as I can testify from my own observations in Morocco, Senegal, the Niger, and the Interior of the Guinea territories of the "A.O.F." (Afrique Occidentale Fran?aise), capturing the hearts of the whole population by her essential culture, and, last but not least, winning the Mohammedans by her clever Islam policy.
That, finally, Russia, at any rate from the psychological standpoint, is perhaps the best coloniser of Further Asia, even German textbooks on colonial policy admit unreservedly, and the glowing conditions that she has brought about especially in the basin of Ferghana in Turkestan by the introduction of the flourishing and lucrative business of cotton-growing are known to everyone. Only politicians of the most wildly fantastic type, who see everywhere what they want to see, could believe that in this war the Turkish "Turanistic" bait would ever have any effect in Russian Central Asia, or make its inhabitants now living in security, peace, and well-being32 wish back again the conditions which prevailed under the Emirs of Samarkand, Khiva, and Bokhara. But Germany, who should have been[Pg 132] well informed if anyone was, believed all these fantastic impossibilities.
One could let it pass with a slight feeling of irritation33 against Germany if it were merely a case of the failure of the "Djihad." But unfortunately the propaganda, as stupid as it was unsuccessful, exercised in this connection, will be written down for all time as one of the blackest and most despicable marks against Germany's account in this war. In Turkey alone, the underhand manipulation for the unloosing of the "Holy War" and the German Press propaganda so closely allied35 with it, indeed the whole way in which the German cause in the East was represented journalistically throughout the war, are subjects full of the saddest, most biting irony36, to sympathise with which must lower every German who has lived in the Turkish capital in the eyes of the whole civilised world.
In order to demonstrate the r?le played in this affair by the German Embassy at Constantinople I will not make an exhaustive survey but simply confine myself to a few episodes and outstanding features. An eminent German Red Cross doctor, clear-sighted and[Pg 133] reliable, who had many tales to tell of what he had seen in the "Caucasus" campaign, said to me one evening, as we sat together at a promenade37 concert: "Do you see that man in Prussian major's uniform going past? I met him twice in Erzerum last winter. The man was nothing but an employee in a merchant's business in Baku, and had learnt Russian there. He has never done military service. When war broke out, he hurried to the Embassy in Pera and offered his services to stir up the Georgians and other peoples of the Caucasus against Russia. Of course he got full powers to do what he wanted, and guns and ammunition38 and piles of propaganda pamphlets were placed at his disposal so that he might carry on his work from the frontier of the then still neutral Turkey. Whole chests full of good gold coins were sent to him to be distributed confidentially40 for propaganda purposes; of course he was his own most confidential39 friend! He went back to Erzerum without having won a single soul for the cause of the 'Djihad.' That has not prevented his living as a 'grand seigneur,' for the Embassy are not yet daunted41, and now the fellow struts42 about in a major's[Pg 134] uniform, lent to him, although he has never been a soldier, so that the cause may gain still more prestige."
Numerous examples of similar measures might be cited, and instances without number given, of the German Embassy being made the dupe of greedy adventurers who treated them as an inexhaustible source of gold. First one would appear on the scene who announced himself as the one man to cope with Afghanistan, then another would come along on his way to Persia and play the great man "on a special mission" for a time in Pera while money belonging to the German Empire would find its way into all sorts of low haunts. And so things went on for two years until, with the Arabian catastrophe43, even the eyes of the great diplomatic optimists44 of Ayas-Pasha might have been opened.
I will only mention here how even a bona fide connoisseur45 of the East like Baron46 von Oppenheim, who had already made tours of considerable value for research purposes right across the Arabian Peninsula, and so should have known better than to share these false illusions, doled47 out thousands of marks from his[Pg 135] own pocket—and millions from the Treasury48!—to stir up the tribes to take part in the "Djihad," and how he returned to Pera from his propaganda tour with a real Bedouin beard, and, still unabashed, took over the control of the German Embassy's "News Bureau," which kept up these much-derided war telegraph and picture offices known in Pera and elsewhere by the non-German populace as sacs de mensonges, and which flooded the whole of the East with waggon49 loads of pamphlets in every conceivable tongue—in fact these, with guns and ammunition, formed the chief load of the bi-weekly "culture-bringing" Balkan train!
I will only cite the one example of the far-famed Mario Passarge—a real Apache to look at. With his friend Frobenius, the ethnographer and German agent, well known to me personally from French West Africa for his liking50 for absinthe and negro women and his Teutonic brusqueness emphasised in comparison with the kindly51, helpful French officials, as well as by hearsay52 from many scandalous tales, Passarge undertook that disastrous53 expedition to the Abyssinians which failed so[Pg 136] lamentably54 owing to the Italians, and then after its collapse55 came to Turkey as special correspondent of the Vossische Zeitung and managed to swindle his way through Macedonia with a false Italian passport to Greece, where he wrote sensational56 reports for his wonderful newspaper about the atrocities57 and low morale58 of Sarrail's army—the same newspaper that had made itself the laughing-stock of the whole of Europe, and at the same time had managed to get the German Government to pursue for two years the shadow of a separate peace with Russia, by publishing a marvellous series of "Special Reports via Stockholm," on conditions in Russia that were nothing but a tissue of lies inspired by blind Jewish hate; if a tithe59 of them had been true, Russia would have gone under long ago.
I need not repeat my own opinion on all the machinations of the German Embassy, but I will simply give you word for word what a German Press agent in Constantinople (I will mention no names) once said to me: "It is unbelievable," he declared, "what a mob of low characters frequent the German Embassy now. The scum of the earth, people who would[Pg 137] never have dared before the war to have been seen on the pavements of Ayas-Pasha, have now free entry. Any day you can see some doubtful-looking character accosting60 the porter at the Embassy, whispering something in his ear, and then being ushered61 down the steps to where the propaganda department, the news bureau, has its quarters. There he gives wonderful assurances of what he can do, and promises to stir up some Mohammedan people for the "Djihad." Then he waits a while in the ante-room, and is finally received by the authorities; but the next time he comes to the Embassy he walks in through the well-carpeted main entrance, and requests an audience with the Ambassador or other high official, and we soon find him comfortably equipped and setting off on a 'special mission' as the confidential servant of the German Embassy." But even the recognition of these truths has not prevented this journalist from eating from the crib of the German Embassy!
I cannot leave this disagreeable subject without making some mention of a type that does more than anything to throw light on the morale of this German propaganda. Every[Pg 138]one in Constantinople knows—or rather knew, for he has now feathered his nest comfortably and departed to Germany with his money—Mehmed Zekki "Bey," the publisher and chief editor of the military paper Die Nationalverteidigung and its counterpart La Défense, published daily in French but representative of Young Turkish-German interests. Hundreds of those who know Zekki also know that he used to be called "Capitaine Nelken y Waldberg." Fewer know that "Nelken" alone would have been more in accordance with fact.
I will relate the history of this individual, as I know it from the mouths of reliable informants—the members of the Embassy and the Consulate62. Nelken, a Roumanian Jew, a shopkeeper by trade, had been several times in prison for bankruptcy63 and fraud, and at last fled from Roumania. He took refuge in the Turkish capital, where he continued his business and married a Greek wife. Here again he became bankrupt, as is only too clear from the public notice of restoration in the Constantinople newspapers, when his lucrative political activity as the champion of Krupp's, of the German cause and "the holy[Pg 139] German war," as much a purely pan-Germanic as Islamic affair, provided him with the wherewithal to pay off his former disreputable debts.
To go back to his history—with money won by fraud in his pocket, he deserted64 his wife and went off, no doubt having made a thorough and most professional study of the subject in the low haunts of Pera, as a white-slave trader to the Argentine, and then—I rely for my information on an official of the German Consulate in Pera—set up as proprietor65 of a brothel in Buenos Ayres. Then, as often happens, the Argentine special police took him into their service, thinking, on the principle of "setting a thief to catch a thief," that he would have special experience for the post. Grounds enough there for him to add on the second name of his falsified passport "Nelken y Waldberg" and to call himself in Europe a "Capitaine de la Gendarmerie" from the Argentine.
From there he went to Cairo and edited a little private paper called Les Petites Nouvelles Egyptiennes. For repeated extortion he was sentenced to one year's imprisonment66, but unfortunately only in contumaciam, for he[Pg 140] had already fled the country, not, however, before he had been publicly smacked67 on the face in the "Flasch" beer garden without offering satisfaction as an "Argentine General" should—a performance that was later repeated in every detail in Toklian's Restaurant in Constantinople.
He told me once that he had been sentenced in this way because, on an understanding with the then German Diplomatic Agent in Cairo, von Miquel, he had attacked Lord Cromer's policy sharply, and that his patron von Miquel had given him the timely hint to leave Egypt. I will leave it to one's imagination to discover how much truth there was in this former brothel-keeper's connection with official German "world-politics" and high diplomacy68. From what I have seen personally since, I believe that Zekki, alias69 Nelken, was probably speaking the truth in this case, although it is certainly a fact that in German circles in Cairo at that time ordinary extortion was recognised as being punishable by imprisonment for a considerable length of time.
Nelken then returned to Constantinople and devoted himself with unflagging energy to[Pg 141] his previous business of agent. He turned to the Islamic faith and became a citizen of the Ottoman Empire because he found it more profitable so to do, and could thus escape from his former liabilities. Then in spite of lack of means, he managed to found a military newspaper, which, however, soon petered out. Nelken became Mehmed Zekki and a journalist, and of course called himself "Bey."
Up to this point the history of this individual is nothing but a characteristic extract from life as it is lived by hundreds of rogues70 in the East. But now we come to something which is almost unbelievable and which leads me to give credence71 to his version of his relations with von Miquel, which after all only shows more clearly than ever that German "world-politics" are not above making use of the scum of the earth for their intrigues. In full knowledge of this man's whole black past—as Dr. Weber of the German Embassy himself told me—the German Embassy with the sanction of the Imperial Government (this I know from letters Zekki showed me in great glee from the Foreign Office and the War Office) appointed this fellow, whom all Pera said they would not[Pg 142] touch with gloves on or with the tongs72, to be their confidential agent with a large monthly honorarium73 and to become a pillar of "the German cause" in the East. And it could not even be said in extenuation74 that the man had any great desire or any wonderful vocation75 to represent Germany, for—as the Embassy official said to me—"We knew that Zekki was a dangerous character and rather inclined to the Entente at the outbreak of war, so we decided76 to win him over by giving him a salary rather than drive him into the enemy's camp." So it simply comes to this, that Germany buys a bankrupt, a blackmailer77, a procurer, a brothel-keeper with cash to fight her "Holy War" for her!
As publisher of the Défense Zekki received a large salary from Germany, one from Austria, afterwards cut down not from any excess of moral sense, but simply from excess of economy, and a very considerable sum from Krupp's. As representative of German interests he did all he could to propitiate78 the Young Turks by the most fulsome79 flattery, and more recently he was pushing hard to get on the Committee of union and Progress. But the[Pg 143] Turks jibbed at what the German Embassy had brought on themselves—seeing Zekki "Bey" moving about their sacred halls with the most imposing80 nonchalance81 and condescension82. Zekki himself once complained to me bitterly that in spite of his having presented Enver Pasha with a valuable clock worth eighty Turkish pounds which Enver had accepted with pleasure, he would not even answer a written request from Zekki craving83 an audience with him. (This, incidentally, is a most excellent example of the working of Enver's mind, a megalomaniac as greedy as he was proud.)
The military director of the Turkish Press said to me once: "We are only waiting for the first 'gaffe84' in his paper to get this filthy85 creature hunted out of his lair," and one day when through carelessness a small uncensored and really quite harmless military notice appeared in print (everything is submitted to the censor), the Turkish Government gave it short shrift indeed, and banned sine die this "Ottoman" paper which lived by Krupp and the German trade advertisements, and had become an advocate of the German Embassy,[Pg 144] because it was paid in good solid cash for it. The paper was replaced by a new one in Turkish hands, called Le Soir.
I could go on talking for ages from most intimate personal knowledge about this man, superb in his own way. His doings were not without a certain comic side which amused while it aggravated86 one. I could mention, for example, his great lawsuit87 in Germany in 1916, in which he brought an accusation88 of libel against some German who had called him a blackmailer and a criminal who had been repeatedly punished. He managed to win the lawsuit—that is, the defenders89 had to pay a fine of twenty marks, because the evidence brought against Zekki could not be followed up to Egypt on account of England's supremacy90 on the sea, and also no doubt because the interests of Krupp and the German Embassy could not have this cherished blossom of German propaganda disturbed! So for him at any rate the lack of "freedom of the seas" he had so often raged about in his leading articles was a very appreciable91 advantage.
The last time I remember seeing the man he was engaged in an earnest tête-à-tête about the[Pg 145] propagation of German political interests by means of arms with the Nationalist Reichstag deputy, Dr. Streesemann, a representative of the German heavy goods trade and of German jingoism92 who had hastened to Constantinople for the furtherance of German culture. Most significantly, no doubt in remembrance of his days in Buenos Ayres, Zekki had chosen for this interview the most private room of the H?tel Moderne, a pension with a bar where sect93 could be had; and the worthy94 representative of the German people, probably nothing loth to have a change from his eternal "Pan-German" diet, accepted his invitation with alacrity95. I followed the two gentlemen to make my own investigations96, and I certainly got as much amusement, although in a different sense, as one usually does in such haunts. It was really most entertaining to watch Nelken the ex-Jew and Young Turk, with his fez on his head, nodding jovially97 to all the German officers at the neighbouring tables, and settling the affairs of the realm with this Pan-German representative of the people.
I trust my readers will forgive me if, in spite of the distaste I feel at having to write[Pg 146] this unsavoury chapter about German Press representatives and those in high diplomatic authority who commission them, I relate one more episode of a like character before I close. One of these writers employed in the service of the German Embassy had done one of his female employees an injury which cannot be repeated here. His colleague—out of professional jealousy98, the other said—gave evidence against him under oath at the German Consulate, and the other brought a charge of perjury99 against him. The German Consulate, in order not to lose such a trusty champion of the German cause for a trifle like the wounded honour of a mere34 woman—an Armenian to boot!—simply suppressed the whole case, although all Pera was speaking about it.
Against this we have the case later on of a German journalist, most jealous of German interests, who had a highly important document stolen out of his desk with false keys by one of his clerks in the pay of the Young Turkish Committee. The document was the copy of a very confidential report addressed to high official quarters in Germany, in which there were some rather more uncomplimentary re[Pg 147]marks about Enver and Talaat than appeared in the version for public consumption. An Embassy less notoriously cowardly than the German one would simply have shielded their man in consideration of the fact that the report was never meant for publication and of the reprehensible100 way it had been stolen and made public. But our chicken-hearted diplomats101 allowed him to be dismissed in disgrace by the Turks, and so practically gave their official sanction to the meanest Oriental methods of espionage102.
I have, however, now come to the conclusion from information I have received that German cowardice103 in this case probably had a background of hypocrisy104 and malice105, for this same journalist had spoken with remarkable106 freedom, not indeed as a pro-Englander, but in contrast to German and Turkish narrow-mindedness, of how well he had been treated by the English authorities, and particularly General Maxwell in the exercise of his profession in Cairo, where he had been allowed for fully15 five weeks, after the outbreak of war, to edit a German newspaper. (I have seen the numbers myself and wondered at the al[Pg 148]most incredible liberality of the English censorship.) Instead of being sent to Malta he had been treated most fairly and kindly and given every opportunity to get away safely to Syria. Of course the narration107 of events like these were rather out of place in our "God Punish England" time, and it was no doubt on account of this, apart from all cowardice, that the German Embassy made their fine distinctions between personal and political morality in the case of their Press representative.
We have spoken of German propaganda for the "Holy War," as carried out by individuals as well as by pamphlets and the Press. The Turkish capital saw a very appreciable amount of this in the shape of wandering adventurers and printed paper. Several thousand Algerian, Tunisian, French West African, Russian Tartar, and Turkestan prisoners of war of Mohammedan religion from the German internment108 camps were kept for weeks in Pera and urged by the German Government in defiance109 of all the laws of the peoples to join the "Djihad" against their own rulers.
They were told that they would have the[Pg 149] great honour of being presented to the Caliph in Stamboul; as devout110 Mohammedans they could of course not find much to object to in that. A wonderfully attractive picture was painted for them of the delights of settling in the flourishing lands of the East, and living free of expense instead of starving in prison under the rod of German non-commissioned officers till the far-distant conclusion of peace. One can well imagine how such marvellous conjuring111 tricks would appeal to these poor fellows.
They have repeatedly told me that they had been promised to be allowed to settle in Turkey without any mention being made of using them again as soldiers. But once on the way to Constantinople there was no further question of asking them what their opinion was of what was being done to them. They were simply treated as Turkish voluntary soldiers and sent off to the Front, to Armenia, and the Irak. How far they were used as real front-line soldiers or in service behind the lines I do not know; what I do know is that they left Constantinople in as great numbers as they came from Germany, armed with rifles and[Pg 150] fully equipped for service in the field. One can therefore guess how many of them became "settlers" as they had been promised. Several days running in the early summer of 1916 I saw them being marched off in the direction of the Haidar-Pasha station on the Anatolian Railway. They were headed by a Turkish band, but on not one single face of all these serried112 ranks did I see the slightest spark of enthusiasm, and the German soldiers and officers escorting each separate section were not exactly calculated to leave the impression with the public that these were zealots fighting voluntarily for their faith who could not get fast enough out to the Front to be shot or hanged by their former masters!
In her system of recruiting in the newly founded kingdom of Poland, Germany demonstrated even more clearly of what she was capable in this direction.
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1 civilisation | |
n.文明,文化,开化,教化 | |
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2 chimera | |
n.神话怪物;梦幻 | |
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3 farce | |
n.闹剧,笑剧,滑稽戏;胡闹 | |
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4 sketch | |
n.草图;梗概;素描;v.素描;概述 | |
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5 affected | |
adj.不自然的,假装的 | |
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6 devoted | |
adj.忠诚的,忠实的,热心的,献身于...的 | |
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7 sinister | |
adj.不吉利的,凶恶的,左边的 | |
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8 profess | |
v.声称,冒称,以...为业,正式接受入教,表明信仰 | |
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9 intrigues | |
n.密谋策划( intrigue的名词复数 );神秘气氛;引人入胜的复杂情节v.搞阴谋诡计( intrigue的第三人称单数 );激起…的好奇心 | |
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10 costly | |
adj.昂贵的,价值高的,豪华的 | |
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11 thoroughly | |
adv.完全地,彻底地,十足地 | |
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12 purely | |
adv.纯粹地,完全地 | |
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13 entente | |
n.协定;有协定关系的各国 | |
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14 frightfulness | |
可怕; 丑恶; 讨厌; 恐怖政策 | |
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15 fully | |
adv.完全地,全部地,彻底地;充分地 | |
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16 fanaticism | |
n.狂热,盲信 | |
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17 doomed | |
命定的 | |
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18 miserable | |
adj.悲惨的,痛苦的;可怜的,糟糕的 | |
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19 immoral | |
adj.不道德的,淫荡的,荒淫的,有伤风化的 | |
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20 eminent | |
adj.显赫的,杰出的,有名的,优良的 | |
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21 arrant | |
adj.极端的;最大的 | |
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22 folly | |
n.愚笨,愚蠢,蠢事,蠢行,傻话 | |
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23 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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24 skilful | |
(=skillful)adj.灵巧的,熟练的 | |
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25 needy | |
adj.贫穷的,贫困的,生活艰苦的 | |
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26 lucrative | |
adj.赚钱的,可获利的 | |
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27 cultivation | |
n.耕作,培养,栽培(法),养成 | |
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28 atlas | |
n.地图册,图表集 | |
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29 excellence | |
n.优秀,杰出,(pl.)优点,美德 | |
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30 consummate | |
adj.完美的;v.成婚;使完美 [反]baffle | |
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31 gem | |
n.宝石,珠宝;受爱戴的人 [同]jewel | |
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32 well-being | |
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33 irritation | |
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34 mere | |
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35 allied | |
adj.协约国的;同盟国的 | |
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36 irony | |
n.反语,冷嘲;具有讽刺意味的事,嘲弄 | |
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37 promenade | |
n./v.散步 | |
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38 ammunition | |
n.军火,弹药 | |
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39 confidential | |
adj.秘(机)密的,表示信任的,担任机密工作的 | |
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40 confidentially | |
ad.秘密地,悄悄地 | |
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41 daunted | |
使(某人)气馁,威吓( daunt的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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42 struts | |
(框架的)支杆( strut的名词复数 ); 支柱; 趾高气扬的步态; (尤指跳舞或表演时)卖弄 | |
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43 catastrophe | |
n.大灾难,大祸 | |
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44 optimists | |
n.乐观主义者( optimist的名词复数 ) | |
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45 connoisseur | |
n.鉴赏家,行家,内行 | |
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46 baron | |
n.男爵;(商业界等)巨头,大王 | |
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47 doled | |
救济物( dole的过去式和过去分词 ); 失业救济金 | |
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48 treasury | |
n.宝库;国库,金库;文库 | |
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49 waggon | |
n.运货马车,运货车;敞篷车箱 | |
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50 liking | |
n.爱好;嗜好;喜欢 | |
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51 kindly | |
adj.和蔼的,温和的,爽快的;adv.温和地,亲切地 | |
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52 hearsay | |
n.谣传,风闻 | |
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53 disastrous | |
adj.灾难性的,造成灾害的;极坏的,很糟的 | |
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54 lamentably | |
adv.哀伤地,拙劣地 | |
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55 collapse | |
vi.累倒;昏倒;倒塌;塌陷 | |
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56 sensational | |
adj.使人感动的,非常好的,轰动的,耸人听闻的 | |
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57 atrocities | |
n.邪恶,暴行( atrocity的名词复数 );滔天大罪 | |
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58 morale | |
n.道德准则,士气,斗志 | |
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59 tithe | |
n.十分之一税;v.课什一税,缴什一税 | |
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60 accosting | |
v.走过去跟…讲话( accost的现在分词 );跟…搭讪;(乞丐等)上前向…乞讨;(妓女等)勾搭 | |
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61 ushered | |
v.引,领,陪同( usher的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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62 consulate | |
n.领事馆 | |
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63 bankruptcy | |
n.破产;无偿付能力 | |
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64 deserted | |
adj.荒芜的,荒废的,无人的,被遗弃的 | |
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65 proprietor | |
n.所有人;业主;经营者 | |
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66 imprisonment | |
n.关押,监禁,坐牢 | |
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67 smacked | |
拍,打,掴( smack的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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68 diplomacy | |
n.外交;外交手腕,交际手腕 | |
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69 alias | |
n.化名;别名;adv.又名 | |
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70 rogues | |
n.流氓( rogue的名词复数 );无赖;调皮捣蛋的人;离群的野兽 | |
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71 credence | |
n.信用,祭器台,供桌,凭证 | |
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72 tongs | |
n.钳;夹子 | |
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73 honorarium | |
n.酬金,谢礼 | |
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74 extenuation | |
n.减轻罪孽的借口;酌情减轻;细 | |
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75 vocation | |
n.职业,行业 | |
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76 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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77 blackmailer | |
敲诈者,勒索者 | |
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78 propitiate | |
v.慰解,劝解 | |
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79 fulsome | |
adj.可恶的,虚伪的,过分恭维的 | |
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80 imposing | |
adj.使人难忘的,壮丽的,堂皇的,雄伟的 | |
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81 nonchalance | |
n.冷淡,漠不关心 | |
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82 condescension | |
n.自以为高人一等,贬低(别人) | |
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83 craving | |
n.渴望,热望 | |
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84 gaffe | |
n.(社交上令人不快的)失言,失态 | |
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85 filthy | |
adj.卑劣的;恶劣的,肮脏的 | |
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86 aggravated | |
使恶化( aggravate的过去式和过去分词 ); 使更严重; 激怒; 使恼火 | |
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87 lawsuit | |
n.诉讼,控诉 | |
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88 accusation | |
n.控告,指责,谴责 | |
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89 defenders | |
n.防御者( defender的名词复数 );守卫者;保护者;辩护者 | |
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90 supremacy | |
n.至上;至高权力 | |
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91 appreciable | |
adj.明显的,可见的,可估量的,可觉察的 | |
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92 jingoism | |
n.极端之爱国主义 | |
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93 sect | |
n.派别,宗教,学派,派系 | |
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94 worthy | |
adj.(of)值得的,配得上的;有价值的 | |
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95 alacrity | |
n.敏捷,轻快,乐意 | |
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96 investigations | |
(正式的)调查( investigation的名词复数 ); 侦查; 科学研究; 学术研究 | |
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97 jovially | |
adv.愉快地,高兴地 | |
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98 jealousy | |
n.妒忌,嫉妒,猜忌 | |
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99 perjury | |
n.伪证;伪证罪 | |
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100 reprehensible | |
adj.该受责备的 | |
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101 diplomats | |
n.外交官( diplomat的名词复数 );有手腕的人,善于交际的人 | |
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102 espionage | |
n.间谍行为,谍报活动 | |
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103 cowardice | |
n.胆小,怯懦 | |
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104 hypocrisy | |
n.伪善,虚伪 | |
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105 malice | |
n.恶意,怨恨,蓄意;[律]预谋 | |
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106 remarkable | |
adj.显著的,异常的,非凡的,值得注意的 | |
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107 narration | |
n.讲述,叙述;故事;记叙体 | |
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108 internment | |
n.拘留 | |
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109 defiance | |
n.挑战,挑衅,蔑视,违抗 | |
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110 devout | |
adj.虔诚的,虔敬的,衷心的 (n.devoutness) | |
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111 conjuring | |
n.魔术 | |
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112 serried | |
adj.拥挤的;密集的 | |
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