问答题CFO
问答题两元经济结构
问答题世界卫生组织
问答题综合国力
问答题horticulture exports
问答题euro zone
问答题Technically, it begins next week. Actually, it began with the epic sigh of relief that could be sensed all over the U. S. right after Labor Day. Even before it arrives, Americans always manage to get into autumn. And no wonder. It is easily the most habitable season of the year.【】Indeed, autumn deserves a hymn—and it has received far less tribute than it deserves. True, some mixed notices have come in over the centuries. Horace slandered autumn as a “dread” period —“harvest-season of the Goddess of Death. ” He was dead wrong, of course, for as Ovid noted, once he got his mind off sex, autumn is “the fairest season of the year. ” Had he lived a little later, Horace might have found out from the U. S. Census Bureau that the death rate is usually lower in autumn than in winter and spring. Why? Science doesn’ t know, but it is quite possible that the will to live is stronger in the fall. Conversely, the will to mayhem weakens: nobody has ever worried about a Long Hot Autumn.【】So autumn is a blatantly vital season, contrary to the allegations of sorrowful poets who misconstrue the message of dying leaves. A more realistic poet, Archibald MacLeish, says that “Autumn is the American season. In Europe the leaves turn yellow or brown and fall. Here they take fire on the trees and hang there flaming. Life, too,we think, is capable of taking fire in this country; of creating beauty never seen. ”
问答题advance shipment
问答题低碳经济
问答题四项基本原则
问答题house-for-pension program
问答题symphony orchestra
问答题HSBC
问答题“抑郁的”一代
问答题环境友好型社会
问答题人民币汇率
问答题Not in Education, Employment or Training
问答题节操
问答题建筑垃圾
问答题和为贵
