THE
LAST LESSON
1.Why was Franz tempted to play truant from school?
A. The French teacher M Hamel was going to ask questions on participle
which Franz had not prepared. To avoid being scolded he was tempted to play
truant from school and spend the day out doors in a pleasurable manner.
2.What was unusual about the school that Franz noticed when he entered the
school?
A. On entering the school Franz noticed there was unusual silence. There
was no usual bustle of opening and closing of desks. The village elders had
occupied the last benches that usually remain empty.
3.Why was it the last lesson? How did Franz react to it?
A. As the order from Berlin had come to teach German in all schools of
Alsace and Lorraine there would be no French lesson form the next day M Hamel
announced in the class. The announcement was like a thunderclap to Franz. He
felt sorry for not learning French. The French books, which earlier were
nuisance, became attractive. He felt he could not give up his French books.
4.What reasons did M Hamel give for their lack of interest in learning
French?
A. The lack of interest in learning French was due to the parents who
wanted their children to work in farm or mill to earn, due to the students who
were reluctant to learn and often put off the lesson for the next day and due
to himself as he asked them to water the flower and gave them off when he had
to go for fishing
5. Why does not M Hamel want the people to forget French?
A. M Hamel wanted them not to forget French as it is the most beautiful
and logical language and as long as they hold fast to their language it would
be as if they had the key to the prison.
6.Describe how M Hamel conducted the last lesson.
A. In his last French class though M Hamel was emotional he fully involved
himself in the teaching learning process. He heard every lesson to the last
sitting motionless in the chair. When the church bell struck twelve he stood
up pale and wrote ‘Vive La French’ and with a gesture he communicated that
the school is dismissed.
LOST SPRING
1.Seemapuri a place on the periphery of Delhi yet miles away from it
metaphorically. Justify this statement.
A. Seemapuri the rag pickers shanty is just in the outskirt of Delhi but
it is far away from Delhi so far as Delhi’s glitter and amenities are
concerned. Here the squatters of Bangladesh who came after 1971 war live in
structures of mud with roof of tin or tarpaulin. There is no sewerage,
drainage or pipe water that Delites enjoy.
2.Through the years rag picking has acquired the ‘proportion of a fine
art’ in Seemapuri. Justify the statement.
A. The means of survival of migrants of Bangladesh in Seemapuri is rag
picking. Garbage to them is gold. Like a fine art that has no end in appealing
the sense of beauty the rag picker’s scrounging the garbage is a never
ending process which provide them their daily bread day after day.
3.Does the rag picking mean the same thing for parents and children? Give
reasons for your answer.
A. No, rag picking is not the same for parents and children. For children
it is wrapped in wonders where as for parents it is the means of survival.
4.Why was not Saheb happy on getting a job?
A. Saheb was not happy on getting a job in tea stall for a salary of
Rs.800/- per month as he lost his freedom. He had to carry the stall owner’s
steel canister in place of his bag. He lost his carefree look He was now no
longer his own master.
5.Why don’t the bangle makers of Firozabad organise themselves?
A. The bangle makers are trapped in the vicious circle of middlemen and
police. If they organise a co operative they will be hauled up, beaten and
dragged to jail by police for doing something illegal. There is no leader to
help them out from their misery. They are the victims of greed and injustice.
DEEP WATER
1.What had happened when Douglas was three or four years old?
A.When Douglas was three or four years old he was on the California beach
with his father. There the sea waves knocked him down and swept over him. He
felt breathless buried in the water and was frightened; but his father laughed
at him.
2.What was the misadventure of Douglas? How did it end?
A. The misadventure was his being ducked by a big bruiser of a boy of
eighteen in the YMCA swimming pool. He was drowned and nearly dying in the
pool; but was somehow miraculously saved from the mouth of death
3.How was the instructor successful in making Douglas a perfect swimmier?
A. The instructor made Douglas a perfect swimmer by removing his fear of
being drowned and teaching him swimming piece by piece in a period of three
months. During the training he let Douglas swim back and forth of the pool
tying him with a pulley. He taught him to put his face under the water to
exhale raise above it to inhale.
4.How did Douglas finally over come his fear of water?
A. Douglas over came his fear of water by challenging the fear itself and
going for several round of swimming in the pool; but finally the residual fear
he over came when he went up to Tie ton to Conrad meadows and swam across the
other shore and back of the warm lake as Doug Corpron used to do.
5.What thought of Roosevelt deeply impacted Douglas? How did the thoughts
apply to his life?
A. The thought of Roosevelt that there is terror in the fear of death had
deep impact on Douglas. He had experienced both the sensation of dying and the
terror of the fear of death. But later he brushed aside his fear by
challenging it by the will to live and succeeded.
THE RATTRAP
1.What was the peddler’s philosophy about rattrap? Why did it
amuse him?
A. The peddler’s philosophy was that the whole world is a rattrap with
several baits in it. As one is tempted to bait and touches it the door is
closed and everything comes to an end like in a rattrap. The thought amused
him because he has so far been selling rattrap; but not fallen in this
world’s rattrap
2.What kind of host was the old crofter?
A. The old crofter was an affectionate and generous host. He warmly
welcomed the peddler as he got someone to talk to in his loneliness. He served
him porridge for his supper and offered a pipe with tobacco roll to smoke and
finally played with him mjolis till bedtime.
3.The reader’s sympathy is with the peddler right from the beginning? Is
it justified? Give reasons.
A. The rattrap peddler draws reader’s sympathy because of his poverty.
The author’s description of his clothes and appearance like –“his
clothes are in rags, his cheeks are sunken and hunger gleams his eyes” and
his resorting to begging and petty thievery to keep his body and soul together
evoke reader’s sympathy
4. Who do you think was at fault-the ironmaster or the peddler? Give two
reasons.
A. I think the ironmaster was at fault because it was he who invited the
tramp to his house for the Christmas thinking him to be his old acquaintance;
but on knowing he was not his acquaintance he could not oppose his
daughter’s decision to offer him Christmas cheer.
5.Why was the peddler grateful to the ironmaster and his daughter?
A. The peddler was grateful to the ironmaster and his daughter as they
empowered him to release himself from the world’s rattrap through their
selfless hospitality, love, sympathy, compassion, and understanding.
INDIGO
1.Why was Gandhiji impressed with Rajkumar Shukla’s tenacity and
determination?
A. Rajkumar Shukla the Champaran-Sharecropper requested Gandhiji in
Congress Session in Lucknow to fix a date to visit Champaran where the
sharecroppers were subjected to injustice. Till Gandhiji fixed a date he did
not leave him rather he accompanied him wherever he went. Gandhiji was
impressed by his tenacity and determination and finally agreed to go there
from Calcutta.
2. Why did Gandhi chide the lawyers who represented the interests of group
of sharecroppers of Champaran?
A. Gandhiji chided the lawyers for collecting big fees from the
sharecroppers to fight their case in law courts. He felt taking their case to
law courts would do little good when they were so crushed and fear stricken.
So his first priority was to free them from fear.
3.What were the conditions of sharecroppers of Champaran?
A. The peasants of Champaran were tenants of British landlords. Under long
term sharecropping arrangement they were growing Indigo on 15 percent of their
holding and surrendering the harvest as rent to the British landlord. But when
Indigo price fell due to synthetic Indigo developed in Germany the landlords
obtained agreement from the peasant to pay them compensation which some of the
peasants resisted and fought their case in court.
4.What made the British realise that the Indians could challenge their
might hither to unquestioned?
A. The spontaneous demonstration around the courthouse by the peasants of
Motihari on knowing that Gandhiji was in trouble was the beginning of their
liberation from fear of the British which made the British realise that now
the Indians can challenge their might.
5.How did Gandhiji make the peasants fearless and self-reliant?
A. Gandhiji made the peasants fearless by letting them know about their
rights, fighting their case and by obtaining the refund of compensation made
to the British landlords who were behaving as lords above the law.
POETS AND PANCAKES
1.Bring out gentle humour that the make-up room presents.
A. The make-up room once believed to be Clive’s stable had a look of
haircutting saloon with incandescent light around half a dozen mirrors. The
gang of nationally integrated make up men could turn any decent looking person
into a hideous, crimson hued monster with pancakes and locally made lotion and
potion.
2.How did Subbu give direction and definition to Gemini Studio?
A. Subbu was a many sided genius. He was a poet, an actor, a director and
a novelist. He composed many story poems in folk refrain, wrote a novel,
recreated the mood and manner of the Devadasis of the early 20th century and
played the subsidiary role better than supposed main players.
3.Why is the Englishman’s visit referred to as ‘an unexplained
mystery’?
A. The Englishman’s visit to the studio remained a mystery because
neither they could know why an English poet visited a film studio nor they
could understand what he spoke due to his accent. The poet too after his
speech looked baffled due to sheer incongruity of his talk
4.What views does the author have about the prose writers?
A. The author’s conviction is that the prose writing is not and cannot
be the true pursuit of a genius. It is meant for the patient, persistent,
persevering drudge with a shrunken heart. A prose piece is always rejected.
But the prose writer never bothers about rejection. He sends a fresh copy to
another publisher with postage for return of the manuscript.
5.What does ‘The God That Failed’ refer to?
A. ‘The God That Failed’ is a book of six essays by six eminent
essayists that describe their journey to communism and disillusioned return.
The book has allusive reference to the author who failed in getting
recognition as a poet like the essayists failed in their journey to communism.
THE INTERVIEW
1.Interviews are necessary. Justify the statement.
A. Despite the drawbacks of interviews they are supremely serviceable
medium of communication. They are an art and a source of truth. We know about
our contemporary celebrities and others through their interviews.
2.Do you think Eco’s non-fictional writing style is a departure from
regular style? Give reasons.
A. Eco’s non-fictional writing is not depersonalized and boring like his
scholarly works. There is a playful and personal touch in it, which is a
departure from his regular style.
3.What did Eco learn at the age of 22 that he pursued in his novels?
A. Eco learnt at the age of 22 that scholarly books should be written by
telling the story of research. He learnt that there should be a narrative
technique employed in scholarly writing that he later employed when he wrote
novels at the age of 50.
4.What makes ‘The Name of the Rose’ a serious novel?
A. ‘The Name of the Rose’ is a serious novel as it delves into
metaphysics, theology and medieval history inspite of being a detective story
at one level.
5.What does Eco think of the readers of his novel ‘The Name of the
Rose’?
A. Eco thinks that there are readers who don’t like ‘trash’ and like
to have difficult reading experiences. It is contrary to what journalists and
publishers think. The selling of 15 million copies of his novel ‘The Name of
the Rose’- a very serious work is testimony that readers don’t want easy
reading experiences.
GOING PLACES
1.How is Jansie different from Sophie?
A. Jansie is practical and down to earth where as her friend Sophie lives
in a world of dream and fantasy. Sophie dreams to have a boutique, wants to
become an actress and fashion designer. But Jansie doesn’t want her to go on
imaginary flights, as she knows that they are made for biscuit factory.
2.What did Sophie think of Geoff who does not share his thought with
anyone?
A. Sophie thought of Geoff as grown up now. She suspected ‘areas of his
life’ about which she knows nothing and he never spoke. Sophie thought when
Geoff didn’t speak he was thinking of these places. They attained a special
fascination for her simply because they were ‘unknown’ and beyond her
reach.
3.Describe the reaction of Sophie’s family on her story.
A. Geoff looked around Sophie abruptly with disbelief when he heard her
meeting with Danny Casey, the wonder boy of football. When she gave the
footballer’s detailed physical appearance he believed her. But Sophie’s
father turned his head on his thick neck with an expression of disdain and
ridiculed her. He muttered something inaudible and dragged himself round in
his chair called it a wild story.
4.Did Sophie really meet Danny Casey?
A. Sophie had once met Danny Casey in the arcade. When Sophie was looking
at the clothes in Royce’s window Danny came and stood beside her. But no one
believed in her as she always fantasized about him. Had she not met Casey she
could not have felt pain when failed to make people believe her.
5.How is the title ‘Going Places’ most appropriate?
A. The title is appropriate as Sophie the protagonist- a teenager
fantasizes and goes to places in her imagination in the story and Geoff’s
‘areas of his life’ which unknown to her holds a special fascination for
her about which she romanticizes.