TIME July 05, 2009
81. The Legacy of Franklin D. Roosevelt (F.D.R.)
A. The Price of World Peace By PETER BEINART
81A-1-383
When it comes to foreign policy, liberals generally like leaders with brains. (Think Bill Clinton or Barack Obama.) Conservatives generally prize backbone. (Think Ronald Reagan or George W. Bush.) So what do we do with Franklin D. Roosevelt? He helped save the world from the greatest barbarism it has ever known and laid the foundation for the greatest run of peace and prosperity in history and yet by most accounts had neither intellectual heft nor a stiff spine.
It's a question that puzzled F.D.R.'s contemporaries as well. In 1931, during Roosevelt's first presidential campaign, the columnist Walter Lippmann warned that "he just doesn't happen to have a very good mind." The satirist H.L. Mencken called him "too feeble and wishy-washy a fellow to make a really effective fight." Yet this preppy, dilettantish mama's boy had something that his critics didn't appreciate: instinct. Once, as Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor were being driven through the New Mexico desert along a barren and featureless landscape that they had traversed only once before, they came to a fork in the road. Their driver, who lived in the area and had driven the route many times, could not remember which way to turn. F.D.R. spoke up immediately: "You go straight ahead."
A. ¾îÈÖ
legacy ë¶ß§(À¯»ê). liberal ÀÚÀ¯ÁÖÀÇÀÚ. conservative º¸¼öÁÖÀÇÀÚ.
prize Á¸ÁßÇÏ´Ù. backbone °ÇÑ ÀÇÁö(Á¤½Å). barbarism ¾ß¸¸ÀûÀÎ Çൿ, ¾ß¸¸.
foundation Åä´ë. run Áø·Î, ¹ßÀü. prosperity ¹ø¿µ.
by most accounts ¸ðµç Æò°¡¿¡ ÀÇÇϸé. heft Áß·®, ¿µÇâ·Â. stiff ´ÜÈ£ÇÑ, ±»Àº, »»»»ÇÑ.
spine ô±ñº(ôÁÖ), µî»À. contemporaries ÔÒãÁÓÛìÑ(µ¿½Ã´ëÀÎ)µé. as well ¶ÇÇÑ.
satirist dzÀÚ°¡. feeble ¾àÇÑ, ¹«±â·ÂÇÑ. wishy-washy ¿ìÀ¯ºÎ´ÜÇÑ, ±èºüÁø.
preppy ¹Ì¼÷ÇÑ, ¾î¸®¼®Àº. dilettantish ¾î¼³ÇÂ, Ô³Õ¥(µµ¶ô) ±âºÐÀÇ, ¿¹¼úÀ» ÁÁ¾ÆÇÏ´Â.
mama's boy ¸¶¸¶º¸ÀÌ. critics ºñÆÇ°¡µé, ºñÆò°¡µé. appreciate Æò°¡ÇÏ´Ù, °¨ÁöÇÏ´Ù.
instinct Á÷°ü, º»´É. barren ÜôÙ¾ò¢(ºÒ¸ðÁö)ÀÇ, Üôìõ(ºÒÀÓ)ÀÇ.
featureless ´ÜÁ¶·Î¿î, Ư»öÀÌ ¾ø´Â. landscape dz°æ. traverse Ⱦ´ÜÇÏ´Ù.
fork ÝÂÐ÷ïÇ(ºÐ±âÁ¡).
81A-2-384
It was instinct that helped F.D.R. find his way through a political labyrinth that was navigable by neither intellect nor principle alone. His basic problem as Nazism stalked Europe was that some Americans wanted to isolate themselves from the world while others wanted to remake it in America's image. Yet both paths, he believed, led nowhere. The U.S. could neither escape the world nor fully redeem it. F.D.R.'s task was to persuade his people to put their money and blood on the line, even though, despite their best efforts, the world would remain a nasty place.
This was the conundrum that had destroyed his old boss Woodrow Wilson, whom Roosevelt had served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. When Wilson led Americans into World War I, he told them they were abandoning their historical isolation in order to create a world in which the strong no longer menaced the weak. But at the Paris Peace Conference following the war, it became clear that the victorious European powers had no interest in birthing such a world. So when Wilson returned home trumpeting the newly created League of Nations, Americans asked why they should join an organization that might require the U.S. to again sacrifice its sons for a world that would not live by its principles. The Senate rejected the league, America returned to political isolation, and Wilson died a broken man.
A. ¾îÈÖ
labyrinth Ú»ÖØ(¹Ì·Î). navigable Ç×ÇØÇÒ ¼ö ÀÖ´Â. intellect Áö¼º, ò±Õô(Áö·Â).
stalk Ȱ°³Ä¡¸ç °È´Ù, ¸ô·¡ ´Ù°¡°¡´Ù. isolate °í¸³½ÃŰ´Ù. path ±æ, Åë·Î.
escape ...À» ¹þ¾î³ª´Ù, Å»ÃâÇÏ´Ù. redeem ±¸¿øÇÏ´Ù, µÇã´Ù.
on the line À̵µ Àúµµ ¾Æ´Ñ, ¾Ö¸ÅÇÑ.
nasty ¼º°¡½Å, °¨´çÇϱ⠾î·Á¿î, ºÒ°áÇÑ. conundrum ¼ö¼ö²²³¢.
Assistant Secretary óίÜÍ(Â÷°üº¸). the Navy úÏÚàý(ÇØ±º¼º). abandon Æ÷±âÇÏ´Ù.
historical isolation ¿ª»çÀû °í¸³ÁÖÀÇ. the strong ËÏÐ(°±¹), °ÀÚ.
Paris Peace Conference ÆÄ¸® ÆòÈȸ´ã. powers æêË(¿°). birth ...À» ³º´Ù.
the newly created League of Nations »õ·Ó°Ô â¼³µÈ ±¹Á¦¿¬¸Í.
organization ðÉå³Ñ¦Ï°(Á¶¾à±â±¸). live by its principles ¿øÄ¢¿¡ µû¶ó »ì´Ù.
senate ß¾êÂ(»ó¿ø). reject °ÅºÎÇÏ´Ù.
B. ±¸¹®
- Wilson died a broken man.
[Wilson ´ëÅë·ÉÀº ½Ç¸ÁÇÑ »ç¶÷ÀÌ µÇ¾î Á×¾ú´Ù.]
cf. Byron died young.
[ByronÀº Àþ¾î¼ Á×¾ú´Ù.]
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