Devoir d'anglais, urgent.

Publié le 12 mars 2014 il y a 10A par Anonyme - Fin › 22 mars 2014 dans 10A
1

Sujet du devoir

The Lotus Eater by Somerset Maugham. The story takes place on the island of Capri and is about a man called Thomas Wilson who has boldly taken the course of life into his own hands'. At the beginning, we don't know in what way he has done this. The writer describes his first impressions of Wilson. 

Though his teeth were not very good his smile was attractive. It was gentle and kindly. He was dressed in a blue cotton shirt and a pair of grey trousers, much creased and none too clean, of a thin canvas, and on his feet he wore a pair of very old espadrilles. The get-up was picturesque and very suitable to the place and the weather, but it did not go at all with his face. It was a lined, long face, deeply sunburned, thin-lipped, with small grey eyes rather close together and tight neat features. The grey hair was carefully brushed. It was not a plain face, indeed in his youth, Wilson might have been good-looking. He wore the blue shirt, open at the neck, and the grey canvas trousers, not as though they belonged to him, but as though, shipwrecked in his pyjamas, he had been fitted out with odd garments by compassionate strangers. Nitwithstanding this careless attire he looked like the manager of a branch office in an insurance company, who should by right be wearing a black coat with pepper-and-salt- trousers, a white collar and an unobjectionable tie. 

We climbed the mountain, admiredthe spacious view and got back to the inn as night was falling, hot, hungry and thirsty. We had ordered our dinner beforehand. The  food was good, for Antonio was an exellent cook, and the wine came from his own vineyard. It was so light that you felt you could drink it like water and we finished the first bottle with our macaroni. By the time we had finished the second we felt that there was nothing much wrong with life. We sat in a little garden under a freat vine laden with grapes. The air was exquisitely soft. The night was still and we were alone. The maid brought us Bel Paese cheese and a plate of figs. I ordered coffee and strega, which is the best liqueur they they make in Italy. Wilson would not have a cigar, but lit his pipe.

'We've got plenty of time we need star,' he said, ' the moon won't be over the hill for another hour.'

'Moon or no moon,' I said briskly, 'of course we've got plenty of time. That's one of the delights of Capri, that there's never any hurry.'

'Leisure,' he said. 'If people only knew!It's the most priceless thing a man can' have and they're such fools they don't even know it's something to aim at. 

Work? They work for work's sake. They haven't got the brains to realise that the only object of work is to obtain leisure'.

Wine has the effect on some people of making them indulge in general reflections. These remarks were true, but no one could have claimed that they were original. I did not say anything, but struck a match to light my cigar.

'It was full moon the first time I came to Capri', he went on reflectively. 'It might be the same moon as tonight.'

'It was, you know,' I smiled.

He grinned. The only light in the garden was what came from an oil lamp that hung over our heads. It had been scanty to eat by, but it was good now for confidences.

Questions : 

6. Pick out two elements in the description of Wilson that the writer appreciates, and two elements that he doesn't seem to appreciate.

Appreciate :

Doesn't seem to apprecaite : 

7. Complete the following table with information about the meal : (pour b,c,d, e répondre par : bad, mediocre or good)

a.Where the meal is taken ? 

b. What the food is like ? Reason : 

c. What the wine is like ? Reason : 

d. What the men's mood is like ? Reason : 

e. What the atmosphere is like ? Reason : 

8. Why do they feel that 'there was nothing much wrong with life' ?

9.a What is Wilson's attitude to work and life ? 

9.b Choose the appropriate definition of 'leisure' as Wilson considers it : 

The possibility to pursue your favourite activities and sports

The possibility to do nothing

Freedom from responsibilities.

10. In the following list choose the two adjectives that correspond best to the image of Capri in this passage and justify (1element from the text for each adjective)

 

11. ''The only light in the garden was what came from an oil lamp that hung over our heads. It had been scanty to eat by, but it was good now for confidences''. This means : 

The lamp burns brightly and they can see very clearly with it.

The lamp wasn't bright enough to see their food, but it's quite appropriate for philosophical exchanges.

the lamp was scary when they were eating, but now they feel more confident. 

Où j'en suis dans mon devoir

J''ai fais les questions du debut, sauf que la je n'arrive pas du tout.

Merci de m'aider svp, c'est URGENT. 




3 commentaires pour ce devoir


Anonyme
Posté le 12 mars 2014

A quelle question es-tu rendue?

Anonyme
Posté le 13 mars 2014

j'ai le corrigé de ce devoir tu veut de l'aide ou veut tu mon mail

Anonyme
Posté le 22 mars 2014

11- the lamp wasn't bright enough to see their food, but it's quite apropriate for philosofical exchanges

9b the possibility to do nothing

9a Wilson considers that work is just a way to obtain leisure, he thinks that enjoying life and being able to stay doing nothing is the real object.

 


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