There is usually a price for pleasure so mindless. In the case of TV golf, it is listening to the commentators analyze the players' swings. What looks to you like a single, continuous, and not difficult act is revealed, via slow motion and a sort of virtual-chalkboard graphics, to be a sequence of intricately measured adjustments of shoulder to hip, head to arm, elbow to wrist, and so on. Where you see fluidity, the experts see geometry; what to you is nature is machinery to them-parallel lines, extended planes, points of impact. They murder to examine. Yet, apparently, these minutes and individualized measurements make all the difference between being able reliably to land a golf ball in an area, three hundred yards away, the size of a bathmat and, say, randomly hitting a car, which, let's face it, only a fool would drive right next to a golf course. There is a major disproportion, in other words, between the straightforwardness of the game and the fantastic precision required to play it, a disproportion mastered by a difficult but, to the ordinary observer, almost invisible technique.
Short stories are the same. A short story is not as restrictive as a sonnet, but, of all the literary forms, it is possibly the most single-minded. Its aim, as it was identified by the modern genre's first theorist, Edgar Allan Poe, is to create "an effect"-by which Poe meant something almost physical, like a sensation or an extreme excitement.
1. The author quotes his own experience with golf to show that _____.
[A] things are often not so simple and easy as they seem
[B] his experience with golf has been a frustrating failure
[C] that experience of his offered much for his later life
[D] apparent truths are more often than not unreliable
2. The author enjoys watching golf games on TV because _____.
[A] access to drinks makes the game more joyful
[B] a more enjoyable view of the game is provided
[C] he is thus unaffected by the result of the game
[D] that is more likely real appreciation of the game
3.What does the author imply when he says "There is usually...so mindless"(Line 1, Paragraph 2)?
[A] Commentators often interrupt your attention.
[B] TV golf is frequently unaffordable for many.
[C] One needs to pay handsomely for the setting.
[D] Some essential parts of the game are missing.
4. In the part succeeding the third paragraph, the author will most probably _____.
[A] draw an analogy between golf and short story
[B] elaborate the "effect" of short story
[C] show other examples similar to golf games
[D] show impact of golf games on short story
5. What is the relationship between Paragraph 1 and Paragraph 2?
[A] Paragraph 1 is an introduction to Paragraph 2.
[B] Paragraph 1 provides an example for Paragraph 2.
[C] Paragraph 1 and Paragraph 2 are both supporting details.
[D] Paragraph 2 serves as an analogy to Paragraph 1.
答案
21. A 22.C 23.D 24.B 25.A