TASKS for
Chapters 7-10
I. Find the
following words and phrases in the text and translate them into Russian:
Placidity –
спокойный;
to make
frantic scenes – закатывать безумные сцены;
to give sb.
a look of scorn – бросить презрительный взгляд на кого-либо;
lavishness
– щедрость;
to know how
to pull strings adroitly – знать, как пустить в
ход связи;
to fall out
of love – разлюбить;
close-cropped
hair – коротко стриженный;
to resist
an inclination – удержаться от чего-то;
weather-beaten
skin – обветренная кожа;
coltish
grace – щенячья грация;
to be on
active service – быть в действующей армии;
confinement – роды;
to run a
theatre – открыть театр;
effusive – экспансивный, несдержанный;
to set one's mind to smth. – стремиться к чему-либо;
disconcerting – смущающий, приводящий в замешательство;
it's a
knock out – сногсшибательно;
amiability – добродушие;
affable manner – дружеское обращение;
to exercise great ingenuity in (doing) smth. – проявить
великую изобретательность в чем-то;
to be
unperturbed – быть невозмутимым;
shrewdness – проницательность;
to grizzle – возмущаться, раздражать;
it's a mere
commonplace – это банально;
exorbitant
– непомерный;
to be
conciliatory – примирительный, дружелюбный;
to foster one's career – способствовать чьей-то карьере;
prosiness – прозаичность;
acumen – проницательность;
to have one's face lifted – подтянуть кожу лица;
it's no
good crying over spilt milk – потерянного не воротишь;
to have
little flirtations – заводить небольшие интриги;
masseuse – массажистка;
gossip column – колонка светской хроники;
the world
of make-believe – мир притворства.
II. Answer
the following questions:
1. What did
Michael and Julia do when the war broke out?
Michael and
Julia were acting when the war broke out.
2. Why do
you think Michael enjoyed the war?
Michael’s
father and his grandfather were military men and Michael could not but
participate it. He also was a patriot.
3. Do you
think love is important for a successful family life? Would you share your
point of view on this problem with your fellow students?
I’m
absolutely sure that love is one of the most important things for a successful
family life, it’s the basic element of any family. Surely, everyone has their
own point of view.
4. How did
it happen that Julia fell out of love with Michael?
She fell
out of love with him before the end of the war, she realized that he was no
longer young, he was already a man.
5. How did
Michael manage to find the money to rent a theatre? What was the theatre
called? Who was in the partnership with him?
They had a
plan, they wanted to find a rich man, who fell in love with Julia or a rich old
woman, who fell in love with Michael and ask this person for money. Finally
they find a woman who was interested in Julia. Mrs. de Vries was in the
partnership with them. The theatre was called “The Siddons theatre”.
6. Why was
Julia against Michael's taking up directing?
Julia
thought he had no talent for it, she said that he had no fantasy.
7. What
kind of director was Michael?
He was a
good director, Julia didn’t expect it from him. “He was thorough; he worked
hard. Julia, strangely enough, felt that he was getting more out of her than
any other director had done”.
8. What irritated
Julia in Michael more and more? How did he change in Julia's eyes?
“His
thrift, which in the early days had seemed an amusing, rather touching trait,
now revolted her. When people were in trouble, and on the stage they too often
are, they got sympathy and kind friendly words from Michael, but very little
cash. He looked upon himself as devilish generous when he parted with a guinea,
and a five‑pound note was to him the extreme of lavishness. He had soon discovered
that Julia ran the house extravagantly, and insisting that he wanted to save her trouble took the matter in
his own hands. After that nothing was wasted. Every penny was accounted for.
Julia wondered why servants stayed with them”.
9. Why was
Julia sad when she thought of her married life?
Julia fell
out of love with Michael, she had never thought that such thing could happen
with her, Michael’s manners; everything in his behavior irritated her.
10. Why was
Michael happier than he had been before?
Julia
became more complaisant than she’d been before, she stopped make scenes,
Michael liked it, he didn’t know that she fell out of love with him, he just
thought that Julia changed her behavior for the better.
11. Julia's
dresser and maid was a Cockney, wasn't she? Please prove it using the examples
from the text.
“Evie was
Julia's dresser and maid. She had come to her first at Middlepool and had
accompanied her to London. She was a cockney, a thin, raddled, angular woman,
with red hair which was always untidy and looked as if it much needed washing,
two of her front teeth were missing but, notwithstanding Julia's offer,
repeated for years, to provide her with new ones she would not have them
replaced.”
Cockney
dialect characterized by colloquial pronunciation and grammatical errors:
"if he saw you now 'e wouldn't, not if I know anything about men"
12. Who was
the unknown man who sent flowers to Julia? Why did she write him a thank you
note?
Lord
Charles Tamerley sent flowers to Julia, he “was the oldest and the most
constant of Julia's admirers”. Julia answered to all letters from her fans, she
was polite with them.
III. Make
up a list of words and phrases describing Michael's appearance and character.
Say what you think of him.
- a good‑humoured smile on his handsome face
- the
handsomest man in England
- a
tailor's dummy
- the
ordinary normal Englishman
- with his
gentlemanly push, with his breezy good‑nature
- his
thriftiness
- He had
tact and a pleasant manner
- He showed
himself possessed of considerable organizing capacity
- He came,
looking wonderfully handsome in his well‑cut uniform, with the red tabs and the crown on his shoulder‑straps. He had filled out a good deal as the result of the hardships of
G.H.Q. and his skin was tanned. With his close‑cropped hair, breezy manner and military carriage he looked every inch a soldier.
- he was
only thirty‑six, but he was not a boy any more; with his close‑cropped hair and weather‑beaten skin, little lines
beginning to mark the smoothness of his forehead and to show under his eyes, he was definitely a man. He had
lost his coltish grace and his movements were set. He was a middle‑aged man.
- He was a
well set‑up, normal, high‑spirited fellow, with a
ready smile and a hearty laugh. He was well suited to drawing‑room comedy. His light voice gave a peculiar effect to a flippant line, and though he never
managed to make love convincingly he could carry off a chaffing love scene,
making a proposal as if it were rather a joke, or a declaration as though he
were laughing at himself.
To my mind,
Michael was the perfect man to run a theatre. He was pedant and stern. Michael
didn’t spend much money, neither had he ever given on credit. Such kind of men
could be successful in this business. Also I think, he was an ideal husband
because this man was so devoted to his wife.
IV. Comment
on the phrase from chapter 9: "Roger had been entered for Eton within a
week of
his
birth." Comment on it. Give a short presentation on public schools in
Britain.
Eton is a
public school in Britain. Only chi;dren from rich families can an opportunity
to study there. So does Roger. His parents live luxirous live and of course their son should study i such a
prestigious school.
There are
two types of schools in the UK: state schools where education is free and private
schools where you have to pay. The only thing is that private schools in
Britain are called ... public. Why? A long time ago when education was a
privilege of the rich, the only schools where poor people could go were funded
by charities (organisations that collect money for people in need). As it was
public money, the schools for the poor were called public schools. Logical,
isn't it? However, in the course of history many public schools became very
successful and turned into expensive private schools but the conservative
British continued to call them public schools.
Until very
recently public schools were either all-boys or all-girls. Public schools can
be full boarding (pupils live there all academic year except for holidays),
normal (pupils go home every day) and mixed (some pupils go home every weekend
and some stay).
Well, the
first thing you need to have is money as some public schools charge up to
£20,000 a year. There are some grants for bright pupils as well but the places
are few and the competition is very strong. Therefore, it comes as no surprise
that only six percent of the people in the UK can afford it. The other
important criterion is that you have to belong to the right class as the class
system in Britain is still very important. Mostly, public education is a
privilege of the upper middle and upper classes.
VI. Give a
summary of chapters 7-10.
Michael and
Julia had a happy family life, they both were acting when the war broke out.
Michael volunteered and Julia continued to act on the stage. Julia took hard
their parting, but when he returned, she realized that she fell out of love
with him, he was still handsome, but now he was a men, not a young boy, she
loved. They respected each other and they had an aim – to open their own
theatre. Mrs. de Vries was their partnership and Michael became a director of
the theatre. Julia became one of the most famous actresses and had lots of
fans, one of them was Tomas Fennel.