Learning Test
Learning Test
Learning Test
talent was apparent even before most children can sing a simple
nursery rhyme. Wolfgangs older sister Maria Anna (who the family
called Nannerl) was learning the clavier, an early keyboard
instrument, when her three-year-old brother took an interest in
playing. As Nannerl later recalled, Wolfgang often spent much time
at the clavier picking out thirds, which he was always striking, and
his pleasure showed that it sounded good .... In the fourth year of
his age his father, for a game as it were, began to teach him a few
minuets and pieces at the clavier.... He could play it faultlessly and
with the greatest delicacy, and keeping exactly in time. Mozart was
the youngest of seven children, five of whom died in infancy. His
mother, Anna Maria Pertl (17201778), was born of a middle-class
family active in local administration. Their father Leopold, an
assistant concertmaster at the Salzburg Court and a minor
composer, came from a family of good standing (from which he was
estranged), which included architects and bookbinders. Leopold
recognized his childrens unique gifts and soon devoted himself to
their musical education. While Leopold was a devoted teacher to his
children, there is evidence that Mozart was keen to progress beyond
what he was taught. Born at 9 Getreidegasse in Salzburg, Austria,
on January 27, 1756, Wolfgang had composed his first original work
by age five. Leopold planned to take Nannerl and Wolfgang on tour
to play before the European courts. Their first venture was to nearby
Munich where the children played for Maximillian III Joseph, elector
of Bavaria. Leopold soon set his sights on the capital of the
Hapsburg Empire, Vienna. On their way to Vienna, the family
stopped in Linz, where Wolfgang gave his first public concert. By this
time, Wolfgang was not only a virtuoso harpsichord player, but he
had also mastered the violin. The audience at Linz was stunned by
the six-year-old, and word of his genius soon traveled to Vienna. In a
much anticipated concert, the Mozart children appeared at the
Schonbrunn Palace on October 13, 1762. They utterly charmed the
emperor and empress. Following this success, Leopold was
inundated with invitations for the children to play, for a fee. Leopold
seized the opportunity and booked as many concerts as possible at
courts throughout Europe. A concert could last three hours, and the
children played at least two per a day. Today, Leopold might be
considered the worst kind of stage parent, but at the time, it was
not uncommon for prodigies to make extensive concert tours. Even
so, it was an exhausting schedule for a child who was just past the
age of needing an afternoon nap.
The crystal clear, blue water and the magnificent sun make the Caribbean
island of Saint Maarten a favorite vacation spot, one that is popular with
North Americans during their winter holidays from December through
March, as well as with South Americans and
Europeans from April through August. The French and Dutch settled on the
island in the 1600s, and to this day, the island is divided between the two
of them. The French capital is Marigot; the Dutch capital is Philipsburg.
Tourists soon discover that St. Maarten has an intriguing history. Ancient
artifacts found on the island date back to the Stone Age,
6,000 years ago! Tourists also learn that 1,200 years ago the Arawak.
Indians inhabited all the islands of the West Indies and were a peaceful
people living under the guidance of their chiefs. Three hundred years after
the Arawaks first arrived on St. Maarten, in the 1300s,
they were defeated and forced to abandon the island by a hostile tribe of
Indians originating in South America. This new tribe was called the Carib.
The Caribbean Sea was named after them. Unlike the Arawaks, they had
no permanent chiefs or leaders, except in times of strife. And they were
extremely warlike. Worse, they were cannibalistic, eating the enemy
warriors they captured. In fact, the very word cannibal comes from the
Spanish name for the Carib Indians.The Spanish arrived in the fifteenth
century and, unfortunately, they carried diseases to which the Indians had
no immunity. Many Indians succumbed to common European illnesses;
others died from the hard labor forced upon them.
2. One can infer from the passage that the Stone Age people lived on
a. 6000 b.c.
b. 4000 b.c.
c. 800 a.d.
d. 1300 a.d.
4. One can infer from the passage that the underlined word strife
means
a. cannibalism.
b. war.
c. duty-free.
d. chief.
b. is independent.