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Today I was at the mall waiting for friends, when a lady wearing a knit hat and a sweater came up to me and, shivering, said, “I’m homeless. Would you mind buying me some food?”
In that split second, everything I’d learned since kindergarten flashed through my mind. Don’t talk to strangers … Be a good citizen … People will take advantage of you … Treat others as you wish to be treated … The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return … I guess love won the debate. “Sure,” I said. “What would you like?”
She thought and then said, “I’d like to get Chinese food.” We headed upstairs. On the way she told me about when she was a teenager. She remembers taking pictures for the yearbook with her best friend. She was in the band and played basketball. She got good grades and was a good student.
She ordered soup, an egg roll, white rice, and pepper chicken. I would normally think that was a lot, but she had probably barely eaten in the last few days. I got my usual – lo mein and General Tso’s chicken.
As we ate, we got to know each other. She asked if I played any instruments. I replied that I played the violin, cello, and guitar. She told me she played the flute, piano, guitar, and violin. In the middle of our meal, I realized something. And she thought of it at exactly the same time.
“So, what’s your name?” she asked.
“I’m Claire,” I said, startled at our exact same thought. “What’s yours?”
“Joyce,” she said with a smile.
We continued talking, and she asked my favorite subjects in school and if I wanted to go to college. “Hopefully,” I replied. “I’m interested in nursing.”
“I went to college for nursing,” she said.
I was taken aback. How could we have so much in common? Was she pretending so I’d feel sympathy for her? But her eyes were genuine as she said this.
Meanwhile I was eating my lo mein, picking around the cabbage and the other vegetables. Joyce said, “If you don’t like it you can take it back.” I told her that I liked it, but was not fond of the vegetables. She broke into a big grin. “You don’t like vegetables, huh? Neither did I. But now I do.” I immediately felt guilty. How could I be picking at my food across from someone who barely gets to eat at all?
I tried my best to finish, but she seemed to sense my guilt and said, “You don’t have to eat it if you don’t want it.” How could she know what I was feeling? I told her the dish was my favorite, but I just eat slowly.
She replied, “I used to like lo mein, but pepper chicken was my dad’s favorite, so I get that now.” Noticing that she used the word “was,” I assumed her dad had passed away. I found it sweet that she gave up her favorite in order to honor her dad.
She asked why I was at the mall.
“I’m waiting for friends. We’re going to see ‘The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,’” I replied, stumbling over the words a bit.
“‘The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,’” she echoed in awe. “What’s that about?” I realized that she didn’t see commercials for movies.
I explained the basic plot and she chuckled. “A man who is born 80 years old and ages backwards! That sounds interesting.”
She got up to get a to-go box. “Would you like one?” she asked, but I refused. I realized that this food would probably last her for a few days, and I was glad she had ordered a lot.
“Would you like these?” I asked, gesturing at the food I had left untouched. “Oh, no, thank you,” she said. “This is enough.” I got up to throw my tray away, feeling guilty about wasting so much.
“I need to meet my friends now,” I explained. “It was so nice to meet you, Joyce.”
“You too, Claire,” she replied with a smile. “Thank you.”
I headed to the theater, and she went back downstairs. It sounds like a perfect coincidence, but I can’t help but think that some force compelled us to meet. I kept puzzling, Why is Joyce homeless? It seems so unfair. She shouldn’t need people to buy her dinner. She was a nurse. She got good grades. She took pictures for her yearbook. She was the person I hope to be in the future. What went wrong? How could such a good life be rewarded with horrible luck?
I feel lucky to have run into Joyce. She changed my outlook. She is still a wonderful person, despite what the world has done to her. I wish her the best, and can only hope that the force that brought us together will help her find what she deserves in life.
【小题1】From the second paragraph we know that the writer _________.
A.debated with the girl over moral issues |
B.hates having to make a quick decision |
C.hesitated before she decided to reach out |
D.fell in love with the girl at the first sight |
A.she was particular about food and also wasted so much |
B.she was a strict vegetarian who ate very little |
C.she didn’t order enough food for the girl |
D.she urged the girl to take her share of food |
A.She was a victim of high education |
B.She actually had some kind of mental disorder |
C.She graduated with average grades |
D.The reason is not yet given. |
A.They both took interest in nursing. |
B.They were about to ask names of each other at the same time. |
C.When Claire headed to the theater, Joyce went back downstairs. |
D.They were both musical lovers. |
A.she didn’t know what she was going to be until then. |
B.this chance meeting changed her attitudes towards life in a way. |
C.she was glad to be able to pay for someone in need. |
D.hopefully the force that brought them together may bring good luck to Joyce. |
A.arouse readers’ curiosity |
B.explore social problems |
C.teach readers a lesson |
D.share a sweet personal story |
around Britain will know, urban foxes are now commonplace. I recently saw one in the middle
of the day, wandering along a street in Pimlico. Twenty years ago, that sight would have stopped
the traffic. Now, it is barely worth a remark. Foxes are large animals, as big as many dogs. Of
course, as in the terrifying incident at Homerton, one would attack a baby sooner or later.
Actually, this has already happened. In 2002, at Dartford in Kent, a fox bit a 14-week-old boy
in the living room of the family home while his mother was sleeping. The last government preferred
to ignore the incident; it was, after all trying to ban foxhunting at the time. It could see that some folk
love urban foxes, perhaps having the same affection for wildlife as the people I have seen in London
parks feeding rats along with squirrels and ducks.
The foxites even include animal scientists, who would seem to have persuaded Bristol City
Council (whose advisory Living with Urban Foxes has been adopted by the Chartered Institute
of Environmental Health) that foxes never attack humans. But then they also deny that country foxes
target lambs, when every hill farmer I know would tell them differently. A lamb is much the same
size as a baby. It is no more difficult to get into a house than into a hen cage.
According to Living with Urban Foxes, “the fox population is stable”, and has not significantly
increased. Is this true? When I first lived in London in the late 1970s, urban foxes had an almost
mythical status. They were like yetis. You never saw one; you weren’t sure they really existed.
Now, they are part of the scene. I wouldn’t be surprised to find one. Friends in the suburbs are
plagued(困扰)with them. A study in Bristol showed that an astonishing 8 percent of pets caged
in gardens are killed by foxes each year.
Surely, if foxes are now harming babies, it is time for something to be done about them, yet this is
not as straightforward as it might seem. While country residents refer to foxes as harmful animals,
that is not how they are officially classified; this means that local authorities do not have a statutory
obligation(法定的义务)to control them. It would be an easy thing for this government to change
the legislation.
B. To show how to provide food for urban foxes.
C. To protect urban foxes from traffic accidents.
D. To prove urban foxes are not dangerous as expected.
B. love urban foxes
C. support foxhunting
D. oppose foxhunting
B. Praise.
C. Disbelief.
D. Tolerance.
B. Students.
C. Drivers.
D. Babies.
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you may like them.
★A Copenhagen bus company has put "love seats" on 103 of its buses for people looking
for a partner. "Even love at first sight is possible on the bus," said a spokesman for the
company to explain the two seats on each bus that are covered in red cloth and a "love
seat" sign.
★Shoppers at an international luxury fair in Italy, found a cell-phone-equipped golden
coffin among the items on display. The phones will help "the dead" contact relatives if they
have been buried alive by mistake.
★A man in New York came up with a disarming(手无寸铁的)way to perform his
latest bank heist , approaching the clerk's window with a large bunch of flowers and handing
over a note saying "give me the money!"
★An Englishman who lost all his legs and arms in an electrical accident successfully
swam across the Channel, a challenge he had been preparing for two years. The whole
cost is 400 dollars.
★A set of artificial teeth(假牙) made for Britain's war-time prime minister Winston
Churchill known as "the teeth that saved the world" sold for nearly 18,000 pounds (21,500
euros, 24,000 dollars) at auction(拍卖).
★A British woman caused an Internet hate campaign after she was caught on camera
dumping(抛弃)a cat in a rubbish bin. She was fined 250 pounds (400 dollars, 280 euros)
after pleading guilty.
★The BBC apologized completely and without any doubts after a radio presenter
jokingly announced that Queen Elizabeth II had died.
★Two Australian men needed surgery(手术)after shooting each other in the bottoms
during a drinking session to see if it would hurt and they were charged 400 dollars separately.
★A Kuwaiti MP(议员) suggested state-aid for male citizens to take second wives, in
an effort to reduce the large number of unmarried women in the oil-rich state.
B. It has a cell phone.
C. It is new.
D. It has many items.
B. love
C. discussion
D. repair
B. One who bought Winston Churchill's artificial teeth.
C. An Australian man who was shot in bottom to test the hurt.
D. An Englishman crossing the Channel without legs and arms.
B. A lot of rich single men lived in Kuwait
C. There are quantities of oil in Kuwait
D. There are many single women in Kuwait