单选题
My first day as an escort, my first "date" had only
one leg. He'd gone to a gay bathhouse, to get warm, he told me. Maybe for other
things, I think. And he'd fallen asleep in the steam room, too close to the
heating clement. He'd been unconscious for hours until some one found him. Until
the meat of his left thigh was completely and thoroughly cooked. He couldn't
walk. but his mother was coming, from Wisconsin to see him, and the hospice
needed someone to cart the two of them around to visit the local tourist sights.
Go shopping downtown. See the beach. This is all you could do as a volunteer if
you weren't a nurse or a cook or a doctor. You were an escort,
and this was the place where young people with no insurance went to die. The
hospice name, I don't even remember. It wasn't on any signs anywhere, and they
asked you to be discreet coming and going because the neighbors didn't know what
was going on in the enormous old house on their street, a street with its share
of crack houses and drive-by shootings, still nobody wanted to live next door to
this: four people dying in the living room, two in the dining room. At least two
people lay dying in each utpstairs bedroom and there were a lot of bedrooms. At
least half these people had AIDS, but the house didn't discriminate. You could
come here and die of anything. The reason I was there was my
job. This meant laying on my back on a creeper with a 200-pound class 8 diesel
truck driveline laying on my chest and running down between my legs as far as my
feet. My job is I had to roll under trucks as they crept down an assembly line,
and I installed these drivelines. Twenty-six drivelines every eight hours.
Working fast as each truck moved along, pulling me into the huge blazing hot
paint ovens just a few feet down the line. My degree in
Journalism couldn't get me more than five dollars an hour. Other guys in the
shop had the same degree, and we joked how liberal arts degrees should include
welding skills so you'd at least pick up the extra two bucks an hour our shop
paid grunts who could weld. Someone invited me to their church, and I was
desperate enough to go, and at the church they had a potted ficus they called a
Giving Tree, decorated with paper ornaments, each ornament printed with a good
deed you could choose. My ornament said: Take a hospice patient on a
date. That was their word, "date". And there was a phone
number. I took the man with one leg, and his mother, all over
the area, to scenic viewpoints, to museums, his wheel chair folded up in the
back of my fifteen-year-old Mercury Bobcat. His mother smoking, silent. Her son
was thirty years old, and she had two weeks of vacation. At night, I'd take her
back to her Travel Lodge next to the freeway, and she'd smoke, sitting on the
hood of my car, talking about her son already in the past tense. He could play
the piano, she said. In school, he earned a degree in music, but ended up
demonstrating electric organs in shopping mall stores. These
were conversations after we had no emotions left. I was
twenty-five years old, and the next day I was back under trucks with maybe three
or four hours sleep. Only now my own problems didn't seem very bad, Just looking
at my hands and feet, marveling at the weight I could lift, the way I could
shout against the pneumatic roar of the shop, my whole life felt like a miracle
instead of a mistake. In two weeks, the mother was gone home.
In another three months, her son was gone. Dead, gone. I drove
people with cancer to see the ocean for their last time. I drove people with
AIDS to the top of Mount Hood so they could see the whole world while there was
still time. I sat bedside while the nurse told me what to look
for at the moment of death, the gasping and unconscious struggle of someone
drowning in their sleep as renal failure filled their lungs with water. The
monitor would beep every five or ten seconds as it injected morphine into the
patient. The patient's eyes would roll back, bulging and entirely white. You
held their cold hand for hours, until another escort came to the rescue or until
it didn't matter.
单选题
The author's duty was to help the man and his mother
A. prepare meals.
B. give medical care.
C. visit tourist sights.
D. as a nurse.
【正确答案】
C
【答案解析】细节题。由题下可以将本题定位在文章的第一段:“He couldn't walk, but his mother was coming from Wisconsin to see him, and the hospice needed someone to cart the two of them around to visit the local tourist sights.”他不能行走,他母亲从Wisconsin过来看望他,医院需要一个人来陪着他们到处走走,看看当地的风景名胜。而“我”正是这样一个人。选项[C]是“陪他们参观名胜”,与文意相符合,为正确选项。
[避错] 选项[A]“准备饭菜”;选项[B]“给予医疗帮助”;选项[D]“当护士”,都与文意相违背,排除。
单选题
According to the author, what can we infer from the passage?
A. The young man might have AIDS.
B. The young man is a homosexual.
C. The young man had many friends.
D. The young man had a miserable life.
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】推断题。在文章的第一段中作者说:“He'd gone to a gay bathhouse, to get warm, he told me. Maybe for other things”,他去了一家同性恋澡堂.说是为了取暖,但是作者却认为他是为了别的而去。这里暗示我们,他既不是为了取暖,那就是为了不可言说的口的,即他可能是同性恋。选项[B]是“他是一个同性恋”,是最有可能推测出来的答案。
[避错] 选项[A]“他可能患有艾滋病”,文中未提及,所以该选项错误;选项[C]“他有很多朋友”,文中找不到相应的依据;选项[D]“他的一生很悲惨”,文中只是说他早逝,并没有说他一生都过得很悲惨。
单选题
What did the author do before he went to the church?
A. Installing drivelines.
B. Working as a creeper.
C. Working as a journalist.
D. Welding for a shop.
【正确答案】
A
【答案解析】细节题。在文章的第三段可以找到相应的内容。文章第三段说:“My job is I had to roll under truchs as they crept down an assembly line, and I installed these drivelines.”这里明确说道“我”是安装管道的。选项[A]是“安装管道”,符合文意。
[避错] 选项[B]“做攀爬工作”;选项[C]“是一个记者”;选项[D]“是一个焊工”,作者说的是工作的时候要攀爬,而在学校里拿的学位是新闻专业的,自我解嘲称自己应该学电焊,都属于断章取义,全部排除。
单选题
Why did the author want to go to the church?
A. Because he was unsatisfied with his life.
B. Because he wanted to help others.
C. Because of a potted ficus.
D. Because of an ornament.
【正确答案】
A
【答案解析】细节题。由题干可以将本题定位在文章的第四段。在主章的前几段作者在对自己的工作抱怨了一通 之后,说:“Someone invited me to their church, and I was desperate enough to go”,有人邀请我去他们教堂,我迫不及待。从这里可以看出,作者之所以去,是因为对自己的工作、生活非常不满。选项[A]是“他对自己的生活不满意”,符合文意,所以该选项为正确答案。
[避错] 选项[B]“因为他想帮助别人”,文中没有提到他想帮助别人,该选项排除;选项[C]“因为一棵热带树”,选项[D]“因为一个小饰物”,这都是他去了教堂以后才看到的,而不是他去教常的原因所在,排除。
单选题
What can we know about the hospice that the author worked in?
A. Nobody wanted to live in it.
B. Many young people were going to die there.
C. It had no name and no signs.
D. Nobody wanted to know what's going on in it.
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】推断题。由题干中的hospice可以将本题定位在文章的第一段:“The hospice name, I don't even remember…”,作者不记得名字,也没有人知道里面到底在做什么,“nobody wanted to live next door to this: four people dying in the living room, two in the dining room. At least, two people lay dying in each utpstairs bedroom and there were a lot of bedrooms”,没有人愿意住在隔壁,因为很多(身患绝症的)年轻人在这里等死。选项[B]是“许多年轻人在里面等死”,符合文意,为正确答案。
[避错] 选项[A]“没有人想在里面住”,文中没有提到;选项[C]“它没有名字也没有标志”,文中找不到相应的依据;选项[D]“没有人想知道里面在做什么”,而文国说的是没有人知道里面在做什么。