Grammar American & British

Sunday, July 10, 2022

2 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question

 2 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question

The Critical Reading Question

Exercise B

This exercise provides you with a mixture of reading passages similar in variety to what you will encounter on the SAT . Answer all questions on thje basis of what is [ stated ] or [ implied ] in the passages .

            The best Eskimo carvings of all ages seem to possess a powerful ability to reach across the great barriers of language and time and communicate directly with us . The more we look at these carvings , the more life we perceive hidden within them . We discover subtle living forms of the animal , human , and mystical world . These arctic carvings are not the cold sculptures of a frozen world . Instead , they reveal to us the passionate feelings of a vital people well aware of all the joys , terrors , tranquility , and wildness of life around them .  

            Eskimo carvers are people moved by dreams . In spite of all their new contacts with the outsiders , they are still concerned with their own kind of mystical imagery . The most skillful carvers possess a bold confidence , a direct approach to their art that has a freedom unsullied by any kind of formalized training . Eskimo carvers have strong , skilled hands , used to forcing hard materials with their simple tools . Their hunting life and the northern environment invigorates them . Bad weather often imposes a special kind of leisure , giving them time in which to perfect their carvings .

            They are among the last of the hunting societies that have retained some part of the keen sense of observation that we have so long forgotten . The carvers are also butchers of meat , and therefore masters in the understanding of animal anatomy . Flesh and bones and sheaths of muscle seem to move in their works . They show us how to drive the caribou , how to hold a child , how to walk cautiously on thin ice . Through their eyes we understand the dangerous power of a polar bear . In the very best of Eskimo art we seevibrant animal and human forms that stand quietly or tensely , strongly radiating a sense f life . We can see , and even feel with our hands , the cold sleekness of seals , the bulking weight of walrus , the icy swiftness of trout , the flowing rhythm in a flight of geese. In their art we catch brief glimpses of a people who have long possessed a very different approach to the whole question of life and death .

            In Eskimo art there is much evidence of humor which the carvers havce in abundance . Some of the carvings are caricatures of themselves , of ourselves , and of situations , or records of ancient legends . Their laughter may be subtle , or broad and Chaucerian .

            Perhaps no one can accurately define the right way or wrong way to create a carving . Each carver must follow his own way , in his own time . Technique in itself is meaningless unless it serves to express content . According to the Eskimo , the best carvings possess a sense of movement that seems to come from within the material itself , a feeling of tension , a living excitement .

1 . The author is primarily concerned with   

(A) showing how Eskimo carvings achieve their effects

(B) describing how Eskimo artists resist the influence of outsiders

(C) discussing the significant characteristics of Eskimo art

(D) explaining how Eskimo carvers use their strength to manipulate hard materials

(E) interpreting the symbolism of Eskimo art

2 . The author’s attitude toward Eskimo art is one of

(A) condescension (B) awe (C) admiration (D) regret (E) bewilderment

3 . With which of the following statements would the author most likely agree ?

(A) formal training may often destroy an artist’s originality .

(B) Artists should learn their craft by studying the work of experts .

(C) The content of a work of art is insignificant .

(D) Caricatures have no place in serious art .

(E) Eskimo art is interesting more as an expression of a life view than as serious art form .

4 . The author gives examples of the subjects of Eskimo carvings primarily to

(A) show that they have o relevance to modern life

(B) indicate the artist’s lack of imagination

(C) imply that other artists have imitates them

(D) prove that the artists’ limited experience of life has been a handicap

(E) suggest the quality and variety of the work

5 . According to the passage , Eskimo carvings have all the following EXCEPT

(A) wit (B) subtlety (C) emotional depth (D) stylistic uniformity (E) anatomical accuracy

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            Charlotte Stanhope was at this time about thirty-five years old ; and , whatever may have been her faults , she had none of those which belong to old young ladies . She neither dressed young , nor talked young , nor indeed looked young . She appeared to be perfectly content with her time of life , and in no way affected the graces of youth . She was a fine young woman ; and had she been a man , would have been a fine young man . All that was done in the house , and was not done by servants , was done by her . She gave the orders , paid the bills , hired and dismissed the domestics , made the tea , carved the meat , and managed everything in the Stanhope household . She , and she alone , could ever induce her father to look into the state of his worldly concerns . She , and she alone , could in any degree control the absurdities of her sister . She , and she alone , prevented the whole family from falling into utter disrepute and beggary . It was by her advice that they now found themselves very unpleasantly situated in Barchester .

            So far , the character of Charlotte Stanhope is not unprepossessing . But it remains to be said , that the influence which she had in her family , though it had been used to a certain extent for their worldly well-being , had not been used to their real benefit , as it might have been . She had aided her father in his indifference to his professional duties , counseling him that his livings were as much his individual property as the estates of his elder brother were the property of that worthy peer . She had for years past stifled every little rising wish for a return to England which the reverend doctor had from time to time expressed . She had encouraged her mother in her idleness in order that she herself might be mistress and manager of the Stanhope household . She had encouraged and fostered the follies of her sister , though she was always willing , and often able , to protect her from their probable result . She had done her best , and had thoroughly succeeded in spoiling her brother , and turning him loose upon the world n idle man without a profession , and without a shilling that he could call his own .

            Miss Stanhope was a clever woman , able to talk on most subjects , and quite indifferent as to what the subject was . She prided herself on her freedom from English prejudice , and she might have added , from feminine delicacy . On religion she was a pure freethinker , and with much want of true affection , delighted to throw out her own views before she troubled mind of her father . To have shaken what remained of his Church of England faith would have gratified her much , but the idea of his abandoning his preferment in the church had never once presented itself to her mind . How could he indeed , when he had no income from any other source ?

6 . The passage as a whole is best characterized as

(A) a description of the members of a family

(B) a portrait of a young woman’s moral and intellectual temperament

(C) an illustration of the evils of egotism

(D) an analysis of family dynamics in aristocratic society

(E) a contrast between a virtuous daughter and her disreputable family

7 . The tone of the passage is best described as

(A) self-righteous and moralistic

(B) satirical and candid

(C) sympathetic and sentimental

(D) bitter and disillusioned

(E) indifferent and unfeeling

8 . On the basis of the passage , which of the following statements about Dr. Stanhope can most logically be made ?

(A) He is even more indolent than his wife .

(B) He resents having surrendered his authority to his daughter .

(C) He feels remorse for his professional misconduct

(D) He has little left of his initial religious beliefs .

(E) He has disinherited his son without a shilling .

9 . It can be inferred from the passage that Charlotte’s mother ( the underlined lines in paragraph two ) is which of the following ?

I . An affectionate wife and mother

II . A model of the domestic arts

III . A woman of un assertive character 

(A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) I and III only (E) II and III only

10 . The passage suggests that Charlotte possesses all of the following characteristics EXCEPT

(A) an inappropriate flirtatiousness

(B) a lack of reverence

(C) a materialistic nature

(D) a managing disposition

(E) a touch of coarseness

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The following passage on the nature of the surface of the earth is taken from a basic geology text .

            Of the 197 million square miles making up the surface of the globe , 71 percent is covered by interconnecting bodies of marine water ; the Pacific Ocean alone covers half the earth and averages near 14,000 feet in depth . The continents -- Eurasia , Africa , North America , South America , Australia , and Antarctica -- are the portions of the continental masses rising above sea level . The submerged borders of the continental masses are the continental shelves , beyond which lie the deep-sea basins .

            The oceans attain their greatest depths not in their central parts , but in certain elongated furrows , or long narrow troughs , called deeps . These profound troughs have a peripheral arrangements , notably around the borders of the Pacific and Indian oceans . The position of the deeps near the continental masses suggests that the deeps , like the highest mountains , are of recent origin , since otherwise they would have been filled with waste from the lands . This suggestion is strengthened by the fact that the deeps are frequently the sites of world-shaking earthquakes . For example , the “tidal wave” that in April , 1946 , cused widespread destruction alongt Pacific coasts resulted from a strong earthquake on the floor of the Aleutian Deep .

            The ropography of the ocean floors is none too well known , since in great areas the available soundings are hundreds or even thousands of miles apart. However , the floor of the At is becoming fairly well known as a result of special surveys since 1920 . A broad , well-defined ridge - the mid-Atlantic ridge -- runs north and south between Africa and the two Americas , and numerous other major irregularities diversify the Atlantic floor . Closely spaced soundings show that many parts of the oceanic floors are as rugged as mountainous regions of the continents . Use of the recently perfected method of echo sounding is rapidly enlarging our knowledge of submarine topography . During World War II great strides were made in mapping submarine surfaces , particularly in many parts of the vast Pacific basin .

            The continents stand on the average 2870 feet --slightly more than half a mile -- abpve sea level . North America averages 2300 feet ; Europe averages only 1150 feet ; and Asia , the highest of the larger continental subdivisions , averages 3200 feet . The highest point on the globe , Mount Everest in the Himalayas , is 29 , 000 feet above the sea ; and as the greatest known depth in the sea is over 35,000 feet , the maximum relief ( that is , the difference in altitude between the lowest and highest points ) exceeds 64,ooo feet , or ecceeds 12 miles . The continental masses and the deep-sea basins are relief features of the first order ; the deeps , the ridges , and volcanic cones that diversify the sea floor , as well as the plains , plateaus , and mountains of the continents , are relief features of the second order . The lands are unendingly subject to a complex of activities summarized in the term erosion , which first sculptures them in great detail and then tends to reduce them ultimately to sealevel . The modeling of the landcape by weather , running water , and other agents is apparent to the keenly observant eye and causes thinking people to speculate on what must be the final result of the ceaseless wearing down of the lands . Long before there was a science of geology , Shakespeare wrote “the revolution of the times makes mountains level .”

11 . It can be inferred from lines 1 - 3 that the largest ocean is the

(A) Atlantic (B) Pacific (C) Indian (D) Aleutian Deep (E) Arctic

12 . According to the underlined lines in paragraph two , the peripheral furrows or deeps are found

(A) only in the Pacific and Indian oceans

(B) near earthquakes

(C) near the shore

(D) in the center of the ocean

(E) to be 14,000 feet in depth in the Pacific

13 . The passage indicates that the continental masses

(A) comprise 29 percent of the earth’s surface

(B) consist of six continents

(C) rise above sea level

(D) are partially underwater

(E) are relief features of the second order

14 . The “revolution of the time” as used in the final sentence means

(A) the passage of years

(B) the current rebellion

(C) the science of geology

(D) the action of the ocean floor

(E) the overthrow of natural forces

5 . From this passage , it can be inferred that earthquakes

(A) occur only in the peripheral furrows

(B) occur more frequently in newly formed land or sea formations

(C) are a prime cause of soil erosion

(D) will ultimately “make mountains level”

(E) are caused by the weight of water pressing on the earth’s surface

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Ever since America’s founding fathers established the legislative branch of our government , the Senate and House of Representatives have been the target of periodic criticisms . In this speech dating from the 1950s , we learn of one accusation made against the House .

            Mr. Speaker , ours is an open society . It is a pluralistic society . Its strength lies in its institutions . Those institutions remain viable only as long as the majority of our citizens retain a meaningful belief in them . As long as Americans feel that their institutions are responsive to the wishes of the people , we shall endure and prevail .

            Everyone will admit freely that today there is a crisis in our institutions and the faith people have in them . No institution is more basic than the Congress -- in this case the House of Representatives , in which we have the privilege to serve .

            Over the past year or so , the Nation has been awakened to the fact that the House -- this House -- our institution -- has been less than responsive to the requirements of modern times . The Nation has read one article after the other that finds this institution wanting . One of the most pertinent and irrefutable accusations has to do with the fact that the House operates with too great an emphasis on secrecy , with too great an imbalance of power and too little attention paid to the wishes of the majority of its Members . In effect , this House of the people has been operating all too often in an undemocratic manner .

            We cannot pretend to stand for pluralistic democracy for the Nation if we daily deny the democratic process in our procedures and deliberations . This is what is going on each day , nonetheless . It is folly to deny the need for reform . We only add fuel to the fires already being set by reactionaries of every stripe who have a vested interest in the failure of democracy . They anticipate reaction , claiming our lack of response as reason enough for seeking the overthrow of the society we are all a part of . Reform on our part in response to a proven need will cut short the fuse of rebellion , cut short those who seek the defeat of democracy .

         Such reform can only be accomplished through existing institutions ; it can only be accomplished through reform of them , beginning with the rules and procedures of the House of Representatives . We must let the people and their news media see what is transpiring here in their name , rather than shut them out in the name of fear and breach of security . This is their House , and they have a right to know what is happening here .

            Mr. Speaker , we should have little to hide from the people . The national security argument has been worked to death . Recently , an article in the Wall Street Journal  by DR. Edward Teller , no raving liberal , attacks secrecy for its own sake . We defeat our own purposes by being overly secretive .

            By closing the House of the people to those very same people , we only alienate growing segments of society , stifle the democratic process and undermine the foundations of the institution and the Nation we all love so deeply . If we do not take the initiative in instituting reform , we merely reaffirm the worst that has been state about the lack of progressivism in the Congress . We add strength to the arguments of the radical revolutionaries among us . We contribute to the erosion of this House and its role .

16 . Which of the following does the author appear to value LEAST ?    

(A) Legislative reforms

(B) Press coverage of Congressional sessions

(C) His responsiveness to his constituents

(D) The rhetoric of left wing extremists

(E) The opinion of Dr. Edward Teller

17 . The author’s primary purpose in this passage is to

(A) encourage Congress to limit the powers of the media

(B) call for an end to undemocratic practices in Congress

(C) answer the radicals who want to overthrow the government

(D) define the powers of Congressional committees

(E) analyze the needs for security of governmental agencies

18 . The underlined phrase “stand for” means  

(A) tolerate (B) withstand (C) surpass (D) advocate (E) arise

19 . The attitude toward closed Congressional hearings is one of

(A) cautious skepticism

(B) grudging tolerance

(C) outright rejection

(D) wholehearted acceptance

(E) fundamental indifference

20 . The tone of the passage as a whole is best described as

(A) satirical (B) cautionary (C) alienated (D) objective (E) elegiac

Answer Key

1. C 2 . C 3 .A 4 . E 5 . D 6 . B 7 . B 8 . D 9 . C 10 . A 11. B 12 . C 13 . D 14 . A

15 . B 16 . D 17 . B 18 . D 19 . C 20 . B

1 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question

1 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question 

The Critical Reading Question

SAT critical reading questions test your ability to understand what you read - both content and technique . One passage on the test will be narrative : a passage from a novel , a short story , an autobiography ,or a personal essay . One will deal with the sciences ( including medicine , botany , zoology , chemistry , physics , geology , astronomy ) ; another with the humanities ( including art , literature , music , philosophy , folklore ) ; a third , with the social sciences ( including history , economics , sociology , government .) Some passages may be what the College Board calls argumentative ; these passages present a definite point of view on a subject . One passage will most likely be ethnic in content : whether it is a history passage , a personal narrative ,or a passage on music , art , or literature , it will deal with concerns of a particular minority group .

Your SAT test will contain three verbal sections ( not counting any experimental verbal part ) . They will most likely follow these three basic patterns .

1 . 25-Question Critical Reading Section 

Questions 1 - 10      sentence completion questions

Questions 11 - 25    reading comprehension questions

2 . 25-Question Critical Reading Section

Questions 1 - 9        sentence completion questions

Questions 10 - 25    reading comprehension questions

3 . 16-Question Critical Reading Section

Questions 1 - 3        reading completion questions

Questions 4 - 16      reading comprehension questions on paired passages

Do not worry if the test you take doesn’t exactly match the above model . The SAT makes occasionally seem to be playing games , but they are just fine-tuning their new format .

Unlike the sentence completion , the questions that come after each reading passage are not arranged in order of difficulty . They are arranged to suit the way the passage’s content is organized . (A question based on information found at the beginning of the passage will generally come before a question based on information at the passage’s end . ) If you are stumped by a tough reading question , do not skip the other questions on that passage . A tough question may be just one question away from an easy one .  

Exercise A

Each passage below is followed by questions based on its content . Answer all questions following a passage on the basis of what is [stated] or [implied] in that passage .

The following passage is taken from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens . In it , the hero , Pip , recollects a dismal period in his youth during which he for a time lost hope of ever bettering his fortunes .

          It is a most miserable thing to feel ashamed of home . There may be black ingratitude in the thing , and the punishment may  be retributive and well deserved ; but , that it is a miserable thing , I can testify . Home had never been a very pleasant place to me , because of my sister’s temper . But Joe had sacrificed it and I believed in it . I had believed in the best parlor as a most elegant salon ; I had believed in the front door as a mysterious portal of the Temple of State whose solemn opening was attended with a sacrifice of roast fowls ; I had believed in the kitchen as a chaste though not magnificent apartment ; I had believed in the forge as the glowing road to manhood . Now , it was all coarse and common , and I would not have had Miss Havisham and Estella see it on any account .

            Once , it had seemed to me that when I should at last roll up my shirt sleeves and go into the forge , Joe’s ’prentice , I should be distinguished and happy . Now the reality was in my hold , I only felt that I was dusty with the dust of small coal , and that I had a weight upon my daily remembrance to which the anvil was a feather . There have been occasions in my later life ( I suppose as in most lives ) when I have felt for a time as if a thick curtain had fallen on all its interest and romance , to shut me out from any thing save dull endurance any more . Never has that curtain dropped so heavy and blank , as when any way in life lay stretched out straight before me through the newly entered road of apprenticeship to Joe .

            I remember that at a later period of my “time,” I used to stand about the churchyard on Sunday evenings , when night was falling , comparing my own perspective with the windy marsh view , and making out some likeness between them by thinking how flat and low both were , and how on both there came an unknown way and a dark mist and then the sea . I was quite as dejected on the first working-day of my apprenticeship as in that after time ; but I am glad to know that I never breathed a murmur to Joe while my indentures lasted . It is about the only thing I am glad to know of myself in the connection .

            For , though it includes what I proceed to add , all the merit of what I proceed to add was Joe’s . It was not because I was faithful , but because Joe was faithful , that I never ran away and went for a soldier or a sailor . It was not because I had a strong sense of the virtue of industry m but because Joe had a strong sense of the virtue of industry , that I worked with tolerable zeal against the grain . It is not possible to know how far the influence of any amiable honest-hearted duty=going man flies out into the world ; but it is very possible to know how it has touched one’s self in going by , and I know right well that any good that intermixed itself with my apprenticeship came of plain contented Joe , and not of restless aspiring discontented me .

1 . The passage as a whole is best described as  

(A) an analysis of the reasons behind a change in attitude

(B) an account of a young man’s reflections on his emotional state

(C) a description of a young man’s awakening to the harsh conditions of working class life

(D) a defense of a young man’s longings for romance and glamour

(E) a criticism of young people’s ingratitude to their elders

2 . It may be inferred from the passage that the young man has been apprenticed to a

(A) cook (B) forger (C) coal miner (D) blacksmith (E) grave digger

3 . In the passage , Joe is portrayed most specifically as

(A) distinguished (B) virtuous (C) independent (D) homely (E) coarse

4 . The passage that the narrator’s increasing discontent with his home during his apprenticeship was caused by

(A) a new awareness on his part of how his home would appear to others

(B) the increasing heaviness of the labor involved

(C) the unwillingness of Joe to curb his sister’s temper

(D) the narrator’s lack of an industrious character

(E) a combination of simple ingratitude and sinfulness

5 . According to the passage , the narrator gives himself a measure of credit for

(A) working diligently despite his unhappiness

(B) abandoning his hope of a military career

(C) keeping his mental position secret from Miss Havisham

(D) concealing his despondency from Joe

(E) surrendering his childish beliefs

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The following passage is excerpted from the short story “Clay” in Dubliners by James Joyce . In this passage , tiny unmarried Maria oversees the washerwomen , all the while thinking of the treat in store for her : a night off .

            The matron had given her leave to go out as soon as the women’s tea was over and Maria looked forward to her evening out . The kitchen was spick and span : the cook said you could see yourself in the big copper boilers . The fire was nice and bright and on one of the side-tables were four very big barmbracks . These barmbracks seemed uncut ; but if you went closer you would see that they had been cut into long thick even slices and were ready to be handed round at tea . Maria had cut them herself .

            Maria was a very , very small person indeed but she had a very long nose and a very long chin . She talked a little through her nose , always soothingly : “Yes , my dear ,” and “No , my dear.” She was always sent for when the woman quarreled over their tubs and always succeeded in making peace .One day the matron had said to her :

            ‘Maria , you are a veritable peace-maker !”

            And the sub-matron and two of the Board ladies had heard the compliment . And Ginger Mooney was always saying what she wouldn’t do to the dummy who had charge of the irons if it wasn’t for Maria . Everyone was so fond of Maria .

            When the cook told her everything was ready , she went into the women’s room and began to pull the big bell . In a few minutes the women began to come in by twos and threes , wiping their steaming hands in their petticoats and pulling down the sleeves of their blouses over their red steaming arms . They settled down before their huge mugs which the cook and the dummy filled up with hot tea , already mixed with milk and sugar in huge tin cans . Maria superintended the distribution of the barmbrack and saw that every woman got her four slices . There was a great deal of laughing and joking during the meal . Lizzie Fleming a\said Maria was sure to get the ring and , though Fleming had said that for so many Hallow Eves , Maria had to laugh and say she didn’t want any ring or man either , and when she laughed her grey-green eyes sparkled with disappointed shyness and the tip of her nose nearly met the tip of her chin . Then Ginger Mooney lifted her mug of tea and proposed Maria’s health while all the other women clattered with their mugs on the table , and said she was sorry she hadn’t a sup of porter to drink it in . And Maria laughed again till the tip of her nose nearly met the tip of her chin and till her minute body nearly shook itself asunder because she knew that Mooney meant well though , of course , she had the notions of a common woman .

6 . The author’s primary purpose in the second paragraph is to      

(A) introduce the character of a spinster

(B) describe working conditions in a public institution

(C) compare two women of different social classes

(D) illustrate the value of peace-makers in society

(E) create suspense about Maria’s fate

7 . The language of the passage most resembles the language of

(A) a mystery novel

(B) an epic

(C) a fairy tale

(D) institutional board reports

(E) a sermon

8. It can be inferred from the passage that Maria would most likely view the matron as which of the following ?

(A) A political figurehead

(B) An inept administrator

(C) A demanding taskmaster

(D) An intimate friend

(E) A benevolent superior

9 . We may infer from the care with which Maria has cut the barmbracks ( in paragraph one lines 4 - 6 ) that

(A) she fears the matron

(B) she is in a hurry to leave

(C) she expects the Board members for tea

(D) it is a dangerous task

(E) she takes pride in her work

10 . It can be inferred from the passage that all the following are characteristic of Maria EXCEPT

(A) a deferential nature

(B) eagerness for compliments

(C) respect for authority

(D) dreams of matrimony

(E) reluctance to compromise

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The following passage is taken from Jane Austen’s novel Mansfield Park . This excerpt presents Sir Thomas Bertram , owner of Mansfield Park , who has just joined the members of his family .

            Sir Thomas was indeed the life of the party , who at his suggestion now seated themselves round the fire . He had the best right to be the talker ; and the delight of his sensations in being again in his own house , to the center of his family , after such a separation , made him communicative and chatty in a very unusual degree ; and he was ready to answer every question of his two sons almost before it was put . All the little particulars of his proceedings and events , his arrivals and departures , were most promptly delivered , as he sat by Lady Bertram and looked with heartfelt satisfaction at the faces around him - interrupting himself more than once , however , to remark on his good fortune in finding them all at home - coming unexpectedly as he did - all collected together exactly as he could have wished , but dared not depend on .

            By not one of the circle was he listened to with such unbroken unalloyed enjoyment as by his wife , whose feelings were so warmed by his sudden arrival , as to place her nearer agitation than she had been for the last twenty years . She had been almost fluttered for a few minutes , and still remained so sensibly animated as to put away her work , move Pug from her side , and give all her attention and all the rest of her sofa to her husband . She had no anxieties for anybody to cloud her pleasure ; her own time had been irreproachably spent during his absence ; she had done a great deal of carpet work and made many yards of fringe ; and she would have answered as freely for the good conduct and useful pursuits of all the young people as for her own . It was so agreeable to her to see him again , and hear him talk ,to have her ear amused and her whole comprehension filled by his narratives , that she began particularly to feel how dreadfully she must have missed him , and how impossible it would have been for her to bear a lengthened absence .

            Mrs. Norris was by no means to be compared in happiness to her sister . Not that she was incommoded by many fears of Sir Thomas’s disapprobation when the present state of his house should be known , for her judgment had been so blinded , that she could hardly be said to show any sign of alarm ; but she was vexed by the manner of his return . It had left her nothing to do . Instead of being sent for out of the room , and seeing him first , and having to spread the happy news through the house . Sir Thomas , with a very reasonable dependence perhaps on the nerves of his wife and children , had sought no confidant but the butler , and had been following him almost instantaneously into the drawing room . Mrs. Norris felt herself defrauded of an office on which she had always depended , whether his arrival or his death were to be the thing unfolded ;and was now trying to be in a bustle without having any thing to bustle about . Would Sir Thomas have consented to eat , she might have gone to the house-keeper with troublesome directions ; but Sir Thomas resolutely declined all dinner ; he would take nothing , nothing till tea came - he would rather wait for tea . Still Mrs. Norris was at intervals urging something different ; and in the most interesting moment of his passage to England , when the alarm of  a French privateer was at the height , she burst through his recital with the proposal of soup . “Sure my dear Sir Thomas , a basin of soup would be a much better thing for you than tea . Do have a basin of soup.”

            Sir Thomas could not be provoked . “Still the same anxiety for everybody’s comfort , my dear Mrs. Norris .” was his answer . “But indeed I would rather have nothing but

tea .”  

11 . We can infer from the opening paragraph that Sir Thomas is customarily

(A) unwelcome at home

(B) tardy in business affairs

(C) dissatisfied with life

(D) more restrained in speech

(E) lacking in family feeling

12 . The passage suggests that Sir Thomas’s sudden arrival

(A) was motivated by concern for his wife

(B) came as no surprise to Lady Bertram

(C) was timed by him to coincide with a family reunion

(D) was expected by the servants

(E) was received with mixed emotions

13 . Which of the following titles best describes the passage ?

(A) An Unexpected Return

(B) The Conversation of the Upper Class

(C) Mrs. Norris’s Grievance

(D) A Romantic Reunion

(E) An Account of a Voyage Abroad

14 . The author’s tone in her description of Lady Bertram’s sensations ( the first five lines of paragraph two ) is 

(A) markedly scornful

(B) mildly bitter

(C) gently ironic

(D) manifestly indifferent

(E) warmly sympathetic

15 . By stressing that Lady Bertram “had no anxieties for anybody to cloud her pleasure” the author primarily intends to imply that

(A) Lady Bertram was hardhearted in ignoring the sufferings of others

(B) it was unusual for Lady Bertram to be so unconcerned

(C) others in the company had reason to be anxious

(D) Sir Thomas expected his wife to be pleased to see him

(E) Lady Bertram lived only for pleasure

16 . Sir Thomas’s attitude toward Mrs. Norris can best be described as one of

(A) sharp irritation

(B) patient forbearance

(C) solemn disapproval

(D) unreasoned alarm

(E) unmixed delight

17 . The office of which Mrs. Norris feels herself defrauded is most likely that of

(A) butler (B) housekeeper (C) wife (D) world traveler (E) message-bearer

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The following passage is taken from Edith Wharton’s Novel , The Age of Innocence . In this excerpt , the American hero has an unexpected encounter during the course of a visit to the Louvre Museum in Paris .

            Newman promised himself to pay Mademoiselle Noemie another visit at the Louvre. He was curious about the progress of his copies , but it must be added that he was still more curious about the progress of the young lady herself . He went one afternoon to the great museum. and wandered through several of the rooms in fruitless quest of her . H was bending his steps tp the long hall of the Italian masters , when suddenly he found himself face to face with Valentin de Bellegarde . The young Frenchman greeted him with ardor , and assured him that he was a godsend . He himself was in the worst of humors and he wanted someone to contradict .

            “In a bad humor among all these beautiful thing ?” said Newman “I thought you were so fond of pictures , especially the old black ones . There are two or three here that ought to keep you in spirits .”

            “Oh ,today ,” answered Valentin , “I am not in a mood for pictures , and the more beautiful they are the less I like them . Their great staring eyes and fixed positions irritate me . I feel as if I were at some big , dull party , in a room full of people I shouldn’t wish to speak to . What should I care for their beauty ? It’s a bore , and , worse still , it’s a reproach. I have a great many ennuis ; I feel vicious .”

            “If the Louvre has so little comfort for you , why in the world did you come here ?” Newman asked .

            “That is one of my ennuis . I came to meet my cousin - a dreadful English cousin , a member of my mother’s family - who is in Paris for a week with her husband , and who wishes me to point out the ‘principal beauties.’ Imagine a woman who wears a green crepe bonnet in December and has straps sticking out of the ankles of her interminable boots ! My mother begged I would do something to oblige them . I have undertaken to play valet de place this afternoon . They were to have met me here at two o’clock , and I have been waiting for them twenty minutes . Why doesn’t she arrive ? She has at least a pair of feet to carry her . I don’t know whether to be furious at their playing me false ,or delighted to have escaped them .”

            “I think in your place I would be furious ,” said Newman , “because they may arrive yet , and then your fury will still be of no use to you . Whereas if you were delighted and they were afterwards to turn up , you might not know what to do with your delight .”

            “You give me excellent advice , and I already feel better . I will be furious ; I will let them go to the deuce and I myself will go with you -- unless by chance you too have a rendezvous .”

18 . The passage indicates that Newman has gone to the Louvre in order to   

(A) meet Valentin

(B) look at the paintings

(C) explore Paris

(D) keep an appointment

(E) see Mademoiselle Noemie

19 . According to the passage , Valentin is unhappy about being at the Louvre because he

(A) hates the paintings of the Italian masters

(B) has accidentally met Newman in the long hall

(C) wishes to be at a party

(D) feels that beauty should be that of nature

(E) is supposed to guide his cousin through it

20 . It can be inferred from the passage that Valentin is expressing his annoyance in the underlined lines by

(A) walking out of the Louvre in a fit of temper

(B) making insulting remarks about a woman

(C) not accepting Newman’s advice

(D) criticizing the paintings

(E) refusing to do as his mother wishes

21 . With which of the following statements would Valentin most likely agree ?

I . Clothes make the man .

II . Blood is thicker than water .

III . Better late than never .

(A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) I and II only (E) I , II , and III

22 . Newman’s role in the conversation is that of

(A) a heckler (B) a gossiper (C) a confidant (D) an enemy (E) a doubter

Answer Key

1 . B 2 . D 3 . B 4 . A 5 . D 6 . A 7 . C 8 . E 9 . R 10 . E 11 . D 12 . E 13 . A 14 . C 15 . C 16 . B 17 . E 18 . E 19 . E 20 . B 21. D 22 . C   

209-] English Literature

209-] English Literature Charles Dickens  Posted By lifeisart in Dickens, Charles || 23 Replies What do you think about Dickens realism? ...