填空题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
The following paragraphs are given in a
wrong order. For Questions 41-45, you are required to reorganize these
paragraphs into a coherent text by choosing from the list A-G to fill in each
numbered box. The first and the last paragraphs have been placed for you in
Boxes. Mark your answers on ANSER SHEET 1.
[A] In 1849 gold was discovered in California in the mountains
near San Francisco. So started the famous Gold Rush of the 49ers across the
vast, unexplored wilderness that lay west of the Mississippi. Whole families
perished. One small group of 49ers, looking for a short cut across the Sierra
Nevada Mountains, happened to enter the infamous Death Valley. It was lucky for
them it was winter, for in summer Death Valley is about the hottest and most
desolate place on earth. As it was, one of the group died of thirst, and it was
the 49ers who gave the valley its grim name.
[B] The completion
of the railroad not only joined the cities of the east with California, it also
brought prosperity to the isolated farmers of the plains, and to the ranchers
who were now able to send their cattle to the slaughterhouses in freight cars.
In fact, the new railroad became an essential life-line for a nation which now
stretched 3000 miles from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans.
[C] As late as the 1880s a man in the Far west could be hanged for
stealing a horse, yet get no more than five years in jail for robbing a bank.
Ever since the pioneers went west into the unknown, they depended absolutely on
their horses and their guns. If a man lost his horse or his gun in the deserts,
mountains or forests of Nevada, Arizona and eastern California, he stood no
chance. Hunger, thirst, a grizzly bear, a mountain lion, or hostile Indians
would finish him off sooner or later. A frontiers man had to be tough, brave and
resourceful in those days.
[D] The colonization of the West was
given a tremendous impetus by the building of the Transcontinental railroad, one
of the great engineering feats of all time. Congress decided that the laying of
the tracks should begin from the East and the West at the same time. So the
building of this railroad lined with poles for the first east-west telegraph
system, developed into a race. The Easterners, moving across the plains,
progressed faster, for they did not have to tunnel through giant mountains or
bridge gaping canyons. The two railroads linked up in Utah on July 10th, 1867.
There was great excitement, and a special ceremony to mark the
occasion.
[E] Deserts, mountains and forests are still the
frontier between teeming Californian cities and the sparsely populated
wilderness of Nevada and eastern California. Even today, Nevada has hardly more
than 500 thousand inhabitants, most of whom live in the cities of Las Vegas and
Reno.
[F] Later, in 1865, after the Civil War, disillusioned
soldiers, unable to find work, followed in the footsteps of the 49ers. They did
not find much gold, but they found rich pastures for cattle. It was they who
founded the USA's great food industry, and they worked with the vigor and
courage of the early pioneers and with a faith fortified by the Bible.
[G] Some Americans feel that the frontier spirit no longer exists in the
USA. But it expressed itself in a number of ways. Americans do not like being
without work, and they will travel hundreds of miles in search of a job, showing
a courage and an enterprise which is un-usual in most of the older European
countries. Then there is the exploration of outer space. President John Kennedy
in a speech to the nation, spoke of this "New Frontier." The frontier spirit
certainly played a part in putting the first men on the noon, the most recent of
all frontiers to be crossed.