大学英语长篇阅读教程下2.docx
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1、大学英语长篇阅读教程下册Unit 1I Grew up When I Was 74Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more
2、than once.A) My mother died last year, aged 107. As I was 74 at that time, and as no one is fully grown-up until both their parents are dead (so they say), I probably remained a child well into old age. I was a “bonded“ child. A bonding between mother and child was essential for the wellbeing and he
3、althy development of the baby, and she determined that was how it would be between us. A strong, long-lasting attachment between a baby and mother, father, carer, or whoever, is the most important factor in infant development.B) So I was cherished. She had tried very hard to bond with my brother, bo
4、rn three years earlier, but he had demonstrated that he wasnt having any of it. He was pleased when I arrived, therefore, as it meant that the spotlight of attention moved from him to me. I was the bonding type. My mummy was the best mummy in the world. No one understood me like my mummy, and most i
5、mportantly no one talked to me like my mummy.Because talk she did. All about her childhood, her mother, her father, herbrothers and sisters, and the First World War.C) She was Mummy. We had the war, we had Hitler but I was always going to be safe because I had Mummy; I was seriously ill but I got be
6、tter because I had Mummy; we had the 1947 snow and ice for three months but it was fine because, when I got home, I had Mummy and she put my woolen gloves and socks on top of the boiler to dry. In the summer we had a heat wave and she made jugs of lemonade.D) But we all grew up and our perceptions a
7、ltered. The adult I became found Mother much less perfect than the child had done. I realized that some of her opinions were racist, some were snobbish all were ill-thought out. She was also a nuisance interfering in my life, worrying about my welfare continually and wanting to know every last detai
8、l of my existence so that she could worry about me further. She telephoned me daily, we met for shopping trips involving lengthy, conversational lunches and every time we chat I let slip personal information I had intended to keep to myself.E) Why was this? I had no idea. I only knew that the habit
9、of “telling Mummy everything and always telling Mummy the truth“ was one I was unable to break. I had given her another rope to reel me back in with. Another rope with which she could bond me. How could I lead an independent life if Mother was always part of it? She criticized my choice of friends,
10、my hairstyle, and my clothes and, of course, any men I associated with were always unsuitable. We argued. She told me she wanted me to be happy. I told her she was possessive. She said she didnt have a daughter any more. I said she was being melodramatic. She cried. I told her to shut up. She told m
11、e I had turned into a horrible person. I cried. I said sorry. She said sorry. So it went on. Year after year.F) I married, I became a television producer, and I ran a career. I retired. I got divorced.(t4I told you he wasnt suitable “)I married for the second time at the age of 68.(Make sure he look
12、s after you “)I was a mature woman. In confidence and experience I had outstripped her. But I remained “bonded”. I joked about it.Its fine being a bonded child 一 but when you are over 60 and still bonded to your mother you wonder whats going on. But I couldnt say,“Listen, Mother, I dont agree with y
13、ou over so many things; you may think we see eye to eye, but, frankly, we dont. I am not who you think I am. I am me and I dont want to be like you.G) When she reached 100 she began to worry about me again.44You will be on your own when I die. When youre old, whos going to care for you? You wont hav
14、e a daughter to look after you.“Well, good, I said.That means no long-suffering female child will have to put up with my deafness, my demands, my irritability and the general strain imposed by the elderly on their young.H) But I wondered how I would feel when she did die. She made it clear that it w
15、as no fun being a blind, partially deaf centenarian.4tI keep hoping that when I wake up there wont be any me,“ was how she put it. At her age and with her health problems, she was in the “death zone”. When it happened, how would I sort my feelings out? The affection, the disagreements, the anger all
16、 mixed up through the length of time we had been together and stirred into the conversations and the confidences we had shared. How would I be able to grieve?I) I did know that her brain and her heart were failing. I also knew I could not live with her and look after her. She knew that too. Uncompla
17、iningly, she went into a care home. I made up my mind that it was time my bonds were broken; time for me to distance myself from her. I asked her to repeat some of the stories she had told me about her girlhood. Dementia made it difficult. She said:My poor mother she had that terrible thing that cam
18、e down and chopped her head off and she died. It was difficult for her to manage after that.”J) But the more we talked, the closer I came to understanding. She was a product of her upbringing as an Edwardian child and her conditioning, as a suburban mother and housewife in the 1940s and 50s. I saw t
19、hat the opinions I objected to were skin-deep born of her background. I saw her as child, wife and mother and realized her identity was rooted in these.K) At 106 she started having falls. Her balance had gone. They took her to hospital where she lingered horribly because at first they tried to keep
20、her alive. When finally they agreed to simple hydration, I held her hand in her last hours and, just for a moment, I licked the back of it, kitten-like as I had done as a child for a joke. She half-smiled. The next morning she died. And I wept. But I had come to terms. I grieved and I forgave, and I
21、 finally realized what the confusion of emotions was that we had felt for each other over 74 years. The resentment, the laughter, the anger, the affection, the attachment - the bonding. Thats love, that is.(1144 words)1. My brother, three year older than me, didnt like to be cherished and bonded by
22、mother.2. My mother was worried that if she dies nobody would look after me since I didnt have a daughter.3.1 wasnt able to break the habit of always telling my mother the truth.4. My mother went into a care home and this was the time to break the bonds with her.5. A strong bonding relationship betw
23、een child and mother is critical to the healthy growth of the baby.1. 1 realized that the confusion of emotions that both of us held for each other was love.7. I came to understanding my mother better after I knew more about her childhood and her situation later as a suburban mother and house wife.8
24、. I remained “bonded“ with my mother even though I thought I had more confidence and experience.9. When I grew up, I didnt want to be bonded anymore, but my mother kept interfering in my life.10. My mother suffered from being blind and partially deaf when she was over 100.Notes:1. bond v.结合,粘合,团结在一起
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