I’m seventeen. I worked as a box boy at a supermarket in Los Angeles. People came to the counter (柜臺) and I put things in their bags for them and carried things to their cars. It was hard work.
While working, I wore a plate with my name on it. I once met someone I knew years ago. I remembered his name and said, “Mr. Castle, how are you?” We talked about this and that. As he left, he said, “It was nice talking to you, Brett.” I felt great, he remembered me. Then I looked down at my name plate. Oh, no. He didn’t remember me at all, he just read the name plate. I wish I had put “Irving” down on my name plate. If he’d have said, “Oh yes, Irving, how could I forget you?” I’d have been ready for him. There’s nothing personal here.
The manager and everyone else who were a step above the box boys often shouted orders. One of these was: you couldn’t accept tips(小費). Okay, I’m outside and I put the bags in the car. For a lot of people, the natural reaction(反應(yīng))is to take a quarter and give it to me. I’d say, “I’m sorry, I can’t.” They’d get angry. When you give someone a tip, you’re sort of being polite. You take a quarter and you put it in their hand and you expect them to say, “Oh, thanks a lot.” When you say, “I’m sorry, I can’t.” they feel a little
put down. They say, “No one will know.” And they put it in your pocket. You say, “I really can’t.” It gets to a point where you almost have to hurt a person physically to prevent him from tipping you. It was not in agreement with the store’s belief in being friendly. Accepting tips was a friendly thing and made the customer feel good. I just couldn’t understand the strangeness of some people’s ideas. One lady actually put a tip in my pocket, got in the car, and drove away. I was puzzled and didn’t know what to do. Should I d have had to throw the quarter at her or eaten it or something?
I decided that one year had been enough. Some people needed the job to stay alive and fed. I guess I had the means and could afford to hate it and give it up.
小題1:. From the second paragraph, we can infer (推斷) that ________.
A.the writer didn’t like the impersonal part of his job |
B.people can easily start talking with a name plate |
C.Mr. Castle mistook Irving for Brett |
D.Irving was the writer’s real name |
小題2:. The box boy refused to accept tips because ________.
A.customers only gave small tips to |
B.some customers had strange ideas about tipping |
C.he didn’t want to fight with the customers |
D.the store didn’t allow the box boys to take tips |
小題3:. The underlined phrase “put down” in the third paragraph probably means ________.
A.relaxed | B.upset |
C.bored | D.surprised |
小題4:What can be the best title for this text?
A.How I Could Find a Job |
B.How I Got along with Customers |
C.Why I Gave up My Job |
D.Why I couldn’t Take Tips |