39. What is the
lesson we can learn from this passage?
A.
Don’t accuse others of not listening while talking with them.
B.
Don’t get anything wrong if you miss what the speaker is saying.
C.
Listening inattentively may cost you the loss of your success.
D. Think carefully of what you’re going to say before the speaker
finishes.
(B)
My father was a foreman of a
sugar-cane plantation in Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico.
My first job was to drive the oxen that ploughed the cane fields. I would walk
behind an ox, guiding him with a broomstick. For $ 1 a day, I worked eight hours straight, with no food
breaks.
It was very tedious work,
but it prepared me for life and taught me many lasting lessons. Because the
plantation owners were always watching us, I had to be on time every day and
work as hard as I could. I’ve never been late for any job since. I also learned
about being respectful and faithful to the people you work for. More important,
I earned my pay; it never entered my mind to say I was sick just because I
didn’t want to work.
I was only six years old, but I
was doing a man’s job. Our family needed every dollar we could make because my
father never earned more than $ 18 a
week. Our home was a three-room wood shack with a dirty floor and no toilet.
Nothing made me prouder than bringing home money to help my mother, father, two
brothers and three sisters. This gave me self-esteem(自尊心), one of the most
important things a person can have.
When I was seven, I got work at a
golf course near our house. My job was to stand down the fairway and spot the
balls as they landed, so the golfers could find them. Losing a ball meant you
were fired, so I never missed one. Some nights I would lie in bed and dreamt of
making thousands of dollars by playing golf and being able to buy a bicycle.
The more I dreamed, the more I
thought. Why not? I made my first golf club out of guava limb(番石榴树枝) and a piece of pipe.
Then I hammered an empty tin can into the shape of a ball. And finally I dug
two small holes in the ground and hit the ball back and forth. I practiced with
the same devotion and intensity. I learned working in the field - except now I
was driving golf balls with club, not oxen with a broomstick.