II. 다음을 읽고 밑줄친 낱말을 문맥에 맞게 알맞은 어형으로 바꿔
쓰라. (8점)

In general, one''s memories of any period must necessarily
(a)weak as one moves away from it. One is constantly learning
----
new facts, and old ones have to drop out to make way for them.
At twenty I could have written the history of my schooldays
with an accuracy which would be quite impossible now. But it
can also happen that one''s memories grow much (b)sharp after a
-----
long lapse of time, because one is looking at the past with
fresh eyes and can isolate and, as it were, notice facts which
previously existed (c)differentiate among a mass of others.

III. 글 (B)가 글 (A)에 가장 가까운 내용이 되도록 빈칸에 주어진
글자로 시작하는 낱말을 하나씩 넣으라. (12점)

(A)

Posthumous fame is too odd a thing to be blamed upon the
blindness of the world. Nor can it be said that it is the
bitter reward of those who were ahead of their time. On the
contrary, posthumous fame is usually preceded by the highest
recognition among one''s peers. When Kafka died in 1924, his few
published books had not sold more than a couple of hundred
copies, but his literary friends and the few readers who had
almost accidentally stumbled on the short prose pieces knew
beyond doubt that he was one of the masters of modern prose.

(B)

If a great writer dies without due (r________) and achieves
fame after his death, people often (b_________) the world for
its blindness. Others may argue that the writer failed to be
recognized because he was born (b________) his time. But a
writer who is (w_________) of posthumous fame is rarely, if
(e______), completely neglected in his life time. Kafka, for
example, was known only to a (s_______) number of friends and
chance readers, but those who read him were assured of his
greatness as a writer.