Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial ¨é

The transfiguration from squalor to shrine sanitizes Lincoln's life story and in this way makes it harder for us to understand the intensity of his ideas about money. Lincoln knew the dead-end life of an undeveloped economy
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Humble Beginnings
The cornerstone of the Kentucky temple was laid a century ago, 13 years before the dedication of the memorial in Washington. But instead of a statue inside or tablets carved with Lincoln's words, the birthplace monument contains a crude one-room hut with a mud-and-stick chimney a replica of the mythic log cabin. Putting a dirt-floor hovel inside a columned temple is a bit weird, yes. On the one hand, it is a way of sanctifying the Lincolnian ideal of upward mobility. On the other hand, the transfiguration from squalor to shrine sanitizes Lincoln's life story and in this way makes it harder for us to understand the intensity of his ideas about money. Lincoln knew the dead-end life of an undeveloped economy: poor, nasty, brutish and short. The romance of the log cabin masks a grim reality.
When Lincoln was born here on Sunday, Feb. 12, 1809, he entered a world as harsh and primitive as if he had been born a thousand years earlier. The simple act of giving birth put his mother in mortal danger, and her only protection was the old 'granny woman' summoned from miles away. Her baby was washed in water carried uphill from a dripping spring, then wrapped in animal skin against the winter cold and put in a bed of corn husks standing on a damp earth floor beside a smoky fire.

A. ¾îÈÖ
humble °â¼ÕÇÑ, ÃʶóÇÑ, ¼Ò¹ÚÇÑ. cornerstone Ãʼ®. dedication °³°ü, úÌÒ¡(Çå³³).
statue ßÀ(»ó). tablet Ù¯÷ù(¸íÆÇ), ¾Ë¾à. carve »õ±â´Ù, Á¶°¢ÇÏ´Ù. crude Åõ¹ÚÇÑ, Á¶ÀâÇÑ.
mud ÁøÈë. stick ³ª¹µ°¡Áö, ¸·´ë±â, ÀåÀÛ. replica ÜÜð²(º¹Á¦). mythic ½ÅÈ­ÀûÀÎ.
log cabin Å볪¹«Áý. dirt-floor Èë¹Ù´Ú. hovel °÷°£, ±¤.
column ê­ñº(¿øÁÖ). cf. columned temple ¿øÁÖ½ÅÀü.
weird ±â¹¦ÇÑ, ±«»óÇÑ, ¹«½Ã¹«½ÃÇÑ. sanctify ½Å¼ºÇÏ°Ô ÇÏ´Ù.
upward mobility »óÇâÀ̵¿(°èÃþ»ó½Â). transfiguration º¯Çü, º¯¸ð.
squalor ´õ·¯¿ò, ´©ÃßÇÔ. shrine îüÓÑ(Àü´ç), ð®Ó¦(Á¦´Ü).
sanitize (û¼Ò¿Í ¼Òµ¶À» ÇÏ¿©) À§»ýÀûÀ¸·Î ÇÏ´Ù. intensity °­·ÄÇÔ. dead-end ¸·´Ù¸¥.
nasty ¸÷½Ã ´õ·¯¿î. brutish ¾ß¸¸ÀûÀÎ, µ¿¹°ÀûÀÎ. short ±ÃÇÌÇÑ, ¸ðÀÚ¶ó´Â.
mask °¡¸®´Ù, ¼û±â´Ù, µ¤´Ù. grim ¾öÇÑ, °¡Â÷¾ø´Â. primitive ¿ø½ÃÀûÀÎ.
mortal Ä¡¸íÀûÀÎ, Á×À½À» ¸éÇÒ ¼ö ¾ø´Â. granny woman ß§÷è(»êÆÄ). cf. granny ³ëÆÄ.
summon ºÒ·¯¿À´Ù, ¼ÒȯÇÏ´Ù.
drip ¹°¹æ¿ïÀÌ ¶³¾îÁö´Ù. dripping spring ¹°¹æ¿ïÀÌ ¶³¾îÁ®¼­ »ý±â´Â »ù¹°.
corn husks ¿Á¼ö¼ö ²®Áú. damp ½À±â Âù, ÃàÃàÇÑ. earth floor Èë¹Ù´Ú.

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In later years, Lincoln allowed his supporters to portray him as a sort of backwoods superman, for already the young nation was beginning to glamorize its frontier roots. Even in the heat of the 'rail splitter' campaign of 1860, however, he resisted the idea that life in the wilderness was grand and pure. All the hardship and sorrow of what he called 'stinted living' could be condensed, Lincoln said, into a single line from the poet Thomas Gray: 'the short and simple annals of the poor.' His strongest boyhood memories were of death and near death: the time he almost drowned, the time he was brained by the kick of a horse, the early deaths of his younger brother and beloved mother and eventually his sister Sarah.
Another monument, this one at Lincoln's boyhood home in south-central Indiana, comes a bit closer to the dark reality especially if you approach the place in winter, as the Lincoln family did when Abe was 7 years old. A sharp wind drives scattered snowflakes, and as you walk deeper into the woods, you might try to imagine the first months, before the tiny cabin was built, when the little family huddled for shelter under a flimsy three-sided windbreak.

A. ¾îÈÖ
portray ...ÀÇ ÃÊ»óÀ» ±×¸®´Ù, ¹¦»çÇÏ´Ù.
backwoods ¹Ì°³Ã´»óÅÂÀÇ »ï¸²Áö´ë, çóò¢(¿ÀÁö)ÀÇ. glamorize ...À» µ¸º¸ÀÌ°Ô ÇÏ´Ù.
frontier roots º¯°æ ¹Ì°³Ã´Áö¿¡¼­ »ì¾Æ°£ Á¶»ó.
rail-splitter (Å볪¹«¸¦ Âɰ³¾î) ¿ïŸ¸® °¡·ÎÀåÀ» ¸¸µå´Â »ç¶÷.(¾Æºê¶óÇÔ ¸µÄÁÀÇ º°¸í).
stint Á¦ÇÑÇÏ´Ù. stinted living ±ÃÇÌÇÑ »î. condense ¿ä¾àÇÏ´Ù, ¾ÐÃàÇÏ´Ù.
annals æÄÓÛÑÀ(¿¬´ë±â). Thomas Gray 18¼¼±â ¿µ±¹ÀÇ ½ÃÀÎ. drown ÀÍ»çÇÏ´Ù.
brain °ñÅëÀ» ºÎ¼ö´Ù. scatter Èð»Ñ¸®´Ù, »ìÆ÷ÇÏ´Ù. snowflakes ´«¼ÛÀÌ, àäø¸(¼³Æí).
huddle ¸öÀ» ¿õÅ©¸®´Ù, ¶¼¸¦ Áþ´Ù. shelter Çdz­Ã³, Àº½Åó, Áý. flimsy ºÎ¼­Áö±â ½¬¿î.
windbreak ¹Ù¶÷¸·ÀÌ.

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