In an America steeped in Romanticism, cemeteries were laid out beyond the city as places for a transcendental contemplation of nature, death and duty. Trees, planted along carefully planned meandering roadways on sculptured hills, shaded the tombstones in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Mass., and the Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester, N.Y., and in cemeteries in other cities, including Lincoln's Springfield. Accommodation to thousands of tourists and competition from the adjacent battlefield, studded with equestrian statues glorifying the military, partially defeated the attempt to make Gettysburg such a cemetery, but with Lincoln's indispensable help, this "place of the dead" did indeed become, in Mr. Wills's words, "a school for the living." " target="_blank">www.nytimes.com/books/98/12/06/specials/wills-lincoln.html+%22In+an+America+steeped+in+Romanticism%22&hl=zh-CN&ct=clnk&cd=5&gl=cn&st_usg=ALhdy2_V_PuJt45Yk-K8C0fUGQXUf2-CDQ">www.nytimes.com/books/98/12/06/specials/wills-lincoln.html+%22In+an+America+steeped+in+Romanticism%22&hl=zh-CN&ct=clnk&cd=5&gl=cn&st_usg=ALhdy2_V_PuJt45Yk-K8C0fUGQXUf2-CDQ" target="_blank">http://203.208.37.104/search?q=cache:KKZ9CZn3ZbcJ:www.nytimes.com/books/98/12/06/specials/wills-lincoln.html+%22In+an+America+steeped+in+Romanticism%22&hl=zh-CN&ct=clnk&cd=5&gl=cn&st_usg=ALhdy2_V_PuJt45Yk-K8C0fUGQXUf2-CDQ NYT上的 感谢各位JJ主人,感谢Google |