题目内容
____________he came from the countryside, he became a modern architect.
| A.Although the fact that | B.Despite the fact that |
| C.Despite | D.Though the fact |
B
解析
Kincaid looked at his watch: eight-seventeen. The truck started on the second try, and he backed out, shifted gears, and moved slowly down the alley under hazy sun. Through the streets of Bellingham he went, heading south on Washington 11, running along the coast of Puget Sound for a few miles, then following the highway as it swung east a little before meeting U.S Route 20.
Turning into the sun, he began the long, winding drive through the Cascades. He liked this country and felt unpressed stopping now and then to make notes about interesting possibilities for future expeditions or to shoot what he called “memory snapshots.” The purpose of these causal photographs was to remind him of places he might want to visit again and approach more seriously. In later afternoon h
e turned north at Spokane, picking up U.S Route 2, which would take him halfway across the northern United States to Duluth, Minnesota.
He wished for the thousandth time in his life that he had a dog, a golden retriever, maybe, for travels like this and to keep him company at home. But he was frequently away; overseas much of the time and it would not be fair to the animal. Still, he thought about it anyway. In a few years he would be getting too old for the hard fieldwork. “I must get a dog then.” He said to himself.
Drives like this
always put him into a sentimental mood. The dog was part of it. Robert Kincaid was alone as it’s possible to be – an only child, parents both dead, distant relatives who had lost track of him and he of them, no close friends.
He thought about Marian. She had left him nine years ago after five years of marriage. He was fifty–two now, that would make her just under forty. Marian had dreams of becoming a musician, a folksinger. She knew all of the Weavers’ songs and sang them pretty well in the coffeehouse of Seattle. When he was home in the old days, he drove her to the shows and sat in the audience while she sang.
His long absences – two or three months sometimes – were hard on the marriage. He knew that. She was aware of what he did when they decided to get married, and both of them had a vague (not clear) sense that it could all be handled somehow. It couldn’t when he came from photographing a story in Iceland and, she was gone. The note read, “Robert, it didn’t work out, I left you the Harmony guitar. Stay in touch.”
He didn’t stay in touch. Neither did she. He signed the divorce papers when they arrived a year later and caught a plane for Australia the next day. She had asked for nothing except her freedom.
【小题1】Which route is the right on
e taken by Kincaid?
| A.Bellingham – Washington 11 – Puget Sound – U.S Route 20 – U.S Route 2 – Duluth |
| B.U.S. Route 2 – Bellingham – Washington 11 – Puget Sound – U.S Route 20 – Duluth |
| C.U.S. Route 2 – U.S Route 20 – Duluth – Bellingham – Washington 11 |
| D.Bellingham – Washington 11 –U.S. Route 2 –U.S Route 20 –Duluth |
| A.Kincaid’s parents were dead and he only kept in touch with some distant relatives. |
| B.Kincaid would have had a dog if he hadn’t been away from home too much. |
| C.Kincaid used to have a golden retriever. |
| D.Kincaid needed a dog in doing his hard fieldwork. |
| A.To write “memory snapshots”. |
| B.To remind himself of places he might want to visit again. |
| C.To avoid forgetting the way back. |
| D.To shoot beautiful scenery along the road. |
| A.She died after five years of marriage. |
| B.She was older than Kincaid. |
| C.She could sing very well and earned big money. |
| D.She was not a professional pop singer. |
| A.Marian knew what would happen before she married Kincaid. |
| B.Kincaid thought his absence would be a problem when he married Marian. |
| C.It turned out that Marian could not stand Kincaid’s absence and left him. |
| D.After Marian left him, they still kept in touch with each other. |
It was 1961 and I was in the fifth grade. My marks in school were miserable and, the thing was, I didn’t know enough to really care. My older bother and I lived with Mom in an ugly multi-family house in Detroit. We watched TV every night. The background noise of our lives was gunfire and horses’ hoofs(马蹄) from “Wagon Train” or “Cheyenne”, and laughter from “I Love Lucy”, or “Mister Ed”. After supper, we’d lie on Mom’s bed and stare for hours at the TV screen.
But one day Mom changed our world forever. She turned off the TV. Our mother had only been able to get through third grade. But, she was much brighter and smarter than we boys know at the time. She had noticed something in the suburban houses where she cleaned books. So she came home one day, switched off the TV, sat us down and explained that her sons were going to make something of themselves. “You boys are going to read two books every week,” she said. “And you’re going to write a report on what you read.”
We moaned(不满,发牢骚) and complained about how unfair it was. Besides, we didn’t have any books in the house other than Mom’s Bible. But she explained that we would go where the books were: “I’ll drive you to the library.”
So pretty soon there were these two peevish(坏脾气的)boys sitting in her white 1959 Oldsmobile on their way to Detroit Public Library. I wandered reluctantly(不情愿) among the children’s books. I loved animals, so when I saw some books that seemed to be about animals, I started leafing through them.
The first book I read clear through was Chip the Dam Builder. It was about beavers(河狸). For the first time in my life I was lost in another world. No television program had ever taken me so far away from my surroundings as did this virtue visit to a cold stream in a forest and these animals building a home.
It didn’t dawn on me at the time, but the experience was quite different from watching TV. There were images forming in my mind instead of before my eyes. And I could return to them again and again with the flip(快速翻动)of a page.
Soon I began to look forward to visiting this quiet sanctuary form my other world. I moved from animals to plants, and then to rocks. Between the covers of all those books were whole worlds, and I was free to go anywhere in them. Along the way a funny thing happened: I started to know things. Teachers started to notice it too. I got to the point where I couldn’t wait to get home to my books.
Now my older brother is an engineer and I am chief of pediatric neurosurgery(儿童神经外科)at John Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore. Sometimes I still can’t believe my life’s journey, from a failing and indifferent student in a Detroit public school to this position, which takes me all over the world to teach and perform critical surgery.
But I know when the journey began the day Mom switched off the TV set and put us in her Oldsmobile for that drive to the library.
【小题1】We can learn from the beginning of the passage that ___________.
| A.the author and his brother had done well in school |
| B.the author had been very concerned about his school work |
| C.the author had spent much time watching TV after school |
| D.the author had realized how important schooling was |
| A.He came from a middle-class family. |
| B.He came from a single-parent family. |
| C.His mother worked as a cleaner. |
| D.His mother had received little education. |
| A.They were afraid | B.They were reluctant. |
| C.They were impatient. | D.They were eager to go. |
| A.he began to see something in his mind |
| B.he could visualize what he read in his mind |
| C.he could go back to read the books again |
| D.he realized that books offered him new experience |
Mr. Reese was born in a big city. His father had several companies and got a lot of money. He could give his son all the young man wanted. He was busy with his business and never asked him how he got along with his studies. So the boy spent most time in the restaurants or cinemas. Of course he was weak at his lessons and learned nothing at school. He made many friends but none of them was good and when they knew he came from a rich family, they began to teach him to gamble(赌博). Of course he lost much money.
Now Mr. Reese was twenty and finished middle school. He could not do anything. But his father didn't mind it until one day he found the young man had sold one of his companies. He became so angry that he made him leave his house. The young man couldn't gamble any longer. His friends made him pay his debt. He had to ask his mother to help him and the woman often gave him some money. But one evening his father happened to find it. The old man stopped his wife from doing so. They began to fight in the room. The young man brought out a knife and killed his father. His mother helped him to run away, but soon after that he was caught and sentenced(判刑)to death.
It was a cold and wet day. Suddenly it began to rain hard when Mr. Reese was being sent to the execution ground(刑场). Soon both he and the soldiers were wet through. He said angrily,“Bad luck! I shall be shot in such bad weather!”
“Don't complain(抱怨), brothers” said one of the soldiers. “You're luckier than us all. We'll have to go back to the city after that!”
1.Old Reese never wanted to know about his son's studies because _________.
|
A.he was sure his son was good at his lessons |
|
B.he spent all his energies on his business |
|
C.he knew nothing about the education |
|
D.his wife looked after their children |
2.The bad young men taught Young Reese to gamble in order _________.
|
A.to play with him |
|
B.to spend spare time |
|
C.that the could get much money from him |
|
D.that they could find jobs in his father's companies |
3.Old Reese became angry because _________.
|
A.him son had learned nothing at school |
|
B.his son was weak at all his lessons |
|
C.his son couldn't do anything in the companies |
|
D.his son had lost one of his companies |
4.Mr. Reese complained _________.
|
A.he was sentenced to death |
|
B.he would be shot |
|
C.he went to the execution ground on foot |
|
D.he would be shot in bad weather |