专四阅读详解三12916.pdf
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1、星期 3 Wednesday He who doesnt advance lose groud.学如逆水行舟,不进则退。学习内容 题 材 词 数 建议时间 错误统计 做题备忘 Text A 社会现象类 399 6.5 分钟/5 Text B 文学人物类 575 7 分钟/6 Text C 政治制度类 415 5.5 分钟/4 Text D 战争史实类 415 6 分钟/5 今日练习 Text A Like all animals,humans are territorial.But unlike other creatures,we are also attached to the soil
2、by an emotional motherland.What nation doesnt have its rural landscape its fatherland or motherland as one of the wellspring of its poetry,music and folklore?So the luckiest of people must surely be farmers.As the poet Virgil,a smaller farmer himself,put it:“How blessed beyond all blessings are farm
3、ers,if they but knew their happiness!Far from the clash of arms,the most just earth brings forth from the soil an easy living for them.”But Virgil wrote those lines in about 30 B.C.Today,how many small farmers in Europe would share his view that the living is easy?The truth is that the image city pe
4、ople love to hold of farmers with their wheat rippling in the sunshine,brown cows and battered red tractors is in danger of becoming restricted to storybooks.A great many of Europes millions of small farmers are deep in financial mire,unable to battle modern intensive agribusiness,and suffering the
5、humiliation of earning a big chunk of their income by being paid not to grow crops or raise animals.The depth of the crisis was brought home earlier this year in Britain,when about 280,000 country people marched quietly through the streets of London carrying placards pleading“Listen to Us”,and“Dont
6、Take the Backbone out of Farming”.As well as farmers,there were people wanting to preserve rural jobs and ways of life:hunters and foresters.Thousands were there simply because they know that the countryside is an economic,recreational and spiritual resource that,once lost,cannot be replaced,says on
7、e of those marchers,Peverell Bruce,a dairy and arable farmer in Hampshire:“I see my lifes work as being for my children.I want to nurture my land for them.I hope theres a future in farming for my sons.”The fact that there is no future on the land for the children of many farming families is popularl
8、y blamed on the Common Agricultural Policy(CAP)of the European Union probably unfairly.The CAP aimed to provide farmers with a guaranteed price for their goods,help peasant farmers adapt to modern,sustainable agriculture and offer rural workers“a fair standard of living”.Behind those noble goals was
9、 the need to boost food production in a post-war Europe plagued by shortage.1.At the beginning of the passage,the author indicates that A land is important to humans,especially farmers.B Virgil is a great and fruitful poet.C humans are different from animals.D farmers should be satisfied with their
10、living.2.In Europe,modern farmers attitude towards Virgils view is A indifferent.B neutral.C opposite.D favorable.3.Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the passage?A There are many songs and poems in praise of the rural landscape.B Many city people still believe in the beauty
11、of rural life.C Small farmers living is threatened by modern agribusiness.D Farmers are unwilling to be bound to their land.4.The reason why British country people marched is that A they were not allowed to read those storybooks anymore.B they wanted to keep their rural life unchanged.C they needed
12、government to enlarge their farming land.D they required government to hasten modernizations in agriculture.5.According to the passage the CAP tried to A strengthen the modern influence on farming life.B take care of childrens life.C help farmers adjust to new situations.D import more from other con
13、tinents.Text B In the whole of French literary history,there is,perhaps,no subject of such inexhaustible and modern interest as that of George Sand.Of what use is literary history?It is not only a kind of museum,in which a few masterpieces are preserved for the pleasure of observers.It is this certa
14、inly,but it is still more than this.Fine books are,before anything else,living works,they not only have lived,but they continue to live.They live within us,underneath those ideas which form our conscience and those sentiments which inspire our actions.There is nothing of greater importance for any s
15、ociety than to make an inventory of the ideas and the sentiments which are composing its moral atmosphere every instant that it exists.For every individual this work is the very condition of his dignity.The question is,should we have these ideas and these sentiments,if,in the times before us,there h
16、ad not been some exceptional individuals,who seized them,as it were,in the air and made them practicable and durable?These exceptional individuals were capable of thinking more vigorously,of feeling more deeply,and of expressing themselves more forcibly than we are.They leaved these ideas and sentim
17、ents to us.Literary history is,then,above and beyond all things,the everlasting examination of the conscience of humanity.George Sand wrote for nearly half a century.For fifty times three hundred and sixty-five days,she never let a day pass by without covering more pages than other writers in a mont
18、h.Her first books shocked people,her early opinions were greeted with storms.From that time forth she rushed head-long into everything new,she welcomed every fantasy and passed it on to us with more force and passion in it.Vibrating with every breath,electrified by every storm,she looked up at every
19、 cloud behind which she fancied she saw star shining.The work of another novelist has been called a repertory of human documents.But what a repertory of ideas her work was!She has said what she had to say on nearly every subject:on love,the family,social institutions and on the various forms of gove
20、rnment.And with all this she was a woman.Her case is almost unique in the history of letters.It is intensely interesting to study the influence of this woman of genius on the evolution of modern thought.The share which belongs to George Sand in the history of the French novel is that of having impre
21、gnated the novel with the poetry in her own soul.She gave to the novel a breadth and a range which it had never hitherto had.She celebrated the hymn of nature,of love and of goodness in it.She revealed to us the country and the peasants of France.She gave satisfaction to the romantic tendency which
22、is in every one of us,to more or less degree.George Sands literary ideal may be read in the following words,which she wrote to Flaubert:“You make the people who read your books still sadder than they were before.I want to make them less unhappy.”She tried to do this,and she often succeeded in her at
23、tempt.What greater praise can we give to her than that?And how can we help adding a little gratitude and affection to our admiration for the woman who was the good fairy of the contemporary novel?6.Whats the usage of the literary history?A It is just a kind of museum.B It is an inventory of ideas an
24、d sentiments.C It records ordinary peoples life.D It exams the moral or ethical awareness of human being forever.7.According to the passage,exceptional individuals have all the following characteristics EXCEPT A they have more active thought.B they feel more deeply.C they have strong expressive powe
25、r.D they can forecast the future.8.The author thinks that George Sand A was a productive writer.B was the first female writer in the literary history.C wrote on all subjects except politics.D had a significant influence on moral atmosphere.9.The word“impregnated”in Para.3 is closest in meaning to A
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