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by Stephen Dunn
From her window marshland stretched for miles. If not for egrets and gulls1, it reminded her of the moors2 behind the parsonage, how the fog often hovered3 and descended4 as if sheltering some sweet compulsion the age was not ready to see. On clear days the jagged skyline of Atlantic City was visible——Atlantic City, where all compulsions had a home. "Everything's too easy now," she said to her neighbor, "nothing resisted, nothing gained." Once, at eighteen, she dreamed of London's proud salons5 glowing with brilliant fires and dazzling chandeliers. Already her own person——passionate, assertive—— soon she'd create a governess insistent6 on rights equal to those above her rank. "The dangerous picture of a natural heart," one offended critic carped. She'd failed, he said, to let religion reign7 over the passions and, worse, she was a woman. Now she was amazed at what women had, doubly amazed at what they didn't. But she hadn't come back to complain or haunt. Her house on the bay was modest, adequate. 点击收听单词发音
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