№
16
I. 1. Read
the extract and say in 2—3 sentences what it is about.
MR WEMMICK’S “CASTLE”
Wemmick’s
house was a little wooden cottage in the middle of a large garden. The top of
the house had been built and painted like a battery loaded with guns. I said I
really liked it. I think Wemmick’s house was the tiniest I had ever seen. It
had very few windows and the door was almost too small to get in.
‘Look,’
said Wemmick, ‘after I have crossed this bridge, I raise it so that nobody can
enter the Castle.’
The
‘bridge’ was a plank1 and it crossed a gap about four feet2
wide and two feet deep. But I enjoyed seeing the smile on Wemmick’s face and
the pride with which he raised his bridge. The gun on the roof of the house, he
told me, was fired every night at nine o’clock. I later heard it. Immediately,
it made an impressive sound.
‘At
the back,’ he said, ‘there are chickens, ducks, geese, and rabbits. I’ve also
got my own little vegetable garden and I grow cucumbers. Wait until supper and
you’ll see for yourself what kind of salad I can make. If the Castle is ever
attacked, I will be able to survive for quite a while,’ he said with a smile,
but at the same time seriously.
Then
Wemmick showed me his collection of curiosities. They were mostly to do with
being on the wrong side of the law: a pen with which a famous forgery3
had been committed, some locks of hair, several manuscript confessions written
from prison.
‘I
am my own engineer, my own carpenter, my own plumber and my own gardener. I am
my own Jack of all Trades4,’ said Wemmick, receiving my compliments.
Wemmick told me that it had taken many years to bring his property to this
state of perfection.
‘Is it your own, Mr. Wemmick?’
‘Oh
yes, I have got a hold of it a bit at a time. I have absolute ownership now. You
know, the office is one thing, and private life is another. When I go to the
office, I leave the Castle behind me, and when I come to the Castle, I leave
the office behind me. If you don’t mind, I’d like you to do the same. I don’t
want to talk about my home in a professional manner’.
1
plank [plæŋk]
брус, доска
2
feet [fiːt]
— мн. ч. от foot —
мера длины, равная 30,48 см
3
а forgery [ˈfɒdʒərɪ] подделка документа
4
Jack
of
all
Trades
мастер на все руки
2. ‘An Englishman’s home is his castle’. Read
aloud the extract which proves this idea.
3. What do we understand about Wemmick’s home
life?
4. Why does Wemmick call himself Jack of all
Trades?
№
17
I. 1. Read
the article and say in 2—3 sentences what it is about.
MOTHER TERESA
Mother
Teresa was a simple nun1. She never wanted to be famous, but
everyone in the world knows who she is.
Mother
Teresa was born in 1910 in what is now Macedonia2. She was the youngest
of three children. Agnes’3 father died when she was a child. Her
mother made dresses to support the family. Agnes’ mother also liked to do
charity work, such as visiting the sick. Agnes often went with her, and she
enjoyed helping these people.
Even
as a child, Agnes wanted to be a nun. When she was 18 years old, she joined a
group of nuns in India. There, she chose the name Teresa. Then she went to
Calcutta to work at St. Mary’s School, in a convent4. Sister Teresa
worked there for 20 years and eventually became the principal.
One
day in 1946 Sister Teresa was riding on a train to Darjeeling5. She
looked out of the window and saw dirty children wearing rags and sleeping in
doorways. Sick and dying people were lying on dirty streets. At that moment,
she believed God sent her a message. She decided to go to work with the poor.
Two
years later, Sister Teresa left the convent and opened a school for the kids
from poor families. Though at the very beginning the school had no roof, no
walls, and no chairs, later it became wellknown all around India. In 1948,
Sister Teresa started her own group of nuns. They were called the Missionaries
of Charity. The nuns lived in the slums6 with people who were poor,
dirty, and sick. It was hard work and the days were long. But many young nuns
came from around the world to join Mother Teresa.
Later,
she started homes for children without families. She also started clinics. Over
the years, news of her work spread around the world. Many people sent her
donations of money, others came to work with her. By 1990 the Missionaries of
Charity were working in 400 centres around the world.
Mother
Teresa got the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979. But she always said her greatest
reward was helping people. Her message to the world was: ‘We can do no great
things — only small things with great love’.
1 a nun [nʌn] монахиня
2 Macedonia [ˌmæsəˈdəʊnɪə]
Македония
3Agnes [ˈæɡnɪs]
Агнес
4 a convent [ˈkɒnv(ə)nt] монастырь
5 Darjeeling [daːˈdʒiːlɪŋ] Дарджилинг (город)
6 slums трущобы
2. The author writes about Mother Teresa’s
family. Read aloud the extract which says about it.
3. Why did Mother Teresa decide to devote her life to people in
need?
4. What did Mother Teresa do for people?
№
18
I. 1. Read
the article and say in 2—3 sentences what it is about.
The
most mystique1 picture
Every
hour about 1,500 people visit the Louvre Museum in Paris with the specific
intention of seeing one particular painting: the Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci. Most of these visitors look at
the painting for about three minutes before they walk back to the tourist buses
outside.
Leonardo
loved the painting very much and people say that he took it everywhere with
him. The painting was originally ordered by a rich businessman in Florence, who
wanted a portrait of his wife, Lisa. Leonardo began the painting in 1503 and he
finished it about three or four years later. The fact that Leonardo wanted to
keep the painting himself, adds to the
Mona Lisa’s mystique.
Mona
Lisa’s mysterious smile has fascinated everyone who has ever seen the painting.
In his Lives of the Artists, written
just a few years after Leonardo’s death, Giorgio Vasari wrote, ‘While painting
Mona Lisa Leonardo employed singers and musicians to keep her happy and so
avoid the sadness that painters usually give to portraits. As a result, there
was a smile that seemed divine2 rather than human; and those who saw
it were amazed to find how alive and real it appeared.’
Modern art critics also emphasise how the portrait
seems alive and real. ‘She is like a living person,’ writes art historian E.H.
Gombrich, ‘She seems to change before our eyes. Even in photographs we can
experience this strange effect. Sometimes she seems to be looking down on us,
and sometimes we can detect sadness in her smile. All this sounds rather
mysterious, and it is; that is so often the effect of a great work of art.’
The Mona Lisa is certainly a
masterpiece, a magnificent work of art, but it is also a part of modern popular
culture. Her image appears on plates, Tshirts, mouse pads and in
advertisements. Perhaps for this reason, officials at the Louvre Museum placed
the painting in a specially built area in a room with other great 16th century
Italian paintings. In this way, visitors have a better chance to appreciate the
painting as a work of art rather than as a tourist attraction.
1 mystique [mɪˈstiːk] таинственный
2 divine [dɪˈvaɪn] божественный
2. Why is Mona Lisa smiling? Read aloud the extract which says
about it.
3. What makes the Mona
Lisa so special?
4. Why is the painting displayed in an exceptional way?
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