Saturday, August 12, 2023

Appreciation of Cherry Tree

 The cherry tree is a beautiful narrative poem where the poet gives his experience of planting a tree and later on enjoying the benifits of the tree

The poem is Written by Ruskin Bond who's home town Kasauli is amidst beautiful nature which has been a fascination for him. He has written poems and short stories which has brought fame to him through prestigious awards and recognition.

The poem depicts the struggle put up by the cherry tree to grow and also the writers curiosity to see the tree bloom. 

The seed of cherry was sowed in the soil as the poet wanted to have a tree of his own. Initially he cared for it but later on he left the tree unattended and allowed it to grow on it's own which was the law of nature. The small sapling faced lot of threat but didn't give up and finally after a period of 8 years the tree bloomed bringing joy to the creatures of nature and of course our poet. The poet enjoys watching the tree lying down on grass on a starry moon lit night.

The poem has various figures of speech which add beauty to it. We can come across Alliteration for example 'Shrivelled the slender stem', 'Who watched wandering wild', Personification ex. ' The young tree struggle ', It's arms in a fresh lust', Antithesis ex. Came back thinner, rather poor, but richer by a cherry tree... The rhyming words add musical effect like 'said-bed', 'child-wild', 'sun-one' and so on. Another aspect which makes the poem lively is the colour imagery used by the poet ex. blue, pink, green  the ripened cherry colour etc. 

The narrative style is beautiful maintained in the poem with a proper beginning, middle and end. The different characters in the poem brings liveliness. The conversation tone add beauty to it. The poem shares the personal experience of the poet. 

The underlying message that we get from this poem is that trees are important for ecological balance of the environment. It brings joy to all the creatures in nature. We also learn that inspite of struggle the tree grows and brings happiness to all. We too should follow the footsteps of the tree.

I love this poem because in this concrete jungle world this poem brings a ray of hope to us by highlighting the importance of tree growing for the welfare of all living beings.

Friday, January 14, 2022

Paraphrase of Upon Westminster Bridge.

 

View From the Westminster Bridge

Wordsworth's Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802 is a pretty straightforward poem. It features a speaker sharing his impressions of the view from, you guessed it, Westminster Bridge. The poem takes shape as the speaker describes the sights and feeling of a quiet early morning before the city springs to life.

The speaker begins by asserting that the view before him just might be the best thing in the world. It would be a very 'dull' person who could pass through without stopping to appreciate the 'majesty' of what he sees. And what is this splendid sight? That of a mighty city, full of the amazing accomplishments of man. 'Ships, towers, domes, theatres, and temples,' spread before the speaker.

But these man-made marvels have yet to come to life in the early morning. The buildings and ships are seen as part of the greater setting: the natural landscape. The sun rises over the quiet scene, and the river moves along on its natural path. For the brief time between sunrise and the beginning of the workday, the speaker feels 'a calm so deep.' For at this moment, civilization sleeps, and the beating heart of man-made constructs is 'lying still.'

Friday, December 17, 2021

History of Drama

 4.1 History of English Drama

Drama:

1) Drama is a composition in verse or prose to be acted on the stage, in which a story is related by means of dialogue and action and is represented with, accompanying gesture, costume and scenery as in real life.


2) Drama is a composition designed for performance in the theatre in which actors take the roles of the characters, perform the indicated action and utter the written dialogue


The elements of drama are-

1. plot

2. characterization

3. dialogue

4. settings

5. stage directions

6. conflict

7. theme


(I) Introduction to English Theatre:

Drama has its origins in folk theatre. Drama is a multiple art using words, scenic effects, music, gestures of the actors and the organising talents of a producer. The dramatist must have players, a stage and an audience.

     The beginnings of drama in England are obscure. There is evidence to believe that when the Romans were in England, they established vast amphitheaters for the production of plays but when the Romans departed their theatre departed with them. 

    (Amphitheaters: a circular building without a roof and with rows of seats that rise in steps around an open space. Amphitheaters were used in ancient Greece and Rome.)

Then there were minstrels. (Minstrels: a medieval singer or musician, especially one who sang or recited lyric or heroic poetry to a musical accompaniment for the nobility.) People enjoyed their performances.

Gradually by the 10th century the ritual of the plays that itself had something dramatic in it and had got few features of a play.

Between the 13th and 14th century drama started having themes which were separated from religion. The words themselves were spoken in English, a longer dramatic script came into use, and they were called as Miracle plays. 

(Miracle plays: Miracle plays are among the earliest formally developed plays in medieval Europe. These plays focused on the representation of Bible stories in churches.)

Later, these religious dramas were the Morality plays in which characters were abstract vices and virtues. (Mortality Plays: a kind of allegorical drama having personified abstract qualities as the main characters and presenting a lesson about good conduct and character, popular in the 15th and early 16th centuries.) These were allegories. (Allegory: a story, play, picture, etc. in which each character or event is a symbol representing an idea or a quality, such as truth, evil, death, etc.; the use of such symbols.)


(II) Elizabethan and Restoration Theatre:

The Secular Morality plays have direct links with Elizabethan plays.

Features of the Renaissance Period:

i) They imposed a learned tradition.

ii) They were classical in depth with themes of education.

iii) They presented general moral problems.

iv) They showed secular politics.

v) These plays had nothing to do with religion.

vi) There were examples of both, comedy and tragedy. 


Prime Dramatists:

Thomas Kyd, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the prime dramatists of this era.

It was Kyd who discovered how easily blank verse might be converted into a useful theatrical medium which Shakespeare used brilliantly in all his plays.

     Tragedy developed in the hands of Kyd and Marlowe.

Comedy had also proceeded beyond rustic humour.

By the nineties of the 16th century, the theatre in England was fully established but complicated conditions governed the activities of the dramatist.


The public theatre of the 16th century:

i) It differed in many important ways from the modern theatre.

ii) It was open to sky.

iii) They were without artificial lighting.

iv) The stage was a raised platform with the recess at the back supported by pillars.

v)There was no curtain and the main platform could be surrounded on three sides by the audience.

vi) There were galleries around the theatre.

In the 17th century the enclosed theatre gained importance. There was increasing attention to scenic device as theatre became private.


William Shakespeare:

Shakespearean era came into existence in the 16th century to the public theatre. He wrote for the contemporary theatre, manipulating the Elizabethan stage with great resource and invention. William Shakespeare was an English playwright, poet, and actor, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's greatest dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon".


Ben Johnson:

Ben Johnson was contemporary to William Shakespeare. He was a classicist, a moralist and a reformer of drama. In comedy, Johnson’s genius is found at its best and his influence was considerable. The Restoration dramatists leaned strongly upon him.


Closing of theatres:

Closing of theatres by the Puritans in 1642. The Puritans were English Protestants in the 16th and 17th centuries who sought to purify the Church of England of Roman Catholic practices, maintaining that the Church of England had not been fully reformed and should become more Protestant. With the Civil wars no theatre existed between 1642 to 1660.

The next phase which appeared after the Restoration produced a very different kind of dramatic literature. Dramatists like Chapman, Thomas Middleton, Webster and Dekker were at the forefront.

    When Charles II came back with the Restoration of 1660, the theatres were reopened. The Restoration comedy achieved its peculiar excellence. Drama developed into class drama with upper-class ethos. It lasted beyond this period into the first decade of the 18th century.

Comedy in the early 18thcentury declined into sentimentalism. It became Comedy of Manners. George Etherege was its most important exponent. From such depths the drama was rescued by Oliver Goldsmith and Richard Sheridan.


(III) Modern Theatre:

Features:

1) Use of picture frame stage.

2) Actresses taking female parts.

3) Moveable scenery designed to create a visual image for each scene.

4) Use of artificial lights.

5) Irregular spectacle, melodrama and farce.

6) Monopoly held by the two houses, Covent Garden and Drury Lane, for the performance of serious drama.

7) The audiences which gathered to the 19th century theatre had not the intelligence or the imagination of the Elizabethan audience.

8) The danger in the 19th century theatre was that, above all, it was unrelated to the life of the time.


Henrik Ibsen:

    Ibsen was the great Norwegian dramatist of the 19th century. He dominates the modern drama. He developed modernist, realist, social and psychological dramas like The Doll’s house, Ghosts, and An Enemy of the People. They are far more subtle in stagecraft and profound in thought than anything in the modern English theatre.


G. B. Shaw:

    George Bernard Shaw was deeply influenced and affected by Ibsen’s innovative contributions and experimentation. He was the most brilliant playwrights of his times. He alone had understood the greatness of Ibsen and he was determined that his own plays should also be a vehicle for ideas.

The responsibility of elevation of the English drama to the brilliance of the Ibsen, fell with Oscar Wilde and G. B. Shaw in the late 19th and early 20th century.


The 20th century Drama:

The 20th century showed a talent in the drama with which the 19th century could not compete. H. Granville Barker, John Galsworthy, St. John Ervine were some of the playwrights who explored contemporary problems. St. John Ervine had been associated with a group of Irish dramatists whose work was normally produced in the Abbey theatre in Dublin. Much that is best in the modern drama in English developed from this movement. One of its originators were Lady Gregory with W. B. Yeats and J. M. Synge. They were the most important dramatists of this Irish revival who used a sense of tragic irony, a violent species of humour and a rich and highly flavoured language.

       T.S. Eliot experimented with Greek tragedy in the early forties of the 20th century. Other dramatists of the modern era, John Osborne, wrote on people who grew up after the Second World War.

Kingsley Amis wrote about frustrated, anti-establishment young people. Osborne’s ‘Look Back in Anger’ brought a new vitality to the theatre scene. It was more a cultural phenomenon than the work of literature.

Other important playwrights of the modern era include Anton Chekhov, Bertolt Brecht, Eugene O’Neill, Arthur Miller, Tennessee William, Eugène Ionesco, Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter.


(IV) Indian Theatre:

Featurers:

i) Earliest seeds of modern Indian Drama can be found in the Sanskrit Drama.

ii) From the first century A.D. ‘Mahabhasya’ by Patanjali provides a feasible date for the beginning of theatre in India.

iii) ‘A Treatise on Theatre’ (Natya Shastra) by Bharat Muni is the most complete work of dramatology in the ancient world. It gives mythological account of the origin of theatre.

iv) Modern Indian drama however, has influences from all over the world, as well as Sanskrit and Urdu traditions.

--------------------------------------------------------------


Objective Test

1) Name any four periods of History of British Drama.

Answer:- The four periods of History of British Drama are:

i) Medieval period

ii) Renaissance period

iii) Restoration period

iv) Victorian period


2) List the four elements of drama.

Answer:- The four elements of drama are plot, characters, theme and stage directions. 


3) State a type of drama each from any four periods of history.

Answer:-

i) Medieval period         

:- Robin Hood, Everyman

ii) Renaissance period          

:- Romeo and Juliet, Duchess of Malfi

iii) Restoration period  

:- All for Love, The Way of the World

iv) Victorian period       

:- The Importance of Being Earnest, A Doll’s House


4) Compare the features of a comedy and tragedy.

Answer:-

Comedy

Tragedy

i) A comedy deals with humorous story with a happy ending.

i) The tragedy deals with a serious or darker themes with sad ending.

ii) A comedy creates laughter and fun.

ii) A tragedy creates emotions of pity and fear.

iii) A comedy depends mostly on unusual circumstances and witty dialogues

iii) In tragedy the main character mostly has a moral flaw that causes the tragic end.

iv) A Comedy uses humorous dialogues and situations to give relief

iv) A tragedy evokes pity for the characters and teach moral lesson.


5) Define drama.

Answer:- Drama is a composition in verse or prose to be acted on the stage. It tells a story through action, costume, setting and dialogue.


Saturday, November 27, 2021

Pillars of Democracy

  

1.4 Pillars of Democracy

Ice Breakers

1) Choose the correct alternative.

(i) ‘Government of the people, by the people and for the people, shall not perish from the earth’. This famous statement is made by –

(a) Mahatma Gandhi

(c) Abraham Lincoln

(b) Nelson Mandela

(d) Dalai Lama

Answer: Abraham Lincoln

(ii) A system where the government is elected and ruled by people is called-

(a) Bureaucracy

(b) Aristocracy

(c) Democracy

(d) Autocracy

Answer: Democracy

(iii) A democratic country is governed by, its-

(a) Military

(b) Police

(c) Politicians

(d) Constitution

Answer: Constitution





















2) Match the following.

Sr.

A

B

1.

Constitution

a) It is the freedom to go where you want, do what you want etc.

 

2.

Liberty

b) It is the state of being equal, especially in status, rights or opportunities.

 

3.

Equality

c) It is the sense of common brotherhood.

 

4.

Fraternity

d) It is an aggregate of fundamental principles or established precedents that constitute the legal basis of a polity, organization or other type of entity and commonly determine how that entity is to be governed.

 


Answer:

Sr.

A

B

1.

Constitution

d) It is an aggregate of fundamental principles or established precedents that constitute the legal basis of a polity, organization or other type of entity and commonly determine how that entity is to be governed.

 

2.

Liberty

a) It is the freedom to go where you want, do what you want etc.

 

3.

Equality

b) It is the state of being equal, especially in status, rights or opportunities.

 

4.

Fraternity

c) It is the sense of common brotherhood.

 


3) Explain

Pillars form a support for concrete buildings. Metaphorically speaking a strong nation too depends on strong pillars. Explain the pillars of a democratic nation. Make a list of obstacles that are a threat to the progress of a nation.

Answer:

The pillars of democracy are liberty, equality and fraternity. Liberty, equality and fraternity lead to an ideal nation. These three concepts build a strong, supportive, caring and united nation. Here people work for the well-being of all. They love and respect other persons. There is no separation in respect of social life. So, such nation is an ideal nation. They build the foundation of a strong nation.

Obstacles that are a threat to the progress of a nation.

1) Communalism

2) Casteism

3) Excessive pride for Language

4) Regionalism

5) Economic Differences

6) Terrorism

7) Racism

8) Large growing population

9) Gender inequality

10) Corruption

11) A lack of capital investment

12) A crushing level of debt

13) Poor development of trade and commerce

14) Illiteracy

15) inadequate technology

16) Unemployment

Writer: Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar

He was born on 14th April 1891 in the town and military cantonment of Mhow (now Dr. Ambedkar Nagar) in Madhya Pradesh. He got his degree from Elphinston College, Mumbai. He subsequently obtained the doctorate from Columbia University, USA and London School of Economics. He was also assigned the big and challenging task of framing the ‘Constitution of India’ in the capacity of Chairman of the Drafting Committee. He was awarded the ‘Bharat Ratna’ posthumously for his dedication and commitment for the welfare of our country. He wrote various thought-provoking books.

About the topic: Pillars of Democracy

Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar has laid emphasis on the values of liberty, equality and fraternity. According to him, these principles will make India a strong nation. These principles make our life livable.

He opines that hero-worship is a sure road to degradation and to eventual dictatorship and the collapse of a nation. He shows the threats of such hero worship and asks the readers to keep away from such thinking.

Important points:

According to Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar, for maintaining democracy not in form but in fact it needs to do the following things.

1) To hold fast to constitutional methods for achieving our social and economic objectives.

2) Do not use any unconstitutional methods as these methods create the Grammar of Anarchy leading liberty at stake.

3) One should not lay liberties at the feet of even a great man. The man may have sacrificed for the nation, but it is not justified one lay liberty at his feet.

4) One should not trust the man with powers which enable him to subvert the institutions.  It is dangerous to liberty of the people. 

5) There is nothing wrong in being grateful to great men but there are limits to that gratefulness.  It is not good for democracy; it the limits are exceeded.

6) In this concern, Irish patriot Danniel O’Connel says that No man can be grateful at the cost of his honour, not woman can be grateful at the cost of her chastity and no nation can be grateful at the cost of liberty. 

7) Here Dr. Ambedkar has given an example of Bhakti.  It subtly fits to the gratefulness theory in India. Bhakti or hero-worship plays diametrically opposite roles in Indian religion and Indian politics. 

8) Dr.Ambedkar says ‘on the 26th of January 1950, we are going to enter into a life of contradictions. The Indian people will get political right of equality.  But they are away from equality in social and economic life.  In politics, the principle is one man one vote and one vote one value.  But the same principle is not applied in social and political life of India. 

9) Dr. Ambedkar says, ‘If we continue to deny one man one value i.e. equality in our social and economic life, we are putting our democracy in peril’  

10) Fraternity means a sense of common brotherhood of all Indians. According to Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar, it is not easy to achieve fraternity in Indian social life. 

11) Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar gives example in the words of Jame Bryce. ‘In American Protestant Epicopal church, at its triennial convention a prayer for all the people was said.  The words ran as “O Lord bless our nation” But the objections were raised by the people of a religious community and later on the words in the prayer was changed as ‘O Lord, bless these United States’.

12) USA has no caste problem still the people did not accept as they were a nation. In India there are so many castes. Castes are anti-national. They bring about separation in social life. Castes are antinational as they generate jealousy and antipathy between common people.

13) According to Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar, in believing that we are a nation, we are doing a great mistake. People divided into several thousands of castes can’t be a nation.

CONCLUSION:

Fraternity can be a fact only when there is a nation. Without fraternity, equality and liberty will be no deeper than coats of paints.





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Sunday, November 14, 2021

The Sower

 2.2 The Sower

 

Title: The Sower

    ‘The Sower’ is a translation of Victor Hugo's French poem. It is translated by Toru Dutt from French to English. ‘The Sower’ is a poem about a farmer who is sowing seeds. He has seen many bad harvests in his life. However, he is so optimistic of having a good harvest every time he tosses grain. The Sower the central aspect of this poem and the poet minutely describes his activities in the farm.

 

Poet: Victor Hugo

He was the poet, novelist, and dramatist of the 19th century. He was one of the most important French Romantic writers.

He is regarded in France as one of the country's greatest poets. He is better known for his famous novels as ''Notre-Dame de Paris''(1831) and "Les Miserables" (1862).

 

Translated by: Torulata Dutt

She was a Bengali poet. She was also known as Toru. She wrote in English and French. She was born on 4th March 1856 in Kolkata.

She is considered to be ‘The first Indian poetess’ to write verses in English and French. She translated dozens of poems and completed a novel before her death at the age of 21. Her poems such as ‘Seeta’, ‘Lotus’ and ‘Our Casuarina Tree’ are well-loved.

 

Ice Breakers Activities:

(i) Make a list of words related to agriculture.

Answer:

Words related to agriculture are-

Plough, weeding, harvest, sowing, cultivating, farmer, farm, crop, fertilizers, grain, seeds, soil, yield, irrigation, tilling, planting, harrowing, reaping, manure

 

(ii) Discuss the activities carried out by a farmer.

Answer:


Ploughing- नांगरणी

 

Sowing – पेरणी

 

Manuring- खत देणे

 

Weeding- तण काढणे

 

Reaping- कापणी / धान्य काढणे

 

(iii) In our country engineering, teaching and medical fields are much sought after. Other professions, occupations though they make a significant contribution to the society, do not get their due.

Answer:


a) Farmer

Highly unpredictable economic gains.

b) Conservancy workers

No protective clothing for handling waste, Lack of security measures. No respect for the service they provide.

c) Domestic workers

Lack of job security and good income.

d) Sales persons

Extensive travelling, long working hours, no guarantee of sufficient income.

e) Factory Workers

Low wages, unpredictable working hours, unhygienic atmosphere and risk  of life while handling the machinery.


(ii) 'Agriculture is the backbone of the Indian economy'. Fill in the boxes supporting this statement. Complete the following web diagram. 


A large part of Indian population is involved in agriculture.

 

 

 

Agriculture- the back- bone of India

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Answer:

A large part of Indian population is involved in agriculture.

 

 

 

Agriculture- the back- bone of India

 

Provides employment to large number of people in India

 

 

Provides sufficient food grains and other needy things.

Gives strong support to Indian economy. Helps to increase GDP.



--------------------------------------------------------

Glossary:

Porchway- a veranda व्हरांडा

Twilight- lighted area before dusk संधिप्रकाश

Hastens- moving fast वेगाने जाणे

Well- nigh- almost completed जवळ जवळ पूर्ण

Sower- the person who plants the seedपेरणी करणारा

Lingers- stays a bit रेंगाळतो

Rags- old and torn clothes जुने फाटके कपडे

Silhouette- outline of someone बाह्याकार

Furrows- line, channel नांगराने केलेला चर

Precious- valuable मौल्यवान

Muse- rest in thought विचारात गुंग होणे

Stride- to walk with long steps लांब पावलं टाकत जाणे

August- noble, dignified, impressive भव्य

Dominates- commands अधिराज्य गाजवतो

Gestures- movements   हालचाली


--------------------------------------------------------

Theme

The Farming and the life of a farmer is the major theme of the poem and the poet gives his feelings for the farmer along with the detailed description about the nature around the farmer.

 

Paraphrase of the poem:-

“Sitting in a porchway………………working hours are well night past.”

The poet is sitting peacefully in the veranda. He is enjoying the sunset. He describes the presence of twilight. ‘The twilight hastens on to rule’ the line suggests the overpower of the twilight over the light of the day. It is a time between the day and night. Day is fading and night is approaching. ‘Working hours are well - nigh past’ this line suggests the time of work in the fields is now over. Soon it is going to be night and dark all around.

 

“Shadow……………………… I feel a thrill”

During the twilight, shadows are spreading all around the area. In such time, the poet sees a farmer who is standing alone in the fields. He is staying a bit there. ‘Old, in rags, he patient stands’ this line gives the appearance of the Sower. The Sower is old and his cloths are tattered. He is standing peacefully in the field. The poet is so much thrilled to see his calm and peaceful appearance in the field.

 

“Black and high……………… a time to reap”

Since it is a twilight time everything appears to be blackish. ‘Silhouette’ is the French word. It means the outline of the Sower. The black shadow of the Sower is dominating the deep furrows in the fields. Since the sun is setting the silhouette gradually becomes bigger and bigger thus even the deep furrows seem to be small in front of the Sower. Here the human aspects is shown powerful and dominating over the nature. In the next line, ‘now to sow……a time to reap’, the farmer is hoping for a good harvest in future. He is sowing and expecting that seeds will grow, the grains will appear and all his wishes will be fulfilled.

  

“Marches he along the plain………to see him stride”

The poet describes the movement of the farmer and his actions in the field. The poet appears the farmer as marching like a soldier. It shows his strong determination and positive attitude towards his work. The farmer moves forward and backward scattering the precious grains which are both a symbol of prosperity and wealth of future. The grain is called ‘precious grains’ because each and every grain is important in the life of a farmer. The poet thinks deeply about the Sower’s hard efforts.

 

“Darkness deepens………………touch the starry skies”

          Here the poet describes the night sky. The twilight gradually turns to night. Everywhere the darkness appears. Now the poet speaks about the gestures of the Sower. The poet feels the majestic and inspiring image of the Sower. The gradual and progressive growth of the shadow of the Sower reaches the top of the sky. The poet feels reverence to the hardworking farmer. He glorifies the work of the Sower and considers his work as noble. Sower’s work gives him such height/ importance that he can touch the sky.

Brain storming activities.

A1. There are a number of challenges a farmer in India faces. Discuss with your partner. How it is possible to improve the condition of farmers?

Answer:

Sr. No

Challenges

Solutions

1)

Water scarcity.

Rainwater harvesting

2)

Credit and in-debtedness.

Providing bank loans on low interest.

3)

Land issues.

Stopping soil erosion, implementing watershed management. Providing good knowledge of crop management.

4)

Climatic changes.

Providing proper forecast of climate.

5)

Social groups.

Farmers should get support from the social groups to choose proper crops and good market to sell them.

6)

Lack of advanced technology.

Government or private sector should provide new techniques and instruments to develop the farming.

7)

Diversification.

Provision of agricultural insurance to give security to the farmers. Give good knowledge about using variety of crops in the farm.

8)

Market risks.

Government should control the market prices. There should be assurance of minimum fixed price to farmers’ products.

 

A2) The poet has observed the sower closely. Express in your own words the reverence the poet has for the sower.

Answer:

The poet realizes that the old farmer is staying a bit in the farm. The poet fills thrill seeing that he does not end his work just because others have ended their work. The poet feels wonder and respect at his dark working figure. The poet is lost in thoughts (muses) and expresses the importance of the farmer’s work. He declares that his work touches the starry skies (as his work provides food to all). All these show that the poet has observed the sower closely and he has reverence for him. 

 

A3) The poet is prompted to call the sower an ‘august personality’ which means- ‘one who has reached the highest position in his work place’.

Explain this using the following points.

i) Hard work

ii) Perseverance

iii) Dedication

Answer:

i) Hard work: The sower is termed as an august personality' by the poet due to his hard-working nature. The sower continues his work well beyond the working hours. Though the daytime is over, he carries on with his work.

ii) Perseverance: The sower's perseverance can be seen when he marches along the plain to and fro with a determination to sow the seeds and hopes for a good harvest.

iii) Dedication: The dedication of the sower can be seen when he takes the seeds and scattered all around, so that the seeds give him good yield.

 

A4)

(i) Pick out the examples of alliteration from the poem and write them down.

Answer:

Examples of Alliteration:

1) Sitting in a porchway cool,

Sunlight, I see, dying fast,

2) Working hours have well-nigh past.

3) But a sower lingers still,

4) Black and high, his silhouette

5) Dominates the furrows deep!

6) Now to sow the task is set.

7) From his hands the precious grain;

8) Darkness deepens. Fades the light.

9) Are august; and strange; his height

10) Seems to touch the starry skies.

 

(ii) 'Seems to touch the starry skies'. The poet has used word imagery. Describe  the idea and pick out other similar examples from the poem.

Answer:

Imagery can be defined as a writer or speaker's use of words or sentences to create a vivid mental picture or physical sensation.

Examples of Imagery:

1) Sitting in a porchway cool.

2) Sunlight, I see, dying fast.

3) Twilight hastens on to rule.

4) Shadows run across the lands.

5) Old, in rags, he patient stands.

6) Black and high, his silhouette.

7) Dominates the furrows deep.

8) Marches he along the plain.

9) Darkness deepens. Fades the light.

 

A5) (i) Write an appreciation of the poem considering the following points:

About the poem / poet / title.

Theme

Poetic devices, language, style

Special features / novelties / focussing elements

Values, message

Your opinion about the poem

Answer:

See answer of this activity in the following book:

Activity Workbook Std. XI English- By Prof. Tushar Chavan

Price Rs. 280 + Courier/ Postage Rs. 50

Total= Rs. 330

Send Whats App message to- 

9850737199

 

Extra Activities

1) Write the rhyming words of the poem-‘The Sower’.

Answer:

1) cool-rule

2) fast-past

3) lands-stands

4) still-thrill

5) silhouette-set

6) deep-reap

7) plain- grain

8) wide- stride

9) light- height

10) eyes- skies

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Appreciation of Cherry Tree

 The cherry tree is a beautiful narrative poem where the poet gives his experience of planting a tree and later on enjoying the benifits of ...