问题 阅读理解与欣赏

春雨梨花

       每当梨花盛开的时候,梨乡都要举办梨花节。每年的梨花节前,都会有一张素洁得如同梨花一样的请柬飞到我的案头,传达着梨花对我的召唤。

       我在一个飘雨的日子,踏上了去梨乡的路途。一路风雨,心中默念着李清照的“知否知否”,却全然没有女词人那种洒脱和悠然。“梨花一枝春带雨”,美倒是美,可那柔弱的梨花,能经得住几番风吹雨打?记得当年秋末,大丰收后销不出去的雪梨堆得像小山,压得人们心里透不过气来,梨农们的眼里噙满了泪水。去年夏天,梨乡的朋友捎来一箱他们自己生产的雪梨汁,细细地品上一品,那甜丝丝和凉幽幽的浸润,又让人闻到了梨花的芬芳。我想,今年梨农们该不会为销梨发愁了吧。

       细雨霏霏,春意阑珊。路旁是一片片青绿色的麦田,阡陌间的农人披着雨衣,烟雨中,一望无垠的绿一直铺上西边山影朦胧的太行群峰。干旱的北方原野,此时竟有了一种江南水乡的气息和韵味。

       车到梨乡,只见蒙蒙细雨之中,地上一层落花如雪;再看枝上,千树万树,依旧如雪,只是有些稀薄。地上的白与树上的白浑然一体,冷香接天,梨花如海,俨然一片银装素裹的冰雪世界,让人整个身心都变得清纯而宁静。

       拨开横陈的枝桠,迎着甜丝的细雨,我小心翼翼地走进树林,去亲近梨花。枝头上,或一丛丛一簇簇.或星星点点,或密或疏,或浓或淡,一色的浅素嫩白,有着一种令人心颤的圣洁的美。越往深处,枝与花越稠密,不时拂面擦身,留下一片水痕一抹暗香。那些可爱的梨花在雨中浸润着,花托、花瓣、花蕊、花蕾上,都挂满了晶莹的雨滴,颗颗粒粒如散珠碎玉.悬坠欲滴。丛丛梨花,在风雨中相互依偎,绽放着少女般清纯的笑靥,深情地贪看着这雨中的春光,让人不忍去触摸他们,生怕惊动了一个个美丽的梦。

       细雨还在飘着,天空中似有千万条飞舞着的丝线,北国的雨竟然也像江南的雨一样的缠绵。身旁的花枝在雨中簌簌抖动,不时有一阵雨珠和花瓣掉落,一层素馨飘零,如同一曲缥缈而伤感的弦乐。花浓雨密,香雾迷离,分不清哪是花哪是雨。这雨中的花,这花中的雨,这清凉的芬芳,这芬芳的清凉,花香水色,似梦非梦。啊,这美丽而圣洁的陶醉与洗礼,竟会是如此的刻骨铭心。不由得想起一些古人吟咏梨花的诗文,李重元的“杜宇声声不忍闻,欲黄昏,雨打梨花深闭门”;秦少游的“梨花满地不开门”,还有洪升的“天涯谁品梨花雪”等。这花与诗,浇上这缠绵的细雨,营造出一片忧伤的美丽,让人深切地体味到人类古今相通的一种美好情感,那就是对真善美的向往和钟爱,虽年华暗替,终也不改。

       一年一度,花开花落。梨花的花期虽短,留给人的美却永恒。更何况花落过后,还有果实的生长,还有秋天的希望。遥望中秋时节,这片片梨园当是枝叶葱茏,黄金万点,雪梨飘香。到那时,人们就又会想起这些洁白的,在细雨中飘落的梨花。

1、本文的线索是                                                    。

2、品读全文,你认为作者赋予了梨花哪些美好的象征意义? 文中字里行间流露出作者对梨花的一种什么样的情感?

     象征意义是                                              

    作者的情感是                                                                       。

3、文中第二段主要记叙了什么内容?请用简洁的语言概括出来。 

                                                                                                                                                          。

4、文中第五段文字运用了哪种描写方法?请试举一例。

    _________________________________________________________ 。

5、如何理解“让人深切地体味到人类古今相通的一种情感,那就是对真善美的向往和钟爱”这句话的含义?

                                                                                                                                                             

答案

1、(春雨中的)梨花

2、生活中纯洁、美好的事物;喜爱、赞美之情。

3、作者去梨乡的心情和内心的想法。

4、细节描写。那些可爱的梨花在雨中浸润着,花托,花瓣,花蕊,花蕾上,都挂满了晶莹的雨滴,颗颗粒粒如散珠碎玉,悬坠欲滴。

5、梨花以其自身的美好唤起了人们对生活中美好事物的追求和对生活的热爱。(意思对即可)

问答题 论述题
单项选择题

Elections often tell you more about what people are against than what they are for. So it is with the European ones that took place last week in all 25 European Union member countries. These elections, widely trumpeted as the world’s biggest-ever multinational democratic vote, were fought for the most part as 25 separate national contests, which makes it tricky to pick out many common themes. But the pest are undoubtedly negative. Europe’s voters are angry and disillusioned-and they have demonstrated their anger and disillusion in three main ways.

The most obvious was by abstaining. The average overall turnout was just over 45%, by some margin the lowest ever recorded for elections to the European Parliament. And that average disguises some big variations: Italy, for example, notched up over 70%, but Sweden managed only 37%. Most depressing of all, at least to believers in the European project, was the extremely low vote in many of the new member countries from central Europe, which accounted for the whole of the fall in turnout since 1999. In the biggest, Poland, only just over a fifth of the electorate turned out to vote. Only a year ago, central Europeans voted in large numbers to join the EU, which they did on May 1st. That they abstained in such large numbers in the European elections points to early disillusion with the European Union-as well as to a widespread feeling, shared in the old member countries as well, that the European Parliament does not matter.

Disillusion with Europe was also a big factor in the second way in which voters protested, which was by supporting a ragbag of populist, nationalist and explicitly anti-EU parties. These ranged from the 16% who backed the UK Independence Party, whose declared policy is to withdraw from the EU and whose leaders see their mission as "wrecking" the European Parliament, to the 14% who voted for Sweden’s Junelist, and the 27% of Poles who backed one of two anti-EU parties, the League of Catholic Families and Selfdefence. These results have returned many more Eurosceptics and trouble-makers to the parliament: on some measures, over a quarter of the new MEPS will belong to the "awkward squad". That is not a bad thing, however, for it will make the ’parliament more representative of European public opinion.

But it is the third target of European voters’ ire that is perhaps the most immediately significant, the fact that, in many EU countries, old and new, they chose to vote heavily against their own governments. This anti-incumbent vote was p almost everywhere, but it was most pronounced in Britain, the Czech Republic, Germany, Poland and Sweden. The leaders of all the four biggest European Union countries, Tony Blair in Britain, Jacques Chirac in France, Gerhard Schroder in Germany and Silvio Berlusconi in Italy, were each given a bloody nose by their voters.

The big question now is how Europe’s leaders should respond to this. By a sublime (or terrible) coincidence, soon after the elections, and just as The Economist was going to press, they were gathering in Brussels for a crucial summit, at which they are due to agree a new constitutional treaty for the EU and to select a new president for the European Commissi6n. Going into the meeting, most EU heads of government seemed determined to press ahead with this agenda regardless of the European elections--even though the atmosphere after the results may make it harder for them to strike deals.

It is implied in the text that the departure of Eurosceptics and trouble-makers from the European Parliament ()

A. benefits the old member countries for the time being

B. fortifies the support of populist and nationalists

C. might oblige anti-EU parties to adopt a compromise resisted by the public

D. would hinder the full expression of European public feeling