Take your place on Williamsburg Bridge some morning, for instance, at say three or four o’clock, and watch the long, the quite unbroken line of Jews trundling pushcarts6 eastward7 to the great Wallabout Market over the bridge. A procession out of Assyria or Egypt or Chaldea, you might suppose, Biblical in quality; or, better yet, a huge chorus in some operatic dawn scene laid in Paris or Petrograd or here. A vast, silent mass it is, marching to the music of necessity. They are so grimy, so mechanistic, so elemental in their movements and needs. And later on you will find6 them seated or standing8, with their little charcoal9 buckets or braziers to warm their hands and feet, in those gusty10, icy streets of the East Side in winter, or coatless and almost shirtless in hot weather, open-mouthed for want of air. And they are New York, too—Bucharest and Lemberg and Odessa come to the Bowery, and adding rich, dark, colorful threads to the rug or tapestry11 which is New York.
Since these are but a portion, think of those other masses that come from the surrounding territory, north, south, east and west. The ferries—have you ever observed them in the morning? Or the bridges, railway terminals, and every elevated and subway exit?
Already at six and six-thirty in the morning they have begun to trickle12 small streams of human beings Manhattan or cityward, and by seven and seven-fifteen these streams have become sizable affairs. By seven-thirty and eight they have changed into heavy, turbulent rivers, and by eight-fifteen and eight-thirty and nine they are raging torrents13, no less. They overflow14 all the streets and avenues and every available means of conveyance15. They are pouring into all available doorways16, shops, factories, office-buildings—those huge affairs towering so significantly above them. Here they stay all day long, causing those great hives and their adjacent streets to flush with a softness of color not indigenous17 to them, and then at night, between five and six, they are going again, pouring forth18 over the bridges and through the subways and across the ferries and out on the trains, until the last drop of them appears7 to have been exuded19, and they are pocketed in some outlying side-street or village or metropolitan20 hall-room—and the great, turbulent night of the city is on once more.
The City Awakes
And yet they continue to stream cityward,—this cityward. From all parts of the world they are pouring into New York: Greeks from Athens and the realms of Sparta and Macedonia, living six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve, in one room, sleeping on the floors and dressing21 and eating and entertaining themselves God knows how; Jews from Russia, Poland, Hungary, the Balkans, crowding the East Side and the inlying sections of Brooklyn, and huddling22 together in thick, gummy streets, singing in street crowds around ballad-mongers of the woes23 of their native land, seeking with a kind of divine, poetic24 flare25 a modicum26 of that material comfort which their natures so greatly crave27, which their previous condition for at least fifteen hundred years has scarcely warranted; Italians from Sicily and the warmer vales of the South, crowding into great sections of their own, all hungry for a taste of New York; Germans, Hungarians, French, Polish, Swedish, Armenians, all with sections of their own and all alive to the joys of the city, and how eager to live—great gold and scarlet28 streets throbbing29 with the thoughts of them!
And last but not least, the illusioned American from the Middle West and the South and the Northwest and the Far West, crowding in and eyeing it all so eagerly, so yearningly30, like the others. Ah, the little, shabby, blue-light restaurants! The boarding houses in silent8 streets! The moral, hungry “homes”—how full they are of them and how hopeless! How the city sings and sings for them, and in spite of them, flaunting31 ever afresh its lures32 and beauties—a city as wonderful and fateful and ironic33 as life itself.
点击收听单词发音
1 wondrous | |
adj.令人惊奇的,奇妙的;adv.惊人地;异乎寻常地;令人惊叹地 | |
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2 efficiently | |
adv.高效率地,有能力地 | |
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3 machinery | |
n.(总称)机械,机器;机构 | |
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4 wagons | |
n.四轮的运货马车( wagon的名词复数 );铁路货车;小手推车 | |
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5 implements | |
n.工具( implement的名词复数 );家具;手段;[法律]履行(契约等)v.实现( implement的第三人称单数 );执行;贯彻;使生效 | |
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6 pushcarts | |
n.手推车( pushcart的名词复数 ) | |
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7 eastward | |
adv.向东;adj.向东的;n.东方,东部 | |
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8 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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9 charcoal | |
n.炭,木炭,生物炭 | |
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10 gusty | |
adj.起大风的 | |
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11 tapestry | |
n.挂毯,丰富多采的画面 | |
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12 trickle | |
vi.淌,滴,流出,慢慢移动,逐渐消散 | |
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13 torrents | |
n.倾注;奔流( torrent的名词复数 );急流;爆发;连续不断 | |
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14 overflow | |
v.(使)外溢,(使)溢出;溢出,流出,漫出 | |
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15 conveyance | |
n.(不动产等的)转让,让与;转让证书;传送;运送;表达;(正)运输工具 | |
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16 doorways | |
n.门口,门道( doorway的名词复数 ) | |
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17 indigenous | |
adj.土产的,土生土长的,本地的 | |
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18 forth | |
adv.向前;向外,往外 | |
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19 exuded | |
v.缓慢流出,渗出,分泌出( exude的过去式和过去分词 );流露出对(某物)的神态或感情 | |
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20 metropolitan | |
adj.大城市的,大都会的 | |
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21 dressing | |
n.(食物)调料;包扎伤口的用品,敷料 | |
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22 huddling | |
n. 杂乱一团, 混乱, 拥挤 v. 推挤, 乱堆, 草率了事 | |
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23 woes | |
困境( woe的名词复数 ); 悲伤; 我好苦哇; 某人就要倒霉 | |
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24 poetic | |
adj.富有诗意的,有诗人气质的,善于抒情的 | |
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25 flare | |
v.闪耀,闪烁;n.潮红;突发 | |
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26 modicum | |
n.少量,一小份 | |
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27 crave | |
vt.渴望得到,迫切需要,恳求,请求 | |
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28 scarlet | |
n.深红色,绯红色,红衣;adj.绯红色的 | |
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29 throbbing | |
a. 跳动的,悸动的 | |
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30 yearningly | |
怀念地,思慕地,同情地; 渴 | |
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31 flaunting | |
adj.招摇的,扬扬得意的,夸耀的v.炫耀,夸耀( flaunt的现在分词 );有什么能耐就施展出来 | |
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32 lures | |
吸引力,魅力(lure的复数形式) | |
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33 ironic | |
adj.讽刺的,有讽刺意味的,出乎意料的 | |
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