6. Przeczytaj tekst. Z podanych odpowiedzi wybierz właściwą, zgodną z treścią tekstu. Zakreśl literę A, B, C albo D.

Stonehenge is one of England's most important monuments. Its stones are visible from a long distance away. Do you know that about 100 years ago it was up for sale? It was once bought by a lawyer whose name was Cecil Chubb. The man hadn't planned to buy the monument. It just happened when he was in Salisbury. Cecil's wife, Mary, had told him she wanted some curtains, so he went to town to buy them. However, he returned from Salisbury with something different for her. When he was there, he went to an auction and became the owner of Stonehenge. Mary was probably surprised at the present which cost as much as £ 680,000 in today's money.
Why did he do it? It is not clear. There is a theory that a wealthy American was going to buy Stonehenge, take it to pieces and send it abroad, and Chubb wanted to stop him and save the monument. Whatever his motivation, we know that Chubb paid £ 6,600 for Stonehenge at an auction in Salisbury in 1915. Three years later, he donated it to the British government.
Cecil Chubb had grown up in an average family. His father wasn't a wealthy man. He made horse saddles in the village of Shrewton, a few miles west of Stonehenge. Cecil attended a local school, and then continued his education in Salisbury, where from the age of 14 he worked for a time as a teacher's assistant. He then attended Christ's College in Cambridge, leaving with Master of Arts and Bachelor of Law degrees. Later in life Chubb made a great fortune, but he didn't forget what it was like to be poor. When he made his donation, he demanded that the public shouldn't pay more than a shilling to visit Stonehenge. A separate agreement said that local people should get in free of charge.

Now Stonehenge is run by an organisation called English Heritage, and about 30,000 people living nearby still get free entry. For other visitors an adult ticket costs £ 14.50, which is less in today's money than it cost in Chubb's times.

Currently, the area around Stonehenge is undergoing an expensive transformation. The main road nearby has been closed and the location of the visitor centre and car park has been changed. They are now further away from the stones than before. The fence around the ruins has also been pulled down. Chubb wanted the place to remain as open as possible, and this is happening. Today very few people have heard of Cecil Chubb, but he is still remembered in Shrewton, the village where he was born.

6.4. In the last paragraph, we learn that nowadays at Stonehenge
A. there is no fence between the monument and the nearby area.
B. a car park has been moved closer to the monument.
C. a huge visitor centre is being built.
D. a new road is going to be built around the monument.