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  3. Cambridge
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  5. C2 Proficiency
  6. /
  7. 部分 6
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  9. 练习测试
C2Reading and Use of English部分 6

Gapped text

You are going to read an extract. Seven paragraphs have been removed from the extract. Choose from the paragraphs A-H the one which fits each gap (1-7). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use.

The Last Bell of Marrow Street

The first time I saw the Marrow Street Cinema, it was already pretending not to exist. A sheet of corrugated metal covered its doors, and the old poster cases had been emptied so carefully you could still see the pale rectangles where film titles used to sun-bleach. Yet the building’s name—painted in a curling script above the awning—refused to fade, as if stubbornness were a form of architecture. I had come for a story about redevelopment, but standing there in the drizzle I realised the story was also about memory, and about who gets to keep it.
It was that bell, surprisingly, that drew me into the building later. Nora had arranged for a final look before the demolition crew arrived, and the site manager had shrugged his permission as if granting access to a shed. Nevertheless, the air inside held the theatre’s old mixture of dust, upholstery, and something sweetly chemical from decades of cleaning fluid. My torch beam caught torn velvet and a scatter of ticket stubs under the seats, and I found myself stepping carefully, as though the floor might still be listening. At the back, a narrow staircase led up to the projection room, where the equipment sat like abandoned laboratory apparatus. The reels had gone, but the splicer and the grease pencils remained, and on the wall someone had written “DON’T FORGET SOUND” in block capitals. That instruction, meant for a hurried teenager threading film, felt addressed to me. In journalism we rarely forget sound in the literal sense; we record voices obsessively. Yet we often miss the quieter noise of places—what they teach a neighbourhood to expect from itself.
Afterwards, outside the municipal building, I spoke with the developer’s representative, a young woman with an immaculate clipboard and a tired honesty. She didn’t sneer at the cinema; she praised it, even. “We’re keeping the façade,” she said, pointing to a glossy rendering where the curling script survived above a ground-floor gym. However, her pride was in compliance: accessible entrances, energy ratings, safety certifications. Listening to her, I understood that the project was not designed to erase the past; it was designed to make the past harmless.
Later, as I wrote my piece, I kept thinking about that block-capital reminder: DON’T FORGET SOUND. The flats will rise, the façade will pose for photographs, and the gym will fill with music loud enough to drown out thought. Yet sound, in the broader sense, is harder to demolish. It persists in habits: in the way neighbours nod, in the expectation that a stranger might be welcomed, in the memory of a room where shoulders could drop. If redevelopment is inevitable, then so is the task of insisting that what cannot be measured still matters.

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