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I’d just got in a taxi at the railway station when suddenly I found one of my suitcases missing. Just then, I saw a young fellow about 30 walking away with it, opening it and drawing out the valuables. “Stop thief! Stop thief!” I shouted and threw open the car door and rushed out to him, followed by the driver and half a dozen passers-by. Very soon the thief was cornered at the turn of the road. My driver caught the thief by the neck and put his hand into his trouser pocket, drawing out money, credit card, telephone book and so on and put them back into my suitcase.
Half an hour later, the car was running at full speed on the express highway. I sat back and breathed a long sigh of relief (松口气). But as I pulled out those stolen things from the suitcase and started to check them, I became dumbfounded (惊呆了). Before my eyes were 200 yuan instead of 100. And a blood test report of a 58-year-old woman appeared. I suddenly realized that the taxi driver must have mistaken the thief’s belongs and put his into my suitcase. The pitiful and begging look of the poor young man flashed across my mind again. My heart began to sink.
Two years has passed since then. But this event keeps coming back to me. Was the young man a habitual robber or a dutiful son who had been driven to desperation (铤而走险) to find money to save his mother’s life? My heart aches for him. How I wish I had gone back that summer afternoon to return the 200 yuan and say sorry to him. For the first time in my life, I realized that hate and love are very close.
【小题1】Why was the writer dumbfounded when he opened his suitcase?
| A.Because he was now searching a different suitcase. |
| B.His own blood test report has changed into an old woman’s. |
| C.An old woman had put her savings into his suitcase. |
| D.He was facing things that did not belong to himself. |
| A.No one. He caught the thief all by himself. |
| B.The driver with several other people. |
| C.Some policemen. |
| D.The thief came back and gave back the suitcase to him. |
| A.The young man was a born thief. |
| B.The young man couldn’t afford to pay for his old mother’s medical treatment. |
| C.The young man’s mother asked him to do so. |
| D.Young people are likely to steal when they are poor. |
| A.to describe what hate and love are like |
| B.to entertain the readers with an interesting story |
| C.to impress the readers with an interesting story |
| D.to encourage the readers to help him find the thief |
I’d just got in a taxi at the railway station when suddenly I found one of my suitcases missing. Just then, I saw a young fellow about 30 walking away with it, opening it and drawing out the valuables. “Stop thief! Stop thief!” I shouted and threw open the car door and rushed out to him, followed by the driver and half a dozen passers-by. Very soon the thief was cornered at the turn of the road. My driver caught the thief by the neck and put his hand into his trouser pocket, drawing out money, credit card, telephone book and so on and put them back into my suitcase.
Half an hour later, the car was running at full speed on the express highway. I sat back and breathed a long sigh of relief (松口气). But as I pulled out those stolen things from the suitcase and started to check them, I became dumbfounded (惊呆了). Before my eyes were 200 yuan instead of 100. And a blood test report of a 58-year-old woman appeared. I suddenly realized that the taxi driver must have mistaken the thief’s belongs and put his into my suitcase. The pitiful and begging look of the poor young man flashed across my mind again. My heart began to sink.
Two years has passed since then. But this event keeps coming back to me. Was the young man a habitual robber or a dutiful son who had been driven to desperation (铤而走险) to find money to save his mother’s life? My heart aches for him. How I wish I had gone back that summer afternoon to return the 200 yuan and say sorry to him. For the first time in my life, I realized that hate and love are very close.
【小题1】Why was the writer dumbfounded when he opened his suitcase?
| A.Because he was now searching a different suitcase. |
| B.His own blood test report has changed into an old woman’s. |
| C.An old woman had put her savings into his suitcase. |
| D.He was facing things that did not belong to himself. |
| A.No one. He caught the thief all by himself. |
| B.The driver with several other people. |
| C.Some policemen. |
| D.The thief came back and gave back the suitcase to him. |
| A.The young man was a born thief. |
| B.The young man couldn’t afford to pay for his old mother’s medical treatment. |
| C.The young man’s mother asked him to do so. |
| D.Young people are likely to steal when they are poor. |
| A.to describe what hate and love are like |
| B.to entertain the readers with an interesting story |
| C.to impress the readers with an interesting story |
| D.to encourage the readers to help him find the thief |
I’d just got in a taxi at the railway station when suddenly I found one of my suitcases missing. Just then, I saw a young fellow about 30 walking away with it, opening it and drawing out the valuables. “Stop thief! Stop thief!” I shouted and threw open the car door and rushed out to him, followed by the driver and half a dozen passers-by. Very soon the thief was cornered at the turn of the road. My driver caught the thief by the neck and put his hand into his trouser pocket, drawing out money, credit card, telephone book and so on and put them back into my suitcase.
Half an hour later, the car was running at full speed on the express highway. I sat back and breathed a long sigh of relief (松口气). But as I pulled out those stolen things from the suitcase and started to check them, I became dumbfounded (惊呆了). Before my eyes were 200 yuan instead of 100. And a blood test report of a 58-year-old woman appeared. I suddenly realized that the taxi driver must have mistaken the thief’s belongs and put his into my suitcase. The pitiful and begging look of the poor young man flashed across my mind again. My heart began to sink.
Two years has passed since then. But this event keeps coming back to me. Was the young man a habitual robber or a dutiful son who had been driven to desperation (铤而走险) to find money to save his mother’s life? My heart aches for him. How I wish I had gone back that summer afternoon to return the 200 yuan and say sorry to him. For the first time in my life, I realized that hate and love are very close.
- 1.
Why was the writer dumbfounded when he opened his suitcase?
- A.Because he was now searching a different suitcase.
- B.His own blood test report has changed into an old woman’s.
- C.An old woman had put her savings into his suitcase.
- D.He was facing things that did not belong to himself.
- A.
- 2.
Who helped the writer catch the thief?
- A.No one. He caught the thief all by himself.
- B.The driver with several other people.
- C.Some policemen.
- D.The thief came back and gave back the suitcase to him.
- A.
- 3.
What was one of the reasons for the young man to steal in the writer’s opinion?
- A.The young man was a born thief.
- B.The young man couldn’t afford to pay for his old mother’s medical treatment.
- C.The young man’s mother asked him to do so.
- D.Young people are likely to steal when they are poor.
- A.
- 4.
The major purpose for the writer to write this passage is ______.
- A.to describe what hate and love are like
- B.to entertain the readers with an interesting story
- C.to impress the readers with an interesting story
- D.to encourage the readers to help him find the thief
- A.
a dozen passers-by. Very soon the thief was cornered at the turn of the road. My driver caught the thief
by the neck and put his hand into his trouser pocket, drawing out money, credit card, telephone book
and so on and put them
Half an hour later, the car was running at full speed on the express highway. I sat back and breathed
a long sigh of relief (松口气). But as I pulled out those stolen things from the suitcase and started to
check them, I became dumbfounded (惊呆了). Before my eyes
blood test report of a 58-year-old woman appeared. I suddenly
mistaken the thief's belongs and put his into my suitcase. The pitiful and begging look of the poor young
man flashed across my mind again. My heart began to sink.
Two years has passed since then. But this event keeps coming back to me. Was the young man a
habitual robber or a dutiful son who had been driven to desperation (铤而走险) to find money to save
his mother's life? My heart aches for him. How I wish I had gone back that summer afternoon to return
the 200 yuan and say sorry to him. For the first time in my life, I realized that hate and love are very close.
B. His own blood test report has changed into an old woman's.
C. An old woman had put her savings into his suitcase.
D. He was facing things that did not belong to himself.
B .The young man couldn't afford to pay for his old mother's medical treatment.
C. The young man's mother asked him to do so.
D. Young people are likely to steal when they are poor.
B. People easily love and hate others.
C. Human beings are always a mixture of different feeling.
D. Don't always hate others.
B. to entertain the readers with an interesting story
C. to impress the readers with an interesting story
D. to encourage the readers to help him find the thief
Taiwan police cannot decide whether to treat it as an extremely act of stealing or an even cheat. Either way, it could be the perfect crime, because the criminals are birds—homing pigeons !
The crime begins with a telephone message to the owner of a stolen car: if you want the car back, pay up. Then, the car owner is directed to a park, told where to find a bird cage and how to attach money to the neck of the pigeon inside. Carrying the money in a tiny bag, the pigeon flies off.
There have been at least four such pigeon pick-ups in Changwa. What at first seemed like the work of a clever stay-at-home car thief, however, may in fact be the work of an even lazier and more inventive criminal mind—one that avoids not only collecting money but also going out to steal the car in the first place. Police officer Chen says that the criminal probably has pulled a double trick: he gets money for things he cannot possibly return. Instead of stealing cars, he lets someone else do it and then waits for the car-owner to place an advertisement in the newspaper asking for help.
The thought is supported by the fact that, so far, none of the stolen cars have been returned. Also, the amount of money demanded-under 3,000 Taiwanese dollars–seems too little for a car worth many times more.
Demands for pigeon-delivered money stopped as soon as the press reported the story. And even if they start again, Chen holds little hope of catching the criminal. “We have more important things to do,” he said.
【小题1】After the car owner received a phone call, he _______.
| A.went to a certain pigeon and put some money in the bag it carried |
| B.gave the money to the thief and had his car back in a park |
| C.sent some money to the thief by mail |
| D.told the press about it |
| A.the car thief who stays at home |
| B.one of those who put the ads in the paper |
| C.one of the policemen in Changwa |
| D.the owner of the pigeons |
| A.how easily people get fooled by criminals |
| B.what Chen thinks might be correct |
| C.the thief is extremely clever |
| D.the money paid is too little |
| A.criminals | B.pigeons | C.the stolen cars | D.demands for money |
| A.he reads the ads in the newspaper |
| B.he lives in the same neighborhood |
| C.he has seen the car owners in the park |
| D.he has trained the pigeons to follow them |