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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Brave New World
by Aldous Huxley
Chapter Six - continued
At the sound of his voice the Director started into a guilty realization1 of where he was; shot a glance at Bernard, and averting2 his eyes, blushed darkly; looked at him again with sudden suspicion and, angrily on his dignity, "Don't imagine," he said, "that I'd had any indecorous relation with the girl. Nothing emotional, nothing long-drawn3. It was all perfectly4 healthy and normal." He handed Bernard the permit. "I really don't know why I bored you with this trivial anecdote5." Furious with himself for having given away a discreditable secret, he vented6 his rage on Bernard. The look in his eyes was now frankly7 malignant8. "And I should like to take this opportunity, Mr. Marx," he went on, "of saying that I'm not at all pleased with the reports I receive of your behaviour outside working hours. You may say that this is not my business. But it is. I have the good name of the Centre to think of. My workers must be above suspicion, particularly those of the highest castes. Alphas are so conditioned that they do not have to be infantile in their emotional behaviour. But that is all the more reason for their making a special effort to conform. It is their duty to be infantile, even against their inclination9. And so, Mr. Marx, I give you fair warning." The Director's voice vibrated with an indignation that had now become wholly righteous and impersonal-was the expression of the disapproval10 of Society itself. "If ever I hear again of any lapse11 from a proper standard of infantile decorum, I shall ask for your transference to a Sub-Centre-preferably to Iceland. Good morning." And swivelling round in his chair, he picked up his pen and began to write.
"That'll teach him," he said to himself. But he was mistaken. For Bernard left the room with a swagger, exulting12, as he banged the door behind him, in the thought that he stood alone, embattled against the order of things; elated by the intoxicating13 consciousness of his individual significance and importance. Even the thought of persecution14 left him undismayed, was rather tonic15 than depressing. He felt strong enough to meet and overcome affliction, strong enough to face even Iceland. And this confidence was the greater for his not for a moment really believing that he would be called upon to face anything at all. People simply weren't transferred for things like that. Iceland was just a threat. A most stimulating16 and life-giving threat. Walking along the corridor, he actually whistled.
Heroic was the account he gave that evening of his interview with the D.H.C. "Whereupon," it concluded, "I simply told him to go to the Bottomless Past and marched out of the room. And that was that." He looked at Helmholtz Watson expectantly, awaiting his due reward of sympathy, encouragement, admiration17. But no word came. Helmholtz sat silent, staring at the floor.
He liked Bernard; he was grateful to him for being the only man of his acquaintance with whom he could talk about the subjects he felt to be important. Nevertheless, there were things in Bernard which he hated. This boasting, for example. And the outbursts of an abject18 self-pity with which it alternated. And his deplorable habit of being bold after the event, and full, in absence, of the most extraordinary presence of mind. He hated these things-just because he liked Bernard. The seconds passed. Helmholtz continued to stare at the floor. And suddenly Bernard blushed and turned away.
§3
THE journey was quite uneventful. The Blue Pacific Rocket was two and a half minutes early at New Orleans, lost four minutes in a tornado19 over Texas, but flew into a favourable20 air current at Longitude21 95 West, and was able to land at Santa Fe less than forty seconds behind schedule time.
"Forty seconds on a six and a half hour flight. Not so bad," Lenina conceded.
They slept that night at Santa Fe. The hotel was excellent-incompara-bly better, for example, than that horrible Aurora22 Bora Palace in which Lenina had suffered so much the previous summer. Liquid air, television, vibro-vacuum massage23, radio, boiling caffeine solution, hot contraceptives, and eight different kinds of scent24 were laid on in every bedroom. The synthetic25 music plant was working as they entered the hall and left nothing to be desired. A notice in the lift announced that there were sixty Escalator-Squash-Racket Courts in the hotel, and that Obstacle and Electro-magnetic Golf could both be played in the park.
"But it sounds simply too lovely," cried Lenina. "I almost wish we could stay here. Sixty Escalator-Squash Courts ..."
"There won't be any in the Reservation," Bernard warned her. "And no scent, no television, no hot water even. If you feel you can't stand it, stay here till I come back."
Lenina was quite offended. "Of course I can stand it. I only said it was lovely here because ... well, because progress is lovely, isn't it?"
"Five hundred repetitions once a week from thirteen to seventeen," said Bernard wearily, as though to himself.
"What did you say?"
"I said that progress was lovely. That's why you mustn't come to the Reservation unless you really want to."
"But I do want to."
"Very well, then," said Bernard; and it was almost a threat.
Their permit required the signature of the Warden26 of the Reservation, at whose office next morning they duly presented themselves. An Epsilon-Plus negro porter took in Bernard's card, and they were admitted almost immediately.
The Warden was a blond and brachycephalic Alpha-Minus, short, red, moon-faced, and broad-shouldered, with a loud booming voice, very well adapted to the utterance27 of hypnopaedic wisdom. He was a mine of irrelevant28 information and unasked-for good advice. Once started, he went on and on-boomingly.
"... five hundred and sixty thousand square kilometres, divided into four distinct Sub-Reservations, each surrounded by a high-tension wire fence."
At this moment, and for no apparent reason, Bernard suddenly remembered that he had left the Eau de Cologne tap in his bathroom wide open and running.
"Cost me a fortune by the time I get back." With his mind's eye, Bernard saw the needle on the scent meter creeping round and round, antlike, indefatigable30. "Quickly telephone to Helmholtz Watson."
"You don't say so," said Lenina politely, not knowing in the least what the Warden had said, but taking her cue from his dramatic pause. When the Warden started booming, she had inconspicuously swallowed half a gramme of soma, with the result that she could now sit, serenely33 not listening, thinking of nothing at all, but with her large blue eyes fixed34 on the Warden's face in an expression of rapt attention.
"To touch the fence is instant death," pronounced the Warden solemnly. "There is no escape from a Savage35 Reservation."
The word "escape" was suggestive. "Perhaps," said Bernard, half rising, "we ought to think of going." The little black needle was scurrying36, an insect, nibbling37 through time, eating into his money.
"No escape," repeated the Warden, waving him back into his chair; and as the permit was not yet countersigned38 Bernard had no choice but to obey. "Those who are born in the Reservation-and remember, my dear young lady," he added, leering obscenely at Lenina, and speaking in an improper39 whisper, "remember that, in the Reservation, children still are born, yes, actually born, revolting as that may seem ..." (He hoped that this reference to a shameful40 subject would make Lenina blush; but she only smiled with simulated intelligence and said, "You don't say so!" Disappointed, the Warden began again. ) "Those, I repeat who are born in the Reservation are destined42 to die there."
Destined to die ... A decilitre of Eau de Cologne every minute. Six litres an hour. "Perhaps," Bernard tried again, "we ought ..."
Leaning forward, the Warden tapped the table with his forefinger43. "You ask me how many people live in the Reservation. And I reply"-trium-phantly-"I reply that we do not know. We can only guess."
"You don't say so."
"My dear young lady, I do say so."
Six times twenty-four-no, it would be nearer six times thirty-six. Bernard was pale and trembling with impatience44. But inexorably the booming continued.
"... about sixty thousand Indians and half-breeds ... absolute savages45 ... our inspectors46 occasionally visit ... otherwise, no communication whatever with the civilized47 world ... still preserve their repulsive48 habits and customs ... marriage, if you know what that is, my dear young lady; families ... no conditioning ... monstrous49 superstitions50 ... Christianity and totemism and ancestor worship ... extinct languages, such as Zuni and Spanish and Athapascan ... pumas52, porcupines54 and other ferocious55 animals ... infectious diseases ... priests ... venomous lizards56 ..."
"You don't say so?"
They got away at last. Bernard dashed to the telephone. Quick, quick; but it took him nearly three minutes to get on to Helmholtz Watson. "We might be among the savages already," he complained. "Damned incompetence57!"
"Have a gramme," suggested Lenina.
He refused, preferring his anger. And at last, thank Ford58, he was through and, yes, it was Helmholtz; Helmholtz, to whom he explained what had happened, and who promised to go round at once, at once, and turn off the tap, yes, at once, but took this opportunity to tell him what the D.H.C. had said, in public, yesterday evening ...
"What? He's looking out for some one to take my place?" Bernard's voice was agonized59. "So it's actually decided60? Did he mention Iceland? You say he did? Ford! Iceland ..." He hung up the receiver and turned back to Lenina. His face was pale, his expression utterly61 dejected.
"What's the matter?" she asked.
"The matter?" He dropped heavily into a chair. "I'm going to be sent to Iceland."
Often in the past he had wondered what it would be like to be subjected (soma-less and with nothing but his own inward resources to rely on) to some great trial, some pain, some persecution; he had even longed for affliction. As recently as a week ago, in the Director's office, he had imagined himself courageously62 resisting, stoically accepting suffering without a word. The Director's threats had actually elated him, made him feel larger than life. But that, as he now realized, was because he had not taken the threats quite seriously, he had not believed that, when it came to the point, the D.H.C. would ever do anything. Now that it looked as though the threats were really to be fulfilled, Bernard was appalled63. Of that imagined stoicism, that theoretical courage, not a trace was left.
He raged against himself-what a fooll-against the Director-how unfair not to give him that other chance, that other chance which, he now had no doubt at all, he had always intended to take. And Iceland, Iceland ...
Lenina shook her head. "Was and will make me ill," she quoted, "I take a gramme and only am."
In the end she persuaded him to swallow four tablets of soma. Five minutes later roots and fruits were abolished; the flower of the present rosily64 blossomed. A message from the porter announced that, at the Warden's orders, a Reservation Guard had come round with a plane and was waiting on the roof of the hotel. They went up at once. An octoroon in Gamma-green uniform saluted65 and proceeded to recite the morning's programme.
A bird's-eye view of ten or a dozen of the principal pueblos67, then a landing for lunch in the valley of Malpais. The rest-house was comfortable there, and up at the pueblo66 the savages would probably be celebrating their summer festival. It would be the best place to spend the night.
They took their seats in the plane and set off. Ten minutes later they were crossing the frontier that separated civilization from savagery68. Uphill and down, across the deserts of salt or sand, through forests, into the violet depth of canyons69, over crag and peak and table-topped mesa, the fence marched on and on, irresistibly70 the straight line, the geometrical symbol of triumphant71 human purpose. And at its foot, here and there, a mosaic72 of white bones, a still unrotted carcase dark on the tawny73 ground marked the place where deer or steer74, puma51 or porcupine53 or coyote, or the greedy turkey buzzards drawn down by the whiff of carrion75 and fulminated as though by a poetic76 justice, had come too close to the destroying wires.
"They never learn," said the green-uniformed pilot, pointing down at the skeletons on the ground below them. "And they never will learn," he added and laughed, as though he had somehow scored a personal triumph over the electrocuted animals.
Bernard also laughed; after two grammes of soma the joke seemed, for some reason, good. Laughed and then, almost immediately, dropped off to sleep, and sleeping was carried over Taos and Tesuque; over Nambe and Picuris and Pojoaque, over Sia and Cochiti, over La-guna and Acoma and the Enchanted77 Mesa, over Zuhi and Cibola and Ojo Caliente, and woke at last to find the machine standing78 on the ground, Lenina carrying the suit-cases into a small square house, and
the Gamma-green octoroon talking incomprehensibly with a young Indian.
"Malpais," explained the pilot, as Bernard stepped out. "This is the rest-house. And there's a dance this afternoon at the pueblo. He'll take you there." He pointed41 to the sullen79 young savage. "Funny, I expect." He grinned. "Everything they do is funny." And with that he climbed into the plane and started up the engines. "Back to-morrow. And remember," he added reassuringly80 to Lenina, "they're perfectly tame; savages won't do you any harm. They've got enough experience of gas bombs to know that they mustn't play any tricks." Still laughing, he threw the helicopter screws into gear, accelerated, and was gone.
点击收听单词发音
1 realization | |
n.实现;认识到,深刻了解 | |
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2 averting | |
防止,避免( avert的现在分词 ); 转移 | |
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3 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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4 perfectly | |
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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5 anecdote | |
n.轶事,趣闻,短故事 | |
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6 vented | |
表达,发泄(感情,尤指愤怒)( vent的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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7 frankly | |
adv.坦白地,直率地;坦率地说 | |
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8 malignant | |
adj.恶性的,致命的;恶意的,恶毒的 | |
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9 inclination | |
n.倾斜;点头;弯腰;斜坡;倾度;倾向;爱好 | |
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10 disapproval | |
n.反对,不赞成 | |
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11 lapse | |
n.过失,流逝,失效,抛弃信仰,间隔;vi.堕落,停止,失效,流逝;vt.使失效 | |
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12 exulting | |
vi. 欢欣鼓舞,狂喜 | |
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13 intoxicating | |
a. 醉人的,使人兴奋的 | |
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14 persecution | |
n. 迫害,烦扰 | |
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15 tonic | |
n./adj.滋补品,补药,强身的,健体的 | |
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16 stimulating | |
adj.有启发性的,能激发人思考的 | |
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17 admiration | |
n.钦佩,赞美,羡慕 | |
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18 abject | |
adj.极可怜的,卑屈的 | |
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19 tornado | |
n.飓风,龙卷风 | |
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20 favourable | |
adj.赞成的,称赞的,有利的,良好的,顺利的 | |
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21 longitude | |
n.经线,经度 | |
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22 aurora | |
n.极光 | |
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23 massage | |
n.按摩,揉;vt.按摩,揉,美化,奉承,篡改数据 | |
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24 scent | |
n.气味,香味,香水,线索,嗅觉;v.嗅,发觉 | |
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25 synthetic | |
adj.合成的,人工的;综合的;n.人工制品 | |
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26 warden | |
n.监察员,监狱长,看守人,监护人 | |
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27 utterance | |
n.用言语表达,话语,言语 | |
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28 irrelevant | |
adj.不恰当的,无关系的,不相干的 | |
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29 canyon | |
n.峡谷,溪谷 | |
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30 indefatigable | |
adj.不知疲倦的,不屈不挠的 | |
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31 upwards | |
adv.向上,在更高处...以上 | |
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32 volts | |
n.(电压单位)伏特( volt的名词复数 ) | |
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33 serenely | |
adv.安详地,宁静地,平静地 | |
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34 fixed | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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35 savage | |
adj.野蛮的;凶恶的,残暴的;n.未开化的人 | |
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36 scurrying | |
v.急匆匆地走( scurry的现在分词 ) | |
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37 nibbling | |
v.啃,一点一点地咬(吃)( nibble的现在分词 );啃出(洞),一点一点咬出(洞);慢慢减少;小口咬 | |
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38 countersigned | |
v.连署,副署,会签 (文件)( countersign的过去式 ) | |
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39 improper | |
adj.不适当的,不合适的,不正确的,不合礼仪的 | |
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40 shameful | |
adj.可耻的,不道德的 | |
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41 pointed | |
adj.尖的,直截了当的 | |
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42 destined | |
adj.命中注定的;(for)以…为目的地的 | |
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43 forefinger | |
n.食指 | |
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44 impatience | |
n.不耐烦,急躁 | |
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45 savages | |
未开化的人,野蛮人( savage的名词复数 ) | |
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46 inspectors | |
n.检查员( inspector的名词复数 );(英国公共汽车或火车上的)查票员;(警察)巡官;检阅官 | |
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47 civilized | |
a.有教养的,文雅的 | |
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48 repulsive | |
adj.排斥的,使人反感的 | |
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49 monstrous | |
adj.巨大的;恐怖的;可耻的,丢脸的 | |
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50 superstitions | |
迷信,迷信行为( superstition的名词复数 ) | |
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51 puma | |
美洲豹 | |
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52 pumas | |
n.美洲狮( puma的名词复数 );彪马;于1948年成立于德国荷索金劳勒(Herzogenaurach)的国际运动品牌;创始人:鲁道夫及达斯勒。 | |
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53 porcupine | |
n.豪猪, 箭猪 | |
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54 porcupines | |
n.豪猪,箭猪( porcupine的名词复数 ) | |
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55 ferocious | |
adj.凶猛的,残暴的,极度的,十分强烈的 | |
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56 lizards | |
n.蜥蜴( lizard的名词复数 ) | |
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57 incompetence | |
n.不胜任,不称职 | |
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58 Ford | |
n.浅滩,水浅可涉处;v.涉水,涉过 | |
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59 agonized | |
v.使(极度)痛苦,折磨( agonize的过去式和过去分词 );苦斗;苦苦思索;感到极度痛苦 | |
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60 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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61 utterly | |
adv.完全地,绝对地 | |
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62 courageously | |
ad.勇敢地,无畏地 | |
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63 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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64 rosily | |
adv.带玫瑰色地,乐观地 | |
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65 saluted | |
v.欢迎,致敬( salute的过去式和过去分词 );赞扬,赞颂 | |
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66 pueblo | |
n.(美国西南部或墨西哥等)印第安人的村庄 | |
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67 pueblos | |
n.印第安人村庄( pueblo的名词复数 ) | |
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68 savagery | |
n.野性 | |
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69 canyons | |
n.峡谷( canyon的名词复数 ) | |
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70 irresistibly | |
adv.无法抵抗地,不能自持地;极为诱惑人地 | |
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71 triumphant | |
adj.胜利的,成功的;狂欢的,喜悦的 | |
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72 mosaic | |
n./adj.镶嵌细工的,镶嵌工艺品的,嵌花式的 | |
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73 tawny | |
adj.茶色的,黄褐色的;n.黄褐色 | |
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74 steer | |
vt.驾驶,为…操舵;引导;vi.驾驶 | |
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75 carrion | |
n.腐肉 | |
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76 poetic | |
adj.富有诗意的,有诗人气质的,善于抒情的 | |
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77 enchanted | |
adj. 被施魔法的,陶醉的,入迷的 动词enchant的过去式和过去分词 | |
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78 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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79 sullen | |
adj.愠怒的,闷闷不乐的,(天气等)阴沉的 | |
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80 reassuringly | |
ad.安心,可靠 | |
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