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Unit 11
4 For questions 1–6, choose the answer (A, B, C or D)
which you think fits best according to the text.
What did Paul expect from his journey?
" to have a variety of enjoyable experiences
# to see how Africa had changed
$ to meet some old friends
% to see impressive scenery
Forty years ago, how did Paul feel about the future of
the country where he was living?
" Little was likely to change.
# People’s aspirations were too limited.
$ Women would do most of the work.
Home had become a routine, and routines make time % Things were likely to improve.
40 pass quickly. I was a sitting duck in this predictable
In paragraph 3, what reason does Paul give for wanting
routine: people knew when to call me, they knew when I to travel to Africa?
would be at my desk. I was in such regular touch it was
" He wanted people to be unable to contact him.
like having a job, a mode of life I hated. I was sick of # He wanted a change of activity.
being called up and importuned, asked for favors, hit up
$ His health was suffering from staying at home.
for money. You stick around too long and people begin % He had been waiting to return to Africa for many
to impose their own deadlines on you.
years.
Everyone always available at any time in the totally Paul says ‘I was a sitting duck’ in paragraph 5 to show
accessible world seemed to me pure horror. It made that
me want to fi nd a place that was not accessible at all … " he was bored.
50 no phones, no Internet, not even mail delivery, the # he was easy to fi nd.
wonderful old world of being out of touch; in short, of $ he had a fi xed lifestyle.
being far away. % he was always lending money.
All I had to do was remove myself. I loved not having to Paul mentions his cooking activities
ask permission, and in fact in my domestic life things " to show he can look after himself.
had begun to get a little predictable, too – Mr Paul at # to explain why the phone was within earshot.
home every evening when Mrs Paul came home from $ to show how he was a good husband.
work. ‘I made spaghetti sauce … I seared some tuna … % to show why he felt trapped.
I’m scrubbing some potatoes …’ The writer in his apron,
In the fi nal paragraph, what is Paul’s reaction to his
perspiring over his béchamel sauce, always within
60 earshot of the telephone. You have to pick it up because friends’ messages?
" sadness about leaving them
it is ringing in your ear.
# surprise at their excitement
$ pleasure at their concern
A morbid aspect of my departure for Africa was
that people began offering condolences. Say you’re % annoyance at their seriousness
leaving for a dangerous place and your friends call
sympathetically, as though you’ve caught a serious 5 Work in small groups.
illness that might prove fatal. Yet I found these
Would you be happy to be out of touch on a journey?
messages unexpectedly stimulating, a heartening
What can be the benefi ts/drawbacks of travelling to a
preview of what my own demise would be like. Lots of
place with a very different culture from your own?
tears! Lots of mourners! But also, undoubtedly, many
70 people boasting solemnly, ‘I told him not to do it. I was
one of the last people to talk to him.’
From Dark Star Safari by Paul Theroux
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