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[主观题]

My family's slave-era history has survived in rich detail, thanks to my aggressively talka

tive great-grandfather John Wesley Staples (1865-1940), who was conceived in the closing days of the Civil War and became the first freeborn black person in the Staples family line. My family has always treasured these stories, but my generation is just beginning to realize the value of the gift John Wesley left us.

Most black families have found it impossible to learn even the most basic facts about ancestors who were born as slaves. That's partly because enslaved people do not appear in the public record as full-fledged human beings-with families, addresses, surnames and occupations-until after Emancipation in 1865. Even more of their stories were lost in the early 20th century, when black families reacted to the stigma of slavery by forbidding their elderly relatives to talk about it at all.

This produced a truncated view of black American history, in which slaves were seen as anonymous victims-defined only by suffering-and the heroic roles were largely reserved for their freeborn descendants.

John Wesley spoke often of his enslaved mother, Somerville, and the stories he left behind have allowed us to locate her in the public records and to piece together the basic outlines of her life. The portrait is still sketchy. But it's already clear that she was a formidable person, who had high ambitions for herself and her Son.

Somerville was most likely born in the 1820's in Virginia. Her adolescent years would have been dominated by the upheaval that followed the bloody slave rebellion mounted by Nat Turner. Fearful of being murdered in their beds, white lawmakers curtailed the already meager fights of free blacks, with the aim of driving them out of the state. For slaves, the ensuing exodus of free blacks they knew must have seemed like the end of even the possibility of freedom.

By the 1860's, Somerville had been sold to the Lowry family in Bedford County, where she became the property of Triplett Lowry, a doctor. As was common at the time, she conceived a child by young Marshall Lowry, the farm manager, and gave birth to John Wesley, whom she named after the abolitionist theologian and founder of the Methodist Church.

In the oral tradition passed down through the generations, Marshall Lowry is named as John Wesley's father. That Somerville named him - instead of keeping his identity secret as many enslaved mothers did - suggests that the truth was more important to her than traditional plantation etiquette. As a servant in an educated household, she would have had a close vantage point to observe middle-class culture and aspirations-which may account for the fact that my great- grandfather could read and write.

Born on the Fourth of July in 1865, the year of Emancipation, John Wesley was one of those freedom babies of whom much was expected. He was still a young man in February 1886, when his mother walked into the Bedford County registrar's office to record the purchase of a little under a half-acre of land, bought for the princely sum of $50. By then she had married a laborer named John Staples. But she registered the property in her name only, a gesture of independence that was common among free black women of the period. This purchase of land-a momentous act in the lives of former Slaves-would have set a powerful example for her son.

John Wesley lived up to his family's expectations. He and his wife, Eliza, established a large family and a successful farm in the Virginia countryside.

They joined with two adjacent neighbors to build the one-room schoolhouse where their children were educated, and hired the teacher who worked there, partly in exchange for room and board. He drove a fancy Model T Ford-and let it be known that he paid for the car in cash-while his neighbors moved about in horse-drawn carriages. At a time when the Ku Klux Kla

A.had a pure blood son

B.was educated

C.was an ambitious woman

D.had never been emancipated

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更多“My family's slave-era history has survived in rich detail, thanks to my aggressively talka”相关的问题

第1题

History teaches my grandfather's aunt family that ______.A.they would be killed by Hitler

History teaches my grandfather's aunt family that ______.

A.they would be killed by Hitler in their fate

B.Jewish people would be unwelcome in the history

C.my grandfather's aunt was totally wrong

D.they were wrong and they should believe my grandfather's aunt

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第2题

If it had not been for my family's care I ______ to you now.A.will not speakB.would not ha

If it had not been for my family's care I ______ to you now.

A.will not speak

B.would not have spoken

C.would not be speaking

D.should not have spoken

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第3题

Why was the photo of my grandfather's aunt passed down by my family?A.Because she once wor

Why was the photo of my grandfather's aunt passed down by my family?

A.Because she once worked for several years in the Library.

B.Because she did help her colleagues in the Library to escape from Nazis.

C.Because she made a right decision and successfully escaped from Nazis.

D.Because she was Jewish and smart and should be remembered by history.

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第4题

This is my bedroom. It's small (小的)but nice. Look, a table is near the window. A light,

This is my bedroom. It's small (小的)but nice. Look, a table is near the window. A light, a clock and my books are on it. A chair is beside it. My bag is on the chair. My bed is near the table, beside the wall. A photo is on the wall. It's a photo of my family. You can see all my family members in it.

My bedroom is small.

A.True

B.False

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第5题

The last time we had a family reunion was ________ my brother’s wedding ceremony fo
ur years ago.

A) in

B) at

C) during

D) over

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第6题

It wasn’t until recently, when we celebrated a family birthday with my parents at a fancy
restaurant, ______I found out that in some cultures it’s considered rude to lick your plate.

A.that

B.when

C.since

D.because

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第7题

听力原文:W: My mother will be coming to visit us over the weekend, dear. It's been quite s
ome time since she last saw her granddaughter.

M: Well, it will be a little crowed, but I've really missed Seeing your mother. That will be just fine.

Q: Who is coming to visit the family?

(13)

A.The man's mother.

B.The man's mother -in-law.

C.The child's mother.

D.The woman's mother-in-law.

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第8题

听力原文:M:Let me see.I have printed my family name,first mane,date of birth,and address.A
nything else?

W:No.That's all right.We'll fill in the rest of if you just sign your name at the bottom.

Q: What has the man been doing?

(13)

A.Talking with his friend

B.Fining out a form

C.Having an interview

D.Asking for information

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第9题

Most English people have three names: a first name, a middle name and the family name. The
ir family name comes last. For example, my full name is Jim Allan Green. Green is my family name. My parents gave me both of my other names.

People don't use their middle names very muck So "John Henry Brown" is usually called “John Brown". People never use Mr., Mrs. or Miss before their first names. So you can say John Brown, or Mr. Brown; but you should never say Mr. John. They use Mr., Mrs. or Miss with the family name but never with the first name.

Sometimes people ask me about my name. “When you were born, why did your parents call you Jim?" they ask, “Why did they choose that name?" The answer is they didn't call me Jim. They called me James. James was the name of my grandfather. In England, people usually call me Jim for short. That's because it is shorter and easier than James.

Most English people have three names.

A.True.

B.False.

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第10题

听力原文:After the death of my grandfather, I got the genealogy bug. It started with the g

听力原文: After the death of my grandfather, I got the genealogy bug. It started with the gathering of family photos and progressed to writing a family history. Several years ago, I took another step and began creating a Website for the Stovalls. During this initiative, I also pursued the Wallace, Cox, Raney, and other related family lines.

One day I received an email about the Wallace line from a fellow named Ron Ritchie. Although I lived in Birmingham, Alabama, and he lived in Dallas, Texas, he had some Wallaces from the same area from which mine originated. We corresponded several times, after which he passed the baton to his daughter, Connie. She emailed me, and after six months or so, we reached the conclusion that we were not related.

With no more data to work on, we chatted about other interests and one thing led to another. The end result? This shy Alabama-born boy found himself flying to Dallas to meet a girl. During several subsequent trips, we explored the sights, met each other's families, and plotted our lives. In December of 1997, my genealogical penpal and I were married. Our search for roots had led instead to a fresh branch on our now combined family tree. I think it's only fair to give our ancestors the credit!

When did I begin my genealogy research?

A.After the death of my father.

B.After the death of my grandfather.

C.After the death of my mother.

D.After the death of my grandmother.

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第11题

听力原文:Yes, my job is fine, and my company is going to promote me and give me a good job
in their branch office about a hundred miles or so from where we live. I don’t know whether to sell my house and take my family with me or not. The trouble is that there’s no formal agreement. I haven’t signed anything, and I’ve got nothing in writing. The company could even dismiss me tomorrow if they wanted.

(17)

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