Directions:Read the following passages
and then answer IN COMPLETE SENTENCES the questions which follow each passage.
Use only information from the passage you have just read and write your answer
in the corresponding space in your ANSWER BOOKLET. Questions 1~3 Lincoln
expected that America would become a nation doubtful about its heroes and its
history. In his astonishing address to the Young Men’s Lyceum of Springfield,
Ⅲ., on Jan. 27, 1838, on "the perpetuation of our political institutions", the
28-year-old Lincoln foresaw the inevitable rise in a modern democracy like ours
of skepticism and worldliness. Indeed, he worried about the fate of free
institutions in a maturing nation no longer shaped by a youthful, instinctive
and (mostly) healthy patriotism. Such patriotism is
natural in the early years after a revolutionary struggle for independence. To
the generation that experienced the Revolution and the children of that
generation, Lincoln explained, the events of the Revolution remained
"living history", and those Americans retained an emotional attachment to the
political institutions that had been created. But the living memories of the
Revolution and the founding could no longer be counted on. Those memories "were
a fortress of strength; but what invading foemen could never do, the silent
artillery of time has done; the leveling of its walls". So, Lincoln concluded,
the once mighty "pillars of the temple of liberty" that supported our political
institutions were gone. Lincoln implored his fellow citizens in
1838 to replace those old pillars with new ones constructed by "reason, cold,
calculating, unimpassioned reason". He knew that such a recommendation—such a
hope—was problematic. In politics, cold, calculating reason has its limits. In
the event, it was Lincoln’s foreboding of trouble, not his hope for renewal,
that turned out to be correct. The nation held together for only one more
generation. Twenty-three years after Lincoln’s speech, the South seceded, and
civil war came. Lincoln managed, of course, in a supreme act of
leadership, to win that war, preserve the union and end slavery. He was also
able to interpret that war as producing a "new birth of freedom," explaining its
extraordinary sacrifices in a way that provided a renewed basis for attachment
to a nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men
are created equal. Perhaps the compromises made by the founding generation with
the institution of slavery would have proved fatal in any case. Still, the fact
is that the US was unable to perpetuate its political institutions peacefully
after those who had lived through the Revolution died and even secondhand
memories of America’s founding faded. Now we find ourselves in
a situation oddly similar to the one Lincoln faced in 1838. Lincoln delivered
his Lyceum Address 62 years after the Declaration of Independence. We are now
the same time span from the end of World War II. Our victory in that
war—followed by our willingness to quickly assume another set of burdens in the
defense of freedom against another great tyranny— marked the beginning of the
US’s role as leader of the free world. Through all the ups and downs of the cold
war and through the 1990s and this decade, the memories of World War II have
sustained the US, as it did its duty in helping resist tyranny and expand the
frontiers of freedom in the world. The generation of World War
II is mostly gone. The generation that directly heard tell of World War II from
its parents is moving on. We have exhausted, so to speak, the moral capital of
that war. Now we face challenges almost as daunting as those confronting the
nation when Lincoln spoke. The perpetuation of freedom in the world is no more
certain today than was the perpetuation of our free institutions then. Of
course, we have the example of Lincoln to guide us. And Ferguson’s wry and
sardonic account of the ways we remember him is heartening and even inspiring,
almost despite itself or despite ourselves. But the failures of leadership of
the 1840s and 1850s should also chasten us. Nations don’t always rise to the
occasion. And the next generation can pay a great price when the preceding one
shirks its responsibilities.
In what ways does our current situation resemble
that of Lincoln’s time
【参考答案】
The same time span from the end of World War II as Lincoln’s......