首页
登录
职称英语
(1)Thirty-seven men have been elected President since 1789, and the American
(1)Thirty-seven men have been elected President since 1789, and the American
游客
2024-11-09
3
管理
问题
(1)Thirty-seven men have been elected President since 1789, and the American people have applied two different standards in evaluating their achievements. The first was formulated by Alexander Hamilton who test-drove the presidency in the Federalist papers. The difficulty of winning the job, he argued, virtually guaranteed it would be held by the best men. "Talents for low intrigue, and the little art of popularity", could "elevate a man to the first honors in a single state". But only "characters pre-eminent for ability and virtue" could impress the nation as a whole. The first seven Presidents, who filled the job for almost a half-century, confirmed Hamilton’s prediction. George Washington, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson were heroes of the American Revolution. James Madison was the prime mover in the push to write and ratify the Constitution. James Monroe and John Quincy Adams had signal triumphs: Monroe successfully fought against the English troops during the war in 1814, and Adams, as Monroe’s Secretary of State, conceived the Monroe Doctrine, which waved Europe off the western hemisphere. Andrew Jackson, the frontier warrior, beat the Creek Indians in the old Southwest and the British in New Orleans.
(2)It was not until the eighth President, Martin Van Buren, that America aimed lower. Van Buren was a smooth self-made man from upstate New York who clambered to leadership first in his state, then in the Democratic Party nationwide. He was a wire puller and wheeler-dealer. Former President John Quincy Adams praised his "calmness", "gentleness" and "discretion", though not his "profound dissimulation" and "fawning servility". Van Buren was a pol, first, last and always. He showed mat intrigue and the art of popularity were now enough to win the White House. Since 1841, most successful presidential candidates have passed the Van Buren test. The electorate wants leaders who have played the game, even if they haven’t been All-Stars. It’s a low but sensible hurdle; Obama qualifies by that standard.
(3)Voters also don’t take kindly to non-politicians: two businessmen, Wendell Willkie and Ross Perot, made serious runs for the White House, although neither came close. Americans will elect a political neophyte only if he passes the Hamilton test of pre-eminent ability. Ulysses S. Grant and Dwight Eisenhower had never held elective office, but they won their wars. Some Presidents pass both tests: Theodore Roosevelt fought well in the Spanish-American War and in New York State politics. Among the prospective 2008 candidates, only one has shown pre-eminent ability: Rudy Giuliani, in solving the crime problem in the nation’s largest city and in bis response to 9/11.
(4)But is pre-eminent ability a reliable predictor of success? It doesn’t guarantee victory at the polls. Henry Clay was master of legislative finesse who helped broker the Missouri Compromises of 1820-1821, a deal between slave states and free states that kept the two sides from each other’s throats for 30 years. Yet he failed to become President in three tries. Great achievements don’t guarantee great presidencies even when the pre-eminent man wins. The Eisenhower Administration, scorned by eggheads of the left and right while it was going on, has been revised upward by later scholars, and a similar process is lifting Grant’s presidency from the cellar to which an unholy alliance of neo-Confederates and genteel reformers had consigned it. But neither man will ever be considered as great in peace as he was in war.
(5)There have also been ordinary-seeming politicians who became epoch-making Presidents. After the 1932 Democratic Convention picked New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, journalist H. L. Mencken described him as a man "whose competence was plainly in doubt." The Republican nomination of one-term Illinois Congressman Abraham Lincoln in 1860 brought this sneer from diarist George Templeton Strong: "He cut a great many rails, and worked on a flatboat in early youth; all which is somehow presumptive evidence of his statesmanship."
(6)Statesmanship is an art, which means there is always room for inspiration, and for grace. We are right to look for a record of pre-eminent ability when we can find it. But the basic doctrine of republican government, that all men are created equal, can be a surprise bonus for some leaders, as well as a guarantee of rights for all of us. Sometimes greatness appears in unlikely places, even in ordinary pols from Illinois. [br] What does the word "finesse" in the fourth paragraph mean?
选项
答案
Delicate and impressive skill.
解析
本文谈论的是美国历来选举总统的标准,文中讲的几乎都是竞选总统的人物,无论他们最终是否当上总统,这些人在政治权谋上肯定都不弱,Henry Clay就是其中之一,促成密苏里协议需要的不仅仅是方法,而应该是策略、技巧。由此推测finesse表示“手腕、策略、技巧(delicate and impressive skill)”一类的意思,故答案为可表述为Delicate and impressive skill。当然,回答skin或者tact也是可以接受的。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3838429.html
相关试题推荐
TheAmericanmedicalschoolisnowwellalonginthesecondcenturyofitsh
TheAmericanmedicalschoolisnowwellalonginthesecondcenturyofitsh
TheAmericanmedicalschoolisnowwellalonginthesecondcenturyofitsh
TheAmericanmedicalschoolisnowwellalonginthesecondcenturyofitsh
TheAmericanmedicalschoolisnowwellalonginthesecondcenturyofitsh
PASSAGETHREE[br]WhatcanweknowaboutAmericanentrepreneursfromPara.5?Th
PASSAGEONE[br]WhatareAmericanssupposedtodopersonallyafterthefinancia
(1)AnAmericansurveyhasshownthateachyeareveryemployedpersonlosest
(1)AnAmericansurveyhasshownthateachyeareveryemployedpersonlosest
(1)TheAmericanscreenhaslongbeenasmokyplace,atleastsince1942’sNo
随机试题
-台额定容量为50MW的同步发电机,额定电压为10.5kV,额定功率因数为0.8
定额法就是定额比例法,是用于分配生产费用的一种方法。()
在工程计量中,下列各项需按“个”计算的有( )。A.配线架 B.集线器 C
新的高中历史课程标准把课程目标分解成三个层面,即( )。 ①知识与能力②过程
属于冲刷防护的间接防护设施是()。A、石笼 B、移改河道 C、植
初孕妇,28岁。妊娠37+4周,剧烈头痛并呕吐3次。查体:BP170/110mm
我国水资源短缺,50多个沿海城市有40多个严重缺水,海岛、苦咸内陆地区也急需淡水
过去100年来,人类寿命的延长,完全是因为对传染性疾病的控制——通过公共卫生、疫
过度工作和压力不可避免地导致失眠症。森达公司的所有管理人员都有压力。尽管医生已经
根据证券法律制度的规定,上市公司应该在每个会计年度结束之日起一定期限内编制年度报
最新回复
(
0
)