精编国家开放大学电大本科《文学英语赏析》2028-2029期末试题及答案试卷号:1062

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国家开放大学电大本科文学英语赏析2028-2029期末试题及答案(试卷号:1062)Purt I Literary Fundamentals 30 pointeSection L Match the woriis with their writera (10 points)eWorks1. Of Studifi2. The Rime of thf Ancient Mariner3. The 5/range Cast of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hydf4. J ant Eg5. I ni pec tor CalliWritersA. Charlotte BronteB. JB PriestleyC. Walt WhitmanD. Francis BaconE Ernest HemingwuyF. Robert Ix)uib StevcnnonG. Thomas HardyH. Saniuei Taylor ColeriduSection 2. Decide whether the following BlntcmrnU arc True (T) or False (F) (10 polrilt).6. The novel A Christmas Carol chart* the growing up of the chnrnctcr Pip.7. Emily Dickinson is well-known American poet*8. Hamht in one of Shnkespeare1 b welbknown trnge(iiea the other three bcinR Macllh Othello and King Lear.9. The Old Man and th. Sa cxponea the corruption, cruelty and greed of the colonial system in Africa10. In the poem Futility”, the speaker expressed hit dintresA at the death of his lover and bewilderment of the mcaninR of marriBgc)11. in written to commemorate gomeone who has died.A. A limerickB- A sonnetG An epitaphIX An elegy12. The refers to a type ofwhich exaggerates one or more aspects ofhurnun ruxure and preaentn them in a non-rrMlistic way.A Thentrc of the Absurd, playK mytery playC Bonncte poemD. myth, novel13. Whm figures of upccch lire used in the followinK iinea?Now i rhe time to make real the promines of democracy Now is the time to rine from the dark and desolate valley of segregation to the sunlit path of raciAl justice. Now in the time to lift our nation from the quick sands of racial injustice to the solid rock of brotherhood.”A. Irony nirnileB. ParAllelini metaphorC Simile# punD. Personificationt pun14. All the following were Awarded the Nobel Prize (or Literature exceptA. Harold PinterB. William GoldingC. Sherwood AnderaonD. Ernest Hemingway15 I have a dream that one day this nation will rie up and live out the true mooning of iu erredi We hold thciie truth to be nclfcvidcnt that all men are created cquaL This in n quote from n farnouH speech byA. Hawaharloi NehruB. Martin Luther KingC Abraham LincolnD. Thoma* JeffersonPrt 0 Reading Comprehension 50 pointsRead the texts 13 and choose the best annwer to each question.Text )Proctort I am only wondering how I may prove what nhe told me U the girl1* Mint nowt I think it not easy to prove ahe9B a fraud* and the town Rone no ,ily. She told it to me in room alone I have no proof of it*EhxAbethi You were alone with her?Proctor Stubbornly) i For a moment alonet aye.Elisabeth: Why. thent it is not as you told me.Proctor (hn angrr ruing) ( For n morncnt 1 say. The others comr in soon after.Elizabeth (quietly she has tuddenly loit all faith tn him ) t Do a、you wih then, (i/ir xtarli to turn).Proctor: Womm (SAe turns to him. ) Til not have your suspicion ony more.Elisabeth (a little loftily) i I have no Proctori Ill not hve it!Elunbeth: Then let you not earn it.Proctor with a violent undertone) i You doubt me yet?Elizabeth with a smile, to keep her dignity): John, if it were not Abigail that youmust go to hurt would you filter now? 1 think not.Proctorj Now look you 一Elizabethi I see what I see, John.Proctor with solemn warning) You will not judge me morc Elizabeth. I have good rranon to think before I charge fraud on Abigail# und I will think on it. Let you look to your own improvement before you ro to judfte your buMbnnd any more. 1 have forgot Abigail, and Elizabethi And LProctor:Spare me! You forget nothinf and forgive nothin Learn charily, woman. 1 have gone tiptoe in this house all seven month since she is gone. I have not moved from there to there without 1 think to plrAnc yout and till nn everlnsting (unernl marches round your heart. ! cannot upeak but I urn doubted r.vcry moment judged for hes# as though 1 come into o court when 1 come into this house!Elizabeth John, you are not open with me. You maw her with a crowd# you mid. Now you Proctort Pl! plead my honesty no more* Eliawibcth.Elixabeth (now sAr would justify herselfJohn. I am only Proctori No more! 1 uhould hnve nwirrtl you down when GrM you told me your miMpinon. But I willed . nruL like n ChriMiant I conferscd ConfcRiuxi! Surur drern I Imd muM hove rnuitakcti you for (hx you1 re not n- run.Elixahcthi I(io not JucIkc you. The inAgiMnttc 前抽 in your IkMrt that yg J never ihonght you but a gtxxl trviru John(uil/i a imi/r ) -only x)nirwlmt bcwildrreiLProctor (laughing bitterly) t Oh# Elizabeth your junher would freexc beer!QuenUons 1619 (12 poinh)16. From the extrnct it in clrnr thtA. the man and the warnon have lost their jobs due to InwBuitH there in a grcj)i tension between the mnn nnd the- wornnnC( Abigail doesnt wnnt to nccunr Elitubrth of wiichcralti19 Eltmbrth portrayed an A. guilty nnd depressed& scldingustcd and rerrifiedC. insistent nnd Ufipiciau5Text 2Ralph looked at him (the officer) dumbly. For a moment hr had a fleeting picture of the sirnnfte glomour thnr had once invEed the bunches. Hut the inlnnd wn scorched up like dead woodSimon wam dc/idnnd Jack hud The tears began to flow and obs shixik him. He gave himself up to them now fur the first time on the inlandi grc/it shuddering,呻心 of grief that seemed to wrench his whole body. His voice rone under the blnck smoke before the burning wreckage of the ialandi and infected by that emotion# the other little boys began lo a hake and sob too. And in the middle of thorn, with filthy body, matted hiiir. and unwiprd noAOe Ralph wept for the end of innocence the darkneM of man f a heart* and the (nil through the air of the (ruct wise friend called Pigy.The officeri nurroundcd by thene noise wah moved nnd a little embarraated. He turned *wy to (ive them time to (Question 22 ) pull thctnxelvcs together; and waitedt allowing his eyes to refit on the trim cruiser in the dintance.Questions 2022 (9 points)20. From which novel it the extract taken?A. Lord of the F7如.B. A Chriilmai Carol.C Grtal Expectations.21. Which o( the following niatements aummanics the scene described in the extract?A. Rnlph broke down. He and the boys wept and cried together at the sight o( the officer*H. Rnlph gave up fightings He ond the boyt cried at the new-found pcacecoruiiind.I stand And look t (hem long and long*Hey do imH nd whine 10眼 their condition ?They do not He Mwnkc In the dnrk nnd weep for their lnn.!hcy do not make me tick discussing their duty to God.Not one is dissatisfied9 not one is demented with the mania of owning thingsNot one kneels to another nor to his kind that lived thousands of yearn ago#Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth.So they nhow their rclntions to me nnd I accept them.They bring me tokens o( mymM. they evince them plainly in their posBesnion.Picking out here one that ! lovet and now go with him on brotherly terms.A gigiintic beauty of stallion frenh and responsive to my careasca9Head high in the forehead wide between the ears*LimbR Klonay nnd nupplct tail duiting the ground.Eyen full of sparkling wickedneaai ears finely cut. flexibly moving.Hib noatrila dilate as my heels embrace him His wclbbuilt limbs tremble with plensure as we race Around nnd return.I but use you minute, then I resign you. utallion.Why do I need your paces when I myself ourxatlop them?Even as I stund or sit passing faster than you.(Song of Myjr/)Qucstionv 2325 (9 points)23. The poem can be categorized as.A. a sonnetEL a free verseC ballad24. Which of the following can be mid of the underlined lines in Btanxa 1?A. The parallel lines rcinforcea the differences between animah and humans.B. The parallel line* reinforces the similnritie!i between inimnlM and humAns.C. The parallel lines stresses the writer1 a respect for the innocence of mankind.25. Which of the following is the messnge Whitman in conveyiriR?A. People should love animal* and respect nAture the Wnterst the I)unri5 little Keogh the cripple hc and her brothers and nistcrs Ernest however, never plnycdi he wn-i too grown up. Her fnthcr tixcd altrn to hunt them in out of the (ickl with hm blackthorn Nticki but ununlly little Keogh iiMcd to keep nrx and cull ou! when hr shw her frtthrr rcHningt Still they Neernrd to hnve been rnther happy then. Her lather wan not z bad thcni and bcRtdcf her mother wn# alive That wtrn a long time agoi he nnd her brothers and nistcrM were nil grown upi hrr moi her was dend. Tixjjic Dunn whm dead. tao. And the Wntern had gone bark to Enxlimd. Everything chntixm Now nhe waj going to f;o nwHy like the othernt to leave her home,llornr! Shr locikc cprcia|y whenever there were people listening.HiIL don11 you re thrMt ladies Arc wniting?Look lively Miss Hill# pleoe.Shr would not cry many “w nt kaving the Stores.Hut in hrr new hornet in a ditunt unknown country t it would not be like thnt. Thni .hr would be married she. Eveline. People would I rent het with rciprct then. She would not be treated its her mother hud been. Even now. though she wa over nineteent !he sometimes felt herself in danger of her father *s violence. She knew it was that that had given her the palpitations. When they were growing up he had never gone for her. like he used to go for Harry and Ernest because sihe was a girh but latterly he had begun to threaten her and sny whnt he would do to her only for her dead mother s 5ke And now she had nobody to protect her. Ernest was dead and Harry who wa in the church decorating business wag nearly always down somewhere in the country. Besides the invariable squabble for money on Saturday nights had begun to weary her urspeokably. She always gave her entire wnges seven ahillingaand Harry nlwayn sent up what he could but the trouble was to get any money from her father. He said she used to squander the monry that she hod no hold, ihn! he wnsn11 going to give her hia hard-earned money to throw about thr rem. and much mare, (or he was UAunlly fairly bad on Saturday night. In the end hr would give her the money and mk her had she any intention of buying Sunday dinner. Then she had to rush out os quickly am she could and do her marketing, holding her block leather purse tightly in her hand as she elbowed her way through the crowd!* and returning home Into under her load oi provisions. She had hard work to keep the house together and to see that the two youngchildren who had been left to her charge went to school regularly and got their meals regularly. It was hard worka hard lifebut now that she was about to leave it she did not find it a wholly undesirable life*She was about to explore another life with Frank. Frank was very kind, manly open- hearted. She was to go away with him by the night-boat to be his wife and to live with him in Buenos Ayres where he had b home waiting for hen How well she remembered the first time she had seen him: he was lodging in a house on the main road where she used to visit. It seemed n few weeks ago. Hr was standing at the gatet his peaked cap pushed back on his head and his hair tumbled forward over a face of bronze. Then they had come to know each other. He used to meet her outside the Stores every evening and sec her home. He took her to see The Bohemian Girl and she felt elated as she sat in an unaccustomed part of rhe theatre with hnu He was awfully fond of music and sang a little. People knew that they were courting and when he ang about the lass that loves a sailor she always felt pleasantly confused. He used to call her Poppens out of fun First of all it had been an excitement for her to have a fellow and then she had begun to like him. He had tAles of distant countries. He had started as n deck boy at a pound a month on a ship of the Allan Line going out to Canada He told her rhe names of the ships he had been on and the names of the different services He had sailed through the Straits of Magellan and he told her stories of the terrible Patagonians. He hnd fallen on his feel in Buenos Ayres he said, and had come over to the old country just for a holiday. Of coursc her father had found out the affair and had ilive they had all gone for n picnic to the Hill of Howth. She remembered her father putting on her mothers bonnet to make the children Iru堆h.Her time wan running out but whe continued to it by the window. IcnninR her htnd ngftinMt the window curfnine inhnhng the odour of dusty cretonne Down far in the uvenue she could hear a street orgwn pinyin. She knew the am StrnnKr thnt it uhould come that very nihf to remind her of the promise he muRed the pitiful vision of her mother9a life laid its upell on the very quick o( her bring*-tha! life of commonplace Mcriftcc closiritf in finnl craxincBAe She trembled as hc heard ngm her mother,voice aayinK conatanlly with fooltiih insintenceiDcrevaun SerMun! Derevaun SeraunlShe tood up in a sudden impulse of terror Escape! She must escape! Prank would save hen lie would give her HGs perhapti lovet too. But nhe wanted to live. Why should she he unhnppy? She had a right to hnppineA Frank would tnkc her in his arrnHe (old her in his armn He would avc her.Shr atood among the nwaying crowd in the utation At the North WnlL He held her hand nd she knew that hr wan speakin to her. Myinx sonicihing about lhe pmm好 over and over agnin. The utation wan (nil of noldicra with brown buxgAge乳 Through the wide doora of the nheds ahe caught a iflimpse of the black ol the honf. lying in bcsiide the quay walk with illumined portholen. She nnnwered nothings She (ch her cheek pale and cold tind out of a mnxe of diatressf hc prayed tu God to direct h She act her white (nee to him pgNVE like a hrlpIcM wnirniiL Her eyc! gnvc htrn no ngn of love or furcwcll or recognitionQuesliofi* 2629 (20 points)26. What rc Eveline91 reawntf for wonting (o leiive? Give t Icost two rensoriM in yournnNWE27. Why in your opinion does Eveline noi join Frunk?28. Which (he feature o( time ntructure of thi story? The action proccrtlf* ns in renl time or Urtn a point in the recent puss or fhifta hnck and forth between different time tones?29. How docn the time structure of the story help reflect the feeliriK of Eveline?Part IQ Writing 20 Poiou30. SuppiMC you nrc n friend of Evelines. Write her n letter (about 150 wonk) In which you urge her to leaveor to my.试题答案及评分标准(仅供参考)Part I Literary Fundamentals 30 pointsSection L Match (he writers with their works (2 points each)1. D2. H3. F4. A5.Section 2. Decide whether the followltiR stutcmcnU arc True (T ) or False (F) (2 points each)6. F7.T8. T9. F10. FSection 3. Chooe the correct answer to complete the following lentcncci (2 points each)11- D12e A13. B14. C15. BPart I Reading Comprehension 50 pointsTexU 13 (30pointav3poinU meh)20. A25. B16. B17. A18. A19. C21. A22, B23. B.24. AText 4 (20 points) 5 points each for qucstlono 2629. Ideas most be correct. Wording can be dilTercnU Points should be given when Ideas are dmilar or stand to reason. Every 5 mistakes in grammar 9 spelling or of any other kind will lcd to the reduction of one point.26. Award 5 points for ANY TWO of (he following:a. She had to do endless housework.b. She Buffered from her father violent behaviourc She had to try and mnke do with the little money sh
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