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ESAME DI STATO DI LICEO LINGUISTICO - 2002
Tema di: LINGUA STRANIERA
TESTO LETTERARIO - LINGUA INGLESE
(comprensione e produzione in lingua straniera)
After Julia had made up her mind to that she was glad. The prospect of getting away from the
misery that tormented her at once made it easier to bear. The notices were put up; Michael collected
his cast for the revival and started rehearsals. It amused Julia to sit idly in a stall and watch the
actress who had been engaged rehearse the part which she had played herself some years before.
She had never lost the thrill it gave her when she first went on the stage to sit in the darkened
playhouse, under dust-sheets, and see the characters grow in the actors' hands. Merely to be inside a
theatre rested her; nowhere was she so happy. Watching the rehearsals she was able to relax so that
when at night she had her own performance to give she felt fresh. She realized that all Michael had
said was true. She took hold of herself. Thrusting her private emotion into the background and thus
getting the character under control, she managed once more to play with her accustomed virtuosity.
Her acting ceased to be a means by which she gave release to her feelings and was again the
manifestation of her creative instinct. She got a quiet exhilaration out of thus recovering mastery
over her medium. It gave her a sense of power and of liberation.
But the triumphant effort she made took it out of her, and when she was not in the theatre she felt
listless and discouraged. She lost her exuberant vitality. A new humility overcame her. She had a
feeling that her day was done. She sighed as she told herself that nobody wanted her any more.
Michael suggested that she should go to Vienna to be near Roger, and she would have liked that,
but she shook her head.
"I should only cramp his style."
She was afraid he would find her a bore. He was enjoying himself and she would only be in the
way. She could not bear the thought that he would find it an irksome duty to take her here and there
and occasionally have luncheon or dinner with her. It was only natural that he should have more fun
with the friends of his own age that he had made. She decided to go and stay with her mother. Mrs
Lambert - Madame de Lambert, as Michael insisted on calling her - had lived for many years now
with her sister, Madame Falloux, at St Malo. She spent a few days every year in London with Julia,
but this year had not been well enough to come. She was an old lady, well over seventy, and Julia
knew that it would be a great joy for her to have her daughter on a long visit. Who cared about an
English actress in Vienna? She wouldn't be anyone there. In St Malo she would be something of a
figure, and it would be fun for the two old women to be able to show her off to their friends.
"Ma fille, la plus grande actrice d'Angleterre," and all that sort of thing.
W. S. MAUGHAM, Theatre, Penguin Books, 1967, pp. 174-175