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Napoleon, as a character in Tolstoy¡¯s War and Peace, is more than once described as having ¡°fat little hands£®¡±Nor does he ¡°sit well or firmly on the horse£®¡±He is said to be ¡°undersized,¡± with ¡°short legs¡± and a ¡°round stomach¡±£®The issue here is not the accuracy of Tolstoy¡¯s description¡ªit seems not that far off from historical accounts¡ªbut his choice of facts£ºother things that could be said of the man are not said£®We are meant to understand the difference of a warring commander in the body of a fat little Frenchman£®Tolstoy¡¯s Napoleon could be any man wandering in the streets and putting a little of powdered tobacco up his nose¡ªand that is the point£®
It is a way the novelist uses to show the moral nature of a character£®And it turns out that, as Tolstoy has it, Napoleon is a crazy man£®In a scene in Book Three of War and Peace, the wars having reached the critical year of 1812,Napoleon receives a representative from the Tsar(ɳ»Ê),who has come with peace terms£®Napoleon is very angry£ºdoesn¡¯t he have more army? He, not the Tsar, is the one to make the terms£®He will destroy all of Europe if his army is stopped£®¡°That is what you will have gained by engaging me in the war!¡± he shouts£®And then, Tolstoy writes, Napoleon ¡°walked silently several times up and down the room, his fat shoulders moving quickly£®¡±
Still later, after reviewing his army amid cheering crowds, Napoleon invites the shaken Russian to dinner£®¡°He raised his hand to the Russian¡¯s£®£®£®face,¡± Tolstoy writes, and ¡°taking him by the ear pulled it gently£®£®£®¡± To have one¡¯s ear pulled by the Emperor was considered the greatest honor and mark of favor at the French court£®¡°Well, well, why don¡¯t you say anything?¡± said he, as if it was ridiculous in his presence to respect any one but himself, Napoleon£®
Tolstoy did his research, but the composition is his own£®
64£®Tolstoy¡¯s description of Napoleon in War and Peace is ___________£®
A£®far from the historical facts B£®based on the Russian history
C£®based on his selection of facts D£®not related to historical details
65£®Napoleon was angry when receiving the Russian representative because ________£®
A£®he thought he should be the one to make the peace terms
B£®the Tsar¡¯s peace terms were hard to accept
C£®the Russians stopped his military movement
D£®he didn¡¯t have any more army to fight with
66£®Tolstoy intended to present Napoleon as a man who is __________________£®
A£®ill-mannered in dealing with foreign guests
B£®fond of showing off his iron will
C£®determined in destroying all of Europe
D£®crazy for power and respect
67£®What does the last sentence of the passage imply?
A£®A writer doesn¡¯t have to be faithful to his findings£®
B£®A writer may write about a hero in his own way£®
C£®A writer may not be responsible for what he writes£®
D£®A writer has hardly any freedom to show his feelings£®
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