范文站 > 试题大全 > 英语试题 > 高考英语试题 > 2013梅州高考5月份英语模拟试题及答案(6)

2013梅州高考5月份英语模拟试题及答案(6)

2013-05-24 15:01 来源:范文站 人气(0) 范文站fanwenzhan.comRSS订阅 

  C. To get a well-paid job. D. To win his parents’ favor.

  39. What kind of person was the author’s father in his schooldays?

  A. He was good at sports. B. He was extremely popular among girls.

  C. He was not quite fond of studies. D. He was hard and clever.

  40. We can infer from the passage that the British sailors from the HMS Ark Royal _____.

  A. paid a visit to his father’s office

  B. loved playing cards and chess

  C. were in the American Navy during peacetime

  D. came across his father on a trip

  D

  I was brought up in the British, stiff upper lip style. Strong feelings aren’t something you display in public. So, you can imagine that I was unprepared for the outpouring of public grief (悲伤) at a Chinese funeral.

  My editorial team leader died recently after a short illness. He was 31. The news was so unexpected that it left us all shocked and upset. A female colleague burst into tears and cried piteously at her desk. Somehow we got through the day‘s work. The next day was the funeral.

  Our big boss stepped forward to deliver a eulogy and was soon in tears. She carried on, in Chinese of course, but at the end said in English: ”There will be no more deadlines for you in heaven.“ Next came a long-term colleague who also dissolved in tears but carried on with her speech despite being almost overcome by emotion. Then a close friend of the dead man paid tribute (哀悼), weeping openly as he spoke. Sorrow is spreading. Men and women were now sobbing uncontrollably. Finally, the man’s mother, supported between two women, addressed her son in his coffin. At one point, the mother almost collapsed and had to be held up. We were invited to step forward to each lay a white rose on the casket. Our dead colleague looked as if he was taking a nap. At the end of the service I walked away from the funeral parlor stunned at the outpouring of emotion.

  In the UK, families grieve privately and then try to hold it together and not break down at a funeral. Here in China it would seem that grieving is a public affair. It strikes me that it is more cathartic to cry your eyes out than try to keep it bottled up for fear of embarrassment, which is what many of us do in the West.

  Afterwards, a Chinese colleague told me that the lamenting at the funeral had been restrained (克制) by Chinese standards. In some rural areas, she said, people used to be paid to mourn noisily. This struck me like something out of novel by Charles Dickens. But we have all seen on TV scenes of grief-stricken people in Gaza and the West Bank, in Afghanistan, Iraq and the relatives of victims of terrorist bombings around the world. Chinese grief is no different. I realized that it‘s the reserved British way of mourning that is out of step with the rest of the world.

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