摘要: He is not a man easy . A. to deal B. to deal him C. to deal with D. to deal with him

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       I was in New York the other day and rode with a friend in a taxi. When we got out, my friend
said to the driver, "Thank you for the ride. You did a good job of driving."
       The taxi driver was shocked for a second. Then he said, "Are you a wise man or something?"
      "No, my dear man, and I'm not putting you on. I like the way you keep cool in heavy traffic."
      "Yeah," the driver said and drove off.
      "What was that all about?" I asked.
      "I am trying to bring love back to New York," he said. "I believe it's the only thing that can save
the city."
      " How can one man save New York?"
       "It's not one man. I believe I have made that taxi driver's day. Suppose he has 20 fares(乘客).
He's going to be nice to those 20 fares because someone was nice to him. Those fares in turn will be
kinder to their shopkeepers or waiters or even their own families. Finally the goodwill could go to at
least 1000 people. Now that isn't bad, is it?"
      "But you're depending on that taxi driver to pass your goodwill to others."
      "I'm not depending on it," my friend said. "I might deal with ten different people today. If out of ten
I can make three happy, then I can have an effect on 3000 more people."
      "It sounds good on paper," I said, "but I'm not sure it works in practice."
       "Nothing is lost if it doesn't. It didn't take any of my time to tell that man he was doing a good job.
He neither received a larger tip nor a smaller tip. If it fell on deaf ears, so what? Tomorrow there will
be another taxi driver I can try to make happy."
1. When the driver heard my friend's words, he at first became____.  
A. excited.  
B. angry  
C. pleased    
D. surprised
2. Why did the writer's friend praise the driver?  
A. Because he hoped to take the driver's taxi again.
B. Because he hoped to bring love to the city.
C. Because the driver moved him really.
D. Because the driver often helped him.
3. What does the writer think of his friend's idea?  
A. It's not a good idea.
B. It's not easy to carry out.
C. It's funny.
D. It's a little interesting.
4. We can learn from the passage that____. 
A. the writer tried to make the taxi driver happy.
B. the writer's friend wanted to be a good taxi driver.
C. the writer's friend did his best to make the world better.
D. the writer's plan would fail if the taxi driver didn't listen to him.
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My new home was a long way from the centre of London but it was becoming essential to find a job, so finally I spent a whole morning getting to town and putting my name down to be considered by London Transport for a job on the tube. They were looking for guards, not drivers. This suited me. I couldn’t drive a car but thought that I could probably guard a train, and perhaps continue to write my poems between stations. The writers Keats and Chekhov had been doctors. T.S. Eliot had worked in a bank and Wallace Stevens for an insurance company. I would be a tube guard. I could see myself being cheerful, useful, a good man in a crisis. Obviously I would be overqualified but I was willing to forget about that in return for a steady income and travel privileges — those being particularly welcome to someone living a long way from the city centre.

The next day I sat down, with almost a hundred other candidates, for the intelligence test. I must have done all right because after half an hour’s wait I was sent into another room for a psychological test. This time there were only about fifty candidates. The examiner sat at a desk. You were signaled forward to occupy the seat opposite him when the previous occupant had been dismissed, after a greater or shorter time. Obviously the long interviews were the more successful ones. Some of the interviews were as short as five minutes. Mine was the only one that lasted a minute and a half.

I can remember the questions now: “Why did you leave your last job?” “Why did you leave your job before that?” “And the one before that?” I can’t recall my answers, except that they were short at first and grew progressively shorter. His closing statement, I thought, revealed (显露)a lack of sensitivity which helped to explain why as a psychologist, he had risen no higher than the underground railway. “You have failed the psychological test and we are unable to offer you a position.”

Failing to get that job was my low point. Or so I thought, believing that the work was easy. Actually, such jobs — being a postman is another one I still desire — demand exactly the sort of elementary yet responsible awareness that the habitual dreamer is least qualified to give. But I was still far short of full self-understanding. I was also short of cash.

1.The writer applied for the job because __________.

A.he wanted to work in the centre of London

B.he could no longer afford to live without one

C.he was not interested in any other available job

D.he had received suitable training

2.The writer thought he was overqualified for the job because _________.

A.he often traveled underground               B.he had written many poems

C.he could deal with difficult situations     D.he had worked in an insurance company

3.The length of his interview meant that _________.

A.he was too nervous                             B.he had not done well in the intelligence test

C.he did not like the examiner                  D.he had little work experience to talk about

4.What does the writer realize now that he did not realize then?

A.How unpleasant ordinary jobs can be.    B.How difficult it can be to get a job.

C.How unsuitable he was for the job.        D.How badly he did in the interview.

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