问题 阅读理解与欣赏

阅读下面的文字,完成下面的题。

  “五片什么,亲爱的?告诉你的苏艾。”

  “叶子。常春藤上的叶子。等最后一片掉落下来,我也得去了。三天前我就知道了。难道大夫没有告诉你吗?”

  ……

  “你用不着买什么酒啦。”琼珊说,仍然凝视着窗外,“又掉了一片。不,我不要喝汤。只剩四片了。我希望在天黑之前看到最后的藤叶飘落下来。那时候我也该走了。”①

  ……

  可是,看哪!经过了漫漫长夜的风吹雨打,仍旧有一片常春藤的叶子贴在墙上。它是藤上最后的一片叶子。靠近叶柄的颜色还是深绿的,但是锯齿形的边缘已染上了枯败的黄色,它傲然挂在离地面二十来英尺的一根藤枝上面。

  “那是最后的一片叶子,”琼珊说,“我以为昨夜它一定会掉落的。我听到刮风的声音。它今天会脱落的,同时我也要死了。”

  ……

  天色刚明的时候,狠心的琼珊又吩咐把窗帘拉上去。

  那片常春藤叶仍在墙上。

  琼珊躺着对它看了很久。然后她喊苏艾,苏艾正在煤气炉上搅动给琼珊喝的鸡汤。

  “我真是个坏姑娘,苏艾,”琼珊说,“冥冥中似乎有什么使那片叶子不掉下来,启示了我过去是多么邪恶。不想活下去是个罪恶。现在请你拿些汤来,再弄一点掺葡萄酒的牛奶,再——等一下;先拿一面小镜子给我,用枕头替我垫垫高,我要坐起来看你煮东西。”②

  一小时后,她说:

  “苏艾,我希望有朝一日能去那不勒斯海湾写生。”

  ……

  那天下午,苏艾跑到床边,琼珊靠在那儿,心满意足地在织一条毫无用处的深蓝色披肩,苏艾把她连枕头一把抱住。

  “我有些话要告诉你,小东西。”她说,“贝尔曼先生今天在医院去世了。他害肺炎,只病了两天。头天早上,看门人在楼下的房间里发现他痛苦得要命。他的鞋子和衣服都湿透了,冰凉冰凉的。他们想不出,在那种凄风苦雨的夜里,他究竟是到什么地方去的。后来,他们找到了一个还燃着的灯笼,一把从原来的地方挪动过的梯子,还有几支散落的画笔,一块调色板,上面剩有绿色和黄色的颜料,末了——看看窗外,亲爱的,看看墙上最后的一片叶子。你不是觉得纳闷,它为什么在风中不飘不动吗?啊,亲爱的,那是贝尔曼的杰作——那晚最后的一片叶子掉落时,他画在墙上的。”

1.“等最后一片掉落下来,我也得去了”这句话在文中有何表达作用?

______________________________________________________

2.画线句①与画线句②分别表明了什么?

______________________________________________________

3.结尾有何特点?从中表现出什么?

______________________________________________________

答案

1.推动故事情节的发展。

2.画线句①表明琼珊对生命已失去信心;

画线句②则表明她又有了活下去的欲望和信心,同时预示着她的病情在好转。

3.结尾出人意料,但又在情理之中。表现出琼珊的生命是老贝尔曼用生命换来的,从而突出了老贝尔曼的善良和崇高。(意思对即可)

问答题 论述题
单项选择题

While the ripples of America’s subprime-mortgage crisis have spread far and wide, Latin America—a place long associated with financial disaster—has remained improbably calm. Banks have reported no unpleasant surprises. Brazil and Peru have been blessed with coveted investment-grade ratings. Surprisingly, perhaps the fleetest country of all has been Argentina. Since it emerged from the financial crisis of 2001-02, it has been one of the world’s fastest-growing economies. It is expected to expand faster than most of its neighbors again this year.

Quite simply, it barely has any credit. Back when its economy virtually collapsed, the country suffered a run on its banks, followed by a freeze on withdrawals, and a massive currency devaluation. As a result, bank lending to the private sector shrivelled, from 23.8% of GDP in 2000 to 10.8% in 2003. Since then, it has rebounded to a piddling 13% ; by contrast, the ratio in Brazil was 36.5% in 2006. Almost all of these loans in Argentina are accessible only on a short-term basis.

Once its recovery began in June 2002, Argentina became a paradise for business. Unemployment of over 20% kept wages down, and the devaluation gave exporters an edge on foreign competitors. The ample productive capacity left idle by the crisis meant firms could expand without making big investments. And the windfall profits reaped by agricultural exporters, thanks to record commodities prices, enabled many of them to finance new projects out of earnings. Hence the economy could grow at almost 9% a year with little need for credit.

But such a lucky confluence of factors could not last. Starting in early 2005 ,.inflation picked up, a sign that the installed capacity was starting to limit output. Salaries and prices for raw materials increased sharply, cutting into profits. And farmers were particularly hard hit when the government nearly doubled the taxes in farm exports. Now, just as companies need to embark on big investments if they are to keep growing, their margins are no longer big enough to pay for the expansion and they need to borrow.

So, the time is ripe for the country’s financial system to recover. But a number of things are in the way. Foremost is Argentina’s business risk. Those in the informal economy (which represents over 40% of GDP) can neither save nor borrow legally, lest they become known to the taxmen. The rest remain cowed by memories of the crisis. Although Argentines have poured their savings into property, fuelling a construction boom, they still hold about four-fifths of their deposits abroad.

Inflation, fuelled by a public-spending binge, state-mandated wage increases, and a cheap currency, is not helping either. No one knows how high it is. The consumer-price index is doctored to keep the official rate below 10%, but private estimates suggest it is near 25%. Without a reliable index of inflation, lending is almost impossible, even for the medium term. And the central bank has kept interest rates ply negative in real terms, encouraging workers to spend their wages rather than to save.

It can be inferred from the first paragraph that()

A. Latin America has been greatly influenced by America’s subprime-mortgage crisis

B. Latin America is suffering a financial disaster

C. Argentina has suffered a financial crisis at the beginning of this century

D. Argentina’s economy grows faster than any other countries’ economy