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Murders in The Run
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is, BATA] ~ BREF ' Si Murders YW ULE VO nloinadl a EN a SEAR SE AC HH hit BSH (eeAA hein B (CIP) BSB DRM EWAR/ (32) BAC - BE ( Poe, E. A.) #5 (32) MF ( Thomson, G., S. | BLE. ENB: ARIE ACEH AL + 2009.7 (Black Cat iP* 4 SOT BBR. 3 6 BR) ISBN 978-7 -5617- 6612-5 LB. 1OX..O%... WL SF REE Bi — PEM IV, 634.413 HEALTH CIP AUBREY (2009) 3% 093003 GT RRURSHPRLA Sid HA = 09 - 2009-203 © 2000 BLACK CAT PUBLISHING an imprint of CIDEB EDITRIC, Genoa, Canterbury © 2004 SENSI (AE) ARAL APSE MG TENA TE (APE) APRS FEAR» ACEH AMR TE RT ‘This special edition of Black Cat Graded Readers prepared, and distributed with the authorization of the copyright holder BLACK CAT PUBLISHING an imprint of CIDEB EDITRIC. Copyright of this Chinese bilingual edition by The Commercial Press (Hong Kong) Ltd. Name of Book: The Murders in the Rue Morgue and The Purloined Letter Author: Edgar Allan Poe Text adaptation and activities: Graeme and Silvia Thomson Editors: Rebecca Raynes, Elvira Poggi Repetto Design: Nadia Meestri illustrations: Gianni De Conno RRGBWRR (Black Cat HHL HMM Level 6) 3 Bl TAL: ROK BR: EASA LPS
[email protected]
TB AAR : kB Pia: KE HERR ATT «EAR ITE AC ch AL 3th: Em Lb 3663 RB Hie = 200062 BiG LAL: 021 - 62450163 FAH | FFBURH + 021 - 62572105 (1th (BBR9) 8258 + 021 - 62869887 #PARBIA = 021 - 62865537 (Fetes) (Trish
The Solution of the Case “I knew immediately that this was the letter I was looking for. Certainly its appearance was completely different from the description of the stolen letter that the Prefect had given us. The wax seal of this letter was large and black with D’s insignia‘ inscribed ? on it, whereas the purloined letter had a small red seal bearing the coat of arms of the Royal Fami is letter was addressed to D__ in a small female hand. The writing on the purloined letter was large and bold * and it was addressed to a lady. But it seemed insignia ; symbols of rank or authority.mimPurloined Letter to me that these differences were excessive. The fact that this letter was almost the opposite of the letter the Prefect described made me suspicious. Then there was the fact that this letter was so clearly visible, in full view of every visitor. So visible, in fact, that nobody would see it, just like in the game I told you about.” “So what did you do?” “I memorized the appearance of the letter and left the minister's house immediately, leaving a gold tobacco box on the writing table. “The next morning I called at the minister’s house again, saying that I had forgotten my tobacco. The minister seemed happy to see me again and we continued the conversation we had had the previous day. Suddenly we heard a loud noise coming from outside, the sound of a pistol shot followed by several screams. D____ ran to the window to see what was happening. In the meantime | went over to the card rack, took the letter, put it in my pocket and replaced it with a facsimile. “The disturbance in the street had been caused by a man with a gun. He had fired it above the heads of the crowd and everybody thought he was simply a lunatic! or a drunk. In fact I had employed him to carry out this diversion® to distract? D____and give me time to get the letter.” lunatic : a person who is mentally ill. a 2, diversion ; something that takes your attention away, 3 distract : stop somebody concentrating on something. 112© The Solution of the case “But why didn't you simply take it on your first visit?” “D____,” replied Dupin, “is a desperate and dangerous man. If Thad taken the letter openly he would probably have had me killed before I could leave the building. But there was another reason. For eighteen months the minister has had the owner of the letter in his power. Now the situation is reversed. She has him in her power.” “How is that?” “Because he still thinks he has the letter, thanks to my facsimile. He will proceed with his blackmail and his political career will be destroyed. It’s ironic in a way too.” “In what way?” “Tt was the minister who gave me the idea of the facsimile, when he stole the original letter. To get the letter back I just did the same thing he did when he stole it. You could even say that between our letters there is a perfect, ahem... correspondence.” “Very funny.” 1, reversed : the situation is changed to the opposite of what it was before. 113What happened in Chapter Three? Ey Are these sentences true (T) or false (F)? Correct the false ones with the right information. T FE Dupin thought the minister was perfectly aware of the fact that the police would search his house. b. The minister wanted the police to think that the letter was hidden somewhere in the house. ° The Prefect’s mistake was mainly in not understanding that the minister could have placed the letter in an absolutely obvious place. d. Dupin went to see the minister three times. e. Dupin pretended that he had forgotten his hat at the minister's house. - The minister realized that the letter had disappeared. Dupin’s strategic visit to the minister: step by step Unlike the police, Dupin managed to spot the letter and take it with him. Try to describe each step using the following key words. a. went b. was wearing c. scrutinized d. noticed e. addressed f. knew immediately g- left a tobacco box h, . went back i. heard j. replaced 14| The two letters EX The letter Dupin finds is very different from the one the Prefect had described. What are the main differences? Letter writing In Chapter 1 you predicted three possible types of purloined letter. Now choose one and write it out. Remember the content has to be somehow very dangerous or crucial ' for the royal personage who doesn’t want her husband to read it. 1. crucial : extremely important. 11SAn interview with Monsieur Dupin Imagine you are Dupin. Answer the following questions that a very curious journalist asks you about the Purloined Letter. youRNALIst: — Monsieur Dupin, you have done it again. How did you manage to solve another apparently unsolvable case? DUPIN: JOURNALIST: Okay, but let’s start from the beginning. Who stole the letter and why? DUPIN: JOURNALIST: Mmm, I see. But didn’t the police search his house? DUPIN: JOURNALIST: Were they careful in making the search? DUPIN: JOURNALIST: So what did you do? DUPIN: JOURNALIST: A facsimile? Why? DUPIN: JOURNALIST: Very clever! But how come the Minister didn’t realize what you were up to? DUPIN: JOURNALIST: It really sounds like you, Monsieur Dupin! Just one more thing. How would you sum up your brilliant methods in a few words for our readers? DUPIN: 116BF EXIT TEST m the context Answer the following questions. a, When and where was Edgar Allan Poe born? b. What were the names of his foster-parents? c. Why was he disappointed when Tamerlane and Other Poems by a Bostonian was published? Re What do some critics consider The Murders in the Rue Morgue to be? e. When did Poe die? locus on the story For questions 1-12, choose the correct answer A, B, C or D. ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue 1. Where was Madame L'Espanaye’s body found? A B Cc D In the chimney. On the bed, On the floor. In the small garden at the back of the house. 2, What did Alberto Montani claim? A B Cc D That one of the voices was French and the other was English. That one of the voices was French and the other was Russian. That one of the voices was French and the other was Spanish. That one of the voices was French and the other was Italian. 1173. According to Dupin, how did the murderer get in? A Byclimbing up the stairs. B_ Byentering through a door from a room into the corridor. C Byclimbing in through a window. D_ Byclimbing up the chimney. What made Dupin come to the conclusion that the murderer was an orang-outang? A. The size of the hands and the type of hair. 4, B_ The type of hair and the size of the feet. C The number of bruises on Mademoiselle L'Espanaye's throat. D_ He found some footprints in the garden, What made Dupin think that the owner of the orang-outang was a sailor? 5. A He found a rope with a sailor’s knot in it. B_ He found a sailor’s map in the garden, C He found a ribbon with a sailor’s knot in it. D_ He found a piece of paper with the name of a Maltese ship on it by the lightning rod. 6. What happened to the orang-outang at the end of the story? A_ It was taken back to the island of Borneo. B It was kept by the sailor. C_ It was arrested by the police. D It was sold to the city zoo. The Purloined Letter 7. How did the Minister D. manage to get hold of the letter? A He stole it in the middle of the night. B_ He put his own letter on the table, then took the other letter just before leaving. © He asked the important lady to give it to him. D_ He persuaded one of the servants to get it for him. 1188. What special object did the police use to help them search for the letter? A A magnifying glass. BA lantern. C Special glasses. D A microscope. 9. How much was the original reward for finding the letter? A Ten thousand francs. B_ Twenty thousand francs. C_ Fifty thousand francs. D A hundred thousand frances. 10. Why did the Prefect give Dupin fifty thousand francs? A Dupin had given him the purloined letter. B Dupin had given him extra advice on where to look for the letter. C Dupin promised to deliver the letter that evening. D_ Dupin flattered and complimented the Parisian police for their excellent work. 41.What did Dupin say was used in the game of ‘even or odd’? A B c D Skittles. Small stones. Plastic balls. Marbles. 12. Where did Dupin finally find the stolen letter? A B Cc D On the Minister’s large writing table. In one of the Minister's books. Behind the clock. In the card-rack. 119[) Read the summary of The Murders in the Rue Morgue and think of the word which best fits each space. Use only one word in each space. There is an example at the beginning (0). Example: (0) about Dupin and the narrator read (0) ........... the murders in the Rue Morgue in a newspaper, Mademoiselle L'Espanaye had been (1) and her body had been placed in the chimney. Her mother was found .... cut. There appeared to be no in the garden with her (2) ... motive for the murders. A number of (3) ............. gave their testimonies, They all agreed that they had heard a French voice but each witness claimed to have heard a second voice in a different foreign language, although none of them could agree on which one. Dupin started his own investigation and realised that the (4) ...... Fideeetess had got in and out of the house through a (5) ... in the back room. He realised that the hand (6) . had strangled Mademoiselle LEspanaye was enormous and (7) .. could not belong to a human being and (8) .... could the hair which had been found in Madame L’Espanaye’s hand. This led him to believe that the murderer had been an orang-outang. By writing an (9) ................ in Le Monde, he found the owner of the orang-outang, (10) recounted the whole story, The sailor himself was innocent and when he finally caught his orang-outang, he sold it to the city zoo. 120The = Le os j inthe Fue Morgue and The F, watoined Solter Key ro THE EXERCISES AND EXIT TEST | 30 Dp feel HE ACTIVITIES SOME INFORMATION ABOUT EDGAR ALLAN POE Page 12 — exercise 1 a. F—He was never officially adopted. b. T cc. T d. F—Poe began his literary career with a collection of pooms. e. F—Poe wrote a poem called “The Raven”. F — Poe's wife was only thirteen when they got married. g. F—Poe's wife died of tuberculosis. h. T THE MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE f Page 19 — exercise 1 Possible answers: a. Although Dupin came from a noble family, he was not very rich. b. Books were his only passion and luxury. c. Because of Dupin’s financial difficulties, the narrator offered to pay the rent of the house they would share in Paris. d. Darkness was one of Dupin’s obsessions. e. During the day they closed all the shutters to simulate the conditions g of darkness. . Atnight they walked around the city looking for things to stimulate their imagination. Thanks to his amazing analytical ability, Dupin could see directly into men’s hearts and minds. Page 19 - exercise 2 a The narrator and Dupin were looking for the same book in a library when they met. . They read about the terrible events that had occurred in Quartier St. Roch in a newspaper. . The first people to know of the murders were the neighbours who had heard terrible screams coming from the house. Among other things, the police found a razor covered in blood and bloody lengths of human hair. The dead body of Madame L'Espanaye's daughter was found in the chimney. . She had been strangled. . The corpse of the old lady was in the back garden. h. Her throat was cut and her body was mutilated. . The police didn't know what to think about these two horrible murders.Page 20 - exercise 3 Open answers. Page 21 - exercise 4 was born/ was acclaimed / found / abandoned / didn’t prove / had already acted / included / didn’t have / led / was struggling / acting / ended / was taken / stayed / had once been / died / was still living / was adopted / was sheltered Page 22 - exercise 5 a. Since Dupin was not particularly well-off, the rent was being paid by the narrator, b. If the voices hadn’t been heard by the neighbours, the murders wouldn't have been found out. As the group ran up the stairs, two angry voices were heard coming from the upper part of the house. d. A horrible scene was discovered by the police in Madame L'Espanaye's flat. e. The girl's body had been found in the chimney. A clue that could help to solve the mystery hasn’t been found yet. ° ” Page 23 - exercise 1 laundress / victims / daughter / affectionate / paid / job / washing / servant / fourth / tobacconist / born / moved / quiet / believed / entered / porter / doctor Page 30 - exercise 1 a. Pauline Dubourg - laundress b. Pierre Moreau — tobacconist c. Isidore Muset — policeman d. Henri Duval — neighbour e. Monsieur Odenheimer — restaurant owner f. Jules Mignaud — banker g. Adolphe Le Bon — bank clerk h. William Bird — tailor 122 i. Alfonso Garcia — undertaker j. Alberto Montani-— baker k. Paul Dumas — doctor Page 30 — exercise 2 a. T b. F— Pierre Moreau said that he had known Madame L’Espanaye for four years. He added that the victims had led a very quiet life despite their wealth and they never had visitors, c. F—Isidore Muset said that when he had gone to the house, he had easily managed to open the gates with a piece of metal. He explained that he had heard loud screams and two. voices speaking in a foreign language, one French and the other possibly Spanish. T . F-Monsieur Odenheimer said that the screams had lasted for about ten minutes. He said that he had heard the two voices too and that one of them had said several times “Heaven help us!” and once “My God!”. f. F—Jules Mignaud stated that Madame L’Espanaye was quite well- off and that three days before her death she had taken out the sum of 4,000 francs. 8 F—Adolphe Le Bon stated that at 12 noon he accompanied Madame L'Espanaye to her house with the money in two bags. Page 31 - exercise 3 h. William Bird said that he had heard two voices. One of them was perhaps the voice of a woman and was shrill, very loud and spoke in German. Alfonso Garcia stated that he had heard the two voices arguing but could not hear what they said. One. of them was speaking in Frenchwhile the other was speaking in English. Alberto Montani declared that he had heard two voices. The low voice was that of a Frenchman while the other was speaking Russian. k. Paul Dumas explained that the gitl’s death had been the result of strangulation and that the body of the mother had been horribly mutilated. Page 32 — exercise 4 a. Monsieur Brelle said that Madame LEspanaye had never said hello to him. b. Madame La Fayette said that she had been living in the area for fifteen years but she had never met the lady in question. c. Paul Leroux said that if he had known something, he would have told the journalist but he hadn’t heard a single noise. d. Bettie Bellini said that she didn't know anything at all. She told the journalist that if he didn’t leave her alone, she would call the cops. e. Claude Puselle said that she had been sleeping when the horrible murders had happened... and she had been having a nightmare. f. Madame Sorelle said that it was the most appalling thing that had ever happened in the area. It had used to be a respectable Quartier, Page 32 — exercise 5 Open answers. Page 33 - exercise 1 arrested / clerk / method / moment / surprising / diligence / hard / qualities / fail / mistake / whole / truth / well / surface Page 40 - exercise 1 a. They arrived at the house late in the afternoon. . They walked around the building. . They entered the house. . They went upstairs, into the room where the body of Mademoiselle L'Espanaye had been found . Dupin examined everything. . They went into the other rooms, g. They stayed in the house until it started to get dark. Then they went home. hos mo Page 40 ~ exercise 2 Open answers. Page 41 — exercise 3 Open answers. Page 41 — exercise 4 a. Someone had broken in. b. The furniture had been broken. c. The drawers had been opened and the papers had been scattered about. d. The daughter's dead body had been badly bruised. e. The bruises on her throat suggested that she had been strangled. f. The body of Madame L'Espanaye had been completely mutilated. Page 42 - exercise 5 a. Dupin’s thesis is ... (open answer). b. The police have ... (open answer). c. Dupin’s family was/were ... (open answer). d. The evidence of the murders is ... (open answer). e. The furniture in Madame LEspanaye's apartment was ... (open answer). f. The goods in the house weren't ... (open answer). g. The people living in the area were . (open answer). h. The hair found in the apartment was ... (open answer), 123Page 42 - exercise 6 k\ (H)\K_T LL ERNM ljoj)s QZO0OPTKX LI(M_A (8) S A CR E)N L||I] S |L] A A X BH J I||c| F |A)U S VWMB N||t| P jul 1 MS J HD iG) DIM |c|/L J LuSs TI R |g) ziH|S CGHTN QT@I|TAEDCRE wT R\|EQCHA ZP DLL®FYoOUsa THE ART OF THE DETECTIVE STORY Page 45 — exercise 1 a. Poe's short stories are a mixture of imagination, logic and hallucination. . His texts can be grouped into tales of the grotesque and tales of ratiocination. . Dupin’s approach consisted in looking at the surface of things. . The type of mystery that the hardboiled detective investigates is almost the inversion of the tradition of Poe, . In hardboiled fiction, the narrator starts with a relatively simple matter which becomes terribly complicated as the story develops. . Hammett's stories are far less cerebral than Poe's elaborate and clever puzzles. They are also more “human”. Page 51 - exercise 1 a.party b.search o.nail d. sill e.rod f.shutter g, shrill 124 Page 51 - exercise 2 a. T b. F Both doors facing the corridor were locked from the inside. F — The chimneys were very narrow. T F ~There were only two windows and only one of them was nailed shut. T . F—Less than two metres from this window there was a lightning rod which ran to the ground. h. T i. T c. e. Page 52 - exercise 3 1st — The murderers must have passed through the windows in the back room. and — The murderers must have been really agile. 3rd — Money could not have been the motive for the murders. Page 52 - exercise 4 Possible answers: a, Who were the murderers? b. Where did they come from? c. What language did they speak? d. How did they get to be so agile? e. Why did they kill the two women? Page 53 — exercise 5 a. Dupin was a brilliant investigator who didn’t take long to find out what had really happened. OR Dupin, who was a brilliant investigator, didn’t take long to find out what had really happened. b. The murderer, whose strength must have been remarkable, had almost decapitated Madame L'Espanaye. c. Dupin searched the flat where he found a lot of interesting things. d. Dupin had a lot of intuitions whichhe told to the narrator. + The narrator, who was not as insightful as Dupin, was astonished by his reconstruction of the events. . The police inspected the windows which appeared to be locked. . Each window had shutters whose width was about one metre. The murderer, who climbed up the wall, must have been of an extraordinary agility. One of the two voices Dupin talked about was extremely shrill. Page 54 — exercise 1 themselves / strangled / pushed / excessive / took / pull / must / evidence / strength / hair / extremely / pull / half Page 60 — exercise 1 The narrator thought that the murderer must have been a madman. Dupin didn’t agree because the murderer spoke a language which contained completely unrecognisable words, Moreover, madmen have human hair while the hair they found in the house seemed to belong to an animal. . Dupin got the narrator to wrap the drawing around a cylinder of wood. . They concluded that the hand in question was not human. . Dupin showed the narrator an article from a book on ethology to prove that the hand belonged to an orang-outang. . One of the voices belonged to a Frenchman while the other belonged to the orang-outang. The advertisement stated that an orang-outang had been found and the owner could collect it. . Dupin wrote it in order to get the attention of the owner of the orang- murderer. . The piece of ribbon proved that the b. owner of the orang-outang was a sailor. . Dupin was expecting a visit from a Maltese sailor. Page 60 - exercise 2 Open answer. Page 61 — exercise 3 a. The orang-outang was of great value and the sailor was poor. ‘The orang-outang had been found in the Bois du Boulogne, a very great distance from the scene of the murders. . Nobody could think that the animal was responsible for the murders, The sailor thought that if he didn’t collect the animal he would attract suspicion. ‘Tho sailor planned to collect the orang-outang and keep it until the incident had been forgotten. b. d. Page 61 - exercise 4 Open answers. APES GOING APE Page 64 - exercise 1 a. T b. F—King Kong was brought to New York for the entertainment of the masses. c. T d. F—They are set in a simian version of the Roman Empire. T F - Romero's film is quite believable. Page 65 — exercise 1 a. The orang-outang was four or five. b. The story began on the island of Borneo. . The orang-outang was holding a razor in its hand when it ran away from the sailor’s place.. Adolphe Le Bon was immediately released. . The orang-outang was sold to the city zoo. Page 74 — exercise 1 a. b. c. d. e. = a F — He was a very muscular man. F —Dupin didn’t want any money at all. YY iff F — The orang-outang was captured bya friend of his. tT. me ¥ T. Page 74 - exercise 2 Open answer. Page 75 - exercise 3 Possible answers: Tf the sailor hadn't gone to Borneo, he would never have met the orang- outang, . If the orang-outang hadn’t found the razor, he would have never killed the two women, . If the window had been properly locked, the orang-outang wouldn't have been able to get into the house. . If Madame L’Espanaye had been fitter, she would have been able to kill the animal. . If the orang-outang hadn’t escaped from the house, the police would. have realised immediately that it was responsible for the murders. Page 75 — exercise 4-6 Open answers. PARIS IN THE 1800’S Page 82 - exercise 1 During his reign, three kilometres of quays were built from the Louvre to the Tuileries, Rue de Rivoli was created and the construction of the Arc de Triomphe was begun. b. Work projects slowed down due to a combination of the kings’ lack of ambition and lack of funds. c. According to doctors, people were supposed to take baths only once a month. d. The “bouquinistes” were used- books merchants. . The department store. . Public transport included trams, funicular railways, buses and boats. + Itturned white under the rain. . The Eiffel Tower was built to commemorate the centennial of the French Revolution. i. The “Belle Epoque” started in the 1880's and was brutally interrupted by the First World War. me ae THE PURLOINED LETTER Page 94 - exercise 1 Possible answers: a. It was a windy evening in the autumn of 18_. b. The narrator and Dupin were friends. c. For one hour they sat together in profound silence. d. Dupin was watching the smoke rising from his pipe. e. The narrator was thinking how fast Dupin had been in solving the Rue Morgue case. f. Suddenly Monsieur G_ arrived. Page 94 - exercise 2 Possible answers: a. If anybody knew that the policeman Monsieur G. told Dupin about the case, he would probably lose his job. b. If the affair hadn’t been so simple, the police wouldn't have been so puzzled. 126. Ifthe document had passed out of the robber's possession, it would have had dramatic consequences. |. If Dupin hadn’t been consulted, the case certainly wouldn't have been solved, . Ifthe Minister D. realized the police were looking for the letter, he would disclose its contents. . Ifthe minister hadn’t often been absent from home, the police wouldn't have been able to search his place. Page 95 - exercises 3, 4 Open answers. Page 96 — exercise 5 a. T b. T c. F—For each room they spent an entire week searching. d. F—They also examined the chairs. e. T f. T g. 7 h. T i. F—They also searched the two adjoining houses. j.T Page 96 — exercise 6 Open answers. Page 105 - exercise 1 a, They were occupied in the same manner as before. A very large reward. The Prefect appeared absolutely amazed, The problem with their techniques was that they were not suitable for this case. . The minister was also a mathematician and a poet. » One shouldn't be either too deep or too superficial in carrying out an investigation. b. om 127 Page 105 — exercise 2 a. This game is played with marbles. b. One player holds a number of marbles and asks the other player whether the number is even or odd. c. Ifthe other player is right, he wins d. one, On the other hand, if he is wrong, he loses one. . In order to win you must first of all observe and measure the intelligence of your opponent. . Ifyou think the opponent is a complete idiot, and if you lose the first time answering “odd”, you have to answer “odd” the second is because the opponent will think that he will fool you just by switching from even to odd. . On the other hand, if your opponent seems to be slightly more intelligent than the first, you should answer “even”. This is because this “idiot a degree more intelligent than the first” will probably think that a simple variation would be too predictable and decide to keep the marbles even as before. Page 106 - exercise 3 a. b. d. ‘The Prefect was asked a question about the purloined letter. When the policoman went to see Dupin, the house had been searched several times. . A large sum of money is being offered as a reward for finding the letter. ‘To the policeman’s surprise, the letter was returned to him by Dupin. . The Prefect was surprised that the letter had been found by Dupin. . The wrong techniques had boon used by the Parisian police to solve the crime.Page 107 — exercise 4 a. bedpost b. marbles ¢. concealment d. mathematician e. puzzled f. drawer g. robber h. perseverance i. search j. thickness Page 107 — exercise 5 Open answer. Page 108 — exercise 1 head / minister / spectacles / business / table / books / purloined / mantlepiece / compartments / tear / female / letter / appearance / Prefect / seal Page 114 ~ exercise 1 a. T b. T ce. T d. F—He went only twice. e. F—He pretended that he had forgotten his tobacco. f. F—Dupin substituted it with a facsimile and so the minister never noticed. Page 114 ~ exercise 2 Open answers. Page 115 - exercise 3 Letter A — The seal was large and black. — The seal had D’s insignia inscribed on it. Letter B The letter was addressed to D. — It was written in small female handwriting. — The seal was small and red. — The seal bore the coat of arms of the Royal Family. — The letter was addressed to a lady. — It was written in a large and bold handwriting, Page 115 — exercise 4 Open answer. Page 116 - exercise 5 Open answers. KEY TO THE EXIT TEST Focus on the context a. In 1809 in Boston. b. John Allan and Frances Keeling Valentine. c, He was disappointed because it was totally ignored by the critics. d. Some critics consider it to be the first ever detective story. e. On October 7, 1849. Focus on the story The Murders in the Rue Morgue 1.D 2.B 3.C 4A 5.C 6D The Purloined Letter 7.B 8D 9.C 10,A 11.D 12.D Fy 1. strangled 2. throat 3. witnesses 4. murderer 5. window 6. which 7. therefore 8. neither 9. advertisement 10, who 128ISRC sn 208-09.0053.0 am“h Level 6 Frankenstein BPEL Pride and Prejudice HES Ha Robinson Crusoe ‘ ‘ Sa RURIE Tess of the d’Urbervilles A Tale vf Two Cities ae aries RIE ey, The Problems: of Cell 13 ‘Phe Scarlet Letter +S SRNR ae AMARRESRRMESFS » MORE WEES A RE? RARER 2 HE HOB. SRHER- BAVSH w-WR REAZAS? AEWA XS? HAD BBHARANMS ? CHER HSSRAD? CMER MS AA ? “GURATE NRGE" BC PRE RSS ARNE AS | if it il | WWW.ecnupress.com.cn up Hee Al ei fe
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