单项选择题
Having taken a room at the hotel which
he had been instructed to stay, Smallwood went out; it was a lovely day, early
in August, and the sun shone in an unclouded sky. He had not been to Lucerne
Since he was a boy, but remembered a covered bridge, though not clearly, a great
stone lion and a church in which he had sat, bored yet impressed while they
played an organ(风琴) ;and now wandering along a shady quay (码头), he tried not so
much to find his way about a half-forgotten scene as to reform in his mind some
recollection(回忆) of the shy and eager boy, so impatient for life, who so long
ago had wandered there . But it seemed to him that the most lively of his
memories was not of himself, but of the crowd; he seemed to remember the sun and
the heat and the people; the train was crowded and so was the hotel, the lake
steamers were packed and on the quays and in the streets you found your way
among the holiday-makers. They were fat and old and ugly and strange. Now, in wartime, Lucerne was as deserted as it must have been before the world discovered that Switzerland was the play-ground of Europe. Most of the hotels were closed, the streets were empty, the boats for hire rocked(摇晃)idly at the water’s edge and there was none to take them, and in the avenue by the lake the only persons to be seen were serious Swiss taking their dogs for their daily walk . Smallwood felt happy and, sitting down on a bench that faced the water, surrendered (听任)himself to the sensation. The blue water, snowy mountains, and their beauty hit you in the face. So long, at all event, as the fine weather lasted he was prepared to enjoy himself. He didn’t see why he should not at least try to combine pleasure to himself with advantage to his country. |
A.Smallwood’s former visit to Lucerne was made in peacetime
B.Smallwood was pleased by the sound of the organ this time
C.Smallwood was very nervous when he got to Lucerne
D.A war would soon break out in Lucerne