SECTION: C: TEXTBOOK
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FLAMINGO (POETRY)
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Poem. 1 MY MOTHER AT SIXTY SIX by KAMALA DAS
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Summary:
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The poet is driving from her parents’ home to Cochin
by car, her mother by her side—sleeping –
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Open mouthed very pale, colorless and frail-like a
dead body indicating that her end was near.
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The poet looks
at her and feels intense
pain and agony
to realize that soon death will cast
her
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Mother from her.
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Tries to
divert her mind, looks outside at
the young trees and
happy children bursting
out of
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Their homes in a playful mood (a contrasting image)
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After the security check at the airport looked again
at her mother’s face—pale and cold.
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“Familiar
ache-My childhood fear” –the
poet has always
had a very
intimate and close
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relationship
with her mother
and she has
always felt the
fear of being
separated from her
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Mother hence it is familiar.
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The poet reassures her mother that they will meet again
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COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS: Read the extracts and answer
the questions that follow.
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“Driving from my parent’s home to Cochin last Friday
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1.
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Morning, I saw my mother, beside me, doze,
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Open mouthed, her face ashen like that
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Of a corpse and realized with pain
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That looked as old as she was
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But soon put that thought far away.”
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a) Where is the poet at present?
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The poet is on her way from her ancestral home to
Cochin Airport, travelling by a
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Car with her aged mother dozing off leaning against
her body.
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b) How does the poet describe her mother?
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The poet describes her mother as old, pale, cold and
senile. As she dozed off beside
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Her, the mother looked almost like a corpse, for her
face was colorless and seemed
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To have lost the color and vitality of life.
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c) Who does ‘she’ refer to in the last line? What
thoughts had she driven away?
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‘She’ here refers to the poet, Kamala Das. She wanted
to put the haunting thought of
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Parting with her mother away.
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d). Explain
the expression’…. Pain that looked as old as she was…’
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Her pain about losing her mother is as old as she was.
The poetess wants to
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Express the idea that the pain / fear was haunting her
since her child hood.
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2
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. “… But soon
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Put that thought far away, and looked out at young
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Trees sprinting, the merry children spilling
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Out of their homes…”
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a) What was the
poet ‘looking’ at? What did she notice?
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The poet was looking at her mother. She noticed the
mother’s ashen and almost
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Lifeless face distraught with pain.
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b) What thought did she try to drive away?
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She tried to drive away the thought of her mother’s
approaching death.
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c) Why did the poet start ’looking out’? What does her
gesture suggest?
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The poet started looking out of the window because she
wanted to drive away the pain
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And agony she experienced on seeing her aged mother.
She wanted to drive away her
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Helplessness in the wake of her mother’s ageing and
approaching death.
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d) What did the poet see from the window of the car?
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The poet saw young trees running past her car and
merry children sprinting out of
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Their homes to play.
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e) What did the images of ‘young trees’ and ‘merry
children’ symbolize?
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Trees and children symbolize the spring of life, its
strength, vigor and happiness
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Which contrasts with the lifelessness and helplessness
that sets in with age.
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3
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. “But after the airport’s
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Security check, standing a few yards
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Away, I looked again at her, wan, pale
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As a late winter’s moon”
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a) Who is ‘I’ and why is she at the airport
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?
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‘I’ is the poet Kamala Das here and the poet was at
the Cochin airport waiting to board
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The plane to Kolkata.
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b) Who does ‘her’ here to? How did she look like?
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’Her’ here refers to the poet’s aged mother. In her
declining stage of health, the mother
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Looked pale, cold like a corpse and like a colorless,
dull later winter moon.
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c) Why does the narrator ‘look at her again’?
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The narrator looked at her mother once again for the
last time before she left to
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Reassure herself about the wellbeing of her mother.
She had tried to drive away the
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Pain she had felt on seeing her weak and aged mother.
It was a look of reassurance to
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Meet her again, of anxiety and fear that it would be
her last meeting.
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d) Explain: ’wan, pale as a late winter’s moon’.
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In this simile, the poet similarises the mother’s pale
and withered face to the late winter’s moon.
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Winter symbolizes death and the waning moon symbolizes
decay. Just like the winter loses its
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Magnificence and brightness in winter covered and
dimmed in fog and mist, the thick cover of
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The winter of old age has made the mother weak, pale,
withered, inactive and spiritless.
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4.
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“And felt that old
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Familiar ache, my childhood’s fear,
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But all I said was, see you soon, Amman,
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All I did was smile and smile and smile
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.”
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a) What ‘familiar ache’ did the poet feel?
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The ‘familiar ache’ refers to the poet’s fear of
losing her mother and the realization that she has
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Not cared and cannot care for her ageing mother. It is
an ache of helplessness. It is also a fear of
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Separation from the mother or the mother’s death.
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b) What could have been the poet’s childhood fears?
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I think the
poet’s childhood fear
was that she would lose
her mother or be separated from her
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And that death would consume her mother.
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c) Did the poet share her thoughts with her mother?
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The poet did
not share her fears
and agony with
her mother. She only bid good bye to her with
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The hope of seeing her soon.
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d) Why do you think, the poet did not share her
thoughts with her mother?
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I think the poet did not share her thoughts with her
mother because they were caused by her fear
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Of the unknown. Sharing them with the mother would
have worried the frail old woman to death.
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e) Why did the poet only ‘smile’?
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The poet only smiled to hide her guilt, anxiety and
fear of the unknown. Also, she wanted to bid a
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Cheerful farewell to her mother before boarding the
flight, giving a hollow promise wrapped in a
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Meaningless smile...
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QUESTION AND ANSWERS
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1. What is the kind of pain and ache that the poet
feels?
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When the poet
looks at her
mother’s face she
found that it
had become pale
and withered. She
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realized
that her mother
was at the
edge of her
life and her
end was near.
The thought that her
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Mother would be soon separated from her caused
unbearable pain and ache in the poet’s heart.
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2 What does the poet do to shrug off the painful
thought of her mother’s approaching end?
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To get rid of the painful thought her mother‘s nearing
end, the poet shifter her attention from her
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Mother’s pale face to the sprinting trees and the
happy children spilling out of their house.
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3. Why does the poet draw the image of sprinting trees
and merry children?
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Sprinting trees and merry children bursting out from
the doors suggest fresh life and warm energy,
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Vitality, youthfulness, spirit etc... The poet draws
this image to strikes a scene of contrast with the
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Pale, dull and withered face of the mother at the
declining stage of her health.
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.
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4. Why have the trees been described as sprinting?
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The poet was driving in a car along with her
mother. Her movement created the
visionary, illusion
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Of the trees outside appeared to be sprinting past.
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5. Why has the mother been compared to the late
winter’s moon?
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The late winter moon lacks luster. The mothers face was pale and withered. Moreover, the late
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winter
moon suggests the end of
season and mother too is nearing the
end of her life, therefore
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The poet compares her with the late winter’s moon.
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6. What is the ‘familiar ache’?
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The fear of losing her mother has tortured the poet
from her very childhood because she had been
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Intimately bound up with her. Therefore this ache is
familiar to her.
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7. What do the parting words of the poet and her smile
signify?
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The parting words of the poet reflect the poet’s pain,
frustration, guilt and helplessness. But she
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wears a
smile on her
face to mask
her pain and
to give hope,
happiness and reassurance
to her
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Mother.
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AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOM IN A SLUM -BY STEPHEN
SPENDER
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GIST OF THE POEM
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In this poem the poet focuses on the theme of social
injustice and inequalities.
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He presents the pathetic and miserable picture of the
elementary classroom in a slum.
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These children have pale and lifeless faces.
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They are like rootless weeds which are uncared and
unwanted with their disorderly hair
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Torn around their faces.
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They are depressed and oppressed with the burdens of
life and keep their heads down.
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They have stunted growth.
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They inherit the diseases of their father.
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Some of them do have dreams. A sweet young boy is
sitting at the back of the dim
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Classroom. He is dreaming of a squirrel’s game in the
trees and probably other
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Interesting things.
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The walls are dirty and creamy and on them are hung
the donations given by the rich
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And also Shakespeare Are’s portrait.
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A civilized dome found in the cities and Tyrolese
valleys with beautiful flowers are also
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Put up.
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The map on the wall shows the children, the beautiful
world outside; but for these
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Children of the slum it is meaningless.
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The children studying in these schools do not have the
means to go and explore the
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World. For them what they see through their classroom
windows, the narrow street
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And the lead sky is the world.
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Shakespeare is wicked for them as he has written only
about the rich, beautiful world
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Tempting them to steal.
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The map is of no interest to them because it does not
reflect the world they live in-
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Cramped and dark lanes.
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Their lives start in darkness and ends in utter darkness.
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They are undernourished and their poverty has
distorted their vision as they spend
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Their whole time in foggy slums.
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The poet feels that the map which shows beautiful and
exotic places should be
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Replaced with slums as it is not the world they live
in.
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Unless the governor inspector and visitor play a vital
role in bringing about a change,
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Their lives will remain in dark.
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The slum children will be able to peep through the
window only when the gap
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Between the two worlds is bridged.
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They should break the barriers till they come out of
the dirty surroundings and their
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World should be extended into the green fields, golden
sands and bright world.
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They should have the freedom of expression and their
outlook be broadened.
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For, only the educated and learned people can create
history whose language has
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Strength and power.
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SOLVED QUESTIONS
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1.
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“Unless, governor, inspector, visitor,
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This map beck omens their window and these windows
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That shut upon their lives like catch mobs.”
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(a) Why does the poet invoke ‘governor, ‘inspector’
and ‘visitor’?
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The poet invokes the ‘governor, ‘inspector’ and
‘visitor’ because they are the powerful people who
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can bring
about a drastic
change in the miserable lives of
the slum children. They can
remove the
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Social injustice and class inequalities.
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(b) What does ‘this map’ refer to? How can it become
‘their window’?
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This map refers to the beautiful world of the rich. Their window refers to holes and the
stinking
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Slums of the unfortunate children of the slum. This can
become their window only when the
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Difference between the two worlds is abridged.
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(c) What have ‘these windows’ done to their lives?
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These windows have cramped their lives, stunted their
physical and mental growth shutting them
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inside
filthy and dingy
holes, keeping them
away from the
vast world of
development and
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Opportunities.
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(d) What do you understand by catacombs?
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Catacombs are long underground graves. Here they stand
for the dirty slums which blocking which
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The slum children are confined.
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(e) Which literary device has been used here? Explain.
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Simile has been used here to describe the oppressive
effect of the surroundings on their pathetic
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Lives. The
slum walled in
against the world
of opportunities and
development is
similarised to
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Catacombs.’
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Answer the following in 30-40 words
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.
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1. What is the theme of the poem?
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This poem deals with the theme of social injustice and
class inequalities. The poet presents it by
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Talking of the two different and incompatible worlds- the
world of the rich and the civilized and
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The world of the poor and the deprived. This gap can
be bridged by the administrative authorities
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And through education.
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2. ‘So blot their maps with slums as big as doom’.
What does the poet want to convey?
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The poet is angry at the social equalities in the
world. There are two worlds – the
dirty slums and
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The prosperous and the beautiful world of the rich. The
poet wants the map of the world should
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Also have blots of slums as big as the ‘doom’. In
reality he wants the gap to be reduced.
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3. ‘History is theirs whose language is the sun’.
Explain.
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This
statement means that
those who have
the courage and conviction to break
free from the
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Constraints of life are the ones who create history.
One can make a mark only if one can outshine
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Others.
Education only can
give them power
and strength like
the sun which
will bring about
a
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Change in the lives of the people.
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QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
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B. Read the stanza and answer the questions that
follows:
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”Surely, Shakespeare is wicked, the map a bad example,
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With ships and sun and love tempting them to steal-
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For lives that turn in their cramped holes
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From fog to endless nights.”
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I) Name the poem and the poet
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ii) Why has Shakespeare been described as wicked?
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iii) Why is the map a bad example?
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iv) What tempts them to steal?
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v) How do the children continue to live?
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vi) Explain: ‘From fog to endless night.’
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C. Read the stanza and answer the questions that
follows:
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“
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The stunted, unlucky heir
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Of twisted bones, reciting a father gnarled disease
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His lesson from his desk. At the back of the dim class
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One unnoted, sweet and young. His eyes live in a dream
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Of squirrel’s game, in tree room, other than this.”
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a) Who is being referred to in the first two lines?
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b) Explain ‘father’s gnarled disease’.
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c) Who sit at
the back of the class? How is he different from others?
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d) Explain his eyes live in a dream?
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e) What is the comparison drawn with squirrels game?
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SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
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1. What is that these children inherit from their
parents? What does it signify?
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2. How has the poet described the color of the wall
and why?
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3. The poet presents two different worlds. What are
they?
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4. What picture of the slum children does the poet
draw?
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5. Where does the poet see hope and relief?
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6. What does the poet mean by saying, ‘Let their
tongue run naked into books’?
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7. How does the poet bring to light the brutalities of
slum life?
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8. Explain ‘Open handed map, awarding the world its
world’.
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9. In what way are the slum children unsung fighters?
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10. How does the poet see the children as victims of
social injustice?
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KEEPING QUIET - BY PABLO NERUDA
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GIST OF THE POEM
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The poet talks
about the need
of silence and
quiet introspection and
the importance of
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Quietude and calmness.
He also talks about creating a feeling of mutual understanding among
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Human beings.
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The poet asks us to keep still and count up to
twelve. He also asks us to sit still.
For a moment
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We should not speak any language. We should not move
our arms so much.
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It will be
a moment of complete
silence without rush
or worry. This would be an exotic
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Moment.
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Then a sudden strangeness will prevail which we will
all enjoy. It will be bliss.
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The fisherman would not harm the whales on the cold
sea. Even the man gathering salt would
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Stop working and look at his hurt hands and reflect at
the pain and harm his strenuous task has
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Caused him.
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All kinds of wars must be stopped at once. The green
wars against the environment, wars with
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Poisonous gases, firearms, must be stopped at once.
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People who are all the time preparing for wars leaving
no survivors behind ought to find time
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To wear clothes and walk around with their brothers
strengthening the message of peace and
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Brotherhood.
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At the same
time the poet
cautions not to
confuse stillness with
total inactivity. Life is an
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Ongoing process and should not be associated with
death. It is to be lived with positive
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Attitude.
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He does not want us to ruminate over death.
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But he feels that if for once we do not focus we
single -mindedly to keep our lives moving
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but do some
introspection or spend
some time in
silence doing nothing,
we can understand
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Ourselves better and escape from the threatening calls
of death.
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The earth can teach us a lesson how everything comes
to a dead end and comes to life again.
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In the same manner a quiet introspection can bring all
evil thoughts to an end and bring in a
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New life of peace and tranquility.
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Now the poet will count up to twelve and they should
keep quiet and he will go.
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SOLVED QUESTIONS
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1.
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Read the stanza and answer the questions that follows:
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“Fishermen in the cold sea
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Would not harm whales
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And the m an gathering salt
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Would look at his hurt hands.”
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a) What is ‘fisherman’ symbolic of?
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The fisherman symbolizes man’s indiscriminate
exploitation of nature for his vested interests.
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b) What will
happen when fishermen do not harm whales?
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The whales will be no longer on the verge of
extinction. A sense of co-existence can go into
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The minds of people.
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c) What has
happened to the man gathering salt? What must he do?
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The man gathering salt has injured his hands. He must take care of his hurt hands and
should
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Realize that his actions are self-destructive.
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d) What would
happen in this moment of silence?
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He will become conscious of the harm causing to others
and to themselves and will work towards a
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Better tomorrow peace, co-existence, mutual
understanding and harmony.
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e) What image
does the poet create in the last line?
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He creates the image of incessant suffering. In his
effort to add comforts to his life he has paid no
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Heed to the pain that caused him.
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2. Read the stanza and answer the questions that
follows:
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”
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Perhaps the earth can teach us
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As when everything seems dead
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And later prove to be alive
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Now I’ll count up to twelve
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And you keep quiet and I will go.”
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a) Who can teach us and what?
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The earth can teach us. The Earth can teach us how new
life emerges from the ashes of the dead
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Remains. Likewise quiet introspection will enable us
to live a life of peace and harmony.
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c) Why does the speaker count up to twelve?
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It is a part of initiation in meditation. All distractions and digressions are washed
away and man is
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In a moment of bliss.
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d) Explain-‘you keep quiet and I will go’?
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The poet wants us all to keep quiet and experience the
moment of realization and peace. He will
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Go and pass on the message to another group of people.
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Short Answer Questions
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1. Why does Pablo Neruda urge us to keep still?
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Stillness is necessary for reflection and quiet
introspection. We can hear the voice
of our
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conscience and
thus withdraw ourselves
from undesirable actions
and contribute to
create a
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Society of peace and mutual understanding.
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2. ’under the apparent stillness there is life’.
Justify.
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The poet does not want to equate stillness with total
inactivity. Under the apparent stillness there
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Is life.
We can learn
it from the earth
when everything seems
dead, the earth still
remains alive.
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The life on earth goes on under the apparent
stillness.
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3. Why do men become sad? How can this sadness be
overcome?
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Men fail to understand themselves. They are always threatening themselves with
death. When
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They do not understand themselves they become sad. A long
silence might interrupt this sadness
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And make them good.
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QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
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C.
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“What I want should not be confused
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With total inactivity
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Life is what it is about
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I want no truck with death.”
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1. What is the desire of the poet?
|
2. What does ‘total inactivity’ imply?
|
62
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3. Why does the poet say that he does not want his
wish to be confused with total inactivity?
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4. Explain-‘I want no truck with death’.
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SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
|
1. Why shouldn’t we speak any language and move our
arms so much?
|
2. How does the poet distinguish ‘stillness’ from
‘total inactivity’? Explain.
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3. “I want no truck with death.” Explain.
|
4. What are the various wars mentioned? What is the
result of these wars?
|
5. What would be the result of quietude?
|
6. What is the ‘exotic moment ’mentioned in the poem
and how can we achieve it?
|
7. According to the poet, why should not we speak in
any language?
|
8. What has man single-mindedly focused on and to what
effect?
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A THING OF BEAUTY by JOHN KEATS
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GIST OF THE LESSON
|
The Poet, John
Keats says that
beautiful things will
never become ‘nothing’
as they will
|
Continue to hold us in their spell and sooth our soul.
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Every
beautiful thing is
like a band
that ties us
to this earth
as it makes
us want to
live and
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Enjoy these things of beauty.
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And these things
of beauty, according
to the poet,
are the things
that give hope
to human
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Beings and make them want to live, in spite of all the
sorrow, ill-health and unpleasant experiences
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That we face on earth.
|
Some of the beautiful things on this earth that have
such an effect on us are the sun, the moon,
|
trees,
streams, flowers, forests, beautiful
monuments that we
have erected for the
dead, all
|
The lovely tales that we have heard or read.
|
Finally he compares all these beautiful things to the
immortal drink (of perennially) or nectar
|
Given to us by gods or gifts of God. Thus he states
his firm belief in the Divine.
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Solved Questions
|
“Yes, in spite of all,
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Some shape of beauty moves away the pall
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From our dark spirits. Such the sun, the moon,
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Trees old, and young, sprouting a shady boon
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For simple sheep: and such are daffodils”
|
a. What does ‘in spite of all’ refer to?
|
The
expression refers to
all the pessimistic and
negative thoughts that
obstruct our way
to
|
Happiness. In spite of the sense of hopelessness and
gloom that overshadow and darken our way,
|
We are able to find our happiness in the beautiful
objects on nature.
|
b. What, according to the poet, drives away the
sadness from our life?
|
63
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Beauty, in shape or form, helps in driving away the
sadness and despair from the dark recesses of
|
Our spirit.
|
c. What does the reference ‘simple sheep’ symbolize?
|
Lambs and sheep are envisioned as the embodiments of
innocent and serene beauty. Jesus Christ,
|
as an apostle
of peace, was
a shepherd and
was seen surrounded
by his flock
of sheep ,
his
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Followers. The poet has made specific reference to the
sheep as symbols of ‘divine beauty’.
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Short Answer Questions:
|
(a) What according to Keats are the things that cause
suffering and pain?
|
The poet says
that a scarcity
of good-natured people
or in other
words the wicked
people
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Outnumber the good people. And the
source of all
our sorrows is either
ill-health or another
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Human being.
|
(b) What makes human beings love life in spite of all
the suffering?
|
Answer: The
poet says that the beautiful things on earth lifts
the pall off
our spirits and make
life
|
Worth living.
Each beautiful thing is
like a link
that forms a
chain or wreath
that binds us
to this
|
Earth.
|
(c) Why does the poet say ‘mighty dead’?
|
Answer: Monuments are erected in memory of people who
were mighty or great when they lived.
|
Physically mighty as in mighty warriors or mentally
might as in great poets, writers or philosophers.
|
Their tombs provide inspiration for the living through
their beauty just as their works continue to
|
Do.
|
Questions for practice:
|
1. “A thing of beauty is a joy forever
|
Its loveliness increases, it will never
|
Pass into nothingness; but will keep
|
A bower quiet for us, and a sleep
|
Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing
|
Therefore, on every morrow, are we wreathing?
|
A flowery band to bind us to the earth.”
|
a. What is the special virtue of a beautiful thing?
|
b. How does it bless us?
|
c. Explain the expression “A bower quiet for us”.
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d. What do we do every day?
|
?
|
2. “The mid forest brake,
|
Rich with a sprinkling of fair musk-rose blooms;
|
And such too is the grandeur of the dooms
|
Who have imagined for the mighty dead;
|
All lovely tales that we have heard or read;
|
64
|
An endless fountain of immortal drink,
|
Pouring unto us from the heaven’s brink.”
|
a. What do you mean by ‘brake’? Where does it grow?
What makes it all the more?
|
Beautiful?
|
B What do you mean by ‘the grandeur of the dooms’?
|
Call lovely tales that we have heard or read” Explain
|
What is the source of the beauty of nature? What is
its effect on us?
|
3. “Some shape of beauty moves away the pall
|
From our dark spirits. Such the sun, the moon,
|
Trees old, and young, sprouting a shady boon
|
For simple sheep; and such are daffodils
|
With green world they live in; and clear rills
|
That for themselves a cooling covert make
|
‘Against the hot season; the mid forest brake
|
Rich with a sprinkling of fair musk-rose blooms”
|
a. What type of beauty and its effect are mentioned
here?
|
b. What sprouts a shady boon for sheep and how?
|
c. How do ‘daffodils’ and rills enrich the environment?
|
d. What makes the mid-forest brake rich?
|
Short answer Questions
|
1. How do we wreathe a flowery band?
|
2. Why do human beings suffer or what depresses the
human soul?
|
3. What does Keats mean by the ‘grandeur of doom’?
|
4. Mention 4 things of beauty listed in the poem?
|
5. How do we bind ourselves to the earth every
morning?
|
6. Why and how is ‘grandeur’ associated with the
mighty dead?
|
7. What is the source of the ‘endless fountain’ and
what is its effect?
|
What is the message of the poem/what philosophy of
life is highlighted in the poem?
|
8.
|
A ROADSIDE STAND BY ROBERT FROST
|
Gist of the lesson
|
Roadside stand by Robert Frost is concerned with human
tragedies and fears. He focuses on the
|
rural-urban
divide and presents
the lives of
the poor deprived
people with pitiless
clarity and
|
With the deepest sympathy and humanity.
|
The dwellers of the little house by the road side put
up a little shed in front of their house as they
|
Wanted to earn a little extra-money but not for making
their living.
|
The rural people wish to feel some real money that
supports the commerce of the cities.
|
The shed was painted artlessly and stood out which
made the passers-by irritated at having the
|
Beauty of the landscape spoilt.
|
The traffic flowed ceaselessly or if ever they stopped, they felt out of sorts on
seeing ‘N’ and
|
‘S’ written as their mirror images.
|
The Stand sold wild berries and golden squash for
sale.
|
The owners of the shed felt cross when nobody wanted
to buy anything
|
The poet feels that the implications of the unstated
facts are more pathetic.
|
65
|
The
government announces schemes
to allure such people
and house them
in villages that are
|
Near to the theatre and the store, to reap benefits
for their own selfish needs.
|
And the social workers and politicians enforce their
decisions by alluring them and destroy their
|
Ability to earn their living, thus stripping them of
all dignity and their voice
|
The poet
is overcome with pain
at the thought of
the people waiting in
vain for the
vehicles. If
|
Ever any vehicle stops, it will be to ask for
directions, take a U-turn, and enquire about the price
|
Or to ask if they sell gas.
|
But the country people have never felt the extra-money
in their hands and they complain about
|
It.
|
The poet
wonders if it
wouldn’t be better
if they were
put out of
their agony at
one stroke but
|
Then wonders if someone offers the same solution to
his pain, how he would feel. Killing
is not
|
The solution to the problem.
|
Solved Questions
|
:
|
1. “
|
It is in the news that all these pitiful kin
|
Are to be bought out and mercifully gathered in
|
To live in villages, next to the theatre and the
stone,
|
Where greedy good-doers, beneficent beasts of prey
|
Swarm over their lives enforcing benefits
|
That are calculated to soothe them out of their wits,
|
And by teaching them to sleep all day,
|
Destroy their sleeping at night the ancient way”.
|
a) What is in the news?
|
It is in the news that the poor are to be relocated to
better surroundings near the theatre and
|
The shops.
|
b) Which word in the verse means the same as
‘generous’ in the above lines?
|
‘Beneficent ‘
|
c) Who is going to exploit the rural people and how?
|
The
politicians and the
Government exploit the
poor by offering
them benefits that
are
|
Supposed to solve their problems but in reality only
add or pose problems of a different nature
|
Thereby making them feel cheated.
|
d) How will the greedy good-doers soothe the rural
poor out of their wits?
|
By offering them free benefits like housing and other
facilities, they rob the poor of their voice
|
To protest and lull them into a feeling of false
security.
|
e) Who is referred to as beasts of prey and why?
|
The politicians in power and in opposition and they
make no difference in the conditions of the
|
Rural poor.
|
Questions for Practice
|
1.
|
“The little old house was out with a little new shed
|
In front at the edge of the road where the traffic
sped
|
A roadside stand that too pathetically pled,
|
It would not be fair to say for a dole of bread,
|
But for some of the money, the cash, whose flow
supports
|
66
|
The flower of cities from sinking and withering faint,
|
The polished traffic passed with a mind ahead,
|
Or if ever aside a moment, then out of sorts”.
|
a. Where was the shed made?
|
b. Why did they put up the shed?
|
c. Why is the cash import for the cities?
|
d. Why didn’t the polished traffic stop at the
roadside stand?
|
e. What does ‘polished traffic’ mean?
|
2.
|
“Of all the thousand selfish cars that pass,
|
Just one to inquire what a farmer’s prices are.
|
And one did stop, but only to plow up grass
|
In using the yard to back and turn around;
|
And another to ask the way to where it was bound;
|
And another to ask could they sell it a gallon of gas
|
They couldn’t (this crossly); they had none, didn’t it
see?”
|
a. Explain ‘Selfish Cars’.
|
b. What did the car-owners generally do not bother
about?
|
c. Why do people generally stop there?
|
d. What made the rural people feel ‘cross’?
|
Short answer questions
|
1. Why did the country folk put up the roadside stand?
|
They put out a stand to earn some extra money to
improve their lives.
|
2. Why are the good-doers said to be greedy?
|
The
good-doers work not
for the real
welfare of the
poor but to
further their own
greed.
|
Offering false promises to the poor people, they are
feeding on them.
|
3. Why do cars stop at the roadside Stand?
|
The car-owners stop at the roadside stand to inquire
about the prices, to turn the car around,
|
Ask for directions or ask for gas.
|
4. What was the attitude of the city folk who passed
by the ‘Roadside Stand’?
|
The city folk
were indifferent and
callous towards the
plight of the
rural folk., never
|
Sympathized or helped them, but accused them of
spoiling the beauty of the country side.
|
Questions for Practice
|
1. How did the country folk react when they knew why
the passers-by had stopped?
|
2. What was the plea of the folk who had put up the
roadside stand?
|
3. Why does the poet call their longing as ‘childish’
and why?
|
4. Why are the country folk always low in spirits?
|
5. What kind of life do the rural folk lead?
|
6. How and why do the good-doers soothe the poor out
of their wits?
|
7. What would give great relief to the poet?
|
8. Is the poet serious about the suggestion he offers
to put the people out of their suffering?
|
9. How did the people feel when they knew they have
been exploited? How and why?
|
10. What is the ‘childish longing’ that the poet
refers to? Why is it ‘vain’?
|
67
|
11. What, according to the poet, contributes to the
progress and affluence of the cities?
|
12. How does the poet criticize the city ways?
|
13. What is the complaint of the country fold against
the party in power?
|
AUNT JENNIFER’S TIGERS By
|
ADRIENNE RICH
|
SUMMARY OF THE POEM:
|
The poet is a feminist and she addresses the
difficulties of a married woman.
|
She spends good amount of time in embroidering panel
of tigers prancing across the screen.
|
The tigers are fearless creatures pacing elegantly and
majestically. They symbolize the
spirit of
|
Freedom. Aunt is a victim of male chauvinism (male
domination).
|
Aunt Jennifer is so oppressed and terrified that she
finds it hard to pull the needle.
|
The
“weight of Uncle’s
wedding band “expresses
how victimized and
oppressed she is.
It
|
Implies that aunt Jennifer has to work hard to meet
his expectation.
|
She spends her
life in fear
but she embroiders
on the panel
the fearless tigers
to express her
|
Secret longing for a life of freedom and confidence.
|
Even her death does not end the problem and torture
which a married woman experiences...
|
SOLVED QUESTIONS
|
1
|
.”Aunt Jennifer’s tigers prance across a screen,
|
Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
|
They do not fear the men beneath the tree:
|
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.”
|
a) What does the expression ‘Aunt Jennifer’s tigers
imply?
|
Aunt Jennifer was embroidering a panel of prancing
tigers. The poet refers to the tigers
as Aunt
|
Jennifer’s tigers because they are her creation, her
work of art.
|
b) What does ‘prancing tigers’ symbolize?
|
Prancing tigers are a symbol of the spirit of freedom
within Aunt Jennifer which remains subdued.
|
They also symbolize her fear of her male counterpart.
|
c) Why are they referred to as ‘denizens of a world of
green’?
|
The tigers are the dwellers of the green forest so
they are referred to as denizens.
|
d) What qualities of the ‘tigers’ are highlighted
here?
|
Fearlessness and ferocity of the tigers are
highlighted here. Aunt Jennifer’s
nervousness and
|
timidity
are in sharp
contrast to wild
ferocity of the
tigers who are
not afraid of
hunting men.
|
Unlike Aunt Jennifer, the tigers fear nothing.
|
e) Explain; “They pace in sleek chivalric certainty”.
|
The movement of the tigers is sleek, stealthy, sure,
majestic and elegant. They are sure of
their
|
Purpose. Gallant and confident, they move ahead
fearlessly and undeterred
|
2.”
|
Aunt Jennifer’s fingers fluttering through her wool
|
Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
|
The massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band
|
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer’s hand.”
|
a) Why do Aunt Jennifer’s fingers flutter through her
wool?
|
Aunt Jennifer lives in constant fear of her chauvinist
husband. She feels so nervous and
terrified
|
That her hands shake and flutter when she sits down to
knit.
|
68
|
b) Why does she find it hard to pull the ivory needle?
|
Confronting constant fear and bearing the constraints
of married life, she has become a nervous
|
Wreck. She
finds it difficult to pull
the ivory needle
through the tapestry more
because of mental
|
Suppression than because of physical weakness.
|
c) Explain: ‘massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band’.
|
The expression is symbolic of male authority and
power. Matrimony binds the woman physical y as
|
well as mentally,
clipping her of
her freedom of
expression and independence . Likewise Aunt
|
Jennifer
is trapped in
gender oppression and
feels herself burdened
by the authority
of her
|
Husband.
|
d) How is Aunt Jennifer affected by the ‘weight of
matrimony’?
|
Aunt Jennifer cannot do things freely, she tries to
come up to the expectation of her husband, she
|
Seems to have lost her identity. The freedom that she
dreams of through her art is itself symbolic
|
Of her oppressed self.
|
3.”
|
When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
|
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
|
The tigers in the panel that she made
|
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.”
|
a) What is Aunt Jennifer’s death symbolic of?
|
Aunt Jennifer’s death is symbolic of her complete
submission to her suppression.
|
b) Explain: “terrified hands”.
|
Aunt Jennifer is terrified by her dominating husband
and hence her hands are shivering.
|
c) What does ‘ringed with ordeals’ imply?
|
Aunt Jennifer
has been so
victimized in her life that
even after death she remains
trapped in the
|
Struggles of the spirit. Though we do not know what
terrors Aunt Jennifer had to live with relatives
|
Did, we find her a victim of gender injustice and
oppression.
|
d) Is the society in any way affected by Aunt
Jennifer’s death?
|
Since the society is male dominated, it shows no
concern for Aunt’s suffering, even her death. The
|
Loss of her freedom is her individual loss. The
society is not affected by it and the state of women
|
Still remains the same.
|
e) Explain: “the tigers in the panel….will go on
prancing, proud and unafraid”.
|
The expression is symbolic of the dispassionate and
unconcerned attitude of the male towards the
|
Desire for freedom among women. Even after her death, the social milieu
remains unaffected,
|
Arrogant and ferocious.
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTION S
|
1. How do Aunt Jennifer’s tiger look like?
|
The tigers, made by Aunt Jennifer on the screen, are
jumping and playing about without any fear of
|
The men beneath the tree. They walk in elegance and style displaying
the spirit of courage,
|
Fearlessness, strength and confidence.
|
69
|
2. What do the tigers made by the Aunt symbolize?
|
The tigers made by Aunt Jennifer symbolize the spirit
of courage, strength and fearlessness Aunt
|
Jennifer,
a victim of
male oppression, expresses
her crushed feelings
in the form
of art. So, the
|
Tigers are symbolic of the fear of male domination
with which Aunt Jennifer suffers.
|
3. Why do you think Aunt Jennifer’s hands are
fluttering through her wool? Why is she finding the
|
Needle so hard to pull?
|
Aunt Jennifer
is victimized by
the overbearing and
dominant nature of
her husband. Her life has
|
Become a torture due to her suppression by her
atrocious husband. The fear of her
authoritative
|
Husband has gone so deep into her being that she seems
to have lost all strength and energy. Thus
|
her hands shake
and flutter so
much that she
is not even
able to pull
the needle through
the
|
Tapestry.
|
4. What do you understand by “massive weight of
uncle’s wedding band”?
|
Generally
‘wedding band’ is
a symbol of
joy and happiness.
But in case of Aunt Jennifer, it has
|
Become a symbol of torture and oppression. Her relationship with her authoritative
husband has
|
Become a painful burden to carry. Her ‘wedding band’
has brought her a world of pain, misery and
|
Torture. She has lost her freedom and entered a world
of humiliation and oppression.
|
5. Explain ’her terrified hands will lie, still ringed
with the ordeals she was mastered by’.
|
These
lines convey Aunt’s
complete submission to
the oppressive authority
of her husband.
The
|
Fear of her husband has gone so deep into her being
that even death cannot liberate her from the
|
Chains of her mental suppression. Memories of her husband’s tortures and
atrocities which bent
|
She into a humiliating slavery will continue to haunt
her even after her death.
|
6. Explain ‘The tigers in the panel------------proud
and unafraid.’
|
Here the tigers
symbolize the unquestioned authority
of man enjoyed
by him over
his woman
|
Counterpart.
The lines suggest
the dispassionate and
unconcerned attitude of
the male towards
|
The desire for freedom among women. Here, Aunt
Jennifer tries to find an escape in her art but
|
Ends up portraying an image of her own
suppression. While woman can never
free herself from
|
The oppressive authority of her male counterpart, the
male, on the other hand will go on enjoying
|
His authoritative arrogance and ferocity without any
fear of regrets.
|
Questions for Practice:
|
1. What ideology does the poem propound?
|
2. How is the poem a forceful expression of the evil
of patriarchy?
|
3The tigers are contrasting symbols. Do you think so?
How?
|
4. What ordeals do you think Aunt Jennifer is surround
by?
|
5. Why do you think Aunt Jennifer created animals that
are so different from her own character?
|
6. What impression do you form about the Uncle in the
poem? Cite evidences.
|
70
|
FLAMINGO (PROSE)
|
THE LAST LESSON by Alphonse Daudet
|
–
|
GIST OF THE LESSON
|
Franz is afraid of going to school as he has not
learnt participles.
|
He wants to enjoy beauty of nature. The bright sunshine, the birds chirruping
in the woods,
|
Prussian soldiers drilling but resisted.
|
Bulletin
board: all bad
news, lost battles,
the drafts and
orders of the
commanding officers:
|
Wondered what it could be now
|
The changes he noticed in the school.
|
-
|
Instead of noisy classrooms everything was as quiet as
Sunday morning
|
-
|
The teacher does not scold him and told him very
kindly to go to his seat
|
The teacher dressed in his Sunday best.
|
-
|
-
|
Villagers occupying the last benches- To pay tribute
to M. Hamel for his 40 yrs. of sincere
|
Service and also to express their solidarity with
France.
|
M. Hamel
making the announcement that that
would be the
last French lesson; realizes that,
|
That was what was put up on the bulletin board.
|
Franz realizes that he does not know his own mother
tongue
|
Regretted why he had not taken his lessons seriously.
|
Also realizes the reason why teacher was dressed in
his Sunday best and villagers sitting at the
|
Back.
|
M. Hamel realizes that all three, the children, the
parents and he himself are to be blamed for
|
Losing respect and regard for the mother tongue.
|
Always keep the mother tongue close to your heart as
it is the key to the prison of slavery.
|
Atmosphere
in class: teacher
teaching sincerely and
patiently, students and
others studying
|
With utmost sincerity.
|
Franz wonders sarcastically if Prussians could force
pigeons to coo in German.
|
M. Hamel overcome with emotions could not speak and
wrote on the black board “Long Live
|
France”.
|
SOLVED QUESTIONS:
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS:
|
1. What was the narrator’s greatest fear as he moved
towards the school?
|
Franz had started late for school and thus was afraid
of being scolded. His fear gripped him further
|
For he was also unprepared. He had not learnt his
lesson regarding the rules of participles and thus
|
Dreaded the teacher’s anger.
|
2. What was more tempting to Franz rather than going
to school?
|
The weather was pleasant, warm and bright. The chirruping birds were inviting him, the
soldiers
|
Drilling in the field were also outdoors and Franz was
not prepared with participles.
|
3. What was the news which was put up on the bulletin
board?
|
71
|
For the last
two years all
bad news – the lost battles, the
orders of the commanding officer
was
|
Displayed on the notice board. That day, the news that only German would
be taught in school of
|
Alsace and Lorraine was displayed on the notice-board
which made the crowd gather there to read
|
The news.
|
4. What was so unusual about the school on that day?
|
Usually
there would be
a great bustle of opening
and closing of the desk, lesson
repeated loudly
|
and the teacher’s
ruler rapping on
the table but
that day was
very calm and
quiet like Sunday
|
Morning. The back benches which were usually empty
were occupied by the village people and M.
|
Hamel wore his special dress and was pacing up and
down with a ruler under his arm.
|
5. Why were the villagers seated on the back benches?
|
All the village
elders were seated on the back benches as
a tribute to the teacher
who had put
in
|
40 years of sincere service. It was also their way of
expressing regret for not learning their mother
|
Tongue when they had the chance. They were also
expressing their patriotism and solidarity with
|
France
|
6. Franz didn’t learn French whom did M. Hamel blame?
|
M. Hamel
didn’t blame Franz for
not learning but
his parents who were not
anxious to have
him
|
Learn. Instead they wanted him to work on a farm or at
the mill to earn money.
|
Even M. Hamel was also to be blamed for sending him to
water the flowers instead of learning and
|
When he wanted to go fishing he declared holiday.
|
7. What did M. Hamel say about French language?
|
He said that
it is the
most beautiful language
in the world- the
clearest, the most
logical. He
|
Requested them to guard it so that they can be united
and fight back for their freedom.
|
8. What happened when the church clock struck 12?
|
The moment the church clock struck 12 the Prussian
army came to take over and M. Hamel stood
|
Up, wanted to tell something but his voice was
chocked. He gathered his strength and wrote on the
|
Black board as large as he could – ‘Vive La France’
and dismissed the school.
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1.
|
Justify the title of the story “The Last Lesson”.
|
Value Points
|
People
always feel there
is plenty of time
to learn—so also in
Alsace—now no time—parents not
|
Keen—preferred children, work in farms, mill—Franz
looked opportunity to escape school—never
|
Serious—receive orders from Berlin—people realize
importance of their language—attend the last
|
Lesson by M. Hamel.
|
QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Why was Franz unwilling to go to school?
|
2. Why didn’t M. Hamel punish Franz, even though he
was late?
|
3. Mention the three changes that Franz noticed in the
school?
|
4. What announcement did M. Hamel make and what was
its impact?
|
5. What do you think was written on the bulletin
board?
|
6. Why did M. Hamel say about knowing one’s language
is a key to prison?
|
72
|
7. Whom did Mr. Hamel blame for not learning the
French?
|
8. What changes have taken place in the school in the
last forty years?
|
9. What did he mean by “Viva La France”?
|
10. Do you think that the story touches upon the
brutalities of war? Explain
|
11. How does Hamel arouse patriotism in the people off
Alsace?
|
12. What does Franz when he asks: “Will they make them sing in German?
|
Even the pigeons”
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS 125 -150 words.
|
1. Write a note on the character of M. Hamel as a
teacher?
|
2. Do you think the story touches upon the brutalities
of war? Comment.
|
3. What thunderbolt did the narrator receive on
reaching the school? How was it affect him?
|
4. At the end of the last lesson M. Hamel wrote, ‘Viva
La France’ on the board in bold letters. Why
|
do you think
he wrote that
and how did
he expect the
people of Alsace –Lorraine to
keep their
|
Identity intact?
|
5.What
were Franz’ feelings
about M Hamel
and his French
lessons? How did they undergo a
|
Complete change?
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
M Hamel ‘The
Last Lesson’ says to the people of
Alsace about the necessity of their mother
|
Tongue- French:
“…. We must guard it among us and never forget it because when a
people are
|
Enslaved, as long as they hold fast to their language
it is as if they had the key to their prison”.
|
‘Mother tongue is
the language of one’s thoughts and ideas. Rejecting one’s mother tongue is
|
Denying one’s
own culture and identity.’ Do you think so? Write your reflections on the above
|
Statement in the form of an article to be published in
your school magazine, encouraging
your
|
Friends to the need for learning and protecting their
mother tongue.
|
LOST SPRING: STORIES OF STOLEN CHILDHOOD
|
By Andes Jung
|
GIST OF THE LESSON
|
The author examines and analyses the impoverished
conditions and traditions that condemn
|
Children to a life of exploitation these children are
denied an education and forced into hardships
|
Early in their lives.
|
The writer encounters Sahib - a rag picker whose
parents have left behind the life of poverty in
|
Dhaka to earn a living in Delhi.
|
His family like
many other families
of rag pickers
lives in Seemapuri.
They do not have other
|
Identification other than a ration card.
|
The children do not go to school and they are excited
at the prospect of finding a coin or even a
|
Ten rupee note for rummaging in the garbage.
|
It is the only
way of earning
the life they live in impoverished conditions but are resigned to
|
Their fate.
|
The writer is pained to see Sahib, a rag picker whose
name means the ruler of earth, lose the
|
Spark of childhood and roams barefooted with his
friends.
|
73
|
From
morning to noon
the author encounters
him in a tea stall and
is paid Rest.
800 He sadly
|
realizes
that he is no longer his
own master and this loss of
identity weighs heavily
on his tender
|
Shoulders.
|
The author then tells about another victim, Makes who
wants to be a motor mechanic.
|
Hailing from Firozabad, the center of India’s bangle
making and glass blowing industry, he has
|
Always worked in the glass making industry.
|
His family
like the others there do not know
that it is illegal for
children to work
in such close
|
Proximity to furnaces, in such high temperatures.
|
They are
exposed to various
health hazards like losing their
eyesight as they
work in abysmal
|
Conditions, in dark and dingy cells.
|
Mesh’s father is blind as were his father and
grandfather before him.
|
They lead a
hand to mouth
existence as they
are caught in
the vicious web
of the money
|
Lenders, middlemen, police and the traditions
|
So
burdened are the
bangle makers of
Firozabad that they
have lost their
ability to dream
|
Unlike Makes who dreams of driving a car.
|
SOLVED QUESTIONS
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. What does Sahib do for living? Why?
|
Sahib is a rag picker.
His family has
left the life
of poverty behind
in Dhaka in
to pursue their
|
Dream of finding a better life. The children like him
have no access to Education and are forced into
|
Rag picking
|
2. “Sahib is no longer his own master”, says the
writer. What does she mean?
|
The writer means
that having accepted
the job with
the tea-stall, Sahib
has lost the
|
Independence that he enjoyed as a rag picker, even
though he was poor. Although he will now be
|
able to supplement
the family income,
it will be
at the cost
of his freedom,
which is difficult,
|
Binding and unfair for someone so young.
|
3. Why did people migrate from the village in Dhaka to
Delhi?
|
Better education, job opportunities and living
conditions.
|
4. What trade does the family of Makes follow? Why
does the writer feel that it will be difficult for?
|
Makes to break away from this tradition?
|
Engaged in bangle
making-difficult to break
away from this
trade. He belongs to the caste
of
|
Bangle makers His family is caught in the web of
shakers, the middlemen, policemen, politicians
|
And bureaucrats, from which there is no escape.
|
5. What does garbage symbolize for the adults and
children?
|
6. Adults –means of earning a livelihood. Children
–wrapped in wonder, magical
|
74
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTION
|
1. ‘Lost Spring’, is
a sad commentary
on the political
system of our
country that condemns
|
Thousands of people to a life of abject poverty.
Comment.
|
Sahib,
optimistic and enthusiastic—prospect of
finding gold in
garbage—likes going to
school
|
But no opportunity—freedom and joy of childhood to
burdens of job at tea -stall.
|
Makes,
born at Firozabad
(bangle maker)—works under
inhuman condition—dark room,
hot
|
furnaces—caught
in web of
poverty—vicious circle of
saucers, policemen, politicians,
|
Bureaucrats and moneylenders—resigned to fate—unaware
of child labor act—stifled initiation
|
And hope—lose eyesight before becoming adults.
|
QUESTIONS FOR
PRACTICE
|
SHORT ANSWER
|
a. What does the title of the story ‘Lost Spring’
imply?
|
b. Where has Sahib come from and why?
|
c. How is Sahib’s name full of irony?
|
D. “Promises made to poor children are never kept.
“Explain with examples from the
|
Lesson.
|
e. Mention the hazards of working in the bangle
industry.
|
f. Do you think Makes will realize his dream of
becoming a car mechanic?
|
g. ‘His dreams loom like a mirage’. Whose dreams are
being referred to and why are
|
They compared to a mirage?
|
h.‘Together they
have imposed the
baggage on the
child that he cannot put down.’
Who do?
|
‘They’ refer to?
What is the
‘baggage’ and why
can the child
not get rid
of it? I. How is
|
Mesh’s attitude to his situation different from that
of his family?
|
j. Why does the author describe children of slums as
partners in survival?
|
k. How has being born in the caste of bangle makers
become both a destiny and a
|
Curse?
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Like all children of his age, Sahib also had many
hopes and dreams. Do you think
children?
|
Like Sahib are able to fulfill their dreams?
|
2. Politicians exploit all people and situations to
their own benefit. Comment, keeping in views
|
The situation of refugees in Seemapuri.
|
3. Sahib wants to blossom and bloom but is nipped in
the bud. Elaborate.
|
4. ‘Sahib and Makes are brothers in penury and
suffering.’ Discuss.
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
5.
|
Makes says “I will be a motor mechanic. I will learn
to drive a car.”
|
Not only setting a goal, b UT having a clear idea
about the means to reach the goal and pursuing g
|
It with strong determination and commitment are essential to achieve success. Based on this
|
realization ,
write an email
to your younger
brother , a boarding school
student, making him
|
aware of the
need for setting
realistic goal and planning ways
to reach it
with strong
|
Determination and commitment.
|
75
|
DEEP WATER BY WILLIAM DOUGLAS
|
THEME
|
In this essay William O. Douglas talks about his fear
of water and how he finally overcomes it by
|
His courage, determination, handwork, strong will
power, perseverance and the desire to learn.
|
If these are practiced we can definitely achieve
success in all our endeavors.
|
GIST OF THE LESSON
|
-
|
William O. Douglas had a desire to learn swimming
since childhood.
|
At the age
of three or
four, he was
knocked down and
buried by a
wave at a
beach in
|
California.
|
He developed a great aversion to water.
|
At the age of
ten or eleven he decided to learn to
swim with water wings a t the Y.M.C.A
pool
|
Since it was safe at the shallow end.
|
A misadventure: - while sitting alone and waiting for
others to come at the Y.M.C.A pool, a big
|
Boy came and threw Douglas into deep end of the pool.
|
Douglas swallowed water and went straight down to the
bottom of the pool.
|
While going down he planned to make a big jump upwards
but came up slowly.
|
Stark terror seized him.
|
Tried to shout but could not……
|
As he went down the pool second time, he tried to jump
upwards but it was a waste of energy.
|
Terror held him deeper and deeper.
|
During the third trial he sucked water instead of air.
|
Light was going out and there was no more panic.
|
So he ceased all efforts and he became unconscious.
|
He crossed to oblivion.
|
When revived he found himself vomiting beside the
pool.
|
He was in grip of fear of water and it deprived him of
the joys of canoeing, boating swimming
|
And fishing.
|
Hired an instructor to learn swimming.
|
The instructor taught him swimming piece by piece.
|
He went to different lakes to swim and found tiny
vestiges of fear still gripped him.
|
He challenged the fear and swam.
|
Swimming up and down the Warm Lake he finally overcame
his fear of water.
|
He realized that in death there is peace and there is
terror only in fear of death.
|
Will to live is stronger than fear of death.
|
SOLVED QUESTIONS:
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Why was the YMCA pool considered safer when
compared to the Yakima River?
|
Yakima
River was very
deep, treacherous and
there were many
cases of drowning
but the
|
YMCA pool only
two or three feet deep at
the shallow end:
and while it
was nine feet at
the
|
Deep end. So YMCA pool was considered safer when
compared to the Yakima River.
|
2. When did his aversion to water begin?
|
76
|
His aversion to water began when he was 3 -4 years old
when his father took him to
California
|
Beach. There the waves knocked him down swept over
him.
|
3. What was the misadventure that happened one day?
|
William Douglas had just learnt swimming. One day, an eighteen year old big bruiser
picked
|
Him up and tossed him into the nine feet deep end of
the YMCA pool. He hit the water surface
|
In a sitting position. He swallowed water and went at
once to the bottom. He nearly died in this
|
Misadventure.
|
4. What strategy did he remember as he went down the
water?
|
To hit the bottom and spring/jump upwards, bob to the
surface –like a cork and come out.
|
5. What effect did the drowning in the YMCA pool have
on the Douglas?
|
-Weak and trembling - haunting fear - deprived of the
joy of canoeing,
|
Boating and swimming.
|
6. What method did he adopt to overcome terror?
|
- Rigorous training (breathing moving of legs, etc.)
|
- went to lake Wentworth and swam for two miles.
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. How did the misadventure in YMCA pool affect
Douglas? How did he overcome it?
|
-Was ten or eleven decided-learn-swim -an older boy
pushed –almost drowned?
|
-haunting
fear gripped him -could
not enjoy any
water sports -finally decided
to hire an
|
Instructor -seven months –instructor –made a swimmer
-released the instructor -vestiges
|
Remained -swam in Lake Wentworth -challenged the
terror -swam across Warm Lake
|
-shouted
with joy-conquered the
fear of water -there is
terror only in
the fear of
death and
|
Peace in death. - The will to live became stronger.
|
QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Why did mother warn Douglas against River Yakima?
|
2. What impact did the incident at California beach
have on him?
|
3. What made him decide that the instructor’s role in
teaching him swimming was over?
|
4. Why did Douglas go to Lake Wentworth in New
Hampshire? How did he make his terror flee?
|
5. What larger meaning did the experience have on him?
|
6. How did he interpret Roosevelt’s saying?
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. What is the
‘misadventure’ that William Douglas speaks about? What were the series of?
|
Emotions fears experienced when he was thrown into the
pool? What plans did he make to come?
|
To the surface?
|
2. How did the instructor build a swimmer out of
Douglas?
|
3. Why does Douglas as an adult recount a childhood
experience of terror and his conquering of
|
It? What larger meaning does he draw from his
experience?
|
4. Do you think the title Deep Water is appropriate to
the story? Why/why not?
|
77
|
5.
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
William Douglas writes about his frightening
experience in the YMCA pool: With that he picked
|
Me up and tossed me into the deep end, I landed in a sitting position, swallowed
water…………. I
|
Was frightened.”
|
Do you appreciate the behavior of the big, bully boy?
Don’t you think that bullying and ragging of?
|
students
by students( as
is seen in
news several times
) are barbarianism and
have great
|
Damaging effect
on the victim as well as to the society? Write down your thoughts
about this in
|
The form of a speech to be delivered in a meeting of
the senior students of your school.
|
INDIGO by Louis Fischer
|
GIST OF THE LESSON
|
Raj Kumar Shukla- A poor sharecropper from Champ ran
wishing to meet Gandhi.
|
Raj Kumar Shukla – illiterate but
resolute, hence followed
Gandhi to Luck now,
Cawnpore,
|
Ahmedabad, Calcutta, Patna, Muzzafarpur and then
Campari.
|
Servants at Rajendra Prasad’s residence thought Gandhi
to be an untouchable.
|
Gandhi considered as an untouchable because of simple
living style and wearing, due to the
|
Company of Raj Kumar Shukla.
|
Decided to go to Muzzafarpur first to get detailed
information about Champ ran sharecropper.
|
Sent telegram to J B Kriplani & stayed in Prof
Malaki’s home –a government servant.
|
Indians afraid of showing sympathy to the supporters
of home rule.
|
The news of Gandhi’s arrival spread –sharecroppers
gathered in large number to meet their
|
Champion.
|
Gandhi chided the Muzzafarpur lawyer for taking high
fee.
|
Champ ran
district was divided
into estate owned
by English people,
Indians only tenant
|
Farmers.
|
Landlords compelled tenants to plant 15% of their land
with indigo and surrender their entire
|
Harvest as rent.
|
In the meantime Germany had
developed synthetic indigo –British landlords
freed the Indian
|
Farmers from the 15% arrangement but asked them to pay
compensation.
|
Many signed, some resisted engaged lawyers, and
landlords hired thugs.
|
Gandhi
reached Champ ran –visited the
secretary of the
British landlord association
to get
|
The facts but denied as he was an outsider.
|
Gandhi
went to the
British Official Commissioner who
asked him to
leave Tight ,
Gandhi
|
disobeyed,
went to Molinari
the capital of
Champ ran where a
vast multitude greeted
him,
|
Continued his investigations.
|
Visited maltreated villagers, stopped by the police
superintendent but disobeyed the order.
|
Molinari black with peasant’s spontaneous
demonstrations, Gandhi released without bail Civil
|
Disobedience triumphed.
|
Gandhi agreed to 25% refund by the landowners, it
symbolized the surrender of the prestige.
|
Gandhi
worked hard towards
social economic reforms,
elevated their distress
aided by his
|
Wife, Mahdi Desai, Marwari Parikh.
|
Gandhi taught a lesson of self-reliance by not seeking
help of an English man Mr. Andrews.
|
78
|
SOLVED QUESTIONS
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1... What strategy did Gandhi follow in removing the
problems of sharecroppers?
|
Gandhi discussed the problems with lawyers. He
disregarded British order of eviction. He insisted
|
Peasants to remove their fear.
|
2. Why did Gandhi feel that it was useless for the
peasants to go to law courts?
|
The peasants are crushed and fear stricken. The
lawyers charged high fee.
|
3. Why did the British landlords free the sharecropper
from growing Indigo? What did they want?
|
Instead?
|
The British came to know that synthetic indigo was
developed in Germany and the 15% of land was
|
released
and in return, the
peasants were asked
to pay compensation for
release from the
|
Agreement.
|
4. Why did Gandhi agree for the 25% refund by the
British landlords?
|
Gandhi agreed for 25% refund because the amount was
not important but the landlord’s prestige
|
Was surrendered.
|
5. What was the important lesson taught by Gandhi to
his disciples?
|
Gandhi taught rules of personal hygiene and
cleanliness. He also taught the
-Chaperons to win
|
Freedom independently without any support of British.
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTION
|
1. Why did
Genii consider freedom
from fear more
important than legal
justice for the
poor
|
Peasants of Champ ran?
|
Value Points: British ruthless exploitation—farmers
fight through lawyers—battles were
|
Inconclusive—terror-stricken—Gandhi’s declaration—no
need of law court –overcome terror—be
|
Bold and courageous.
|
SHORT ANSWER
|
QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
|
1. What made Gandhi urge the departure of the British?
|
2. How was Gandhi received in Mothihari?
|
3. What made Mahatma Gandhi declare ‘the battle of
Champ ran is won’?
|
4. How did the Champ ran episode change the plight of the
peasants?
|
5. Why did Gandhi agree to a settlement of 25% refund
to the farmers?
|
6. How do we know that ordinary people too contributed
to the freedom movement?
|
7. What argument did Gandhi give for not complying with the official
orders to quit?
|
Champ ran?
|
8. How were
the Bruisers shown
that their dreaded
and unquestioned authority
could be
|
Challenged by the Indians?
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Why did Gandhi’s casual visit to Champ ran get
extended to over a year?
|
2. How did civil disobedience triumph?
|
3. What idea do you form about the Bruisers from the
chapter “Indigo”?
|
4. How did the peasants learn courage?
|
5. Are Genii’s socio, economic and political ideals
relevant today? Discuss with reference
|
To the Champ ran episode.
|
79
|
6.
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
‘
|
Champ ran
episode’ was a turning
point not only in
Gandhi’s life, but
also in the history of
|
Indian freedom struggle. Don’t you agree that Gandhi’s
practically proven ideals of truth, none?
|
Violence, and empathy for the deprived are still
relevant? Write your ideas on “Relevance of
|
Gandhi and ideals today” in the form of an article.
|
The Rat Trap by Selma Lagerlof
|
GIST OF THE LESSON
|
The peddler was a vagabond who sold rattraps with
a little thievery on the
side to make
both
|
Ends meet. Had no worldly possession to call his own,
not even a name.
|
It amused him to think of the world as a rattrap and
all the material possessions as bait as the
|
World, he felt was never kind to him. Moreover, he
prided himself in the fact that he was out of
|
It.
|
Takes shelter at a crofter’s cottage. The crofter
welcomed him, gave him diner, shared his pipe,
|
Played moils with him also confided in him about his
income and showed him where he put it.
|
Next
morning, the Peddler
steals the money
and takes the
back roads to
keep away from
|
People and gets lost in the jungle at night. While he wanders in the forest he realizes
that he
|
Has also got caught in the rattrap and that the money
was the bait.
|
Finally reaches Rams iron works, where he takes shelter
for the night. The blacksmith and his
|
assistant
ignore him but
the master mistakes
him to be
an old acquaintance and
invites him
|
Home. Though the Peddler does not correct the
iron master, hoping to get some money out of
|
Him, he declines his invitation.
|
The iron master then sends his daughter who persuades
him to go home with her. She notices
|
His uncouth appearance and thinks that either he has
stolen something or he has escaped from
|
Jail.
|
The
Peddler is scrubbed,
bathed, given a
haircut, a shave
and a suit
of old clothes
of the
|
Iron master. In the morning light, the iron master
realizes he is mistaken and that he is not the
|
Captain. He wants to call the Sheriff. The peddler is agitated and breaks out that
the world is
|
Rattrap and he too is sure to be caught in it. The
ironmaster is amused but orders him out. The
|
Compassionate Elda convinces her father that he should
spend the Christmas day with him.
|
The Peddler spends the whole of Christmas Eve eating
and sleeping. The next day at church,
|
Elda and her father come to know that the Peddler is a
thief who stole thirty kroners from the
|
Poor crofter.
|
80
|
-Back home, they found a letter addressed to Elda,
signed as Captain Von Stahl and a rattrap
|
As a gift from the crofter. In the rattrap were the
three ten kroner notes of the crofter.
|
SOLVED
|
SHORT ANSWER
|
QUESTIONS
|
1. Why did the Peddler choose to go through the forest?
|
2. After
stealing the thirty kroner from the
crofter, the Peddler knew
that he would be
caught
|
And put in prison if he continued to walk by the man
road. So he chose the back roads that went
|
Through the forest.
|
3. Why did not the
Peddler reveal his
true identity when the iron master mistakes him to
be the
|
Captain?
|
The
Peddler thought that
the iron master might
take pity on
him give him
some e money if
he
|
Thought he was an old acquaintance. So he keeps quiet and
allows the iron master to presume he
|
Was the captain
|
.
|
4. Why did it please the tramp to compare the world to
a rattrap?
|
The world was
not very kind
to the tramp
and so it
gave him great
pleasure to think
of it as a
|
Rattrap
|
.
|
5. Why did the tramp sign the letter as Captain Von
Stale?
|
The tramp, though illiterate and a thief, found
himself raised to a captain through Elda’s kindness
|
And compassion. He got a chance to redeem himself and
hence he signs the letter as Captain Von
|
Stale.
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Both the
Crofter and Elda
Williamson were kind and
hospitable to the Tramp. But he repays
|
crofters
kindness by stealing
his money while
Elda is able
to transform him
to a better
human
|
Being. Why?
|
Value Points:
|
Crofter very hospitable. Welcomes
him with a
smile - gives him supper
and shares his
tobacco.
|
Tells him about income -shows him the money - very
trusting and friendly.
|
Stealing a way
of life for
the tramp-no twinge
of conscience while stealing-But later
he realizes
|
That he who prided himself in not being caught in the
rattrap was caught in it by stealing – feels
|
Depressed.
|
Elda’s
kindness and hospitality
awakens his conscience -Realizes that
there is a way out
of the
|
Trap- Returns the money through Elda- His redemption
–gift to Elda.
|
QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE:
|
1. “The world was a rattrap and the peddler himself
became a victim of it”. Elucidate.
|
2. The rattrap exemplifies the truth that essential
goodness of human can be awakened through
|
Understanding and love. Discuss
|
3. The story focuses on human loneliness and the need
to bond with others. Explain.
|
81
|
4. Why was the crofter so talkative and friendly with
peddler?
|
5. Why did the rattrap seller develop negative view of
the world?
|
6. Why did the peddler decline the iron master’s
invitation?
|
7. Elda is a better judge than her father. Do you
think so? Why/why not?
|
8. Why did the peddler defend himself against not
having revealed his true identity?
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTION: PRACTICE
|
1. ‘The
essential virtue of
human heart can
be aroused through compassion
and empathy.’ How
|
Far has the meaning of this statement been exemplified
in the story ‘The Rattrap’
|
2.
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
It has been understood from the story ‘The
Rattrap’ that the compassion,
empathy and
|
Unconditional love and trust of Elda Wilma son only could win the heart of the rattrap seller to
|
Reclaim him to be an honest and upright individual at
last. ‘An Eye for an Eye will make the
whole
|
World blind.’—It
is through fellow-feeling ,
love , compassion
and trust in
others that we
can
|
Change the society. Write your argument for the
statement to participate in a debate competition.
|
POETS AND PANCAKES: ASOKAMITRAN.
|
GIST OF THE LESSON
|
The Gemini studio owned by
S.S.Vasan was one
of the most
influential film Producing
|
Organizations of India in the early years of Indian
film making industry.
|
The make-up department of studios looked like a hair
cutting salon.
|
Had lights at all angles, half dozen mirrors,
incandescent lights
|
The artists were subjected to misery while application
of make -up.
|
The
make-up department, consisting
of people from
different parts of
the country, was
a
|
Unique example of National Integration.
|
A strict hierarchy was maintained in the ma key-up
dept.
|
Narrator
worked in a
cubicle tearing newspapers,
thought he was
free, people barged
in
|
Always.
|
Kothamangalam
Subbed, no.2 at
Gemini studios, was
always cheerful, tailor
made for films,
|
Endowed with great creativity, charitable yet had
enemies
|
He was loyal and faithful, very close to boss.
|
He could offer
various alternatives for
how a scene
could be invented.
Subbed, in fact, gave
|
Direction to Gemini studios during its golden years.
|
The story Department of the studios comprising of a
lawyer, officially known
|
As legal adviser but was treated the opposite. Once
he brought a
sad end to
the career of a
|
Brilliant and promising young actress.
|
Story dept. wound up-lawyer lost job.
|
A favorite haunt for poets
|
Most people wore Khari, worshiped Gandhi, and knew
nothing about politics.
|
Against communism, believed that a communist was a
godless man
|
82
|
A warm welcome was accorded to moral Re Armament Army
(MRA) by the Gemini studios.
|
They
presented two plays
‘Johan Valley’ and
“The forgotten Factor” which
had a great
|
Influence on Tamil drama.
|
THE MRA was a strong counter movement against
communism.
|
The Gemini studios again got an opportunity to welcome
an English poet or an Editor. But the
|
People of Gemini Studio could not comprehend the
purpose as well as the language of the poet
|
Or editor, so his visit was a mystery.
|
Later on, he came to know that the visitor was the
editor of “The Encounter” and his name was
|
Stephen Spender.
|
“The God That Failed” was the collection of six essays
by six men of letters including Spender.
|
These essays described separately their journey into
communism and their disillusioned return.
|
Mystery was solved.
|
SOLVED QUESTIONS
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. How does the writer describe the make-up room of
the Gemini studios?
|
The makeup room of the Gemini studio had incandescent
lights. It also had lights at all
|
Angles, large mirrors. Those subjected to makeup had
to face bright light and a lot of heat
|
There. It was on the upper floor of the o a building
that was believed to have been Robert
|
Clive’s stables.
|
2. How was the make-up room a fine example of national
integration?
|
The makeup room
was headed by
a Bengali, succeeded by a
Maharashtra, assisted by
a-
|
Dharma Kannadiga, an Andhra, a Madras, Christian and
an Anglo Burmese.
|
1. How did the legal adviser bring a sad end to the
brief and brilliant acting career of an extremely
|
Talented in the studios?
|
The legal adviser (lawyer) quietly switched on the
recording equipment when once she blew over
|
On the sets against the producer. When the actress paused for breath, he
played back the
|
Recording.
She was struck
dumb on hearing her
own voice and
never recovered from
the shock.
|
That was the end of the brief and brilliant career of
the actress.
|
2. What does ‘The God That Failed’ refer to?
|
‘The God That
Failed’ refers to
a collection of
essays by six
eminent literary personalities, about
|
Their journey into communism and disillusionment.
Stephen Spender was one of the authors.
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. The author
has used gentle humor to point out human foibles. Pick out instances of this to
|
Show how this serves to make the piece interesting.
-Author uses gentle and subtle humor –bring
|
out human foibles-use
of pancake –ostensibly to cover
the pores -The actors
look ugly. -Strict
|
Hierarchy. -people
at the studio
imagined to be poets
yet no idea
about contemporary -Poets-
|
Laughingly brings out their ignorance -wore khaki
looked Gandhi an no idea about politics -no idea
|
Of communism-welcomed MRA, Stephen Spender
-Description of office boy-Description of Subbed-
|
Wonderful insight into character. -pokes fun
at the ignorance
of all the
people -at the same
|
Time projecting them as real people with human
failings and eccentricities and foibles.
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
|
1. How was Gemini studios a symbol of national
integration?
|
83
|
2. Why did the author want to know more about the
periodical ‘The Encounter’? What did?
|
He finally discover?
|
3. What was the strict hierarchy maintained in the
makeup department?
|
4. Why was the narrator praying for crowd shooting all
the time?
|
5. What do you know about the literary taste of?
|
The taste of Gemini as far English poetry is
concerned?
|
6. Why did the author appear to do nothing in the
studio?
|
7. What political affiliation did the member of the
studio have?
|
8. What was the attitude of the member of the studio
about communism and why?
|
9. What was the incongruity of the English poet
addressing at Gemini studio?
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Attempt a
character sketch on Kothamangalam Subbed.
|
2. The ‘Office-boy’ in the make-up department of
Gemini Studios has the shades of a
|
Typical universal character lured by glitter and
glamour and doomed to frustration.
|
Discuss.
|
3. The author is at great skill to use gentle humor to
bring out the follies and foibles of
|
People. How far
is it evident in the story?
|
4. The staff at Gemini Studio enjoyed the visit of MRA
while the visit of the English poet
|
Remained an unexplained mystery. Discuss.
|
5.
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
The makeup boy was not at all satisfied with his job
and always complained that he was kept
|
Back in such a mean job for long years, even though he
had higher caliber, only because of the
|
Influential person Subbed. The office boy never liked
or tried to like his job. Being a resentful employee,
|
He fails to understand the glory and importance of every work, be it high or low.
Unless we love our
|
Work, we cannot be productive, but a mere waste. .
Learning lessons from the office boy’s behavior,
|
write a letter
to your engineering
graduate sister working
as a clerk
telling her about
the ‘Glory of
|
Labor’ and the need to be satisfied and committed to
what one gets to be progressive in life.
|
THE INTERVIEW by
|
Christopher
Sylvester
|
GIST OF THE LESSON:
|
PART I
|
Interview has become a commonplace of journalism.
Opinions on the functions, methods and
|
Merits of Interview vary considerably.
|
Some claim it to be the highest form, a source of
truth and in its practice an art.
|
Some
despise the interview
as an unwarranted
intrusion into lives,
which diminishes their
|
Personality.
|
O
|
V.S. Naipaul feels that ‘some people are wounded by
interviews and lose a part of them
|
Selves’.
|
Lewis Carroll never consented to be interviewed for he
believed it to be ‘a just horror of
|
O
|
The interviewer’.
|
O
|
Rudyard Kipling considered it ‘immoral, a crime, an
assault that merits punishment’.
|
H.G. Wells referred interviewing to be an ‘ordeal’.
|
O
|
O
|
Saul Bellow describes it ‘like thumbprints on his
windpipe’.
|
84
|
Despite
the drawbacks interview
is a supremely
serviceable medium of
communication.
|
Interviews
are the most
vivid impression of
our contemporaries and
the interviewer holds
a
|
Position of unprecedented power and influence.
|
PART II
|
An extract from an interview of Umberto Eco
interviewed by Mound Padmanabhan.
|
Umberto
Eco was a
professor with a
formidable reputation as a scholar
for his ideas
on
|
Semiotics, literary interpretation and medieval
aesthetics before he turned into writing literary
|
Fiction. He attained intellectual superstardom with
his publication “The Name of the Rose”.
|
In the interview
Eco shares his idea
of empty spaces in our lives just as
they exist in
an atom,
|
Which he calls Interstices. He says that he makes use
of these empty spaces to work.
|
Eco’s essays were scholarly and narrative. He likes to be identified more as a
university
|
Professor who writes novels.
|
Eco’s ‘The Name
of the Rose”,
a serious novel,
which delves into
metaphysics, theology and
|
Medieval history, enjoyed a mass audience. It dealt
with medieval past. He feels that the novel
|
Wouldn’t have been so well received had it been
written ten years earlier or later.
|
SOLVED
|
SHORT ANSWER
|
QUESTIONS
|
a. Why do most celebrity writers despise being
interviewed?
|
Most celebrity writers despise being interviewed as
they consider it as an undesirable
|
Intrusion into their personal lives. Some viewed it an
immoral and offensive activity.
|
Some others feel it would ‘diminish’ them.
|
How is Umberto Eco’s non-fictional writing style
different from academic writing style?
|
Umberto
Eco’s non-fictional writing
style has a
certain playful, narrative
and personal quality
|
About it whereas his academic writing is
depersonalized and often dry and boring.
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTION
|
a. “Interviews an unwarranted intrusion in the lives
of others”. Elucidate with reference to
|
The Interview.
|
Value points:-
|
Interviews
are common feature
in Journalism – Most celebrities
consider them as
an
|
Unnecessary intrusion in their lives – “a horror of
the interview”, “an ordeal”, “thumbprints on
|
windpipe”- interview
is a supremely
serviceable medium of
communication- the most vivid
|
impression
of our contemporaries -the interviewer
holds a position
of unprecedented power
|
And influence.
|
SHORT ANSWER
|
QUESTIONS FOR
PRACTICE
|
1. “Best interviews are considered as an art.” Mention
four qualities of such an art.
|
2. Saul Bellow consented to be interviewed many a
times. Did he like being interviewed?
|
Substantiate.
|
85
|
3. Why does Brian say that interviewer holds a strong
position of power and influence?
|
4. Why was ‘Name of the Rose’, a success?
|
5. What are the major two remarkable qualities of
Umberto Eco’s scholarly writings?
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. The interview conducted by Mound Padmanabhan
reveals what a good interview should be
|
Like. Do you agree? Give reasons.
|
2.
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
Rudyard Kipling says that ‘interview’ is ‘an offence
against a person, an assault…. It is cowardly
|
And vile.’
|
Everyone likes to have his/her own individual space
and freedom. It is seen quite often in your
|
class that some
of your fellow
students are made
victims of verbal
assault, rumors and
|
Insults at the hands of your own friends. Write a note of advice ‘How to conduct
yourself’ to
|
Such bullying friends of yours teaching them about the
need to respect others’ self -esteem,
|
Dignity, individuality and freedom...
|
GOING PLACES by A
|
.R.BARTON
|
GIST OF THE LESSON
|
The lesson explores the theme of adolescent fantasies
and hero worship.
|
Sophie and Janise
are both in
the last year
of high school
and both knew
that they were
|
Destined to work in the biscuit factory as they belong
to a working class family.
|
Yet, Sophie, always dreams of big and beautiful
things, glamour and glory.
|
Her ambitions are not rooted in reality i.e., have no
relation with the harsh realities of life.
|
In contrast is Janise, Sophie’s friend, a realistic
and practical girl.
|
Sophie lives in male -dominated family where her
mother was only a shadow. The men were
|
Football fans and the conversations around the dinner
table were about Danny Casey, their
|
Hero.
|
Sophie
wants some attention
from her father
and brother and telling
them that she
met
|
Casey, was her way of drawing their attention towards
her.
|
But she carries her fantasies too far when she starts
to live them.
|
SOLVED SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. What does Sophie dream of doing after she passes
out of school? Why do you call it a
|
Dream, and not a plan?
|
Sophie dreams of big and beautiful things, glamour and
glory. She is not practical in her
|
Thinking and has no concrete plans to make her dreams
real.
|
1. Do you think Sophie and Janise are pole apart in
their attitude to life?
|
86
|
Sophie was a dreamer unable to come in terms with the
fact that she is year marked for the
|
Biscuit factory after her high school. But the tragedy
was that she carries her fantasies too far
|
When she started living in them, whereas her friend
Janise is practical and down-to-earth.
She
|
Tries her level best to bring her friend down to the
realities.
|
2. Sophie
is a typical
adolescent hero-worshiper who
carries her fantasizing too
far .Do you
|
Agree?
|
Yes, Sophie is a typical adolescent who worships Danny
Casey, the football star. She
fantasizes
|
About meeting him and taking his autograph which is
quite normal for an adolescent. But she
|
Crosses the border of normalcy when she tell her
family that she actually met him and that he
|
Wants to take her on a date. And then she actually
goes to the place and literally waits for him
|
To appear which is abnormal.
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTION
|
1.
|
Sophie has no
touch with reality;
Janise’s feet are,
however, firmly planted
on the ground.
|
Discuss.
|
Value Points
|
:
|
Both
school going girls
and intimate friends – both belong
to lower middle
class family – but
|
Different from each other. Different approach to life
- one a romantic, habitual dreamer and an
|
Escapist. Sophie dreams of things beyond her reach –
Janise has a practical approach to life -
|
Discourages her friend’s wild dreams – gossipy.
|
QUESTIONS FOR PRACTICE
|
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. “Sophie’s dreams and disappointments are all in her
mind “.justify this statement.
|
2. Do you think that Sophie met Danny Casey? Give
reasons.
|
3. What was Sophie’s father’s reaction when Geoff told
him about Sophie meeting Casey?
|
4. When did Sophie actually see Danny Casey?
|
5. Why was Sophie jealous of Geoff’s silence?
|
6. 6. What is the adolescent issues discussed in the
lesson ‘Going places’?
|
LONG ANSWER QUESTIONS
|
1. Why did Sophie like her brother Geoff more than any
other person? What did he symbolize for?
|
Her?
|
2. Give a brief character sketch of Sophie’s father.
What kind of a relationship did they share?
|
3. The story “Going Places” draws a beautiful contrast
between ‘fact’ and ‘fiction’. Comment.
|
4. Do you think that Sophie is a representative of
unguided adolescent? Discuss.
|
5.
|
Value Based Question
|
: Answer the
following in about 100 words. 5
|
Sophie, in the story, ‘Going Places’ is a victim of
adolescent fantasizing and hero worship and
|
Does not have any touch realistic and practical
outlook. But her friend Janise is very
opposite
|
To her and tries hard to bring her to the reality.
|
One of your
friends studying in
the city is
also such a
victim of adolescent fantasizing
and
|
Hero worship.
Write a letter
to her making
her realize the
wrong path she
is treading and
|
Guiding her through the right way, being true
friend...
|
87
|
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