3£®An idea came to me£¬and I turned off the lights in the studio£®In the darkness£¬I took off my shirt and took up the cello £¨´óÌáÇÙ£©£» it was the first time in my life I'd fel the instrument against my bare chest£®I'd never thought about that£» music scholars always talk about the resonating properties £¨¹²Õñ£© of various instruments£¬but surely the performer's own body must have some effect on the sound£®As I dug into the notes I imagined that my own chest and lungs were extensions of the sound box£» I seemed to be able to change the sound by the way I sat£¬and by varying the muscular tightness in my upper body£®
After improvising for a while£¬I started playing£¬still in the darkness£®I heard the music through my skin£®For the first time I didn't think about how it would sound to anyone else£¬and slowly£¬joyfully£¬gratefully£¬I started to hear again£®The notes sang out£¬first like a trickle£º£¬then like a fountain of cool water bubbling up from a hole in the middle of a desert£®After an hour or soI looked up£¬and in the darkness saw the outline of the cat sitting on the floor in front of me£¬cleaning her paws and purring loudly£¬I had an audience again£¬humble as it was£®
So that's what I do now with my cello£®At least once a clay I find time to tune it£¬close my eyes and listen£®It's probably not going to lead to the kind of comeback I'd be thirsty for-years of playing badly have left scars on my technique-but I might eventually try giving a concert if I feel up to it£®
Occasionally I feel a stab of longing£¬and I wish I could give just one more concert on a great stage before m lights blink off£¬but that longing passes more quickly now£®I take comfort in the fact that£¬unlike the way I felt before£¬I can enjoy playing for myself now£®I feel relaxed and expansive when I play£¬as if I could stretch out my arms and reach from one end of the apartment to the other£®A feeling of completeness and dignity surrounds me and lifts me up£®

60£®The writer put the cello against his bare chest toB£®
A£®test music scholars'ideas about the resonating properties
B£®experience the effect of his body on the musical sound
C£®reduce his muscular tightness in his upper body
D£®check the function of the sound box
61£®In Paragraph 2£¬the writer intends toC£®
A£®explain his feelings of playing before a cat
B£®identify specific pieces of music he layed
C£®express his feelings of playing against his body
D£®describe the sound when he played against his body
62£®From the last paragraph we can infer that the writer wasA£®
A£®optimistic    B£®discouraged     C£®nervous      D£®enthusiastic
63£®The passage is mainly aboutC
A£®a musician playing he cello for an audience
B£®a musician's feelings when playing the cello
C£®a musician finding joy in playing music in a new way
D£®a musician's desire to return to his former profession£®

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60£®B ϸ½ÚÀí½âÌâ ¸ù¾ÝµÚÒ»×ÔÈ»¶ÎÏà¹ØÓï¾³"music scholars always talk about the resonating properties £¨¹²Õñ£© of various instruments£¬but surely the performer's own body must have some effect on the sound£®"¿ÉÖª×÷Õß°Ñ´óÌáÇÙ¿¿µ½Â㶵ÄÐز¿ÊÇÒòΪ×÷ÕßÈ·ÐÅÑÝ×àÕßµÄÉíÌå¿ÉÒÔÓ°ÏìÀÖÆ÷µÄÉùÒô£¬ËùÒÔ½áºÏÑ¡Ïî¿É֪ѡÏîBÌáµ½µÄÌåÑéÉíÌå¶ÔÒôÀÖµÄÓ°ÏìÊÇÕýÈ·µÄ£¬¹ÊÑ¡B£®
61£®C ·ÖÎöÅжÏÌâ ·ÖÎöµÚ¶þ×ÔÈ»¶ÎµÄÓï¾³¿ÉÖª¶¼Êǽ²Êö×÷Õßµ¯ÇÙʱµÄ¸ÐÊÜ"slowly£¬joyfully£¬gratefully£¬I started to hear again£®The notes sang out£¬first like a trickle£º£¬then like a fountain"´ÓÕâЩÐÎÈݴʺͱÈÓ÷ÖпÉÒÔÍƶϳöÕýÈ·´ð°¸£¬¹ÊÑ¡C£®
62£®A ·ÖÎöÅжÏÌ⣮±¾ÌâÍƶÏ×÷ÕßµÄÇé¸Ð£¬¸ù¾Ý×îºóÒ»×ÔÈ»¶ÎµÄÓï¾³£¬´ÓÕâЩÓôÊ"enjoy£¬relaxed£¬completeness and dignity"ÖпÉÒÔÅж¨×÷Õ߶ÔÒôÀÖÊǾßÓлý¼«ÐÄ̬µÄ£»ÓÖ´ÓÉÏÒ»×ÔÈ»¶ÎµÃÖª×÷ÕßÑݼ¼"playing badly have left scars on my technique"²»ÈçÒ⣬×ÛºÏÀ´¿´×÷ÕßÊdzÖÀÖ¹Û̬¶ÈµÄ£¬¹ÊÑ¡A£®
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13£®I recently had dinner with someone who told me that one of his best friends had been killed in a private plane crash£¬and something happened at the memorial service that he'll never forget£®He shared the story with me£®
At the memorial service£¬his friend's wife walked to the platform to speak to the gathering£® She said a friend had asked her the best memory she had of their life together£®At the moment£¬she had been too sad to answer£¬but she had thought about it since and wanted to answer the question£®
They were in their late forties when he died£¬and she began talking about a time in their life almost twenty years earlier£®She had quit her job to obtain her master's degree£¬and her husband never hesitated in his support£®
He held down his own job and also did the cooking£¬cleaning£¬and other housework while she studied for her degree£® One time they both stayed up all night£®She was finishing her paper£¬and he was preparing for an important-business meeting£®That morning£¬she walked out of her study£¬leaned against the door by the stairs£¬looked at her husband downstairs and just thought about how much she loved him£®She knew how important this meeting was to his future£¬and she was feeling guilty that she didn't even have time to make his breakfast£®He took his briefcase and hurried out£®
She heard the garage door open and close£¬but much to her surprise£¬she heard it open again about thirty seconds later£®From above£¬she watched her husband dash into the house and walk over to the forgotten coffee table£®Marking the surface of it with his finger through the dust with the words"I love you"£¬then he raced back to his car£®
The new widow then looked out at her audience and said£¬"John and I had a wonderful life together£®We have been around the world several times£®We've had everything money can buy¡­but nothing comes close to that moment£®"
    Hearing this£¬I was deeply moved£®"Love makes life worthwhile£®"
56£®The service was held toB
A£®listen to the woman's story                       
B£®mourn the woman's husband
C£®meet some old friends              
D£®share the woman's sadness
57£®Why did the woman quit her job£¿D
A£®She had to support her husband£®
B£®She had too much housework to do£®
C£®She wanted to travel around the world£®
D£®She needed to concentrate on her studies£®
58£®"He held down his own job'"______"in Paragraph 4 means thatA£®
A£®he managed to keep his job                        
B£®he needed help in his work
C£®he cancelled his job                              
D£®he delayed his work
59£®The woman mentioned an incident 20 years ago to showD£®
A£®how busy their life was                           
B£®how her husband loved her
C£®how they improved their life                      
D£®how hard her husband worked£®

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15£®He made a practical suggestion£¬____ of great use to everyone present at the meeting£®£¨¡¡¡¡£©
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