The Sea
i
In the evening Hilda, returning from a short solitary1 walk as far as the West Pier2, found Sarah Gailey stooping over her open trunks in the bedroom which had been assigned to her. There were two quite excellent though low-ceiled rooms, of which this was one, in the basement; the other was to be used as a private parlour by the managers of the house. At night, with the gas lighted and the yellow blind drawn3 and the loose bundle of strips paper gleaming in the grate, the bedroom seemed very cozy4 and habitable in its shabbiness; like the rest of the house it had an ample supply of furniture, and especially of those trifling6 articles, useful or useless, which collect only by slow degrees, and which are a proof of long humanizing habitation. In that room Sarah Gailey was indeed merely the successor of the regretted Mrs. Granville, the landlady7 who had mysteriously receded8 into the unknown before the advent9 of Sarah and Hilda, but with whom George Cannon10 must have had many interviews. No doubt the room was an epitome11 of the character of Mrs. Granville, presumably a fussy12 and precise celibate13, with a place for everything and everything in its place, and an indiscriminating tendency to hoard14.
Sarah Gailey was at that stage of unpacking15 when, trunks being nearly empty and drawers having scarcely begun to fill, bed, table, and chairs are encumbered17 with confused masses of goods apparently18 far exceeding the cubical contents of the trunks.
“Can I do anything for you?” asked Hilda.
The new landlady raised her watery19 and dejected eyes. “If you wouldn’t mind taking every single one of those knick-knacks off the mantelpiece and putting them away on the top shelf of the cupboard—”
Hilda smiled. “It’s a bit crowded, isn’t it?”
“Crowded!” By her intonation20 of this one word Sarah Gailey condemned21 Mrs. Granville’s whole life.
“Can I empty this chair? I shall want something to stand on,” said Hilda.
“Better see if the shelf’s dusty,” Sarah gloomily warned her.
“Well,” murmured Hilda, on the chair. “If my feather doesn’t actually touch the ceiling!” Sarah Gailey made no response to this light-heartedness, and Hilda, with her hands full of vain gewgaws, tried again: “I wonder what Mrs. Granville would say if she saw me!... My word, it’s quite hot up here!”
A resonant22, very amiable23 voice came from beyond the door: “Is she there?”
“Who?” demanded Sarah, grievous.
“Miss Lessways.” It was George Cannon.
“Yes.”
“I just want to speak to her if she’s at liberty,” said George Cannon.
Hilda cried from the ceiling: “I’ll come as soon as I’ve—”
“Please go now,” Sarah interrupted in tense accents. Hilda glanced down at her, astonished, and saw in her eyes an almost childish appeal, weak and passionate24, which gripped the heart painfully.
She jumped from the chair. Sarah Gailey was now sitting on the bed. Yes, in her worn face of a woman who has definitely passed the climacteric, and in the abandoned pose of those thin arms, there was the look and gesture of a young girl desperately25 beseeching26. Hilda was puzzled and intimidated27. She had meant to be jocular, and to insist on staying till the task was finished. But she kept silence and obeyed the supplication28, from a motive29 of prudence30.
“I wouldn’t keep you from him for anything,” murmured Sarah Gailey tragically31, as Hilda opened the door and left her sitting forlorn among all her skirts and linen33.
ii
“I’m here,” George Cannon called out from the parlour when he heard the sound of the door. He was looking from the window up at the street; the blind had not been drawn. He turned as Hilda entered.
“You’ve been out!” he said, observing that she was in street attire34.
“What is it?” she asked nervously35, fearing that some altercation36 had already occurred between brother and sister.
“It’s about your private affairs—that’s all,” he said easily, and half-humourously. “If you’ll just come in.”
“Oh!” she smiled her relief; but nevertheless she was still preoccupied37 by the image of the woman in the next room.
“They’ve been dragging on quite long enough,” said George Cannon, as he stooped to poke38 the morsel39 of fire in the old-fashioned grate, which had a hob on either side. On one of these hobs was a glass of milk. Hilda had learnt that day for the first time that at a certain hour every evening George Cannon drank a glass of warm milk, and that this glass of warm milk was an important factor in his daily comfort. He now took the glass and drank it off. And Hilda had a peculiar40 sensation of being more intimate with him than she had ever been before.
They sat down to the square table in the middle of the room crowded with oddments of furniture, including a desk which George Cannon had appropriated to his own exclusive use. This desk was open and a portion of its contents were spread abroad on the crimson41 cloth of the table. Among them Hilda noticed, with her accustomed clerkly eye, two numbers of The Hotel–Keeper and Boarding–House Review, several sheets of advertisement-scales, and a many-paged document with the heading, “Inventory of Furniture at No. 59 Preston Street”; also a large legal envelope inscribed42, “Lessways Estate.”
From the latter George Cannon drew forth43 an engraved44 and flourished paper, which he silently placed in front of her. It was a receipt signed by the manager of the Brighton branch of the Southern Counties Bank for the sum of three thousand four hundred and forty-five pounds deposited at call by Miss Hilda Lessways.
“Everything is now settled up,” he said. “Here are all the figures,” and he handed her another paper showing the whole of the figures for the realization45 of her real property and of her furniture. “It’s in your name, and nobody can touch it but you.”
She glanced at the figures vaguely46, not attempting to comprehend them. As for the receipt, it fascinated her. The fragile scrap47 represented her livelihood48, her future, her salvation49. It alone stood between her and unimagined terrors. And she was surprised to see it, surprised by its assurance that no accident had happened to her possessions during the process of transformation50 carried out by George Cannon. For, though he had throughout been almost worryingly meticulous51 in his business formalities and his promptitudes—never had any interest or rent been a day late!—she admitted to herself now that she had been afraid... that, in fact, she had not utterly52 trusted him.
“And what’s got to be done with this?” she asked simply, fingering the receipt.
He smiled at her, with a touch of protective and yet sardonic53 condescension54, without saying a word.
And suddenly it struck her that ages had elapsed since her first interview with him in the office over the ironmonger’s at Turnhill, and that both of them were extraordinarily55 changed. (She was reminded of that interview not by his face and look, nor by their relative positions at the table, but by a very faint odour of gas-fumes, for at Turnhill also a gas-jet had been between them.) After an interval56 of anxiety and depression he had regained57 exactly the triumphant58 self-sure air which was her earliest recollection of him. He was not appreciably59 older. But for her he was no longer the same man, because she saw him differently; knowing much more of him, she read in his features a thousand minor60 significances to which before she had been blind. The dominating impression was not now the impression of his masculinity; there was no clearly dominating impression. He had lost, for her, the romantic allurement61 of the strange and the unknown.
Still, she liked and admired him. And she felt an awe16, which was agreeable to her, of his tremendous enterprise and his obstinate62 volition63. That faculty64 which he possessed65, of uprooting66 himself and uprooting others, put her in fear of him. He had willed to be established as a caterer67 in Brighton—he who but yesterday (as it seemed) was a lawyer in Turnhill—and, on this very night, he was established in Brighton, and his sister with him, and she with his sister! The enormous affair had been accomplished68. This thought had been obsessing69 Hilda all the afternoon and evening.
When she reflected upon the change in herself, the untravelled Hilda of Turnhill appeared a stranger to her, and a simpleton!; no more!
As George Cannon offered no answer to her question, she said:
“I suppose it will have to be invested, all this?”
He nodded.
“Well, considering it’s only been bringing in one per cent. per annum for the last week... Of course I needn’t have put it on deposit, but I always prefer that way. It’s more satisfactory.”
Hilda could hear faintly, through the thin wooden partition, the movements of Sarah Gailey in the next room. And the image of the mournful woman returned to disquiet70 her. What could be the meaning of that hysteric appeal and glance? Then she heard the door of the bedroom open violently, and the figure of Sarah Gailey passed like a flash across the doorway71 of the parlour. And the footsteps of Sarah Gailey pattered up the stone stairs; and the front door banged; and the skirts and feet of Sarah Gailey intercepted72 for an instant the light of the street-lamp that shone on the basement-window of the parlour.
“Excuse me a minute,” muttered Hilda, frowning. By one of her swift and unreflecting impulses she abandoned George Cannon and her private affairs, and scurried73 by the area steps into the street.
iii
Bareheaded, and with no jacket or mantle74, Sarah Gailey was walking quickly down Preston Street towards the promenade75, and Hilda, afraid but courageous76, followed her at a distance of thirty or forty yards. Hilda could not decide why she was afraid, nor why it should be necessary, in so simple an undertaking77 as a walk down Preston Street, to call upon her courage. Assuming even that Sarah Gailey turned round and caught her—what then? The consequences could not be very terrible. But Sarah Gailey did not turn round. She went straight forward, as though on a definite errand in a town with which she was perfectly78 familiar, and, having arrived at the corner of Preston Street and the promenade, unhesitatingly crossed the muddy roadway of the promenade, and, after a moment’s halt, vanished down the steps in the sea-wall to the left-hand of the pier. The pier, a double rope of twinkling lamps, hung magically over the invisible sea, and at the end of it, constant and grave, a red globe burned menacingly in the wind-haunted waste of the night. And Hilda thought, as she hastened with gathering79 terror across the promenade: “Out there, at the end of the pier, the water is splashing and beating against the piles!”
She stopped at the parapet of the sea-wall, and looked behind her, like a thief. The wrought-iron entrance to the pier was highly illuminated80, but except for a man’s head and shoulders caged in the ticket-box of the turnstile, there was no life there; the man seemed to be waiting solitary with everlasting81 patience in the web of wavering flame beneath the huge dark sky. Scores of posters, large and small, showed that Robertson’s “School” was being performed in the theatre away over the sea at the extremity82 of the pier. The promenade, save for one gigantic policeman, and a few distant carriages, was apparently deserted83, and the line of dimly lighted hotels, stretching vaguely east and west, had an air grim and forlorn at that hour.
Hilda ran down the steps; at the bottom another row of lamps defined the shore, and now she could hear the tide lapping ceaselessly amid the supporting ironwork of the pier. She at once descried84 the figure of Sarah Gailey in the gloom. The woman was moving towards the faintly white edge of the sea. Hilda started to run after her, first across smooth asphalt, and then over some sails stretched out to dry; and then her feet sank at each step into descending85 ridges86 of loose shingle87, and she nearly fell. At length she came to firm sand, and stood still.
Sarah Gailey was now silhouetted88 against the pale shallows of foam89 that in ever-renewed curves divided the shore from the sea. After a time, she bent90 down, rose again, moved towards the water, and drew back. Hilda did not stir. She could not bring herself to approach the lonely figure. She felt that to go and accost91 Sarah Gailey would be indelicate and inexcusable. She felt as if she were basely spying. She was completely at a loss, and knew not how to act. But presently she discerned that the white foam was circling round Sarah’s feet, and that Sarah was standing92 careless in the midst of it. And at last, timid and shaking with agitation93, she ventured nearer and nearer. And Sarah heard her on the sand, and looked behind.
“Miss Gailey!” she appealed in a trembling voice.
Sarah made no response of any kind, and Hilda reached the edge of the foam.
“Please, please don’t stand there! You’ll catch a dreadful cold, and you’ve got nothing on your shoulders, either!”
“I want to make a hole in the water,” said Sarah miserably94. “I wanted to make a hole in the water!”
“Please do come back with me!” Hilda implored95; but she spoke96 mechanically, as though saying something which she was bound to say, but which she did not feel.
The foam capriciously receded, and Hilda, still without any effort of her own will, stepped across the glistening97, yielding sand and took Sarah Gailey’s arm. There was no resistance.
“I wanted to make a hole in the water,” Sarah repeated. “But I made a mistake. I ought to have gone to that groin over there. I knew there was a groin near here, only it’s so long since I was here. I’d forgotten just the place.”
“But what’s the matter?” Hilda asked, leading her away from the sea.
She was not extremely surprised. But she was shocked into a most solemn awe as she pressed the arm of the poor tragic32 woman who, but for an accident, might have plunged98 off the end of the groin into water deep enough for drowning. She did really feel humble99 before this creature who had deliberately100 invited death; she in no way criticized her; she did not even presume to condescend101 towards the hasty clumsiness of Sarah Gailey’s scheme to die. She was overwhelmed by the woman’s utterly unconscious impressiveness, which exceeded that of a criminal reprieved102 on the scaffold, for the woman had dared an experience that only the fierce and sublime103 courage of desperation can affront104. She had a feeling that she ought to apologize profoundly to Sarah Gailey for all that Sarah must have suffered. And as she heard the ceaseless, cruel play of the water amid the dark jungle of ironwork under the pier, and the soft creeping of the foam-curves behind, and the vague stirrings of the night-wind round about—these phenomena105 combined mysteriously with the immensity of the dome106 above and with the baffling strangeness of the town, and with the grandeur107 of the beaten woman by her side; and communicated to Hilda a thrill that was divine in its unexampled poignancy108.
The great figure of the policeman, suspicious, was descending from the promenade discreetly109 towards them. To avoid any encounter with him Hilda guided her companion towards the pier, and they sheltered there under the resounding110 floor of the pier. By the light of one of the lower lamps Hilda could now clearly see Sarah Gailey’s face. It showed no sign of terror. It was calm enough in its worn, resigned woe111. It had the girlish look again, beneath the marks of age. Hilda could distinguish the young girl that Sarah had once been.
“Come home, will you?” she entreated112.
Sarah Gailey sighed terribly. “I give it up,” she said, with weariness. “I could never do it! I could never do it—now!”
Hilda pulled gently at her unwilling113 arm. She could not speak. She could not ask her again: “What’s the matter?”
“It isn’t that the house is too large,” Sarah Gailey went on half meditatively114; “though just think of all those stairs, and not a tap on any of the upper floors! No! And it isn’t that I’m not ready enough to oblige him. No! I know as well as anybody there’s only him between me and starvation. No! It isn’t that he doesn’t consider me! No! But when he goes and settles behind my back with those Boutwoods—” She began to weep. “And when I can hear you and him discussing me in the next room, and plotting against me—it’s—it’s more—” The tears gradually drowned her voice, and she ceased.
“I assure you, you’re quite mistaken,” Hilda burst out, with passionate and indignant persuasiveness115. “We never mentioned you. He wanted to talk to me about my money. And if you feel like that over the Boutwoods, I’m certain he’ll tell them they mustn’t come.”
Sarah Gailey shook her head blankly.
“I’m certain he will!” Hilda persisted. “Please—”
The other began to walk away, dragging Hilda with her. The policeman, inspecting them from a distance, coughed and withdrew. They climbed a flight of steps on the far side of the pier, crossed the promenade, and went up Preston Street in silence.
“I should prefer not to be seen going in with you,” said Sarah Gailey suddenly. “It might—” she freed her arm.
“Go down the area steps,” said Hilda, “and I’ll wait a moment and then go in at the front door.”
Sarah Gailey hurried forward alone.
Hilda, watching her, and observing the wet footmarks which she left on the pavement, was appalled116 by the sense of her own responsibility as to the future of Sarah Gailey. Till this hour, even at her most conscientious117, she had under-estimated the seriousness of Sarah Gailey’s case. Everybody had under-estimated the seriousness of Sarah Gailey’s case.
She became aware of some one hurrying cautiously up the street on the other side. It was George Cannon. As soon as Sarah had disappeared within the house he crossed over.
“What’s the matter?” he inquired anxiously.
“Well—”
“She hasn’t been trying to drown herself, has she?”
Hilda nodded, and, speechless, moved towards the house. He turned abruptly118 away.
The front door of No. 59 was still open. Hilda passed through the silent hall, and went timorously119 down the steps to the basement. The gas was still burning, and the clothes were still strewn about in Sarah Gailey’s bedroom, just as though naught120 had happened. Sarah stood between her two trunks in the middle of the floor.
“Where’s George?” she asked, in a harsh, perfectly ordinary voice.
“I don’t think he’s in the parlour,” Hilda prevaricated121.
“Promise me you won’t tell him!”
“Of course I won’t!” said Hilda kindly122. “Do get into bed, and let me make you some tea.”
Sarah Gailey rushed at her and embraced her.
“I know I’m all wrong! I know it’s all my own fault!” she murmured, with plaintive123, feeble contrition124, crying again. “But you’ve no idea how I try! If it wasn’t for you—”
iv
That night Hilda, in her small bedroom at the top of the house, was listlessly arranging, at the back of the dressing-table, the few volumes which had clung to her, or to which she had clung, throughout the convulsive disturbances125 following her mother’s death. Among them was one which she did not wish to keep, The Girls’ Week-day Book, and also the whole set of Victor Hugo, which did not belong to her. George Cannon had lent her the latter in instalments, and she had omitted to return it. She was saying to herself that the opportunity to return it had at length arrived, when she heard a low, conspiratorial126 tapping at the door. All her skin crept as, after a second’s startled hesitation127, she moved to open the door.
George Cannon, holding a candle, stood on the landing. She had not seen him since the brief colloquy128 between them outside the house. Having satisfied herself that Sarah Gailey was safe, and to a certain extent tranquillized, for the night, she had awaited George Cannon’s reappearance a long time in vain, and had then retired129 upstairs.
“You aren’t gone to bed!” he whispered very cautiously. Within a few feet of them was an airless kennel130 where Louisa, the chambermaid, slept.
“No! I’m just—I stayed up for you I don’t know how long.”
“Is she all right?”
“Well—she’s in bed.”
“I wish you’d come to one of these other rooms,” he continued to whisper. All the sibilants in his words seemed to detach themselves, hissing131, from the rest of the sounds.
She gave a gesture of assent132. He tiptoed over the traitorous133 boards of the landing, and slowly turned the knob of a door in the end wall. The door exploded like the firing of a pistol; frowning, he grimly pushed it open. Hilda followed him, noiselessly creeping. He held the door for her. She entered, and he shut the door on the inside. They were in a small bedroom similar to Hilda’s own; but the bed was stripped, the square of carpet rolled, the blind undrawn, and the curtains looped up from the floor. He put the candle on the tiny iron mantelpiece, and sat on the bed, his hands in his pockets.
“You don’t mean to say she was wanting to commit suicide?” he said, after a short reflective silence, with his head bent but his eyes raised peeringly to Hilda’s.
The crudity134 of the word, ‘suicide,’ affected135 Hilda painfully.
“If you ask me,” said she, standing with her back rubbing against the small wardrobe, “she didn’t know quite what she was doing; but there’s no doubt that was what she went out for.”
“You overtook her? I saw you coming up from the beach.”
Hilda related what had happened.
“But had you any notion—before—”
“Me? No! Why?”
“Nothing! Only the way you rushed out like that!”
“Well—it struck me all of a sudden!... You’ve not seen her since you came in?”
He shook his head. “I thought I’d better keep out of the way. I thought I’d better leave it all to you. It’s appalling136, simply appalling!... Just when everything was shaping so well!”
Hilda thought, bewildered: ‘Shaping so well?’ With her glance she took in the little cheerless bedroom, and herself and George Cannon within it, overwhelmed. In imagination she saw all the other bedrooms, dark, forlorn, and inanimate, waiting through long nights and empty days until some human creature as pathetic as themselves should come and feebly vitalize them into a spurious transient homeliness137; and she saw George Cannon’s bedroom—the harsh bedroom of the bachelor who had never had a home; and the bedrooms of those fearsome mummies, the Watchetts, each bed with its grisly face on the pillow in the dark; and the kennels138 of the unclean servants; and so, descending through the floors, to Sarah Gailey’s bedroom in the very earth, and the sleepless139 form on that bed, beneath the whole! And the organism of the boarding-house seemed absolutely tragic to her, compact of the stuff of sorrow itself! And yet George Cannon had said, ‘Shaping so well!’
“What’s to be done?” he inquired plaintively140.
“Nothing that I can see!” she said. She had a tremendous desire to escape from the responsibility thrust on her by the situation; but she knew that she could never escape from it; that she was immovably pinned down by it.
“I can’t see anything either,” said he, quietly responsive, and speaking now in a gentle voice. “Supposing I tell her that she can go, and that I’ll make her an allowance? What could she do, then? It would be madness for her to live alone any more. She’s the very last person who ought to live alone. Moreover, she wouldn’t accept the allowance. Well, then, she must stay with me—here. And if she stays here she must work, otherwise she’d never stay—not she! And she must be the mistress. She wouldn’t stand having anyone above her, or even equal with her, that’s a certainty! Besides, she’s so good at her job. She hasn’t got a great deal of system, so far as I can see, but she can get the work out of the servants without too much fuss, and she’s so mighty141 economical in her catering142! Of course she can’t get on the right side of a boarder—but then I can! And that’s the whole point! With me on the spot to run the place, she’d be perfect—perfect! Couldn’t wish for anything better! And now she—I assure you I’m doing the best I can do for her. I do honestly assure you! If anybody can suggest to me anything else that I can do—I’ll do it like a shot.” He threw up his arms.
Hilda was touched by the benevolence143 of his tone. Nevertheless, it only intensified144 her helpless perplexity. Sarah Gailey was inexpressibly to be pitied, but George Cannon was not to be blamed. She had a feeling that for any piteous disaster some one ought to be definitely blamable.
“Do you think she’ll settle down?” George Cannon asked, in a new voice.
“Oh yes!” said Hilda. “I think she will. It was just a sort of—attack she had, I think.”
“She’s not vexed145 with me?”
Hilda could not find courage to say: “She thinks you and I are plotting against her.” And yet she wondered why she should hesitate to say it. After a pause she murmured, as casually146 as possible: “She doesn’t like the Boutwoods coming back.”
“I knew you were going to say that!” he frowned.
“If you could manage to stop them—”
“No, no!” He interrupted—nervous, impatient. “It wouldn’t do, that wouldn’t! It’d never do! A boarding-house can’t be run on those lines. It isn’t that I care so much as all that about losing a couple of boarders, and I’m not specially5 keen on the Boutwoods. But it wouldn’t do! It’s the wrong principle. You haven’t got to let customers get on your nerves, so long as they pay and behave respectably. If I gave way, the very first thing Sarah would do would be to find a grievance147 against some other boarder, and there’d be no end to it. The fact is she wants a grievance, she must have a grievance—whether it’s the Boutwoods or somebody else makes no matter!... Oh no!” He repeated softly, gently, “Oh no!”
She knew that his argument was unanswerable. She was perfectly aware that she ought to yield to it. Nevertheless, the one impulse of her being in that moment was to fight blindly and irrationally148 against it. Her instinct said: “I don’t care for arguments. The Boutwoods must be stopped from coming. If they aren’t stopped, I don’t know what I shall do! I can’t bear to think of that poor woman meeting them again! I can’t bear it.” She drew breath sharply. Startling hot tears came into her eyes; and she stepped forward on her left foot.
“Please!” she entreated, “please don’t let them come!”
There was a silence. In the agonizing149 silence she felt acutely her girlishness, her helplessness, her unreason, confronted by his strong and shrewd masculinity. At the bottom of her soul she knew how wrong she was. But she was ready to do anything to save Sarah Gailey from the distress150 of one particular humiliation151. With the whole of her volition she wanted to win.
“Oh well!” he said. “Of course, if you take it so much to heart—”
A peculiar bright glance shot from his eyes—the old glance that at once negligently152 asserted his power over her, and reassured153 her against his power. Her being was suffused154 with gladness and pride. She had won. She had won in defiance155 of reason. She had appealed and she had conquered. And she enjoyed his glance. She gloried in it. She blushed. A spasm156 of exquisite157 fear shot through her, and she savoured it deliciously. The deep organic sadness of the house presented itself to her in a new light. It was still sadness, but it was beautiful in the background. Her sympathy for Sarah Gailey was as keen as ever, but it had a different quality—an anguish158 less desolating159. And the fact that a joint160 responsibility for Sarah Gailey’s welfare bound herself and George Cannon together in spite of themselves—this fact seemed to her grandiose161 and romantic, no longer oppressive. To be alone with him in the secrecy162 of the small upper room seemed to endow her with a splendid worldly importance. And yet all the time a scarce-heard voice was saying clearly within her: “This appeal and this abandonment are unworthy. No matter if this man is kind and sincere and admirable! This appeal and this abandonment are unworthy!” But she did not care. She ignored the voice.
“I’ll tell Sarah in the morning,” he said.
“Please don’t!” she begged. “You might pretend later on that you’ve had a letter from the Boutwoods and they can’t come. If you tell her tomorrow, she’ll guess at once I’ve been talking to you; and you’re not supposed to know anything at all about what happened to-night. She made me promise. But of course she didn’t know that you’d found out for yourself, you see!”
George Cannon walked away to the window, and then to the mantelpiece, from which he took up the candle.
“I’m very much obliged to you,” he said simply, putting a faint emphasis on the last word. She knew that he meant it, without any reserves. But in his urbane163 tone there was a chill tranquillity164 that astonished and vaguely disappointed her.
1 solitary | |
adj.孤独的,独立的,荒凉的;n.隐士 | |
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2 pier | |
n.码头;桥墩,桥柱;[建]窗间壁,支柱 | |
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3 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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4 cozy | |
adj.亲如手足的,密切的,暖和舒服的 | |
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5 specially | |
adv.特定地;特殊地;明确地 | |
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6 trifling | |
adj.微不足道的;没什么价值的 | |
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7 landlady | |
n.女房东,女地主 | |
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8 receded | |
v.逐渐远离( recede的过去式和过去分词 );向后倾斜;自原处后退或避开别人的注视;尤指问题 | |
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9 advent | |
n.(重要事件等的)到来,来临 | |
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10 cannon | |
n.大炮,火炮;飞机上的机关炮 | |
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11 epitome | |
n.典型,梗概 | |
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12 fussy | |
adj.为琐事担忧的,过分装饰的,爱挑剔的 | |
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13 celibate | |
adj.独身的,独身主义的;n.独身者 | |
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14 hoard | |
n./v.窖藏,贮存,囤积 | |
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15 unpacking | |
n.取出货物,拆包[箱]v.从(包裹等)中取出(所装的东西),打开行李取出( unpack的现在分词 );拆包;解除…的负担;吐露(心事等) | |
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16 awe | |
n.敬畏,惊惧;vt.使敬畏,使惊惧 | |
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17 encumbered | |
v.妨碍,阻碍,拖累( encumber的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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18 apparently | |
adv.显然地;表面上,似乎 | |
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19 watery | |
adj.有水的,水汪汪的;湿的,湿润的 | |
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20 intonation | |
n.语调,声调;发声 | |
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21 condemned | |
adj. 被责难的, 被宣告有罪的 动词condemn的过去式和过去分词 | |
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22 resonant | |
adj.(声音)洪亮的,共鸣的 | |
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23 amiable | |
adj.和蔼可亲的,友善的,亲切的 | |
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24 passionate | |
adj.热情的,热烈的,激昂的,易动情的,易怒的,性情暴躁的 | |
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25 desperately | |
adv.极度渴望地,绝望地,孤注一掷地 | |
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26 beseeching | |
adj.恳求似的v.恳求,乞求(某事物)( beseech的现在分词 ) | |
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27 intimidated | |
v.恐吓;威胁adj.害怕的;受到威胁的 | |
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28 supplication | |
n.恳求,祈愿,哀求 | |
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29 motive | |
n.动机,目的;adv.发动的,运动的 | |
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30 prudence | |
n.谨慎,精明,节俭 | |
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31 tragically | |
adv. 悲剧地,悲惨地 | |
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32 tragic | |
adj.悲剧的,悲剧性的,悲惨的 | |
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33 linen | |
n.亚麻布,亚麻线,亚麻制品;adj.亚麻布制的,亚麻的 | |
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34 attire | |
v.穿衣,装扮[同]array;n.衣着;盛装 | |
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35 nervously | |
adv.神情激动地,不安地 | |
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36 altercation | |
n.争吵,争论 | |
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37 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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38 poke | |
n.刺,戳,袋;vt.拨开,刺,戳;vi.戳,刺,捅,搜索,伸出,行动散慢 | |
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39 morsel | |
n.一口,一点点 | |
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40 peculiar | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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41 crimson | |
n./adj.深(绯)红色(的);vi.脸变绯红色 | |
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42 inscribed | |
v.写,刻( inscribe的过去式和过去分词 );内接 | |
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43 forth | |
adv.向前;向外,往外 | |
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44 engraved | |
v.在(硬物)上雕刻(字,画等)( engrave的过去式和过去分词 );将某事物深深印在(记忆或头脑中) | |
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45 realization | |
n.实现;认识到,深刻了解 | |
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46 vaguely | |
adv.含糊地,暖昧地 | |
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47 scrap | |
n.碎片;废料;v.废弃,报废 | |
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48 livelihood | |
n.生计,谋生之道 | |
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49 salvation | |
n.(尤指基督)救世,超度,拯救,解困 | |
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50 transformation | |
n.变化;改造;转变 | |
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51 meticulous | |
adj.极其仔细的,一丝不苟的 | |
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52 utterly | |
adv.完全地,绝对地 | |
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53 sardonic | |
adj.嘲笑的,冷笑的,讥讽的 | |
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54 condescension | |
n.自以为高人一等,贬低(别人) | |
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55 extraordinarily | |
adv.格外地;极端地 | |
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56 interval | |
n.间隔,间距;幕间休息,中场休息 | |
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57 regained | |
复得( regain的过去式和过去分词 ); 赢回; 重回; 复至某地 | |
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58 triumphant | |
adj.胜利的,成功的;狂欢的,喜悦的 | |
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59 appreciably | |
adv.相当大地 | |
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60 minor | |
adj.较小(少)的,较次要的;n.辅修学科;vi.辅修 | |
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61 allurement | |
n.诱惑物 | |
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62 obstinate | |
adj.顽固的,倔强的,不易屈服的,较难治愈的 | |
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63 volition | |
n.意志;决意 | |
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64 faculty | |
n.才能;学院,系;(学院或系的)全体教学人员 | |
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65 possessed | |
adj.疯狂的;拥有的,占有的 | |
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66 uprooting | |
n.倒根,挖除伐根v.把(某物)连根拔起( uproot的现在分词 );根除;赶走;把…赶出家园 | |
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67 caterer | |
n. 备办食物者,备办宴席者 | |
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68 accomplished | |
adj.有才艺的;有造诣的;达到了的 | |
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69 obsessing | |
v.时刻困扰( obsess的现在分词 );缠住;使痴迷;使迷恋 | |
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70 disquiet | |
n.担心,焦虑 | |
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71 doorway | |
n.门口,(喻)入门;门路,途径 | |
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72 intercepted | |
拦截( intercept的过去式和过去分词 ); 截住; 截击; 拦阻 | |
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73 scurried | |
v.急匆匆地走( scurry的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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74 mantle | |
n.斗篷,覆罩之物,罩子;v.罩住,覆盖,脸红 | |
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75 promenade | |
n./v.散步 | |
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76 courageous | |
adj.勇敢的,有胆量的 | |
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77 undertaking | |
n.保证,许诺,事业 | |
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78 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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79 gathering | |
n.集会,聚会,聚集 | |
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80 illuminated | |
adj.被照明的;受启迪的 | |
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81 everlasting | |
adj.永恒的,持久的,无止境的 | |
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82 extremity | |
n.末端,尽头;尽力;终极;极度 | |
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83 deserted | |
adj.荒芜的,荒废的,无人的,被遗弃的 | |
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84 descried | |
adj.被注意到的,被发现的,被看到的 | |
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85 descending | |
n. 下行 adj. 下降的 | |
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86 ridges | |
n.脊( ridge的名词复数 );山脊;脊状突起;大气层的)高压脊 | |
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87 shingle | |
n.木瓦板;小招牌(尤指医生或律师挂的营业招牌);v.用木瓦板盖(屋顶);把(女子头发)剪短 | |
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88 silhouetted | |
显出轮廓的,显示影像的 | |
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89 foam | |
v./n.泡沫,起泡沫 | |
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90 bent | |
n.爱好,癖好;adj.弯的;决心的,一心的 | |
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91 accost | |
v.向人搭话,打招呼 | |
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92 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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93 agitation | |
n.搅动;搅拌;鼓动,煽动 | |
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94 miserably | |
adv.痛苦地;悲惨地;糟糕地;极度地 | |
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95 implored | |
恳求或乞求(某人)( implore的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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96 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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97 glistening | |
adj.闪耀的,反光的v.湿物闪耀,闪亮( glisten的现在分词 ) | |
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98 plunged | |
v.颠簸( plunge的过去式和过去分词 );暴跌;骤降;突降 | |
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99 humble | |
adj.谦卑的,恭顺的;地位低下的;v.降低,贬低 | |
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100 deliberately | |
adv.审慎地;蓄意地;故意地 | |
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101 condescend | |
v.俯就,屈尊;堕落,丢丑 | |
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102 reprieved | |
v.缓期执行(死刑)( reprieve的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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103 sublime | |
adj.崇高的,伟大的;极度的,不顾后果的 | |
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104 affront | |
n./v.侮辱,触怒 | |
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105 phenomena | |
n.现象 | |
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106 dome | |
n.圆屋顶,拱顶 | |
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107 grandeur | |
n.伟大,崇高,宏伟,庄严,豪华 | |
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108 poignancy | |
n.辛酸事,尖锐 | |
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109 discreetly | |
ad.(言行)审慎地,慎重地 | |
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110 resounding | |
adj. 响亮的 | |
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111 woe | |
n.悲哀,苦痛,不幸,困难;int.用来表达悲伤或惊慌 | |
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112 entreated | |
恳求,乞求( entreat的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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113 unwilling | |
adj.不情愿的 | |
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114 meditatively | |
adv.冥想地 | |
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115 persuasiveness | |
说服力 | |
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116 appalled | |
v.使惊骇,使充满恐惧( appall的过去式和过去分词)adj.惊骇的;丧胆的 | |
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117 conscientious | |
adj.审慎正直的,认真的,本着良心的 | |
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118 abruptly | |
adv.突然地,出其不意地 | |
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119 timorously | |
adv.胆怯地,羞怯地 | |
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120 naught | |
n.无,零 [=nought] | |
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121 prevaricated | |
v.支吾( prevaricate的过去式和过去分词 );搪塞;说谎 | |
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122 kindly | |
adj.和蔼的,温和的,爽快的;adv.温和地,亲切地 | |
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123 plaintive | |
adj.可怜的,伤心的 | |
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124 contrition | |
n.悔罪,痛悔 | |
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125 disturbances | |
n.骚乱( disturbance的名词复数 );打扰;困扰;障碍 | |
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126 conspiratorial | |
adj.阴谋的,阴谋者的 | |
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127 hesitation | |
n.犹豫,踌躇 | |
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128 colloquy | |
n.谈话,自由讨论 | |
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129 retired | |
adj.隐退的,退休的,退役的 | |
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130 kennel | |
n.狗舍,狗窝 | |
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131 hissing | |
n. 发嘶嘶声, 蔑视 动词hiss的现在分词形式 | |
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132 assent | |
v.批准,认可;n.批准,认可 | |
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133 traitorous | |
adj. 叛国的, 不忠的, 背信弃义的 | |
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134 crudity | |
n.粗糙,生硬;adj.粗略的 | |
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135 affected | |
adj.不自然的,假装的 | |
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136 appalling | |
adj.骇人听闻的,令人震惊的,可怕的 | |
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137 homeliness | |
n.简朴,朴实;相貌平平 | |
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138 kennels | |
n.主人外出时的小动物寄养处,养狗场;狗窝( kennel的名词复数 );养狗场 | |
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139 sleepless | |
adj.不睡眠的,睡不著的,不休息的 | |
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140 plaintively | |
adv.悲哀地,哀怨地 | |
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141 mighty | |
adj.强有力的;巨大的 | |
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142 catering | |
n. 给养 | |
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143 benevolence | |
n.慈悲,捐助 | |
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144 intensified | |
v.(使)增强, (使)加剧( intensify的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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145 vexed | |
adj.争论不休的;(指问题等)棘手的;争论不休的问题;烦恼的v.使烦恼( vex的过去式和过去分词 );使苦恼;使生气;详细讨论 | |
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146 casually | |
adv.漠不关心地,无动于衷地,不负责任地 | |
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147 grievance | |
n.怨愤,气恼,委屈 | |
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148 irrationally | |
ad.不理性地 | |
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149 agonizing | |
adj.痛苦难忍的;使人苦恼的v.使极度痛苦;折磨(agonize的ing形式) | |
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150 distress | |
n.苦恼,痛苦,不舒适;不幸;vt.使悲痛 | |
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151 humiliation | |
n.羞辱 | |
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152 negligently | |
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153 reassured | |
adj.使消除疑虑的;使放心的v.再保证,恢复信心( reassure的过去式和过去分词) | |
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154 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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155 defiance | |
n.挑战,挑衅,蔑视,违抗 | |
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156 spasm | |
n.痉挛,抽搐;一阵发作 | |
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157 exquisite | |
adj.精美的;敏锐的;剧烈的,感觉强烈的 | |
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158 anguish | |
n.(尤指心灵上的)极度痛苦,烦恼 | |
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159 desolating | |
毁坏( desolate的现在分词 ); 极大地破坏; 使沮丧; 使痛苦 | |
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160 joint | |
adj.联合的,共同的;n.关节,接合处;v.连接,贴合 | |
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161 grandiose | |
adj.宏伟的,宏大的,堂皇的,铺张的 | |
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162 secrecy | |
n.秘密,保密,隐蔽 | |
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163 urbane | |
adj.温文尔雅的,懂礼的 | |
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164 tranquillity | |
n. 平静, 安静 | |
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