单选题 Few modern travel writers excite more hostility and awe than Sir Wilfred Thesiger, who died in 2003. Despising the "drab uniformity of the modern world", Sir Wilfred slogged across Africa and Asia, especially Arabia, on animals and on foot, immersing himself in tribal societies. He delighted in killing-lions in Sudan in the years before the second world war, Germans and Italians during it. He disliked "soft" living and "intrusive" women and revered murderous savages, to whom be gave guns. He thought educating the working classes a waste of good servants. He kicked his dog. His journeys were more notable as feats of masochistic endurance than as exploration. Yet his first two books, Arabian Sands, about his crossing of the Empty Quarter, and The Marsh Arabs, about southern Iraq, have a terse brilliance about them. As records of ancient cultures on the point of oblivion, they are unrivalled.
Sir Wilfred's critics invariably sing the same chorus. They accuse him of hypocrisy, noting that his part-time primitive lifestyle required a private income and good connections to obtain travel permits. They argue that he deluded himself about the motives of his adored tribal companions. In Kenya, where he lived for two decades towards the end of his life, his Samburu "sons" are calculated to have fleeced him of at least $ 1m. Homosexuality, latent or otherwise, explains him, they conclude, pointing to the photographs he took of beautiful youths.
This may all be true, but it does not diminish his achievements. Moreover, he admits as much himself in his autobiography and elsewhere, in 1938, before his main travels, for example, Sir Wilfred wrote of his efforts to adopt foreign ways:" I don't delude myself that I succeed but I get my interest and pleasure trying."
In this authorised biography, Alexander Maitland adds a little colour to the picture, but no important details. He describes the beatings the explorer suffered at his first boarding school. Quoting from Sir Wilfred's letters, he traces the craggy traveler's devotion to his dead father, his mother and three brothers. At times, Sir Wilfred sounds more forgiving, especially of friends, and more playful than his reputation has suggested. As for his sexuality, Mr. Maitland refers coyly to occasional "furtive embraces", presumably with men. Wearisome as this topic has become, Mr. Maitland achieves nothing by skirting it; and his allusion to Sir Wilfred's "almost too precious" relationship with his mother is annoyingly vague.
There may be a reason why Mr. Maitland struggles for critical distance. He writes that he and Sir Wilfred were long-standing friends, but he fails to mention that he collaborated with the explorer on four of his books and later inherited his London flat. If Mr. Maitland found it so difficult to view his late friend and benefactor objectively, then perhaps he should not have tried. An earlier biography by Michael Asher, who scoured the deserts to track down Sir Wilfred's former fellow travellers, was better; Mr. Maitland seems to have interviewed almost nobody black or brown.
His book is, however, a useful companion to the explorer's autobiography, The Life of My Choice. Hopefully, it will also refer readers back to Sir Wilfred's two great books, and to sentences as lovely as this:" Memories of that first visit to the Marshes have never left me: firelight on a half-turned face, the crying of geese, duck flighting in to feed, a boy's voice singing somewhere in the dark, canoes moving in procession down a waterway, the setting sun seen crimson through the smoke of burning reed-beds, narrow waterways that wound still deeper into the Marshes./

单选题 Which of the following is TRUE of Sir Wilfred Thesiger?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】细节题。题干中出现丁关键词Sir Wilfred Thesiger,因为本题是第一题,故直接定位至首段。第二句明确指出:威福瑞爵士厌恶这个“单一乏味的现代世界”,其结果是“他或借助兽力或徒步,长途跋涉,穿越非洲和亚洲…完全将自己沉浸在了部落社会中”,可见他向往原始生活,[D]是答案。第三句提到:他住在苏丹,喜欢捕猎狮子。此处没有提及其他动物[A]与原文不符。第四句指出:他讨厌“温和”的生活,憎恶“不安本分”的女人,但不喜欢不安分的女人不等于说他喜欢安分的女人,[B]为过度推断,排除。第五句指出:在他看来,让工人阶级受教育无异于优秀奴仆人才的浪费。显然[C]与原文矛盾。
单选题 Sir Wilfred Thesiger's behavior has called forth some criticism partly because
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】细节题。由题干中的criticism定位至第二段,此处criticism与首句中的critics属于同一语义场。第二句指出批评者对Wilfred的看法:批判威福瑞的人指责他是伪君子,说他的半原始生活方式少不了私人收入支持,而且要想获得旅行批准,他还得处理好人际关系。显然这些人认为Wilfred言行不一致,[A]为答案。第三句指出:他们坚持认为,威福瑞说自己旅行的动机是仰慕部落社会里的同伴,这是自欺欺人。[D]属于断章取义,Wilfred自己声称是如此,但事实并非如此。第四句指出:威福瑞晚年曾在肯尼亚生活了20年,据估算,他在桑姆布鲁部落认养的几个“儿子”至少从他那里骗取了100万美元。[B]是文章提到的事实,但并非批评家批评Wilfred的原因,属于张冠李戴,排除。[C]与原文矛盾,为干扰项。
单选题 How does Sir Wilfred respond to the critics?
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】推断题。由题干中的关键词critics定位至第三段。首句是过渡句,引出第二句中Sir Wilfred对批评家们对他批评的反应:he admits as much himself in his autobiography and elsewhere。从第三句的具体解释“比如,他曾写到,1938年在一系列重要旅程开始前利用过外交途径,‘到底成功与否,我不想欺骗自己,但是趣味和快乐终究来之不易。’” 可知,此处是说Wilfred承认一些事实,但这不等同于他认为那些批评很有道理,排除[B],只是没有为自己辩解而已,[C]符合文意。[A]未提及,排除。[D]是对adopt foreign ways(利用过外交途径)的曲解,排除。
单选题 In Alexander Maitland's writing, Sir Wilfred Thesiger is all but
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】细节题。由题干中的Alexander Maitland定位至第四段。第三句提到:这位经历坎坷不平的旅行者热爱自己去世的父亲、母亲还有三个兄弟,[A]符合文意。第四句指出:威福瑞有的时候似乎要比传言中说的更为宽容,尤其是对朋友,而且也更为顽皮。[B]和[D]符合文意,只有[C]未提及,故为答案。
单选题 Which of tile following is mentioned in Alexander Maitland's. writing?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】细节题。由Alexander Maitland定位至第四、五段。第四段第二句指出:书中记述了这位探险家最初上寄宿学校时曾经遭受的责打。此处说的是school life,并非college life,排除[A]。第五段第二句指出:他在书中说和威福瑞是多年好友,却对曾与这位探险家合作出版四本书以及后来继承他在伦敦的一处寓所一事只字未提。[B]符合文意,故为答案,排除[D]。末句指出:在梅特兰之前也有一篇威福瑞的传记,写得相对就好一些。作者是迈克尔·阿舍,他曾到沙漠中四处寻觅威福瑞以前的旅行同伴,而梅特兰却好象几乎完全是闭门造车。这里采访Wilfred以前旅伴的是Asher不是Maitland,排除[C]。