Comprehension and Discussion Questions. 1. What were the positions which Paula and Nancy held in the advertising company of this story?

1. What were the positions which Paula and Nancy held in the advertising company of this story?

2. Why was Paula very nervous this afternoon and why did she keep making so many mistakes as she typed?

3. What position were both of them very interested in ob­taining?

4. What were some of the advantages to be gained in be­ing promoted to the position of Bill Hargrave's secre­tary?

5. How did the two girls, Paula and Nancy, differ in their characters?

6. Which was the more efficient of the two girls?

7. Why was Paula always busy when some of the men of lesser importance in the office wanted her to do some typing for them?

8. Which of the two girls was finally able to obtain tickets for the stateroom for Bill Hargrave for that evening?

9. Which of the girls did Bill Hargrave finally select to be his secretary in the future?

10. Which did he select as his wife?

 

Vocabulary and Idiom Review

A. Circle the word in parentheses which completes each sen­tence correctly:

1. To pick a secretary is to (criticize/select/admire/promote) one.

2. To settle a matter is to (consider it/set it aside/decide it/ postpone it).

3. He had a keen knife; that is, the knife was (sharp/dull/late/ easy).

4. To cancel something is to (put it off/call it off/put it away/ put it down).

5. (Candy/pepper/perfume/butter) will make you smell sweet.

6. (Salary/flannel/expense account/pride) is often used to make men's suits.

7. A kitten is a (ticket agent/boss/good salary/young cat).

8. A great deal is a (little/lot/few/necessity).

9. She took a sheet of (water/chalk/paper/pencil) out of her typewriter.

10. An executive is usually a (mechanic/businessman/doctor/ painter).

 

B. Use the following expressions in sentences of your own:

1. leave town 5. used to 9. keep one's eye on something

2. take one's time 6. go after 10. be dressed up

3. be in a hurry 7. get dressed up 11. for some time

4. be used to 8. in fact 12. get used to

 

Structure Review

C. The negative prefix dis- is also commonly used with verbs.

Example: He hasn't liked any of the movies he's seen recently; he's even disliked the ones that were highly recommended by the critics.

Give the form with dis- for each of the following verbs. Then use each of the resulting words in a sentence of your own:

1. agree ______________ ____________________________________________________________

2. satisfy ______________ ____________________________________________________________

3. approve ______________ ____________________________________________________________

4. trust ______________ ____________________________________________________________

5. please ______________ ____________________________________________________________

6. place ______________ ____________________________________________________________

7. connect ______________ ____________________________________________________________

8. continue ______________ ____________________________________________________________

9. obey ______________ ____________________________________________________________

10. credit ______________ ____________________________________________________________


Ten Steps

By Robert Littell

I put on a clean collar. I was in our room on the second floor where I could see into the Hubbell’s yard, and the ring on the stone post where they tie up their dog. The dog wasn't there. The collar which I took off had two kinds of laundry marks on the inside, one mark from the laundry where I used to take my shirts and a second mark from the present laundry. Then I washed my hands.

The soap was worn down so, that there was almost none left. It was a soap that smelled, like salad. I turned off the water, but the water still went drip-drip from the faucet. I dried my hands. I hung the towel on the left end of the rod. The right end of the rod is for Mae. The rod is glass, and some day it will come loose and fall down and break. I shut the bathroom door so that I would not hear the drip-drip of the water from the faucet.

I went into the room again which is Mae's and mine. On her bed in the daytime she keeps a French doll with big eyes. Where the back of the bed hits the wall there is a mark. I moved out the bed, and I saw the mark. It is black, and a yard long. The doll fell off and I put it back on the bed so it could not look at me when I went out. Then I went out.

I was in the hall, and I shut my eyes. I did not know what kind of wallpaper there was in the hall. I thought that it would be green, but when I opened my eyes again, it was more blue than green, with a woman, and a basket, and a lamb. Around the door the paper was cut off, and there was only the lamb; eight times, from the ceiling to the floor, no woman, and no basket, but only the lamb. I could touch the ceiling when I stood on my toes.

Next to our room is the extra room, which we do not use. I went into that. The back of the mirror was peeling off, and both windows were closed. On the window there was a large fly, and I opened the window and drove him out and he flew away; and in the window frame there was a long nail; and I took off my shoe and drove in the nail with the heel of my shoe. Then I put on my shoe again. I measured the room by walking across in each direction from one wall to the other. It is ten by fourteen.

I came into the parlor from the door across from the desk. The desk has three drawers down one side. I took out an envelope from the bottom drawer and put some money in it and wrote "For Mae" on it and put it on the top of the desk. The curtains in the parlor were red. Where the sun hits them there is a part that is not red, but pink. There was a magazine on the table called Movieland, and I started to read it, but I did not read it. I went over to the fireplace and looked at the rest of the room from there, and I saw the table and the carpet and how two chairs were facing right toward each other. I sat down on one of them and one of its legs was shorter than the others, and I got up and went into the kitchen.

In the kitchen I saw Mae shelling peas. She forced the peas out of the shell with her thumb and they fell into the bowl. There were three peas on the floor and I picked them up and put them in my pocket. The kitchen floor was laid in linoleum with blue and white squares two inches square. Mae was sitting on a stool, reading a paper placed in front of her. She did not turn around when I came in. She said, "When you come back bring some stove polish with you.”

I said I was going now.

I went out through the back door into the yard. There I saw my kid playing with some sand and toys in the sand. He was putting the sand into a toy truck, and then running the truck back and forth through the sand. The sand was wet, and I could see the print of his hand on it. It was his left hand. I said, "So long, son," to him, but he didn't say anything. He was too busy with his truck and the sand.

Then I went to the garage, and unlocked the door. I ran a cloth over the windshield of the car, and it was scratched in a half circle where the windshield wiper wipes it. And I stood there for a couple of minutes, and then I closed the doors and walked alongside of the house to the front and looked at my watch. It was twenty minutes to ten.

Then I walked down the wooden steps to the sidewalk, and I counted the steps. I counted ten steps, I thought I counted the last step, but perhaps I didn't. I walked down the street, and looked back, and saw the house, and there was one window with a shade halfway down, and I wanted to go back and count the steps again to make sure, but I didn't. I walked down to the corner and took the bus and got off at the police station and found Captain Rogers and told him that if they were looking for the man who killed Sam Matthews they should arrest me because I had done it. Captain Rogers asked me if I wanted to write out a confession and I said that I would, but before I tell them how I killed Matthews I want to write down the last things which I saw in my house and how I remember them, because now I'll want always to be able to remember about all those things that I won't ever see again.