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LEVEL: ADVANCED return to the USA.

They have looked for information


about a man whose address was on a letter.
A Study in Scarlet 19 Holmes deduces that the man was poisoned by a tall
COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS man, who had arrived at the house in a horse-drawn
cab. He even describes the shoes the man wore and
PART 1 the type of cigar he smoked.
MR SHERLOCK HOLMES
WHAT JOHN RANCE HAD TO TELL
1 Watson is in London because he has been wounded
20 Holmes explains his deductions as the result of his
while in the army, and sent home with a pension.
2 Stamford finds Holmes strange, cold-blooded, and observations: the footprints in the garden, marks on
the wall, ash he picked up from the floor etc.
erratic in his behaviour.
21 Watson notices that Holmes blushes with pleasure
3 Watson’s first meeting with Holmes takes place in
when he compliments him on his work.
the laboratory, where Holmes is extremely excited
22 Rance’s story: It was a quiet night, so he was not very
by a discovery he has made. He is much more
interested in this, and its possible applications, than busy. When he saw a light in an empty house he
in meeting Watson. decided to investigate (but he looked for a colleague
4 Watson’s ‘shortcomings’ are that he is lazy, has a dog, first, because he was frightened of ghosts). He found
the dead man of the floor, went outside and called his
and keeps strange hours. Holmes’ are that he smokes,
colleagues. There was also a drunk man in the street,
suffers from spells of depression, and plays the violin.
who they did not arrest because they were busy with
The violin would only be a problem if he plays it badly
the death.
– Watson cannot stand noise – but Holmes plays
23 Holmes means that Rance should learn to use his
it well.
head for thinking.
THE SCIENCE OF DEDUCTION
OUR ADVERTISEMENT BRINGS A VISITOR
5 Holmes is not a difficult man for Watson to live with
24 Holmes puts an advertisement saying that a wedding
because he is quiet and his habits are very regular.
6 Watson’s life is ‘objectless’ because he has nothing to ring has been found in Brixton Road. He hopes this
will attract the murderer, who he believes lost the ring
do, and nothing to think about. This is because his
at the scene of the crime.
health is not good.
25 The visitor is a wrinkled old woman. This
7 Holmes is ignorant about literature, philosophy and
surprises Holmes and Watson, who expected a large
politics. He does not even know that the Earth travels
violent man.
around the sun.
26 Holmes was both amused and disappointed to find
8 Holmes deliberately keeps his mind empty of informa-
he had been deceived. The ‘old woman’ was a young
tion so that he can fill it with information that is useful
man is disguise, and had escaped from him.
to him. (He believes the mind has a limited capacity).
9 Sometimes he plays sad music, and sometimes TOBIAS GREGSON SHOWS WHAT HE CAN DO
cheerful music. It depends on his mood. 27 Three newspapers give different reports and comments
10 The clients who visit Holmes are: 1. Mr Lestrade, who on the crime. The Daily Telegraph emphasises that it
comes regularly, and looks like a rat; 2. a fashionably had been foreigners bringing their arguments to
dressed young girl; 3. an untidy man with grey hair; 4. Britain, something which the government should stop.
an elderly drunk woman; 5. a white-haired gentleman; The Standard gives a lot of details, blames the liberal
6. a railway porter in his uniform. government for the increase in crime, and says that
11 Watson discovers Holmes’ ‘trade’ when he reads and Lestrade and Gregson are investigating. The Daily
criticises an article, without knowing Holmes is the News is sure the crime was political, and comments
author. Holmes defends his article and explains that on Mr Gregson’s energy and abilities.
he is a ‘consulting detective’. 28 Holmes uses these homeless boys because they work
hard and can go anywhere. They are much more
THE LAURISTON GARDENS MYSTERY
effective than the police at finding information.
12 The messenger’s tattooed hand, his whiskers, the way 29 Gregson has discovered that a certain Arthur
he walks, and the way he uses a cane show Holmes Charpentier was Drebber’s killer, in revenge for
that he is a sailor, and that his background is military, Drebber’s insults to his sister. He has been arrested.
of the officer rank. 30 Lestrade brings the news that Stangerson, Drebber’s
13 The police are ‘at a loss’ about how the man died,
companion, has been murdered. This suggests that
and how and why he was in the empty house. Charpentier is innocent.
14 Holmes has a very poor opinion of Gregson and
Lestrade, although he says they are the best of a LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS
bad lot. 31 At Stangerson’s lodgings Lestrade finds blood coming
15 He knows that they will not acknowledge his help in from his bedroom door, and – when they break down
solving the mystery, so his only consolation will be to the locked door – they find a body on the bed,
laugh at their incompetence. stabbed through the heart. As at the scene of
16 When they arrive Holmes approaches the building on Drebber’s death, the word RACHE has been written
foot and spends a long time examining the location in blood.
32 Holmes asks Watson to bring the sick dog so that he
and surroundings. This surprises Watson, who expects
him to go into the house immediately. can test a pill which was found in Stangerson’s room.
17 The room is large and square, with no furniture, and is He gives the dog half one of the tablets and waits.
very dirty. The wallpaper is torn and in bad condition, Nothing happens.
33 The second tablet kills the dog immediately, proving
and there is an ornate fireplace with the remains of a
candle. The window is dirty, so the light is not good. that Holmes’ original conjecture was correct.
The body is lying on the floor. 34 He refuses to name the killer because the information
18 The police have examined the body, looking for the could get out, and if the man realises he is suspected,
cause of death, and have emptied the man’s pockets he will disappear.
looking for identification. They have discovered he was 35 He captures him by using his ‘assistant’ Wiggins to
Enoch J. Drebber, from Cleveland, and was about to bring a cab to 221B Baker Street. Holmes then arrests
the cab driver.
1
PART 2 – The country of the saints A CONTINUATION OF THE REMINISCENCES OF JOHN
ON THE GREAT ALKALI PLAINS WATSON MD
36 The Alkali Plains is described as a desolate place, 57 Hope thinks he may never be tried because he knows
completely without water or vegetation. he is seriously ill, and expects to die soon.
37 The solitary traveller is described as middle-aged or 58 He says this because his whole adult life has been
older, with long brown hair and beard, weather- dedicated to getting revenge, or justice, against
beaten and very, very thin. He is dying of hunger. Drebber and Stangerson.
38 The rest of his group are all dead, apart from the small 59 After he failed to kill Drebber and Stangerson in
child he is carrying. America, he followed them to Europe. In London he
39 The caravan is a very large group – nearly 10,000, worked as a cab driver so that he could follow them,
travelling with animals, in wagons and on foot. They and was finally able to get Drebber alone one night
are moving west, looking for a new place to live. when he was drunk. He pretended he was taking
40 They can join the caravan only if they join the Mormon
Drebber to his hotel but he took him to an empty
house where he revealed his true identity and his
religion.
mission, showing Lucy’s wedding ring. He held a knife
THE FLOWER OF UTAH at Drebber’s throat and offered him a choice of pills,
41 Ferrier gains the esteem of his companions because one poisoned and the other not. Drebber took the
he is a good hunter, practical and hardworking. As a poisoned one and died. A few days later, Hope
result of this his farm is very successful, he becomes entered Stangerson’s room through the window and
rich and well-known throughout the Mormon told him how Drebber had died. Stangerson fought
community. back, refusing to take the pill, so Hope stabbed him
42 He offends his co-religionists because he does not through the heart, killing him.
marry. THE CONCLUSION
43 Lucy Ferrier is rescued from being thrown off her horse 60 The ‘higher judge’ is God, who will judge Hope now
by a stranger, Jefferson Hope. Hope introduces himself he is dead.
and his visits to the Ferrier farm lead to her falling in 61 Holmes had solved the case analytically, by ‘reasoning
love with him. backwards’.
JOHN FERRIER TALKS WITH THE PROPHET
GENERAL QUESTIONS
44 John Ferrier had never wanted Lucy to marry a
1 a) Sherlock Holmes: Holmes is described as very tall
Mormon. He considered their practice of taking many
and thin, with a thin curved nose, sharp penetrating
wives to be a disgrace.
eyes and a determined chin. He is clean and
45 He had never said anything about this because going
temperate in his habits, but obsessive about his work.
against the religion would be severely punished. His hands are often stained with chemicals. He is
46 The Avenging Angels is a secret society which carries practical, systematic, and energetic. Although
out violent and bloody deeds in the name of religion. sometimes he becomes depressed and silent, he is
Because membership is secret, everyone is afraid to able to laugh at himself, and at others. Watson
confide in anyone. discovers that he is also vain – he likes to be
47 Brigham Young visits Ferrier to warn him of the complimented!
dangers of going against the Mormon faith. He criticis- b) John Watson: Watson seems a practical man. He is
es him for never having married, and refers to rumours well-educated and cultured, so Holmes’ lack of general
that Lucy is going to marry a non-Mormon. The ‘Sacred knowledge shocks him. Once his initial scepticism
Council of Four’ has decided that she must marry the passes, however, he admires Holmes’ powers of
son of one of the Elders. thought and deduction. He is self-critical, calling
48 Ferrier and his daughter decide to leave Utah. himself lazy, and perhaps rather frustrated by his poor
A FLIGHT FOR LIFE health and shaken nerves. Physically, we know he
49 The two young Mormons are arrogant and rather is shorter than Holmes, fair-skinned, but tanned by
the sun, and has a military manner.
threatening.
c) Gregson: We know very little about Inspector
50 Ferrier’s defiance leads them to threaten him with
Gregson, other than that his hair is very blond
punishment from God. (‘flaxen’), that he is tall, with a pale complexion,
51 They escape at night, with Jefferson Hope leading
and that he evidently has a high opinion of himself.
them across the fields. They take money, food and d) Lestrade: Physically, he contrasts with Gregson,
drink. The house is surrounded but Hope uses the because he is small, and dark. He is not attractive,
password to get past one of the Mormon guards. and is described as ‘rat-faced’ (p. 13), and ferret-like
They collect horses that Hope has left two miles away. (p. 23) with an unhealthy skin. Like Gregson, he thinks
THE AVENGING ANGELS he will be able to solve the case, but his approach is
52 The flight is very hard: the road is narrow and more practical and less thoughtful than Gregson’s.
dangerous, with many falling rocks. It is difficult to go e) Drebber: Enoch J. Drebber was unattractive even as
fast and it is cold at night. a young man, but drunkenness and a bad character
53 Their food runs out so Hope leaves to go hunting. have made him brutish (‘ape-like’) and ugly in middle
age. He is described as middle-sized, with broad
54 On return, he finds the horses, the man, and the girl shoulders, black curly hair and a short beard. He is
have all gone. Near the camp he finds a newly-dug arrogant, obstinate, and thinks he can treat people
grave with a paper showing John Ferrier is buried (especially women) as he wants.
there. f) Stangerson: As a boy Stangerson was obstinate and
55 Lucy has been taken away. She is forced to marry presumptuous. These characteristics continue – he
young Drebber, but dies within a month. takes the lead, even though he is less rich than
56 ‘The one object to which Jefferson Hope had devoted Drebber, and ends up as his secretary. He is alert to
his life’ is revenge against Drebber and Stangerson. He danger and fights back when Hope comes to kill him.
pursues this by trying to kill them in Utah, and then – We know little about his appearance other than that
once he has earned enough money – following them he has ‘keen eyes’ (p. 63) and a ‘long, pale face’ (p. 78)
to Europe, still determined to kill them.

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g) Brigham Young: He is the leader of the Mormons
although he is only in his 30s. He is described as
having a ‘massive head’ and a ‘resolute expression’
(p. 66). He is an excellent administrator and organiser.
His appearance remains stern and impressive, but
probably not attractive. He has sandy hair, light-
coloured eyelashes, and is rather fat. His character is
cold and
merciless.
h) John Ferrier: When we first see him he is thin with
hunger, with his long brown hair and beard starting to
turn white. It is clear that he is brave, strong and
determined. He is a good hunter and a good farmer,
practical and hardworking. He becomes rich from his
farming but he loves his daughter, and his freedom,
more than his wealth. Although he is a reserved man,
he is loving and loyal.
i) Lucy Ferrier: As a child, she is described as innocent
and pretty with golden hair. When she is older, her
beauty attracts a lot of attention, and her character is
frank, innocent, and fearless.
j) Jefferson Hope: He is very tall. As a young man, he is
‘savage looking’, strong, powerful, and dark from the
sun. His character is passionate and strong-willed and,
after Lucy is taken away and dies, he dedicates his
whole life to revenge. He pursues this with patience
and vindictiveness. Even after all his suffering, he is
very strong and the only external symptom of his
illness is his florid complexion.
2 (suggestions for answers:)
The place descriptions are not just factual: they are full
of atmosphere creating a sense of drama and
foreboding. For example, Lauriston Gardens is
described as ill-omened; the windows are melancholy,
and even the plants are sickly. The Alkali desert is not
only without water and vegetation, but described as
grim, gloomy, and dreary. We are shown the bones of
those who have died there as examples of its
inhospitality. The route that Hope and the Ferriers take
through the mountains is described giving emphasis to
the boulders that fall, paralleled to the organisation
whose iron grasp could …crush them.
Another characteristic of the descriptions is that they
are almost cinematic in technique, beginning in the
distance, and moving closer to the small details.
This is very clear in the description of the desert.
3 (suggestions for answers:)
As ‘A Study in Scarlet’ is the first of the Sherlock
Holmes stories, Conan Doyle has to establish their
characters, and explain how they came to be living
together. Later stories can build on this information,
and develop their relationship, sometimes with
humorous effect.
4 (suggestions for answers:)
Typical themes found in modern detective and murder
stories – a crime is investigated; methods of
investigation (clues are given); a false arrest/suspicion,
with an innocent person accused; the character and
unorthodox methods of the detective contrasted
with less successful detectives; psychological details:
the need to establish a motive; suspense and drama
as people are pursued; certainty that the mystery will
be solved and the criminal caught.
Differences? – story in two parts, with the connection
not immediately clear; Watson’s narrative voice;
relative lack of graphic violence and suspense.
We can see, however, that Conan Doyle’s stories have
had a lasting influence in the modern ‘thriller’.

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LEVEL: ADVANCED AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT II
1 a. He speaks strangely because he wants to appear mad.
Hamlet b. They are friends of his from the university in Wittenburg.
COMPREHENSION AND TEXT APPRECIATION EXERCISES c. He is happy because the players will give entertainment.
d. The story of King Priam reminds him that he has not
PAGE 78 taken revenge for his own father’s death.
Act I e. He plans to have the players perform a scene similar
PRE-READING QUESTIONS to his father’s murder and to watch Claudius’s reactions.
a. Perhaps you know about the ghost, or that Hamlet PAGE 81
is the prince of Denmark, and that he has a famous
soliloquy beginning ‘To be or not to be –‘. Another 2 carrion – dead flesh
famous scene is with the grave-digger, and Yorick’s skull. slander – accuse falsely and maliciously
b. The Zefferelli version is exciting, filmed in a castle doomsday – the Day of Judgement
in Scotland; the Branagh version is very long, but very maggot – fly larva
powerful. mirth – merriment, good humour
AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT I offal – internal organs
flinch – jump, be startled by something
1 a. The ghost looks like King Hamlet, the dead king of
cleave – cut open, split
Denmark. 3 (Model answers:)
b. A cock crowed, and, because morning was
The newspaper story about corruption appalled me.
approaching, the ghost disappeared.
Crows and other birds feed on carrion.
c. Fortinbras is the Prince of Norway, whose father,
I shall sue that man for slander!
the king, was killed by King Hamlet.
This will last until doomsday.
d. There are preparations for war because Fortinbras
I think maggots are disgusting creatures.
wants to get his lands back.
His eyes filled with tears of mirth.
e. Hamlet is the prince of Denmark, King Hamlet’s son.
Offal has to be carefully cooked.
f. The ghost wants Hamlet to follow him.
He flinched when the doctor touched his broken arm.
g. So that it can speak to him privately.
He used an axe to cleave the block in two.
h. King Claudius was King Hamlet’s brother – and his 4 a. mirthless b. cleaver c. doom d. appalling
murderer.
2 a. True b. False c. True d. False e. True f. False
e. slanderous f. maggoty
g. True h. False M I R T H L E S S
PAGE 79 C L E A V E R
3 a. He is mourning his father’s death and is angry D O O M
and disgusted by his mother’s very rapid marriage A P P A L L I N G
to Claudius, her husband’s brother. S L A N D E R O U S
b. ‘Oh that this too too solid flesh would melt
M A G G O T Y
Thaw and resolve itself into a dew!
Or that the Everlasting had not forbidden us Vertical word: Hamlet
To take our own lives.’ PAGE 82
c. He thinks his father and Claudius are completely
5 LORD POLONIUS Oh, pardon me, but how is my good
different: he is ‘no more like my father Than I to
Hercules’ Lord Hamlet?
d. He believes women are frail and inconstant. HAMLET Well, thank you.
4 5
LORD POLONIUS Do you know who I am, my lord?
S HAMLET Perfectly well: you are a fishmonger.
H 8 LORD POLONIUS No, I’m not, my lord.
R K HAMLET Then I wish you were such an honest man.
LORD POLONIUS Honest, my lord!
O 7 I HAMLET Yes, sir. To be honest, in this modern world,
1 S U M M O N S is to be one in ten thousand.
D O LORD POLONIUS That’s quite true, my lord.
U 9
HAMLET Because if the sun breeds maggots in a dead
dog, which is good dead flesh for that – Do you have
2 E N T R E A T a daughter?
N H LORD POLONIUS Yes, I do, my lord.
3 F I E R HAMLET Don’t let her walk in the sun. Conception is
a blessing, but not in the way she may get pregnant.
6 N I
Be careful, my friend.
4 L O D G E F LORD POLONIUS (aside) What do you think of that? He still
A T speaks only about my daughter, but at first he didn’t
T know me; he said I was a fishmonger: he’s gone, far
gone, and indeed when I was young I also suffered
H terribly for love; very like this. I’ll talk to him some more.
PAGE 80 What are you reading, my lord?
5 a. lodge b. shroud c. entreated d. thrifty e. fie HAMLET Words, words, words.
LORD POLONIUS What is it about? The argument?
f. oath g. summoned h. kin i. mourning
HAMLET Between who?
PRE-READING QUESTION LORD POLONIUS I mean what are you reading about?
a. Perhaps by getting Claudius to confess his crime. HAMLET It’s all lies because the stupid writer says that
If he kills him he will be killed himself. old men have grey beards, and their faces are wrinkled,
b. He might have doubts about the ghost’s story. with their eyes secreting yellow gum and that they
have a lack of intelligence, as well as weak thighs:

4
all of which, although I absolutely believe it, I do not 4 Rosencrantz told Claudius that Hamlet confessed that
think it is honest to put in writing like this, because you, he felt mad, but would not tell them why. Guildenstern
sir, would be the same age as me – if you could go added that he wasn’t willing to be questioned either.
backwards like a crab. Gertrude asked if Hamlet had welcomed them, and
LORD POLONIUS (aside) Even if this is madness, it makes a Rosencrantz said that he had been very gentlemanly.
lot of sense. Would you like to walk out of the air, my lord? She asked if they had encouraged him to pursue some
HAMLET Into my grave? entertainment and Rosencrantz explained that they had
LORD POLONIUS True – that is out of the air. (aside) How passed some players on their way there and when they
meaningful his replies sometimes are! Madness often told Hamlet this, he had been overjoyed. He believed
hits on greater appropriateness than reason and sanity they had already had the order to play before him that
do! I will leave him, and arrange a meeting between evening. Lord Polonius interrupted to say this was true
him and my daughter. – I humbly take my leave of you, and that Hamlet had beseeched him to invite the King
my lord. and Queen to see the play. King Claudius said he was
HAMLET You couldn’t take anything from me that I would very glad to hear that.
be happier to lose – except my life, except my life.
LORD POLONIUS Goodbye, my lord. PAGE 85
HAMLET These boring old idiots! 5 b. She asked me to pass the water.
6 a. He is not a brave, noble hero like the character in c. She begged me to help her.
the play. d. She ordered me to sit at the back of the room.
b. The player weeps because he is acting a role. e. She entreated me not to tell Frank.
c. Some of the strong language he uses is: slave; bloody, f. She asked me to wait there a moment.
bawdy villain; Remorseless, treacherous, lecherous, g. She told me to stop talking nonsense.
kindless villain! h. She beseeched me not to leave her there.
d. Then he reproaches himself for using bad language i. She asked me what time the next bus was due.
instead of taking vengeance. PAGE 86
e. He says: ‘The spirit I have seen may be the devil’
6 question Q D E H S I W T O O
PAGE 83 nobler
PRE-READING QUESTIONS U J R O D S M R A P
slings
a. It is obviously about a murder – the murder of a king, outrageous E D S R E U S O F A
perhaps. arms S N A S R O I U G F
b. A play about a murder will remind him of his own troubles T A D G L E L B E L
guilt. opposing
c. He loves her, but he cannot think about love and I S W N P G O L A E
sleep
about murder and revenge at the same time. thousand O U I I E A P E W S
AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT III flesh N O B L E R H S C H
1 a. He thinks love of Ophelia has caused him to go mad. wish’d E H L S L T U H T U
b. Gertrude would be happy for Hamlet to marry Ophelia. D T N E S U J I H V
c. He tells her to ‘get to a nunnery’ because he does not
F G N I S O P P O E
want to marry her, or to see her again.
d. He treats her well, giving her presents, and speaking 7 a. He is considering whether it is better to be alive or
to her like a lover. dead.
e. When he rejects her she is full of sadness that he has b. When you are alive, you have to bear all kinds of
gone mad. misfortunes.
f. Queen Gertrude thinks the queen in the play is being c. You can oppose this suffering by dying.
excessive when she promises that she will never d. But he is afraid of the dreams and suffering that
remarry after her husband’s death. Gertrude of course might come when you are dead.
remarried very quickly. e. He uses words like: calamity, whips, scorns, wrong,
g. He is upset, and gets up and leaves the room. pangs …
h. No – he is much more honest and speaks clearly f. He compares death to sleep.
when he speaks to Horatio.
i. If he were killed while he was praying, Claudius would PAGE 87
go straight to heaven. PRE-READING QUESTIONS
j. It’s not clear – possibly Claudius, or some other a. Claudius will need to punish Hamlet – he could
enemy, but he does not care who he has killed. sentence him to death, or exile him.
k. Yes, she seems definitely to believe him. b. Laertes will want to revenge his father’s death.
PAGE 84 Ophelia will be left alone, and very sad.
2 a. mischief b. pox c. bellow d. grant e. prank AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT IV
f. repentance g. slain h. rotten i. chide j. weed 1 a. Claudius decides Hamlet must be sent away to
k. cunning l. guts England immediately.
3 (Model answers:) b. Hamlet calls Rosencrantz a sponge because he soaks
My little brother is always up to mischief. up rewards and favours.
Nowadays we know the ‘pox’ as ‘syphilis’. c. He says Polonius is ‘at supper’ because worms are
He bellowed with pain. eating him.
We were granted this land in perpetuity. d. ‘The other place’ where they could seek for Polonius
That was a very silly prank to play. is hell.
He was full of repentance for his wicked past. e. Claudius believes grief for Polonius’s death has sent
This memorial is dedicated to soldiers slain in the war. Ophelia mad.
One rotten apple will spoil the whole box. f. He promises Laertes than they will investigate and
She chided him for not telling the truth. revenge Pononius’s death and that if he, Claudius, is
The garden is such a mess: it’s full of weeds. found to be responsible, Laertes can have his throne.
The fox is considered a very cunning animal.
I have a feeling in my guts that this will not work.

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g. Claudius makes sure that Laertes will kill Hamlet by PAGE 92
poisoning his sword, and, if this fails, by making sure 3 a. grinning b. treason c. fit d. decked e. dallying
there is a poisoned cup that Hamlet will drink from.
f. treachery g. churlish h. rants
h. Ophelia dies by drowning. 4 (Model answers:)
2 1. dead 2. lean 3. fever 4. rebuke 5. turf
b. treason (noun) – treachery, betrayal
6. unwholesome 7. judgment 8. withered 9. flaxen
treasonable (adjective) – treacherous
10. shuffling
8 c. fit (noun) – attack, seizure
W fitful (adjective) – irregular
d. to deck (verb) – to decorate
2 10 S H U F F L I N G
decked (adjective) decorated
L T e. to dally (verb) – to move or act slowly
1 D E A D 4 3 H dalliance (noun) – slowness
A R 9 F L A X E N f. treachery (noun) – betrayal, treason
treacherous (adjective) – likely to betray; dangerous
6 U N W H O L E S O M E R g. churl (noun) – peasant; rude person
B V E churlish (adjective) – rude, bad-tempered
5 U E D h. to rant (verb) – to talk loudly and angrily
T K R ranting (adejctive) – loud, incoherent
7 J U D G M E N T
PAGE 93
5 a. false b. false c. true d. true e. true
R
F 6 (Model answers:)
b. What would you do if you had a cold drink in front
3 (Model answers:) of you?
He has been dead for many years. c. What would you do if you felt ill?
I prefer lean meat to fat. d. What would you do if you had plenty of money and
She has a cold and a very high fever. a few free days?
He received a strong rebuke for his careless work. e. What would you do if you heard an intruder in your
We laid turf to create beautiful green lawn. house at night?
The unwholesome climate affected his health badly. f. What would you do if the ice cream was melting?
Her judgment was badly affected by drugs. ‘Second’ – hypothetical – conditional is being used
Lack of rain left the plants dry and withered. here.
I had lovely flaxen curly hair as a child.
The children came shuffling unwillingly into class. PAGE 94
PAGE 89 Hamlet • The work as a whole
4 a. false b. true c. false d. true e. false f. false g. true
THE WRITER AND HIS WORK
a. Suggestion: First write a short summary of the play
5 came / grew / climbed / broke / fell / spread / carried / in your own words. Which of the themes occur in your
went / sang / was not / became / pulled version? Which themes do you find the most important?
PAGE 90 Relate them to incidents in the play: for example,
corruption – who do you think is corrupt? Revenge –
6 b. made / have not made
who takes revenge, and what for? Deception – who
c. stayed / tried / was not / have had deceives who? Appearance and reality – what
d. could not believe / saw / looked / have not seen incidents in the play show this?
e. told / was / have tried Are there other themes that do not occur in this list?
f. have never read / had to / used / did not get Also look at the language, for example, in Hamlet’s
PAGE 91 famous soliloquies – how does this reflect the themes
PRE-READING QUESTIONS mentioned? Now organise your answer into paragraphs:
(Model answers:) you could have one about corruption, one about
a. He will be very upset. revenge, and perhaps combine deception and
b. Laertes is probably a better soldier, so may win. appearance and reality in a third paragraph. In your
conclusion you can mention other themes you have
AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT V found.
1 a. The grave is for Ophelia. (Model answer:)
b. Yorick was a court jester. Yes. Claudius is corrupted by the desire for power
c. The priest says this because it is not clear whether and by lust for his brother's wife. The ghost of Hamlet's
her death was suicide or not. father demands he take revenge for his murder. King
d. Hamlet fights with Laertes because Laertes Claudius deceives Hamlet by telling him to go away for
attacks him. his own safety, when in fact he is planning to kill him.
e. Yes, Hamlet did love Ophelia. At first Hamlet appears to be slightly mad because he is
f. He thinks he will win the duel because he has been acting strangely, but it is because he is trying to find out
practising continuously. the truth.
g. Gertrude drinks from the poisoned cup first. b. (Model answer:)
h. Laertes is poisoned with his own rapier. ACT II, Scene Two (a room in the castle): Two large
i. Hamlet stops Horatio from drinking the poison so wooden chairs with cushions, to represent the thrones.
that he will live and tell Hamlet’s story. ACT V, Scene One (a churchyard): Several standing
2 a. – smiling stupidly or without humour crosses and large stones to represent grave markers; a
b. – bad-mannered brown rug to represent the grave which is being dug;
c. – cover with flowers, decorate spades for the gravediggers and a wax or plaster of paris
d. – shout with anger skull for Hamlet's soliloquy.
e. – convulsion, attack of anger
f. – waste time
g. – disloyalty, betrayal
h. – betrayal of the king or state

6
c. (Model answer:) PAGE 95
The Shakespearean stage did not use scenery. For ESSAY QUESTIONS
each change of scene, appropriate props were carried (Model essay:)
onto the stage. For ACT III, Scene Four, a couch would
indicate the scene takes place in the Queen's closet. b. There are many examples in the play. Here are two:
The actor playing Polonius could cover himself with ACT I, Scene one: King Claudius speaks of Hamlet's
a cloth or blanket and stand to one side of the stage father as his "dear brother", when in fact he had
to indicate he is hiding behind a tapestry. murdered him. Later in the same scene, Hamlet
attributes his downcast appearance first to having
The play been exposed to too much sun, and later to the grief
ESSAY QUESTIONS he feels after his father's death. He is really only
Suggestions for writing: Read the question carefully. suppressing his rage at the way his uncle has enticed
What does it ask you? Write some notes giving your his mother into marriage so soon after becoming a
immediate answer. If your answer is both yes and no, widow.
put your arguments under those headings. Look through ACT II, Scene two: Hamlet gives the impression of
the text for examples to support your arguments. being mad by giving nonseniscal answers to Polonius'
Organise your essay into paragraphs with an introduction, questions. Polonius suspects he is madly in love with
two or more argumentative paragraphs, and a Ophelia. But Hamlet's strange behaviour is the result
conclusion. of his uncertainty about the ghost's accusations and
a. The main question is: Is Hamlet a coward? Secondly: his own indecision as to whether to venge his father's
compare him to Laertes and Fortinbras. death.
Possible structure: c. Both Gertrude and Ophelia are ladies of the Court
Introduction: Your opinion? Overview of Hamlet’s role. and therefore involved with powerful men. But
1. Arguments that Hamlet is a coward. Gertrude succumbed to the seduction of Claudius and
2. Arguments that he is not. betrayed her husband's memory by marrying his
3. Comparison with Laertes and Fortinbras. brother almost immediately after King Hamlet's death.
On the other hand, Ophelia was driven to madness
(Model essay:)
precisely because her love for Hamlet was faithful.
Hamlet is different from many tragic heroes because he
Both women are viewed more as objects of passion
is not a man of action. At the beginning of the play, his
than as intelligent people worthy of respect.
father is dead and he is depressed and angry. After his
d. In ACT II, Scene two, Hamlet pretends to mistake
father’s ghost speaks to him, he spends most of the
Polonius for a fishmonger. Polonius interprets this
play planning his revenge, and debating whether he
as madness, but in fact, Hamlet uses this image of
should act or not. Does this mean that he is a coward?
simplicity to contrast with the deceit he has
Hamlet believes himself to be a coward. He compares encountered in his uncle. In ACT III, Scene one, Hamlet
himself with Priam’s son (who revenges his father’s repeatedly exhorts Ophelia to "get to a nunnery", but far
murder) in the play, saying (Act II, scene ii): from madness, his words are a lament because of his
‘Yet I, mother's "incestuous" marriage to his uncle. Hamlet is
A dull and cowardly rascal, mope not mad. Rather he is obsessed with the discovery of
And can say nothing; … Am I a coward? treachery and the question of revenge.
… I am pigeon-liver’d and lack gall …’
In the famous soliloquy beginning ‘To be, or not to be’
(Act III, scene I), he explains that he is not ready to kill
and then be tormented for his sins in hell. He may also
compare himself with Fortinbras, the prince of Sweden
(who begins a war to revenge his own father’s death),
and, later, with Laertes (who wishes to have revenge
for Hamlet’s accidental killing of Polonius).
But Hamlet is very conscious of the moral dilemma of
killing. He also wonders whether killing is an effective
revenge. For example, when he has the opportunity to
kill Claudius at prayer, he decides not to act:
‘A villain kills my father; and for that,
I, his sole son, do this same villain send to heaven.
O, this is legal payment, not revenge.’
(Act III, Scene ii)
He worries that the ghost may be an instrument of the
devil, sent to tempt him. He is also disgusted by the
society he lives in, and feels outside it. Anger and
disgust make him more active, for example when he
attacks Laertes at Ophelia’s grave (Act V, Scene i). When
he is forced to act, in a duel with Laertes, he shows he
is a brave and capable fighter, but this is not his natural
way.
In contrast to natural fighters like Fortinbras or Laertes,
Hamlet thinks about the consequences of his actions,
and whether they are morally justified. He is a scholar
and a philosopher in a war-like society. This does not
make him a coward.

7
LEVEL: ADVANCED d. Bingley’s sisters don’t really like Jane. e. Caroline
Bingley likes Darcy. f. Bingley likes Jane. g. Jane likes
Pride and Prejudice Bingley. h. Darcy likes Elizabeth. i. Bingley and his
sisters like Darcy. j. Yes, Jane and Bingley like each
COMPREHENSION AND TEXT APPRECIATION EXERCISES
other. k. No, Elizabeth and Caroline Bingley do not like
PAGE 75 each other. l. Yes, Bingley and Darcy like each other.
Chapters 1-5
PAGE 80
PRE-READING QUESTIONS
7 a. had been trying b. had been raining
(Model answers:)
a. Prejudice can be about social class, or gender, or c. had not stopped d. had finished
because we have heard gossip about someone. Perhaps e. had been writing f. had written g. had met
the characters in the novel are proud of their social h. had not flown i. had not eaten j. had been eating
positions or prejudiced against each other. PAGE 81
b. These two characteristics would be obstacles to falling Chapters 6-10
in love.
PRE-READING QUESTIONS
AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS 1-5 a. No, because they are much richer, and would like
1 a. Mr Bennet seems unconventional and intelligent. Bingley to marry a rich woman.
He is sarcastic and humorous, and especially fond of b. They might start to like each other more.
his daughter Elizabeth. b. Mrs Bennet is less intelligent AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS 6-10
than her husband, superficial and changeable. c. They
1 a. Mr Collins is a distant cousin of the Bennets.
appear to tolerate each other, although they are very
different. d. Mrs Bennet’s main aim in life is to find b. He is the heir to Mr Bennet’s property and so will
husbands for her daughters. e. Jane finds Mr Bingley’s inherit Longbourn. c. He comes to Longbourn to
sisters charming. Elizabeth thinks they are ill-mannered make his peace with the family. d. Mrs Bennet is
and snobbish, and she notices their lack of concern for pleased because she thinks she has successfully
Jane when she is ill. f. Mrs Bennet wants Jane to go on married off two of her daughters. e. Lydia and Kitty
horseback because if the weather is bad, she will have are less serious than their elder sisters. f. Mr Wickham
to stay there and spend more time with the Bingley is an army officer. g. Mr Darcy’s father was his
family. g. The Bingleys are surprised to see Elizabeth godfather. h. He says that he dislikes Darcy because
so early, because she has come three miles on foot, Darcy prevented him from getting a living he had been
and has got very muddy on her walk. h. The Bingley promised. i. Lady Catherine is Mr Collins’ patroness
sisters comment on Elizabeth’s untidy appearance, and Mr Darcy’s aunt. j. Miss de Bourgh may be going
saying that she looked ‘wild’ when she arrived. i. Mr to marry Darcy. k. Mr Collins asks Elizabeth to marry
Darcy finds Elizabeth unconventional and thinks she him. l. Caroline Bingley hopes that Georgiana Darcy
has beautiful eyes. j. When she visits, Mrs Bennet will marry her brother. m. Elizabeth is surprised that
praises Jane’s beauty by comparing it with Charlotte Charlotte has accepted Mr Collins’s proposal of
Lucas’ plainness. Charlotte is a close friend of Elizabeth’s. marriage.
k. The separation is agreeable to Mr Darcy and to PAGE 82
Bingley’s sisters. It is disagreeable to Mr Bingley. 2 a. – achievement, successful completion of something.
PAGE 76 b. – to leave in a will. c. – breaking, especially of a
2 a. False b. True c. False d. False e. True f. False contract or other formal agreement.
g. True h. True i. False d. – a short look. e. – suffering, difficult experience.
3 5 f. – (here) legally settled on a person.
U g. – to politely say ‘no’; go down or diminish
N h. – mixed. i. – to hold someone affectionately in
6 7 10
your arms. j. – a very humble or serious request.
1 S U P E R C I L I O U S N E S S k. – place where things are stored.
A O E E 3 A
S M T 9 I
C H D
Y P W G
C E N T A I L E D
O 8 E H
O R C
S T A B
M I N G L E D L
U R R 2 S O L A C E
P S I
3 S C A R C I T Y U
L H N
E F R
G L I M P S E I E
L H
S P
I 4 F O O T M A N
H B E
N O
M R N
G D
PAGE 77 B E Q U E A T H W
4 a. supercilious b. solace c. footman d. uneasy N A R A
e. neighbourhood f. compose g. let h. weary T C E M B R A C E
i. trifling j. scarce H A E
PAGE 78
T H
5 a. supercilious b. composed c. not at ease
Y O
d. scarce e. trifle f. let g. allow h. neighbour
U
PAGE 79
S
6 a. Mr Bingley likes Jane. b. Jane likes Mr Bingley and
his sisters. c. Bingley’s sisters dislike Elizabeth. E

8
PAGE 83 f. Elizabeth’s main reason for not wanting to marry Darcy
4 My dear,
is that he has ruined Jane’s possibility of happiness.
g. Darcy’s worst fault, in Elizabeth’s opinion, is his
You cannot imagine what has happened! I have already
pride.
told you about our impossible cousin, Mr Collins, who
h. Darcy explains that he thought Jane was indifferent
has come to visit us. He is the silliest and most
to Bingley. He was also shocked by the way members
pompous man imaginable, and talks continuously
of the Bennet family were talking about the marriage
about his patroness, Lady Catherine de Bourgh. He
as if certain. He justifies his treatment of Wickham by
said he wanted to visit us to restore good relations
explaining how Wickham first gave up his claim to the
with our family, but it seems he has another motive!
church, asking for money to study law instead, and
Lady Catherine, apparently, has told him he should
then, after he had spent all the money, wanted to be
marry. He also thinks (I do not disagree!) that it is
ordained. After all this, he tried to elope with 15-year-
appropriate for a clergyman to be married, so he is
old Georgiana Darcy.
looking for a wife. At first he was interested in dear
i. Elizabeth is ashamed of her prejudice.
Jane, but now he has understood that she has
j. Elizabeth wants Jane’s advice on whether she should
given her heart to someone else, he has quickly
tell the family about Wickham’s true character.
changed his plan.
k. Elizabeth believes that Lydia’s behaviour in Brighton
This morning, in a very pompous way, he asked my
will reflect on the whole family, and ruin their reputation.
mother if he ‘could solicit a private audience’ with me.
l. She finds Pemberley very elegant, and showing very
I was surprised and embarrassed but Mama was
good taste.
delighted, and would not stay to hear his proposal.
m. She is ashamed because it might look as if she was
He explained his reasons for wanting to marry and that
trying to meet Darcy.
he had chosen me to be ‘the companion of his future
n. His behaviour is surprising because he is polite and
life’. When I interrupted to say that I could not accept,
friendly, wants to meet her friends, and also wishes to
he answered that he knew it was usual for young
introduce her to his sister.
ladies to refuse even when they wanted to accept.
In short, he would not believe that I did not want to PAGE 86
marry him! 2
I promised him that I was serious and left as quickly as E E N D E A V O U R W
possible. Fortunately, although Mama thinks I should R L K E P B E A R M E
accept, Papa understands my feelings and agrees with D O O B O R D T H B D
them. F P R E Y U F E H W F
It is not every day that one receives a proposal of
marriage, I suppose, but I wish it had not been such T E E R O P I D U E G
an unwelcome one! Write and tell me all your news, G S D F J T J V J Y U
Your loving friend, H U N W A L H C E T L
Elizabeth Bennet
5 c. He had no objection to my using his car.
O B I R E Y C A G E L
d. Harry’s wife says she is tired of living in the city. U S E I N I A D S I D
e. He wasn’t very interested in my applying for the job. L I K E N E S S U R H
f. After warming up we went on to do more difficult M D A S O I O D W P I
exercises.
g. Before taking off we were told to fasten our seat A E T D U H P S F O K
belts. R U Y A G G B A Y R B
h. She was very enthusiastic about Frank’s participating E E G A N O S R A P F
in the project.
i. She suffered for years without complaining. 3 a. endeavour – I will endeavour to finish these
j. He didn’t agree with my way of thinking. exercises today.
PAGE 84 b. prey – I am sometimes prey to doubt and
depression.
6 (Model answer:) c. lawn – We had a picnic sitting on the lawn.
He is a very foolish, self-satisfied man. He thinks rank d. parsonage – The parsonage, where the vicar lives,
and wealth are the most important things, and seems is next to the church.
to have no normal human emotions. His vanity is not e. elope – If your parents will not let us marry, we will
affected by Elizabeth’s refusal to marry him. have to elope.
Chapters 11-15 f. abruptly – Months after agreeing, he abruptly
PRE-READING QUESTIONS changed his mind.
g. take in – The story was so complicated I could not
(POSSIBLE ANSWERS!) take in all the detail.
a. He is very charming and attractive, but desperate for h. subside – I took an aspirin and the pain began to
money. subside.
b. It doesn’t seem likely. i. propriety – Her strong sense of propriety was
PAGE 85 offended by his behaviour.
AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS 11-15 j. disdain – I do not deserve to be treated with such
1 a. Mr Collins feels triumphant that Lady Catherine disdain!
de Bourgh has invited them all to dine at Rosings k. likeness – All the children share a strong family
(her house). likeness.
b. Elizabeth is not very impressed by Rosings. l. legacy – My grandmother left me a small legacy
c. Mr Darcy is ashamed of his aunt’s desire to be when she died.
involved in every conversation. m. bear – She can't bear her noisy neighbours.
d. No, Darcy shows no interest at all in Miss de
Bourgh.
e. Colonel Fitzwilliam reveals that Darcy is pleased
to have saved Bingley from an imprudent marriage.

9
PAGE 87 c. When she sees Bingley she thinks he seems very
4 a. I have been running for 30 minutes … I have run
interested in knowing about Jane.
d. Jane’s letter brings the bad news that their sister
five kilometres so far …
Lydia has run off with Wickham, who, it seems, may
b. I have been baking all morning. I have baked two
not intend to marry her.
cakes …
e. Elizabeth is angry with herself for not telling her
c. My eyes are tired because I have been writing for
family what she had learnt about Wickham’s character.
a long time. I have written four letters. I still haven’t
f. Her uncle Gardiner promises to help in any way he
written to my auntie …
can, and both prepare to leave Derbyshire immediately.
d. Have you read the new best seller …?’ ‘No, I
g. Aunt Philips is less helpful than aunt Gardiner: she
haven’t. In fact I haven’t had much time for reading
tells Mrs Bennet more and more worrying stories
recently.’
about Wickham’s behaviour.
e. ‘… Have you been waiting long?’
h. Mr Gardiner manages to negotiate a marriage
f. ‘Have you bought Jack a birthday present yet?’ ‘No
between Wickham and Lydia on the following terms:
I haven’t. Actually I have been wondering what to buy
Lydia will receive one hundred pounds per annum,
him …’
from her father, and her share of five thousand pounds
g. ‘ … It has been getting colder and colder in the last
when her father dies.
few days.’
i. Mr Bennet does not believe that this will be enough
h. … He has been standing there for ages.
money to persuade Wickham to marry Lydia.
PAGE 88 j. When they come home Mr Bennet is angry that the
5 a. Lady Catherine de Bourgh: What are you telling Miss couple are not at all embarrassed about their
Bennet? behaviour and the scandal they have caused.
b. Elizabeth: Will you certainly leave Kent on Saturday? k. Elizabeth discovers that Mr Darcy not only looked for
c. Mr Darcy: Is this all the reply I have the honour of and located Wickham in London, but also paid off all
receiving? his gambling debts on condition that he married Lydia.
d. Mr Darcy: Will you do me the honour of reading l. Mrs Bennet keeps winking at her daughter because
this? she wants Jane and Bingley to be left alone.
e. Lydia: Have you seen any pleasant men? PAGE 90
f. Elizabeth: Do you think we should tell the rest of our 2 a. simper b. deliberately c. rant d. decease
family and friends about Wickham’s true character?
e. ventured f. detain g. outstrip h. earnest
g. Elizabeth: Can this be Mr Darcy?
i. bribe j. complying
h. Mr Darcy: Will you allow me to introduce my sister
to your acquaintance during your stay at Lambton? PAGE 91
PAGE 89 3 a. She is such a simpering idiot!
6 (Model answer:)
b. I think it was deliberate, not an accident.
c. He was ranting and raving in a ridiculous way.
Now that we have Darcy’s side of the story we do not
d. The deceased’s last will was read to his family.
only have Elizabeth’s prejudiced opinion, which has
e. May I venture an opinion?
been influenced by Wickham’s story.
f. He will be detained until he is no longer a danger
It is clear that his intervention to prevent Bingley
to society.
marrying Jane Bennet was made with good motivation,
g. Demand will outstrip supply if we not increase
to prevent his friend making a mistake. Although he
production.
misunderstood Jane’s emotions, it seems Darcy is
h. It seems he is in earnest about this crazy plan.
usually a good judge of character. Elizabeth would
i. The council employee was bribed by contractors.
probably agree with his criticisms of her mother and
j. You must comply with all the terms of the contract.
her sisters, and he realised many years ago that
Wickham was unprincipled and immoral. PAGE 92
The letter shows that his behaviour to Wickham was 4 (example)
very fair, but that Wickham is immoral and only My dear aunt Gardiner,
interested in money. He tried to take advantage of I am writing to thank you and my uncle for all your
Mr Darcy’s generosity, and, when this failed, he even help with the unfortunate affair of my sister’s
tried to corrupt Georgiana in order to get her fortune. elopement.
Darcy’s behaviour in not telling the whole world about Lydia and Mr Wickham have been visiting us, and
this shows that he is a gentleman. seem very happy. They are certainly not embarrassed
Given his position, and what he has experienced, it is by any of the problems they have caused. Lydia wanted
not surprising that Darcy is suspicious of people’s to tell everyone about the details of her marriage.
motives, and tries to protect his friend from a marriage She even said that Mr Darcy helped to arrange it.
with someone who may be prompted more by I know Mr Darcy is a very kind and courteous
interest in his money than by love and affection. gentleman, but I did not ask for the details of how he
Chapters 16-20 arranged their marriage. I am just very grateful to you,
PRE-READING QUESTIONS my uncle and Mr Darcy for helping to protect the
family’s reputation.
(Model answers:)
Your loving niece,
d. Darcy’s letter has definitely changed Elizabeth’s
Elizabeth Bennet.
attitude. She may feel she has been unfair to him.
d. Caroline Bingley would be sorry – she would like 5 was / got / visited / talked / missed / delighted /
to marry Darcy herself. Possibly Lady Catherine would bought / were / spent / improved / remained /
like him to marry her daughter. changed / remained / sank / could / did
All the verbs are in the simple past.
AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS 16-20
1 a. Darcy brings his sister Georgiana to see Elizabeth.
b. Elizabeth is surprised that he does this so soon,
especially as it makes her aunt and uncle think he is
interested in her.

10
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE • THE WORK AS A WHOLE However, Elizabeth is not a rebel. She is very concerned
ESSAY QUESTIONS not to offend the values of her society, and is upset
SUGGESTED APPROACH: Read the question carefully and when her mother’s and sisters’ behaviour cause scandal
make sure you understand it. Quickly note down your and affect the whole family’s reputation. In this way
first reactions. If the question asks for an opinion, you her opinions are similar to Mr Darcy’s. She is also
may wish to answer for and against. Divide your upset and embarrassed when Darcy finds her visiting
arguments into for/against. Look through the text to his house. She worries that he will think she is looking
find examples to support your opinions. Give your for him.
essay an introduction and a brief conclusion. Finally, Elizabeth’s tendency to judge others can
sometimes be dangerous. It is fortunate that people
THE WRITER AND HER HISTORICAL BACKGROUND. like Charlotte Lucas and Mr Darcy can show her that
Refer to the Preface, page 2. she has been unfair. She learns that she was wrong to
ESSAY 1) be prejudiced against Darcy, and that she had no right
EXAMPLE OF NOTES: to criticise Charlotte for marrying Mr Collins. She learns
INTRODUCTION: Restate the question and give general to be more charitable, and helps Lydia and Wickham
personal opinion. whenever she can. Jane Austen probably respects
PARAGRAPH 1: arguments against the statement (For Elizabeth’s nonconformism and her attempt to think
example, 18th century context, women’s role and for herself.
limited rights, small sector of society portrayed, great
importance of correct behaviour ...) Examples taken
from text.
PARAGRAPH 2: arguments in favour. (For example,
importance of sincerity, of morality, and of considering
others’ feelings, need to avoid prejudice, not believe
everything we hear, and to be ready to reconsider
opinions, …)
Examples taken from text. For example, Wickham’s be-
haviour, Elizabeth’s prejudice.
CONCLUSION: overall opinion, perhaps contrasting
changed moral standards and legal position of women
from 18th to 21st century.
THE STORY
ESSAY 1)
EXAMPLE OF NOTES:
INTRODUCTION: Restate the question (that Elizabeth is
nonconformist) and give general personal opinion.
PARAGRAPH 1: Examples of Elizabeth’s nonconformist
behaviour taken from text. (For example, leaving home
immediately and walking to visit Jane; higher opinion
of goodness and sincerity than of rank and wealth;
refusal to marry ‘at any cost’; rejection of her mother’s
and younger sisters’ values …)
PARAGRAPH 2: Examples taken from text that show her
to be very influenced by her society. (For example,
worries what people will think about sisters’ behaviour,
embarrassed to be found by Darcy at Pemberley, not
naturally rebellious)
CONCLUSION: Elizabeth is independent minded, but
sometimes too ready to judge others: For example,
judges Charlotte for accepting Mr Collins, is prejudiced
against Darcy, but is able to accept her mistakes and
correct them. Jane Austen respects Elizabeth’s
nonconformism.
MODEL ESSAY:
Elizabeth Bennet has a strong personality, and is her
father’s favourite child. She is independent-minded,
but her values are those of her society.
From the beginning of the novel, Elizabeth’s actions
show that she is not afraid to think for herself and to
appear different. She is critical of her mother’s plan to
put Jane inside the Bingley family, but when she hears
her sister is ill her immediate reaction is to walk across
the fields, getting very muddy in the process, and visit
her. She is not impressed by wealthy snobbish people
like Bingley’s sisters and Lady Catherine de Bourgh.
She thinks good manners and concern for others are
more important than money and rank. Furthermore,
despite the social and family pressure to get married,
she is not at all interested in marrying someone who
she does not respect or like.

11
LEVEL: ADVANCED PAGE 75
5 a. The buildings were destroyed during the invasion.
Rapa Nui b. The painting was stolen from the museum.
COMPREHENSION AND TEXT APPRECIATION EXERCISES c. He was killed in a road accident.
d. The small island airport will be enlarged.
PAGE 72 e. A new hospital is being built for the island.
Chapters I-X
f. The road was being repaired when I tried to drive
PRE-READING QUESTIONS through the city centre.
1. It is a very isolated place in the Pacific Ocean, governed g. She has been informed of the situation.
by Chile. It is famous for its mysterious stone sculptures. h. You will be taken to your hotel when you arrive at
2. I think it was probably for religious purposes – perhaps the airport.
a god to be worshipped. i. You will be taken on a guided tour of the island.
AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS I-X PAGE 76
1 a. He knows if people think he is ‘odious’, they won’t
Chapters XI-XX
think about his motives and won’t suspect him.
b. Carter is a big businessman from Florida. PRE-READING QUESTIONS
c. Carter thinks Mayor Pro Tem is cunning, but that he 1. We know that Pro Tem knows what is happening,
is predictable because he is selfish. and knows what people think of him. He cultivates
d. The ‘Bird-man’ was a young man who swam out to the image of a simple man, but he is not a fool.
a small island in the ocean, floating on a raft, and was 2. I think they are planning luxury holidays in an exotic
the first to bring back a bird’s egg. location – comfortable, but with a suggestion
e. The skin on Pro Tem’s arms was covered with of adventure.
small scars. AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS XI-XX
f. The statues were made with Stone Age tools. 1 a. Pro Tem emphasises to Mr Irving that he is as
g. He wants Carter to understand that he knows how
tourism will affect the island. important as Mr Carter and should be treated with
h. The developers want to expand the island’s infra- the same respect.
structure, including the communications and security. b. A Sau Sau is a long night of celebrating, eating
i. The local people trust the mayor: they are indifferent and drinking, taking place in the house of a local
to the changes that are happening and do not let the family on Rapa Nui.
development affect them. c. Pro Tem lets the Greens explain their point of view,
2 a. laconically b. pursed c. grimly d. bleak e. settlers shows that he agrees with them, and then explains
f. thrive g. quarry h. sheltered i. endeavour j. trust that the alternatives to tourism would be worse for
the island and its people.
T S T X H D E S R U P d. The local people feel the mayor is not part of
R E R S N F K L G I U the island and has strange desires.
U D E V I R H T O D G e. Two people are killed when a lighting column falls
on them.
S R U O V A E D N E R f. Pro Tem reacts very calmly to the news.
T R C O R V O Y I R I g. Carter is worried because these were influential
S F U I T S L R U E M people. Their deaths will bring bad publicity,
and the risk of litigation. Both these things will worry
B E V H H A L R H T L
the financial backers who are about to arrive.
L A C O N I C A L L Y h. Pro Tem explains that no-one was hurt. He says that
E Y P N E E Y U H E U two sheep were killed, and that the emergency teams
A O U U S R G Q I H O worked well.
2 a. buffer b. soothe c. supersede d. slack e. squall
K P H B A G B J I S D f. dodge g. hurtled h. flesh i. screech
N M S E T T L E R S F 3 a. lived b. have lived c. was / was / got / was
PAGE 73 d. have studied e. went / haven’t decided
f. have read / tried / was
3 (Model answers:)
a. ‘That’s too bad’, she replied laconically. PAGE 78
b. Her lips were pursed in disapproval. Now complete this sentence:
c. They looked grim when they heard the news. … present perfect …. past participle …
d. The future looks bleak, I’m afraid. 4 ‘the wind whipped’ ‘the stinging rain flew … tearing
e. Many Americans are the descendants of European at their clothes’
settlers. The final image of blood, fire, and burning flesh is
f. Some animals do not thrive in captivity. sinister, frightening and dramatic.
g. We used to play in the old chalk quarry. PAGE 79
h. We found a sheltered spot for our picnic. 5 a. (example given) b. have already begun / said /
i. His endeavours were well rewarded. were c. has been / was / forced / failed / died
j. You can’t trust what the papers say! d. has announced / was
PAGE 74 PAGE 80
4 a. (example given) 6 a. will be going – fixed/highly probable
b. She didn’t use to smoke when she was young. b. will be taking up – highly probable
c. I used to do a lot of sport, but now I don’t. c. will be watching – action in progress at a particular
d. She didn’t use to be very thin in the past. moment
e. There didn’t use to be a lot of traffic in the town. d. will be flying – action in progress at a particular
f. There used to be a lot of trees in the town. moment
g. He didn’t use to be so moody in the past. e. will be working – action in progress at a particular
h. She used to be more cheerful when she was a girl. moment
i. They didn’t use to live in the city when they were f. will probably be staying – highly probable
first married.
12
PAGE 81 PAGE 85
Chapters XXI-XXX Chapters XXXI-XLI
PRE-READING QUESTIONS PRE-READING QUESTIONS
1. They may have eaten fish – or perhaps they were a. I think he is interested in developing the island, but not
cannibals. for tourism.
2. I think he wants to make Carter nervous about b. Perhaps he just wants to develop the island’s
the island and its inhabitants. infrastructure.
AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS XXI-XXX AFTER YOU'VE READ CHAPTERS XXXI-XLI
1 a. According to Pro Tem, they ate their own dead. 1 a. He thinks the world has changed, and that
b. Carter is horrified and disgusted by this idea. Christianity cannot resist the Old Forces any more.
c. The bodies of the two dead conservationists are in b. Some of the men are looking for available women –
the sea. prostitutes, presumably.
d. Walgrave is the head of the promotional department c. Carter is a good speaker.
for tourism on Easter Island. d. All the tourists are handed an alarm and tracking
e. She tries to associate Easter Island with sexual device.
delights. e. He tells the visitors to strike the rock face at the
f. Including celebrities will generate publicity. quarry with a small stone and leave a mark.
g. They will get more publicity by forbidding f. He will show them a place no outsider has ever
academics from attending. seen.
h. It is not quite clear why he was chosen, but it may g. The 15 men are naked and their bodies are covered
be because of his talent for impersonation. with scars.
By impersonating the previous mayor he seems h. They lead the tourists to the crater of Rana Koi.
exactly like him. i. The stone workers ate the fish that were trapped in
i. It is not a real debate because both sides have been the crater and preserved in salt.
paid by the Easter Island company. j. The scars are from swimming over the volcanic
j. The walls are of volcanic glass, with images of ‘bird- rocks to unblock the entrance to the cavern.
men’. The floor is made of white grains, and drops into k. When the men started to sing the cavern vibrated
a deep pit. and the rocks started to crack.
k. The insurance company insists that they are l. He had taken them to the cave to kill them.
distributed in order to distribute the risk. m. He realised that Carter never intended tourism to
PAGE 82 work on Rapa Nui.
2 a. mass produced b. with no obstacle c. evidence PAGE 86
d. belief e. come into mind f. deadened, with no 2 a. parishioner b. stout c. thrust d. waive e. host
feeling g. pitiless behaviour, acting without moral f. discreet g. poisoning h. sample i. achieve j. groove
considerations m h. completely i. lower back and k. marshy l. flinch m. swarm n. struggle
sides j. disabled person (unpleasant term) k. give
S E F P O T E E R C S I D
undeserved praise l. move gradually like liquid
m. people who live on the streets and ask for money F A N A P L O H Q U A S P
n. personally train o. move on the hands and knees R E J R E V O O R G M F O
like a baby p. shelf T L W I S D R S O M P G I
S E E P
I G E S T O U T U A L B S
F L A T T E R
E G S H R F E E R R E V O
R U T H L E S S N E S S
V U M I E M R A W S T W N
F A I T H
I R J O S E V E I H C A I
C R I P P L E
A T U N H U D B N Y R F N
P R O O F
W S R E F L I N C H H U G
U N H I N D E R E D
O T H R U S T M O U U J K
L O I N S
T H O R O U G H L Y PAGE 87
3 thrust / swarmed / flinched / stout / struggling /
B E G G A R S
host / samples / poisoned / achievement
N U M B E D 4 a. (answer given) b. reading c. swimming
L E D G E d. to have a chat e. reading f. to read g. to answer
PAGE 83 h. answering i. talking j. making k. to think
3 a. care b. pager c. come d. tall e. deep f. yeast PAGE 88
g. peg h. coins i. health 5 a. look like b. are just like c. like / don’t like / are like
4 a. False b. True c. False d. False e. False f. True d. looks more like e. is like / like f. isn’t like / likes
g. False h. True PAGE 89
PAGE 84 6 (Examples)
5 a. I must have lost it. Struggled … half-blinded by the salt … forced himself
b. You might/could have dropped it. … lungs screaming for air … stomach churning …
c. It must have snowed … 7 (Example answer:)
d. He must/might have been delayed … I struggled against the force of the waves, half-blinded
e. … he might have slept late … by the salt in my eyes. I sank below the surface, my
f. That can’t have been Mary … lungs screaming for air …
g. You must have heard of the Macdonald case.
h. She must have been …
i. … you might have been too young … you can’t
have been more than ten …
13
RAPA NUI · THE WORK AS A WHOLE
PAGE 90
1 Advantages: Rapa Nui is a beautiful place, away from
the pollution and pressures of modern life. The
islanders’ life is very quiet. They follow traditional
values and are not interested in money.
Disadvantages: The islanders’ life is hard and unvaried,
they are poor and their diet is unvaried. They have few
work opportunities, are very isolated, and have little
access to education or health care.
2 For: Tourism will bring prosperity.
Tourism will bring development.
There will be better communications, more
facilities, and more opportunities.
There will be jobs for the islanders.
Against: This is a very small community.
Their traditions will be destroyed.
Seeing rich tourists will make them dissatisfied
with their lives.
The island and its statues will be damaged.
There will be noise and pollution.
PAGE 91
3 The rescue workers entered through a long tunnel and
then an entrance through the rock. Inside the cavern,
the floor, which was a ledge over a deep pit full of salt,
was covered with fallen rocks. Bodies of tourists and
islanders lay under the rocks. Others must have fallen
off the ledge, and had disappeared into the salt
crystals.
4 Tourism brings both advantages and disadvantages.
It makes it possible to visit beautiful places, but it can
also destroy those places. I would love to visit a place
like Easter Island before it gets developed for mass
tourism, but I don’t think I would like to live there!
5 Like Carter, we are told some false sinister stories
about cannibalism and ‘birdmen’. We also read about
the mysteries of Rapa Nui and its bleak landscape. We
know that the priest is worried, and that Pro Tem him-
self worries about the destruction of lives. This creates
an ominous sense of evil and danger. Like Pro Tem,
we don’t want mass tourism to arrive, but we don’t
know how it will be stopped.
PAGE 92
6 The author has a low opinion of big business people.
He thinks they are cynical, dishonest, and only
interested in money. Walgrave, for example, gets
sexually excited by the idea of saving money. Carter is
only upset by the deaths of two ‘Greens’ because this
may cause the financial backers to withdraw.

14
LEVEL: ADVANCED Act II
PRE-READING QUESTIONS
Romeo and Juliet
1. He will wait outside her house, hoping to see her.
COMPREHENSION AND TEXT APPRECIATION EXERCISES 2. Probably – she is not a very responsible person.
PAGE 81 AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT II
Act I 1 a. Juliet is talking about Romeo, so she is embarrassed
PRE-READING QUESTIONS when he hears her.
1. The Zefferelli film is very beautiful, and romantic. The b. Their families are enemies, so they want to change
more recent Baz Luhmann film is more modern and their names.
popular in style. The musical film West Side Story is also c. Friar Lawrence knows that Romeo was in love with
based on Romeo and Juliet. Rosaline, so this a big, and very quick, change.
2. Modern audiences probably see it as a romantic tale of d. The Nurse acts as a messenger.
doomed love, and do not have the expectations that e. The message is to meet him the next afternoon so
Shakespeare’s audience had, for example, about that they can get married.
obedience to parents, the immorality of the young f. Friar Lawrence marries them in his cell.
people’s, the Nurse’s, and the Friar’s actions … PAGE 86
AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT I 2 f g k

1 a. We learn that these two important families from B W S


Verona have an old grudge, which often leads to a A L O O F h i T
violent fights between them. I M R R b B U D
b. Tybalt is obviously brave, but aggressive. He hates
the Montague family and loves fighting. T c B R I N E M
c. Romeo is sad because he is in love, but his love is T P B
not returned. E R j L
d. Paris asks to marry Capulet’s daughter.
d W O U N D E D
e. The servant cannot read the message he is carrying,
so he asks Romeo to read it. V R
f. Lady Capulet tells Juliet that Paris is there and wants E U l
to marry her. D W
g. Tybalt wants to fight Romeo. Capulet says Romeo is
e G R I E F
a guest in his house, is quiet, and is behaving well.
Tybalt has no right to attack him. E A
h. The moment Romeo sees Juliet he falls in love with R
her.
2 a. True b. False c. False d. True e. False f. True Y
g. True h. True PAGE 86
PAGE 82 3 b. What do you want?/What do you wish?
3 c. It is what I want …
V D E C G K A B R A W L I P B
d. …or, if you do not want to do that …
E E R R O L F D D E R Q U L E e. If only you can love me …
X S T U U W R M V M T U N I S f. … if you prefer …
4 a. The following words refer to light: light … breaks,
E G O T J S A Y F E Y E D U E
the sun (x2), the (pale) moon …pale, stars … twinkle,
D R L C N A P R S H R K W M E brightness, daylight, lamp, (her eyes) stream so bright.
A U P H M X I R D Y U S K T C b. Romeo seems to idealise her: his language is poetic
S D U N A C E E P L H E A H H but he does not see her as a normal person.
c. The moon (the goddess Diana) is envious because
C G G E S B R S S G Y W U R S
one of her subjects is more beautiful than she is.
F E D R D U D A A E H A H I Y d. He wants to be a glove because Juliet’s gloved hand
I O O U O I B O Z O F N E C D is touching her cheek. A glove can touch her cheek, as
M I S A D V E N T U R E Y E G he would like to.
5 1. a. 2. b. 3. a. 4. b.
U E A H J O E D G R O A N F R
PAGE 87
H F S D I Y Y A N K W A U U E
6 a. I wish I could speak English better.
E A R T H Q U A K E N N O Q U
b. If only I could have a long holiday this year.
c. I wish you could come. / I wish you were able to
a. grudge b. misadventure c. frown d. cowardly come.
e. crutch f. brawl g. thrice h. adversary i. grove d. If only the weather weren’t so bad.
j. vexed k. groan l. earthquake m. beseech e. If only she hadn’t lost the job.
n. rapier f. Do you wish he hadn’t gone?
PAGE 83 g. I wish we didn’t have to leave so early.
4 a. earthquake b. misadventure c. groaned Act III
d. frowned e. grudge f. coward g. brawl h. crutches PRE-READING QUESTIONS
PAGE 84 a. They will probably be very angry.
5 a. ii) b. v) c. iv) d. vii) e. vi) f. iii) g. i) b. Tybalt, who hates all the Montagues, will be especially
6 Sentences a, b, c, e, f are first conditional. D is second angry.
conditional. G is mixed second and third – the ‘if’
clause is past and the result clause is present.

15
PAGE 88 PAGE 91
AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT III 4 a. What if … the mixture does not work and she has
1 a. Your own opinion – but notice that Benvolio avoids to marry Paris? What if …the friar has given her poison
a fight, and tells Romeo to run away after Tybalt is and she dies? What if … she wakes before Romeo
killed, while Mercutio cannot resist Tybalt’s insults, arrives and dies or goes mad in the tomb?
even though Romeo tells him not to fight. b. A fearful thing … foul air, horrible thought of death
b. Now that Romeo is married to Juliet, Tybalt is … terror, … bones, bloody Tybalt … lies festering,
his cousin as well, but of course Tybalt does not night spirits … loathsome smells and shrieks …
know this. hideous fears … rotting Tybalt …
c. Tybalt and Mercutio are fighting. Romeo puts himself c. She might kill herself using a dead person’s bone as
in the middle to try and stop the fight, so Mercutio a club to dash out her own brains.
does not see when Tybalt lunges at him. d. It makes us think of the horrors of death, and of
d. Tybalt dies when Romeo fights him. being in a tomb. It also shows us the possible risks of
e. Lady Capulet says that twenty Montagues fought the Friar’s plan, and the possibility of bad luck.
against Tybalt and killed him. 5 b. and c. In b. we can substitute ii and in c. we can
f. Romeo is punished by being sent into exile. substitute i.
g. Juliet swears she will remain a virgin if she cannot PAGE 92
be with Romeo.
6 a. She must marry Paris, although she does not
h. Friar Lawrence is impatient because he thinks
Romeo is ungrateful for a merciful sentence. He could want to.
have been sentenced to death! b. Juliet decides to go ahead with the plan despite
i. Capulet and his wife see how upset Juliet is, and her fears.
decide that marriage would stop her crying for Tybalt. c. The friar might want to kill her, although he is a holy
j. Capulet is very angry when Juliet says she doesn’t man.
want to get married, and he threatens to disown her. d. My father never complained in spite of his illness.
k. Juliet turns to the Nurse for comfort and advice. e. Even though she had many lessons, she never learnt
2 a. lunge – thrust, stab with a sword to swim well.
f. She went for a walk despite the cold.
b. grove – a group of trees
c. woe – great trouble Act V
d. gallant – brave, courageous PRE-READING QUESTIONS
e. agile – quick, flexible
f. coffin – box in which a dead body is buried a. I think she will wake up – but too late.
g. dismal – dark and depressing b. With both lovers’ deaths.
h. predicament – difficult situation PAGE 93
i. childhood – infancy
j. scold – chide, reprove, tell off
AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT V
k. starve – die of hunger 1 a. The apothecary agrees to sell poison because
Romeo offers him lots of money.
PAGE 89
b. Friar Lawrence gave the letter to Friar John, who
3 a. grove(s) b. agility c. coffin d. dismal e. lunged visits a house where there was a suspected case of
f. woe g. gallant h. childhood plague and so is not allowed to leave the house.
4 a. Has he gone without a scratch? c. Paris goes to Juliet’s grave to leave flowers.
b. Why the devil did you come between us? d. Romeo kills him.
c. Which way did Mercutio’s murderer run? e. Friar Lawrence tells Juliet he will take her to a convent.
d. Where are those vile men that began this fray? f. She dies because she stabs herself.
e. Why are you wringing your hands? g. The Prince sees the deaths as the result of the
f. Did Romeo’s hand shed Tybalt’s blood? hatred between the two families.
PAGE 90 h. Montague offers to put up a gold statue of Juliet.
Act IV PAGE 94
k m
PRE-READING QUESTIONS 2
a. She could tell her family about her marriage to Romeo, h B a L I S S
and hope they will forgive her. b T A T T E R E D K
b. Any plan can go wrong, perhaps even leading to death. H G U
AFTER YOU'VE READ ACT IV W c G O R G E D L
1 a. Friar Lawrence tells Juliet to drink a liquid. It will d S H E A T H A L
make her sleep as if dead for 42 hours.
R j R
b. Juliet’s parents are happy because they think she is
preparing for her wedding. T e M O U L D Y
c. Juliet expresses fears that the mixture will not work, i I Y
or will be poisonous, or that she will wake up too M S l
soon, before Romeo arrives, and be alone in the tomb.
d. The Nurse thinks she is asleep. O f C O R D I A L
e. Friar Lawrence thinks they should be merry because R H I
Juliet has gone to heaven. g S P R I N K L E M
2 a. true b. false c. false d. false e. false f. true.
E E B
3 Fight: brawl, fray, riot / Kill: slay / Promise: swear, vow / L F S
Goodbye: farewell, adieu / Sorrow: woe, grief /
Reprove: tell off, scold, chide / Enemy: foe / PAGE 95
Hateful: detestable, loathsome, vile 3 a. lay b. lie c. lay d. lay e. lain f. lain g. lies

16
LEVEL: ADVANCED 32 The bank note is cashed in and cancelled. The couple
are given it as a wedding present.
The £1,000,000 Bank Note 33 He hangs it in a frame to remind him of how he came
and other Stories to live in London and marry Portia.
THE £1,000,000 BANK NOTE THE UNDERTAKER’S CHAT
1 He is a clerk in a mining broker’s. 1 The corpse was ‘a brick’ because he was so easy-going
2 He gets lost at sea while sailing and is rescued by a and helpful.
ship going to London. 2 He would prefer a quick, simple funeral, so that he
3 He arrived in London with only one dollar, which he does not have to wait around.
spent on the first day. 3 It’s not clear, at first, what he died of, but we learn
4 He is embarrassed to be seen picking it up. later that he died while practising for his funeral.
4 He prepares detailed lists of instructions, and
5 This means that he almost could not resist eating the
supervises the preparations.
breakfast remains, because he was so hungry.
5 He doesn’t like praise, or any exotic, formal language.
6 The two brothers disagree over the probable effect
on a poor man of having a £1,000,000 bank note. The 6 He dies while singing the song he has chosen for his
narrator is not surprised they decide to settle it with a funeral service.
bet – this is the normal English way of doing things. 7 It seems the family will insist on a traditional funeral,
7 They choose him because he looks both poor and but the undertaker thinks the corpse’s wishes should
honest and is a stranger. be respected.
8 He feels he has been the victim of a practical joke. 8 The moral is that, in any profession, one can be
9 He goes to a restaurant to eat a meal. cheerful.
THE DANGER OF LYING IN BED
10 He is so shocked he nearly faints.
1 He is afraid that he will die in bed.
11 The landlord is terrified – he cannot even touch the
2 He regards the ‘accident tickets’ as a lottery ticket:
note!
12 He thinks they have made a mistake. he will win money if he is in an accident.
3 He calculates that, out of every million deaths,
13 The letter says the note is a loan, and he can return it 987,631 occur in bed.
in 30 days.
4 The moral is that the railways are very safe.
14 He decides that he has nothing to lose, and will
certainly benefit in the end. LIONIZING MURDERERS
15 At first he is treated with condescension and sarcasm. 1 The fortune-teller is dirty, wearing dirty clothes, and
The shop assistants change their minds when they see smells bad.
the bank note. 2 If she heaves another sigh, he will be able to follow
16 They decide he is an eccentric millionaire. the smell.
17 He probably continues going there because he feels 3 She reveals that he started as a small criminal, but his
at home. He brings publicity to the restaurant and crimes have become more serious.
attracts more customers. 4 While in prison he will repent his crimes and be
18 The cartoon shows that he is now famous throughout lionized, attracting many followers.
England. 5 Pike, a murderer, was glorified and rewarded for his
19 He can’t keep pretending to be a tramp because he is crimes in New Hampshire.
recognised wherever he goes. AN ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER
20 It is his duty, as an American citizen, to visit the 1 He does not understand what an interview is.
minister.
2 The young man thinks some interviews need to be
21 He discovers that his father and the minister’s father
used to be friends. done using force and threats.
3 The protagonist says he is 19.
22 He is optimistic because at the end of the month he
will have a job, with a salary. 4 It was strange that Aaron Burr, the dead man, spoke
23 This is an ironic comment, because obviously his to him at his funeral.
lifestyle is only ‘cautious and economical’ by the 5 He should be 180 years old.
standards of very rich people. 6 The mystery is who died: William or his twin brother.
24 He meets Portia Langham, who he falls in love with,
and he meets Lloyd Hastings. 7 Aaron Burr was a ‘remarkable man’ because, at his
25 Hastings is in London on business and he has not funeral, he wanted to look at the scenery, so he got up
been successful. The protagonist used to work for him, and rode with the driver of the hearse.
helping him to prepare the business venture. ABOUT BARBERS
26 They don’t have dinner because they cannot decide on 1 He thinks barbers, their ways, and their shops never
the correct order of precedence for sitting at dinner. change.
This is a normal occurrence, because the English are 2 He hopes that it will be his turn when the better
obsessed with precedence. barber is free.
27 He enjoys the cribbage game because he plays with 3 ‘No. 1’ finishes second because he stops to comb his
Portia. customer’s eyebrows.
28 He decides to help Hastings by using his name, and 4 He leaves the shop so that he will not be shaved by
recommending him. This makes the venture very ‘No. 2’.
successful, and he earns £1,000,000. 5 While waiting he looks around. He describes the shop
29 Portia goes with him, as she promised, to help him as dirty, with everything there being old and in poor
negotiate his salary. condition.
30 Portia kisses him because he is her step-father. 6 He tells the barber that he was the person who had
31 He takes the ‘situation’ of son-in-law. cut his hair last time.

17
7 After lathering half the protagonist’s face, the barber
goes outside to watch a dogfight.
8 The barber shaves him very slowly and painfully, and
cuts him.
9 He doesn’t like a close shave, as it gives him pimples.
10 His ‘pet tender spot’ is the side of his chin.
11 After finishing the shave, the barber splashes on bay
rum, especially in the cut.
12 The barber spends a long time combing his hair and
his eyebrows, and then telling him about his pet dog:
it is now past midday.
13 He is revenged by attending the barber’s funeral.

18
LEVEL: ADVANCED 25 Tales of ghosts had survived because the area was
long-established, with little movement of populations.
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow It was also close to Sleepy Hollow, where people said
they had seen and heard strange things.
PAGE 76 26 At the end of the party, Katrina only spoke to Crane
COMPREHENSION EXERCISES for a very short time, and he left looking upset.
Choose the best answer. 27 The enormous tree was well-known for its association
1) c 2) b 3) a 4) c 5) d 6) b 7) d 8) d with the capture of Major André.
28 As he approached the area where André had been
PAGE 77
killed Crane felt very nervous.
Answer the following questions.
29 In the shadow of the grove he saw a huge, black, mis-
1 Sleepy Hollow is a very quiet and isolated place. The
people are drowsy and traditions are fixed. One result shapen figure on horseback.
of this is that people are superstitious, and there is a 30 The figure was very large, wrapped in a big cloak,
strong belief in local legends. and had no head.
2 The headless horseman is the ghost of someone who 31 When Crane realised this he started to beat and kick
was killed in the revolutionary wars, who is buried in his horse to make it go faster.
the local churchyard. 32 The horseman threw his ‘head’ at Crane.
3 These valleys are separate and so are not disturbed by 33 People searched for Crane, following his tracks to the
the currents and movements of the rest of the country. stream, and searching in the stream for his body.
4 Crane managed to live by staying with the families of 34 The horse’s saddle was found, and a big broken
his students. pumpkin.
5 He was appreciated because he was more ‘gentleman- 35 The farmer heard that Crane had studied law and
like’ than the peasants they usually lived with. become a politician and, later, a judge.
6 Yes, he believed in the supernatural. 36 Bones probably laughed because he had been the
7 The memories of the stories he read combined with ‘headless horseman’ who frightened Crane so much.
the sounds and sights of the wild countryside made 37 Popular belief was that Crane had been taken away
him imagine many things. by ghosts.
8 Sometimes he counteracted his fear by singing PAGE 79
psalms.
Choose the correct answer.
9 A woman caused Crane the most confusion.
1) b 2) d 3) b 4) c 5) a 6) d 7) a 8) d 9) c 10) d
10 Katrina Van Tassel was beautiful and healthy-looking.
11 When Crane looked at the farm animals, he imagined
them transformed into delicious meals.
12 His main rival was Brom Bones, a big, strong young
man who was an excellent horseman, sportsman,
and liked fighting.
13 Brom was regarded by his neighbours with fear,
respect and affection.
14 Other admirers retired because they were afraid of
Brom.
15 Crane did not despair of winning Katrina because he
was flexible and had great perseverance.
16 Van Tassel was a very indulgent father who loved his
daughter.
17 Crane courted Katrina in his role of singing master,
talking with her under the tree, and walking with her
in the evening.
18 He probably used his talent for music, which Brom did
not have, and he avoided any confrontation with
Brom, which he would certainly lose.
19 Brom tried to discourage him by playing practical jokes,
including breaking into the school and disordering
everything. He also ridiculed him in front of Katrina.
20 Tassel’s invitation meant that lessons finished an hour
early that day.
21 Crane’s appearance was very strange: both his clothes
and the horse were old, and his way of sitting on the
horse was very inelegant.
22 The beautiful scenery of the countryside made him
think of food prepared by Katrina.
23 The main attraction for Crane was the food that had
been prepared.
24 Because the War of Independence was not recent,
stories had changed, and people could exaggerate
their own courage.

19
LEVEL: ADVANCED 15 The narrator does not draw back because he knows
the old man cannot see anything.
The Pit and the Pendulum 16 The room is ‘as black as pitch’ because the shutters
COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS are closed.
1 He has been tied up, and presumably tortured, before 17 The sound of an intruder makes the old man cry out.
being tried and sentenced. 18 When the old man cries out, the narrator keeps still.
2 In his dreams he experienced visions, but it is difficult 19 We know the old man does not lie down again,
to remember factual details such as being carried because the narrator is listening for the sound, which
down and down to his prison. never comes.
3 He wakes up in complete darkness. 20 The old man groans with terror.
4 He tries to discover where he is by walking around, 21 He knows the sound of a groan of terror because he
feeling the walls. It is difficult because of the has frequently made it himself.
darkness. 22 At hearing the groan he feels sympathy: he can
5 He discovers the ‘pit’ when he falls over, and finds part identify with this terror.
of his face is hanging over an empty space. 23 He can imagine the old man’s fear.
6 The Inquisition has reserved a death by falling into a
deep well. He is a ‘fitting subject’ because he does not 24 The old man could feel that his murderer’s head was
want to die. in the room because he knew intuitively that someone
7 He finds that the prison is much smaller than he was there.
imagines – a circuit of about 25 metres – square in 25 After some time, he opens the lantern slightly and
shape, and formed of metal walls. shines a light onto the old man.
8 He awakes and finds he is lying down, tied to a board. 26 In the light he sees the old man’s Evil Eye.

9 The ‘pendulum’ is a mechanism with a sharp blade, 27 This makes him furious.
suspended from the ceiling, of the prison cell, 28 He can hear the old man's heart beating.
swinging backwards and forwards, and slowly moving
29 This sound increases his fury.
closer.
10 They have changed his manner of death because he 30 He suffers ‘uncontrollable terror’ because he is so
did not fall in the pit. nervous.
11 It is a terrible torture because it is slow but inevitable. 31 He thinks his heart must burst because it is beating
12 Long suffering has reduced his mental powers to harder and harder.
32 The new anxiety is that the sound will be heard by
those of an imbecile.
13 The emotion left, even to the condemned, is hope. neighbours.
33 He kills the old man by pulling the heavy bed
14 His first ‘thought’ is that the pendulum will cut him over him.
free when it reaches his body. This thought is 34 The muffled beat of a heart does not worry him
frustrated when he realises he is not bound at the because it won’t be heard by the neighbours.
point of contact. 35 He dismembers the corpse.
15 He frees himself by getting the rats to chew through
his bonds and free him. 36 He hides the pieces under the floorboards.
16 The final manner of death reserved for him is the fire 37 He describes his actions as clever.
that heats the sides and ceiling of his cell, driving him 38 He uses a tub to avoid any blood falling on the floor.
closer to the pit.
17 He is saved by the arrival of the French army, who will 39 The police officers come because a neighbour
drive out the Inquisition. reported a shriek.
40 When the police arrive the narrator feels no fear.
THE TELL-TALE HEART
1 The ‘disease’ has made his senses more acute. 41 He explains that the shriek was his own, caused by
a bad dream.
2 His sense of hearing is particularly acute.
42 He says the old man has gone to the country.
3 He hears things in hell.
43 This means that he is so sure of himself that he goes
4 The idea of killing the old man began to obsess him. over the top to show how relaxed he is.
5 There is no real reason for this obsession. He is fond 44 While talking to the police, he sits just above where
of him, but finds one of the old man’s eyes makes his the dismembered corpse is.
‘blood run cold’. Later he explains it is the Evil Eye. 45 The police are completely satisfied. They feel relaxed,
6 He says it reminds him of a vulture’s eye. and stay and chat.
46 While talking, the narrator begins to feel unwell.
7 He says he is not mad because he remains capable of
foresight and dissimulation. He plans his actions very 47 To try and get rid of this feeling, he talks more.
carefully. 48 He begins to hear a heart beating.
8 He behaves very kindly to the old man for the week
49 The noise leaves him unable to breathe easily.
before killing him.
9 Every night he opens the old man’s bedroom door 50 The sound gets louder.
very slowly and shines a lantern onto his strange eye. 51 No one else seems to hear the sound. They continue
10 He cannot kill him on those nights because the Eye is talking.
closed. 52 He decides they are teasing him.
11 Every morning he greets him cheerfully and asks him
53 He cannot stand it any more, and admits to the
whether he has slept well.
12 On the eighth night, the old man wakes up. murder.
54 I think the sound only existed in his imagination,
13 The narrator feels a sense of triumph because the Eye either because of the ‘disease’ or because of his
is open. overwhelming feelings of guilt.
14 The sound of the door opening wakes the old man.

20
MS. FOUND IN A BOTTLE 33 His impression is that the man is extremely old and
1 The narrator has little to say about his family and sick, possibly mad.
country because bad treatment had driven him away 34 The new feeling is one he cannot analyse, but he
many years before. feels that past, or even future, experience cannot teach
2 He has been accused of having no imagination. him anything.
3 He feels it is necessary to emphasise his lack of 35 He is experiencing something so novel that it has
imagination because he is about to tell such an changed his soul.
incredible story. 36 It is useless to conceal himself because the people on
4 He goes on the voyage as a passenger because he the ship cannot see him.
feels restless. 37 He will put the manuscript in a bottle and throw it into
5 Up to a certain moment the voyage is merely the sea.
monotonous. 38 He notices that a chance paint mark produces the
6 One evening he notices a strange cloud. It is ‘singular’ word ‘DISCOVERY’ – is it possible that this is just
because of its colour, and also because it is the only chance?
cloud they have seen. 39 His impression is that the ship is a mixture of many
7 Another thing that attracts his notice is the colour of kinds of ship.
the moon. 40 The wood is familiar because it resembles Spanish
8 The temperature of the air rises, and he observes oak, but it is porous, as if it has been distended.
a spiral exhalation. 41 His impression is that they are very old, weak with age,
9 The air is very still – there is no wind at all, with and pay him no attention. The captain, in particular,
the result that not even a candle flame, or a hair, fills him with reverence.
will move. 42 The ship escapes the stormy sea because it is carried
10 The captain is not worried. He has the sails furled, by an undercurrent.
and the anchor lifted. 43 He is reconciled to ‘the most hideous aspect of death’
11 The narrator does not sleep because he is worried. by his wish to experience the unknown.
44 The ship finally goes down in a whirlpool among the
12 At midnight there is a loud noise and a violent storm
ice at the South Pole.
suddenly blows up.
13 The ship does not sink because the force of the wind
blows it upright again.
14 He sees that they are in the middle of a tempest,
surrounded by mountainous waves.
15 They are the only survivors because they are the only
ones not drowned in a cabin or washed overboard.
They were on deck but not sleeping. But their escape
seems a miracle: the writer himself is trapped
between equipment on the deck.
16 The ship is badly damaged, but the pumps are still
working, and the load has not moved much.
17 They are driven by the storm for five days.
18 On the fifth day the sun is low on the horizon, and
shines almost without light.
19 The sixth day never arrives because the darkness is
continuous. The Swede dies that day, so there will
never be a sixth day for him.
20 The total darkness means they cannot see more than
twenty paces.
21 There is no sign of surf or foam because the darkness
is so intense.
22 They are surrounded by horror and blackness.
23 This gives an effect of wonder and terror.
24 To avoid being swept overboard they tie themselves to
the remains of the mast.
25 They are surprised at not finding ice even though they
are so far south.
26 They ride up and down huge waves, like precipices.
27 His blood freezes when he sees a gigantic ship,
weighing about 4000 tons, about to fall on top of
them.
28 The ship is bigger than any ever seen, black, with a
row of cannons.
29 It seems incredible that the ship resists the storm, with
its sails still up, riding up and down the waves.
30 When the ship crashes into them the force throws the
writer onto it.
31 He conceals himself from the crew because they seem
so strange.
32 He hides below deck with the cargo.

21
LEVEL: ADVANCED 9 It appears on Hester’s breast, embroidered in rich
colours, which are reflected in the armour at the
The Scarlet Letter Governor’s house. It appears in the sky one night.
COMPREHENSION CHECK Pearl creates an ‘A’ out of green plants. Finally, it
appears on Dimmesdale’s breast.
PAGE 57 10 Dimmesdale is revered as a scholar and holy man. He
is a leader in the community. As the story progresses,
1 a. True b. False c. False d. True e. False f. True however, he becomes sick and weak, and is tormented
g. False h. True i. False j. False k. False l. True with feelings of guilt. His strength returns when he is
PAGE 58 reunited with Hester, but, after confessing his sin to
the town, he falls down dead.
2 b. Hester chooses to live in the town because 11 Although she appears penitent, living apart from her
‘a chain’ bound her to the place. Later it becomes neighbours and dedicating herself to good works,
clear that this is her love for Dimmesdale. Hester is still in love with Dimmesdale, and wants to
c. Pearl is not a normal, simple child: she is very be with him.
perverse, and has no respect for authority and rules.
She knows she is an outcast, and does not speak PAGE 62
to others. 12 The Puritans dressed plainly, wearing grey, sad colours.
e. Chillingworth wants to be close to Dimmesdale to The novel portrays them as intolerant and judgmental,
torture him and make him suffer. especially the women, who suggest worse
g. Chillingworth and Dimmesdale decide themselves punishments for Hester than the one she is given.
to move into the same house. Hester is probably They are suspicious and fearful of outsiders like
opposed to this. Chillingworth, and Mistress Hibbens, but they give
i. As Dimmesdale becomes sick his popularity great respect to people whose behaviour is saintly.
increases. His suffering makes people think he is a saint.
j. The minister does not promise Pearl that he will
stand with her and her mother on the scaffold the
next day. He only says they will stand together at
judgment day.
k. The meaning of the letter ‘A’ on Hester’s breast
changes, but not to mean ‘Angel’. The people think it
means ‘Able’, because of her strength.
PAGE 59
3 Noun Adjective
dangerous
magic
mountainous
fame
ceremonious
commerce
phenomenon
regional
occupational
religious
beauty
brilliance
interest
incomprehensible
monstrous
sentiment
affection
pain
dramatic
PAGE 60
4 a. for b. through c. in d. after e. in f. for g. After
h. through
5 At first she was an outcast, but, through her work with
the poor and sick, Hester wins their respect. Her badge
of sin becomes associated with her good deeds.
6 Pearl is wild and unconventional. She plays alone,
and rejects both authority and affection. She changes
when Dimmesdale publicly says she is his child, and
she then accepts his kiss.
PAGE 61
7 (various answers) You can consider which character is
most important in the plot, or which is described best.
8 Wearing her ‘scarlet letter’, she covers her hair and
loses her attractiveness. Talking with Dimmesdale in
the woods, she takes off the letter and her cap and
her beauty returns.

22
LEVEL: ADVANCED AFTER YOU'VE READ PAGE 23 CHAPTER VI - END OF SUMMARY
PAGE 31
The Woman in White
1 a. The anonymous letter warns that Miss Fairlie will be
COMPREHENSION AND TEXT APPRECIATION EXERCISES
miserable if she marries Sir Percival Glyde.
PAGE 27 b. Mr Gilmore is coming to Limmeridge to arrange
PRE-READING QUESTIONS Miss Fairlie’s marriage settlement.
c. The woman in white wrote the letter.
1. Suspense, uncertainty, a sense of danger. d. Anne is cleaning Mrs Fairlie’s gravestone.
2. It may be a uniform. e. When Walter mentions Sir Percival Glyde, Anne
AFTER YOU'VE READ PAGES 3-22 (END OF CHAPTER V) screams, and her face is full of hatred and fear.
1 a. Professor Pesca is attached to him because Walter f. Sir Percival explains that he has paid for Anne’s
once saved him from drowning. treatment in a private asylum for many years.
b. He brings Walter news of an attractive job offer. 2 a. – criminal or bad action
c. He is startled because she touches him on the back b. – evening, when the light fades
when he thought he was alone. c. – cemetery
d. He helps her by finding her a cab. d. – deep sorrow
e. After she has gone he learns that she has escaped e. – testament
from an asylum. f. – no longer on good terms
f. Mr Fairlie is Marian Halcome’s step-father’s brother. g. – without children
(She calls him her uncle). h. – unable to speak (through shock)
g. Walter’s first impression of Mr Fairlie is that he is i. – without stopping
affected and selfish. j. – without success
h. His first impression of Laura Fairlie is that she is 3 churchyard, childless, will, misery, estranged, villainy
beautiful and charming but reminds him strangely of PAGE 83
someone else.
i. Marian thinks the woman in white might be Anne 4 a. hopeless b. harmless c. merciful d. cheerless
Catherick, who her mother helped as a little girl. e. thoughtless f. careless g. harmful h. thoughtful
j. He decides to leave because he has fallen in love i. hopeful j. helpless k. cheerful l. careful m. helpful
with Laura Fairlie, whose fiancé is coming to visit. n. merciless
Marian asks him to leave for both their sakes. ‘Harmful’ has a negative meaning.
2 k ‘Harmless’ has a positive meaning.
g U ‘Hopeful’ and ‘hopeless’ and ‘helpful’ and ‘helpless’
are not opposites.
a F O R L O R N T
A synonym for ‘hopeful’ is ‘optimistic’.
V h T m n A synonym for ‘hopeless’ is ‘useless’.
b R E L U C T A N C E S W A synonym for ‘helpful’ is ‘useful’.
R G c R E W A R D
A synonym for ‘helpless’ is ‘defenceless’.
d W O R T H Y j L A E PAGE 85
H A G Y R T 5 Walter went back to Limmeridge and told Marian
E V i O l T C everything. Together they decided to look for Anne
Catherick the next day and question her further, but
L E e S H A W L H H
she was not to be found. They discovered that she
M P N O Y E and Mrs Clements had left the village.
f E S Q U I R E F D Mr Gilmore, the family solicitor, arrived and they
D K T appealed to him. He decided to send a copy of Anne’s
letter to Sir Percival’s solicitor and to show the original
E Y to Sir Percival when he arrived. All attempts to trace
Nouns: reluctance, reward, shawl, esquire, gown, spike Anne proved fruitless.
Adjectives: forlorn, overwhelmed, swarthy, wretched, Walter Hartwright left. When he took his leave of Laura,
worthy, grave, lofty it was obvious that it was as hard for her as it was for
Adverbs: utterly him to say goodbye. Marian promised to write.
Sir Percival arrived. He was friendly and polite to
PAGE 81
everyone and made a good impression on Mr Gilmore.
3 a. jumped b. came suddenly c. jumped d. jumped He saved any embarrassment by referring to the letter
e. jumped f. set off, began our journey g. began himself. He explained that Mrs Catherick, Anne’s
4 a. Is he a foreigner or an Englishman? – Papa (of the mother, had been a servant of his and had served him
family), quoted by Professor Pesca. faithfully for many years. When it had become obvious
b. Is that the road to London? – the woman in white that her daughter’s mental faculties were in need of
c. Do you know many men of rank and title in medical attention, he had offered to pay for her to go
London? – the woman in white. to a private asylum where she would be well-treated.
d. Have you seen a woman pass this way? – the man He had done this in acknowledgement of Mrs
in the carriage. Catherick’s years of faithful service. He insisted, much
e. Could you manage to speak quietly? – Mr Fairlie to her embarrassment, that Marian write to Mrs
Catherick for confirmation of this. She did so, against
PAGE 82 her will, and confirmation arrived.
PRE-READING QUESTIONS Mr Gilmore’s business at Limmeridge was/had been
1. It may be about Sir Percival’s character or some to arrange Laura’s marriage settlement. Laura stood to
crime he has committed. inherit twenty thousand pounds, from her father’s will,
2. Not after reading the letter – also she is love with on reaching the age of twenty-one. This money was
Walter. absolutely her own and she might leave it to whom
she wanted in her own will. Apart from this she had

23
a life interest in ten thousand pounds which would go PAGE 88
to her aunt Eleanor, her father’s estranged sister,
5 b. If she hadn’t got wet she wouldn’t have caught a cold.
should she die childless. She would also inherit
Limmeridge House on her uncle Fairlie’s death. If she c. If he’d looked where he was going he wouldn’t have
should die childless the house would go to a distant walked into the lamppost.
cousin. Sir Percival’s solicitor wanted to arrange the d. They could have gone on holiday if everywhere had
settlement so that Laura’s twenty thousand pounds not been booked up.
would go automatically to her husband, should she die e. He would have been killed if he had waited another
before him, without a penny going to Miss Halcome, minute.
or any other friend or relative. Mr Gilmore was f. He would have got the job if he had not worn such
outraged and appealed to Mr Fairlie to intervene. scruffy clothes to the interview.
Mr Fairlie selfishly refused, and the settlement was g. She wouldn’t have been ill if she hadn’t eaten
drawn up according to Sir Percival’s wishes. Mr so much.
Gilmore left the house, declaring that he would never h. The dinner wouldn’t have been awful if she had
have allowed a daughter of his to be married under used some salt.
such conditions. ‘Third’ (=past hypothetical) conditional is used.
6 a. In total, Laura will inherit thirty thousand pounds. PAGE 89
b. Twenty thousand pounds is absolutely her own. 6 c. He had no objection to my arriving late.
c. She cannot leave ten thousand pounds of the total
d. After having coffee we went back to work.
to whoever she wants.
e. She worked really hard without complaining.
d. If Laura dies childless, her aunt Eleanor will inherit
f. I’m getting tired of living in this busy city.
ten thousand pounds.
g. He wasn’t very impressed by my completing the
e. If she dies childless, a distant cousin will inherit
job early.
Limmeridge House.
h. Before taking off we were told to fasten our seat belts.
f. Sir Percival wants to change the settlement so that,
i. She was very keen on Mary’s participating in the project.
if she dies before him, Laura’s twenty thousand
pounds will automatically go to her husband. PAGE 90
PAGE 86 PRE-READING QUESTIONS
1. Perhaps something happened while they were away
PRE-READING QUESTIONS in Italy.
1. He wants to marry her because she is young, 2. He is very intelligent, and has a lot of force.
beautiful, and rich.
2. There is a lot of mystery about Anne’s past, and her AFTER YOU'VE READ PAGES 40-56 - END OF THE SUMMARY
relation with Mrs Fairlie. Sir Percival has not explained 1 a. His financial situation is desperate, and he is relying
everything. on Laura’s money to get him out of difficulties.
b. She obeys him in everything.
AFTER YOU'VE READ PAGES 31-40 c. She refuses because nobody has explained what she
1 a. Laura does not break off the engagement because
is signing.
she promised her father she would marry Sir Percival. d. She finds that the letter is not properly sealed.
b. Marian is worried about Walter’s state of mind e. He said that Walter would be punished and Laura
because a letter from him shows that he thinks he is could imagine the marks of a horse-whip on his back.
being watched by strange men in London. She fears f. She meets Anne Catherick.
his hopeless love for Laura is sending him mad. g. Anne says she is no longer afraid because she
c. She finds him work as a draughtsman on an knows she is dying.
expedition to South America. h. He locks her in her room to force her to tell what
d. Laura is happy when she hears about the plan to she knows.
tour Italy because she likes the idea of travelling. i. She knows that the Count listened to their
e. Marian considers Sir Percival ‘extraordinarily conversation beside the lake and told Sir Percival what
considerate and unselfish’ to think about Anne he heard.
Catherick just a few days before his wedding. j. He intercepts her letters by sending his wife to the
f. The marriage might mend the family feud between inn to drug Fanny and read what Marian has written.
Madame Fosco (aunt Eleanor), whose husband is a
friend of Sir Percival’s, and Laura’s father. PAGE 91
h
g. Laura has become very reserved, and does not talk 2
to Marian about her married life. W
h. Sir Percival is much less civil than before, and takes g R j k
almost no notice of Laura and Marian. a L A N D I N G I l
i. We learn that aunt Eleanor has changed from being
a silly and talkative woman since she married Count O N A M B m

Fosco. She is now silent, cold, and always obedient to f N G W P R P


her husband. U S b A D H E S I V E
PAGE 87 N E i Y N N T
2 a. – frightening, disturbing b. – technical artist c S P O N G E O F F I K R
c. – anger, frustration d. – hostile relationship P S A T I
e. – ornamental pin f. – period of time
E I T R F
3 a. brooch b. alarming c. vexation d. feud
e. draughtsman f. epoch A C d H G H A S T L Y
4 a. – if I had married someone else. K A B
b. – if he had heard her. A e G L O O M Y L
c. – if he had waited a minute longer. B E
d. – if she hadn’t stopped to answer the phone.
e. – he would have heard her. L
f. – I wouldn’t have left him. E

24
PAGE 92 5 Sir
3 I went to apologise to the Count and Countess for I am writing to answer your questions about my
Laura’s outburst, which Madame Fosco had heard relationship with Sir Percival Glyde, and the life of my
through the door. They both said not to mention it, daughter Anne.
but I knew I must be more careful in future. I took two Sir Percival was a bastard: his parents had never been
letters to Fanny at the inn so that no-one in the house married because his mother’s real husband, who
would be able to intercept them. abandoned her, was still alive. Sir Percival gave me
I was sitting at the open window writing my diary and gifts so that I would give him access to the church.
I heard the Count and Sir Percival talking on the veranda. When I followed him there I forced him to tell me
I wanted to hear their conversation so, although it was what he was doing, and he explained that in order to
dangerous, I climbed out of my window and crawled take possession of Blackwater Park and then borrow
along the leaden roof until I was directly above them. money (for he was in great financial difficulties) he
They were talking about their financial situation: both needed a birth certificate and a certificate of his
are in very serious difficulties, and they are relying on parents’ marriage.
my poor sister’s money to solve their problems. The He gave me more gifts and I agreed to help him.
Count even seemed to suggest murdering Laura to get I even mixed the ink to get exactly the right colour.
her money! But he also told Sir Percival that they must Then my husband became suspicious. He found some
beware of me. He said I was clever and courageous of the gifts Sir Percival had given me, and saw us
and had already written to Mr Gilmore and Mr Fairlie. talking together privately. I asked Sir Percival to give his
This means that somehow he has found out about the word as a gentleman that we had never been lovers,
letters I took to Fanny at the inn. but he refused. It was better for him if a scandal hid
Sir Percival was shocked, but at least he did not the real nature of his dealings! Instead of protecting
consider murder. Then the Count asked him about my reputation, he agreed to pay me a regular sum
Anne Catherick, and Sir Percival said he must find her, of money to stay in the neighbourhood.
and that he would be a lost man if he did not. He did Of course, time passed and people forgot the scandal.
not give any more details except to mention how I asked Sir Percival for permission to take a trip up
strikingly similar her appearance is to Laura’s. At this North, but he came to see me and refused to let me
point the Count became very excited and said he had leave. After he had gone I was so angry that I said
the answer to the problem, but he said nothing more. I could ruin him if I wanted. My daughter Anne heard
I crawled back to my room, wet through because it this and, the next time Sir Percival came to visit, she
had started to rain not long after I went onto the roof. repeated what I had said.
I cannot sleep after hearing such terrible things, and Sir Percival was so angry, and in such a panic, that he
I feel ill: I think I have a fever, but want to write had her shut up in the mad house. That way his secret
everything down in my diary … was safe, because no one would ever believe her.
4 a. Count Fosco also writes in Marian’s diary. Now of course she is dead, and so is he!
b. This is significant because it shows he has read her PAGE 94
diary.
c. Laura falls ill herself when she hears about Marian’s (Read the preface, pages 2-3, and background pages
illness. 77-78. You can also look in encyclopedias or on the
Internet for information.)
PRE-READING QUESTIONS Suggestions for writing:
1. They realise that the two sisters protect and support 1. Notice the descriptions of Marian and Laura. Do
each other. they look alike? Are their characters similar? Who is
2. To substitute Laura for Anne, because they look so the better-looking? Is she a better person?
similar. Notice the descriptions of Mr Fairlie and Count Fosco.
AFTER YOU'VE READ PAGE 56 - THE END Does their appearance reflect their characters? What
1 a. Walter learns that Laura is dead. do we know about Sir Percival’s appearance?
b. The truth is Anne Catherick has died, but she and Write a paragraph about the two sisters, and a
Laura have been forced to exchange identities. paragraph about the villains. Introduce these
c. Marian was reunited with Laura at the asylum. paragraphs with information about theories of
d. She was there because, at Foscos’ house in London, physiognomy, and relating these, if possible, to the
she was drugged, dressed in Anne Catherick’s clothes work of Dickens, Collins, or other writers. Conclude
and sent to the asylum. with a paragraph making a general statement.
e. Anne’s body is buried in the churchyard, in the same ESSAY QUESTIONS
tomb as Mrs Fairlie. 1. Use the information you found about Marian and
f. Anne and Laura are half-sisters. Laura to write a paragraph about each. Remember to
g. Sir Percival dies locked in a burning church. contrast their characters, giving examples of their
h. He was trying to destroy the church register which behaviour from the text. Conclude by giving your
contains evidence of his birth. opinion about who is the more modern.
i. Walter forces the Count to confess by telling him he For example, Introduction: 2 sisters: same mother,
will betray his presense to the brotherhood the Count different fathers, very different in appearance and
is a member of. character. (Refer to Marian’s comments on this).
j. Walter and Laura’s son is the heir of Limmeridge. Marian Halcombe: dark, swarthy, ugly – rather
PAGE 93 masculine; humorous, ironic, ‘odd’, intelligent,
self-reliant, brave, practical …
3 a. illegally pay for service Laura Fairlie: beautiful, fair, feminine; charming,
b. talk vaguely talented in feminine activities, rather passive,
c. most arrogant, haughtiest obedient …
d. room in a church where the priest’s robes are kept Reaction of male characters to each? Closing opinion.
e. society
f. make a high noise like a dog in pain
4 a. bribe b. lofty c. whined d. brotherhood
e. vestry f. rambled on

25
(Model answer:)
The two main female characters in The Woman in
White are half-sisters: they have the same mother, but
different fathers. As Marian tells Walter, they are very
different in both appearance and character.
Marian is described by Walter as surprisingly ugly.
She is dark, swarthy, and even has a slight moustache.
Her facial characteristics are described as masculine,
but also as resolute and intelligent. In contrast, his
first impression of Laura, her sister, shows she is the
traditional Victorian heroine: she is fair, pretty, with
a light figure, and a soft thoughtful expression.
This contrast between their appearance is also found
in their characters. Marian is intelligent and amusing,
but her honest description of herself as ‘crabbed and
odd’ is very unusual in a heroine at this time. Her
personality is also seen as more ‘masculine’ than her
sister’s: she is a woman of action, climbing out on the
roof to listen to Fosco and Sir Percival, and standing up
to their plans to exploit Laura. Laura, on the other
hand, is more passive, following her father’s plans,
and obeying her husband.
The main contrast between the two women is
between the conventional romantic heroine, victim of
a wicked man, and a more modern woman who takes
a less passive role, and tries to protect her weaker
sister. It is striking that Walter, the drawing master, falls
in love with Laura, while the villainous Count Fosco is
more attracted by Marian’s intelligence and spirit.

26

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