首页
登录
职称英语
Abraham Lincoln turns 200 this year, and he’s beginning to show his age. Whe
Abraham Lincoln turns 200 this year, and he’s beginning to show his age. Whe
游客
2025-03-28
26
管理
问题
Abraham Lincoln turns 200 this year, and he’s beginning to show his age. When his birthday arrives, on February 12, Congress will hold a special joint session in the Capitol’s National Statuary Hall, a wreath will be laid at the great memorial in Washington, and a webcast will link school classrooms for a “teach- in” honoring his memory.
Admirable as they are, though, the events will strike many of us Lincoln fans as inadequate, even halfhearted and—another sign that our appreciation for the 16th president and his towering achievements is slipping away. And you don’t have to be a Lincoln enthusiast to believe that this is something we can’t afford to lose.
Compare this year’s celebration with the Lincoln centennial in 1909. That year, Lincoln’s likeness made its debut on the penny, thanks to approval from the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Communities and civic associations in every comer of the county erupted in parades, concerts, balls, lectures and military displays. We still feel the effects today: The momentum unloosed in 1909 led to the Lincoln Memorial, opened in 1922, and the Lincoln Highway, the first paved transcontinental thoroughfare.
The celebrants in 1909 had a few inspirations we lack today. Lincoln’s presidency was still a living memory for countless Americans. In 2009 we are farther in time from the end of the Second World War than they were from the Civil War; families still felt the loss of loved ones from that awful national trauma.
But Americans in 1909 had something more: an unembarrassed appreciation for heroes and an acute sense of the way that even long-dead historical figures press in on the present and make us who we are.
One story will illustrate what I’m talking about.
In 2003 a group of local citizens arranged to place a statue of Lincoln in Richmond, Virginia, former capital of the Confederacy. The idea touched off a firestorm of controversy. The Sons of Confederate Veterans held a public conference of carefully selected scholars to “reassess” the legacy of Lincoln. The verdict—no surprise—was negative: Lincoln was labeled everything from a racist totalitarian to a teller of dirty jokes.
I covered the conference as a reporter, but what really unnerved me was a counter-conference of scholars to refute the earlier one. These scholars drew a picture of Lincoln that only our touchy-feely age could conjure up. The man who oversaw the most savage war in our history was described—by his admirers, remember—as “nonjudgmental,” “unmoralistic,” “comfortable with ambiguity.”
I felt the way a friend of mine felt as we later watched the unveiling of the Richmond statue in a subdued ceremony: “But he’s so small!”
The statue in Richmond was indeed small; like nearly every Lincoln statue put up in the past half century, it was life-size and was placed at ground level, a conscious rejection of the heroic—approachable and human, yes, but not something to look up to.
The Richmond episode taught me that Americans have lost the language to explain Lincoln’s greatness even to ourselves. Earlier generations said they wanted their children to be like Lincoln: principled, kind, compassionate, resolute. Today we want Lincoln to be like us.
This helps to explain the long string of recent books in which writers have presented a Lincoln made after their own image. We’ve had Lincoln as humorist and Lincoln as manic-depressive, Lincoln the business sage, the conservative Lincoln and the liberal Lincoln, the emancipator and the racist, the stoic philosopher, the Christian, the atheist—Lincoln over easy and Lincoln scrambled.
What’s often missing, though, is the timeless Lincoln, the Lincoln whom all generations, our own no less than that of 1909, can lay claim to. Lucky for us, those memorializers from a century ago—and, through them, Lincoln himself—have left us the hint of where to find him. The Lincoln Memorial is the most visited of our presidential monuments. Here is where we find the Lincoln who endures: in the words he left us, defining the country we’ve inherited. Here is the Lincoln who can be endlessly renewed and who, 200 years after his birth, retains the power to renew us. [br] In the author’s opinion, the counter-conference
选项
A、rectified the judgment by those carefully selected scholars
B、resulted in similar disparaging remarks on Lincoln
C、came up with somewhat favorable conclusions
D、offered a brand new reassessment perspective
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/4016190.html
相关试题推荐
Theideawasjustbeginningto______inAmericaandweknewthatitwasgoingto
Opinionpollsarenowbeginningtoshowthatwhoeveristoblameandwhateve
Opinionpollsarenowbeginningtoshowthatwhoeveristoblameandwhateve
AbrahamLincolnturns200thisyear,andhe’sbeginningtoshowhisage.Whe
AbrahamLincolnturns200thisyear,andhe’sbeginningtoshowhisage.Whe
AbrahamLincolnturns200thisyear,andhe’sbeginningtoshowhisage.Whe
Hefailedtocompletelyachievetheaim______bytheteacheratthebeginningof
Atthebeginningofacountry’sriseoutofbackwardnessandpoverty,morew
Atthebeginningofacountry’sriseoutofbackwardnessandpoverty,morew
Atthebeginningofacountry’sriseoutofbackwardnessandpoverty,morew
随机试题
安装高度超过20m的物料提升机应安装渐进式防坠安全器及自动停层、语音影像信号监控
正常蓄水位至防洪限制水位之间的水库容积为()。A.重叠库容 B.兴利库容
契诃夫呕心沥血的绝笔戏剧代表作是()。A.《三姊妹》 B.《万尼亚舅舅》 C
当某类化学品具有一定毒性或者遇水有腐蚀性时,人一旦吸入就会对人体呼吸系统造成损伤
患者,女性,25岁。饱餐后脐周持续性绞痛伴阵发性加剧3小时。恶心、呕吐数次,解大
关于基金信息披露的表述,不正确的是()。A.加强基金信息披露可以改变投资者的信
不属于亲水胶体溶液的是A.明胶溶液B.琼脂溶液C.右旋糖酐溶液D.阿拉伯胶溶液E
性格的基本特征包括( )。A.对现实的态度 B.性格的意志特征 C.性格的
关于滑坡治理设计,下面哪种说法是错误的?( )A、当滑体有多层潜在滑动面时应取
国家鼓励、支持节能科学技术的研究、开发、示范和推广,促进节能()。A.技术创新与
最新回复
(
0
)