高级英语第二册第七课学习辅导资料.doc
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1 On a Winter day some years ago, coming out of Pittsburgh on one of the
expresses of the Pennsylvania Railroad, I rolled eastward for an hour through the coal
and steel towns of Westmoreland county. It was familiar ground; boy and man, I had
been through it often before. But somehow I had never quite sensed its appalling
desolation. Here was the very heart of industrial America, the center of its most
lucrative and characteristic activity, the boast and pride of the richest and grandest
nation ever seen on earth--and here was a scene so dreadfully hideous , so intolerably
bleak and forlorn that it reduced the whole aspiration of man to a macabre and
depressing joke. Here was wealth beyond computation, almost beyond
imagination--and here were human habitations so abominable that they would have
disgraced a race of alley cats.
2 I am not speaking of mere filth. One expects steel towns to be dirty. What I
allude to is the unbroken and agonizing ugliness, the sheer revolting monstrousness,
of every house in sight. From East Liberty to Greensburg, a distance of twenty-five
miles, there was not one in sight from the train that did not insult and lacerate the eye.
Some were so bad, and they were among the most pretentious --churches, stores,
warehouses, and the like--that they were down-right startling; one blinked before
them as one blinks before a man with his face shot away. A few linger in memory,
horrible even there: a crazy little church just west of Jeannette, set like a
dormer-window on the side of a bare leprous hill; the headquarters of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars at another forlorn town, a steel stadium like a huge rattrap somewhere
further down the line. But most of all I recall the general effect--of hideousness
without a break. There was not a single decent house within eyerange from the
Pittsburgh to the Greensburg yards. There was not one that was not misshapen, and
there was not one that was not shabby.
3 The country itself is no
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