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新SAT阅读官方题型解析-Central Ideas主旨题例1

2017年05月03日16:10 来源:小站教育作者:小站SAT编辑
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摘要:本系列小站君将分享给大家3篇由小站教研中心出品的新SAT阅读官方Central Ideas主旨题的3道例题解析,希望对备考新SAT的同学有帮助。这里分享第一篇,具体内容我们一起来看正文!

新SAT阅读官方题型-Central Ideas主旨题例题汇总,点击查看

例题一:

材料:The Official SAT Study Guide

试卷:1

页数:344

题号:33

Questions 32-41 are based on the following

passage.

This passage is adapted from Virginia Woolf, Three Guineas.

©1938 by Harcourt, Inc. Here, Woolf considers the situation

of women in English society.

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

70

75

80

Close at hand is a bridge over the River Thames,

an admirable vantage ground for us to make a

survey. The river flows beneath; barges pass, laden

with timber, bursting with corn; there on one side are

the domes and spires of the city; on the other,

Westminster and the Houses of Parliament. It is a

place to stand on by the hour, dreaming. But not

now. Now we are pressed for time. Now we are here

to consider facts; now we must fix our eyes upon the

procession—the procession of the sons of educated

men.

There they go, our brothers who have been

educated at public schools and universities,

mounting those steps, passing in and out of those

doors, ascending those pulpits, preaching, teaching,

administering justice, practising medicine,

transacting business, making money. It is a solemn

sight always—a procession, like a caravanserai

crossing a desert. . . . But now, for the past twenty

years or so, it is no longer a sight merely, a

photograph, or fresco scrawled upon the walls of

time, at which we can look with merely an esthetic

appreciation. For there, trapesing along at the tail

end of the procession, we go ourselves. And that

makes a difference. We who have looked so long at

the pageant in books, or from a curtained window

watched educated men leaving the house at about

nine-thirty to go to an office, returning to the house

at about six-thirty from an office, need look passively

no longer. We too can leave the house, can mount

those steps, pass in and out of those doors, . . . make

money, administer justice. . . . We who now agitate

these humble pens may in another century or two

speak from a pulpit. Nobody will dare contradict us

then; we shall be the mouthpieces of the divine

spirit—a solemn thought, is it not? Who can say

whether, as time goes on, we may not dress in

military uniform, with gold lace on our breasts,

swords at our sides, and something like the old

family coal-scuttle on our heads, save that that

venerable object was never decorated with plumes of

white horsehair. You laugh—indeed the shadow of

the private house still makes those dresses look a

little queer. We have worn private clothes so

long. . . . But we have not come here to laugh, or to

talk of fashions—men’s and women’s. We are here,

on the bridge, to ask ourselves certain questions.

And they are very important questions; and we have

very little time in which to answer them. The

questions that we have to ask and to answer about

that procession during this moment of transition are

so important that they may well change the lives of

all men and women for ever. For we have to ask

ourselves, here and now, do we wish to join that

procession, or don’t we? On what terms shall we join

that procession? Above all, where is it leading us, the

procession of educated men? The moment is short; it

may last five years; ten years, or perhaps only a

matter of a few months longer. . . . But, you will

object, you have no time to think; you have your

battles to fight, your rent to pay, your bazaars to

organize. That excuse shall not serve you, Madam.

As you know from your own experience, and there

are facts that prove it, the daughters of educated men

have always done their thinking from hand to

mouth; not under green lamps at study tables in the

cloisters of secluded colleges. They have thought

while they stirred the pot, while they rocked the

cradle. It was thus that they won us the right to our

brand-new sixpence. It falls to us now to go on

thinking; how are we to spend that sixpence? Think

we must. Let us think in offices; in omnibuses; while

we are standing in the crowd watching Coronations

and Lord Mayor’s Shows; let us think . . . in the

gallery of the House of Commons; in the Law Courts;

let us think at baptisms and marriages and funerals.

Let us never cease from thinking—what is this

civilization” in which we find ourselves? What are

these ceremonies and why should we take part in

them? What are these professions and why

should we make money out of them? Where in

short is it leading us, the procession of the sons of

educated men?

(题目,答案解析及重点词汇请翻页查看哦~)

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