What makes human beings love life in spite of troubles and sufferings?
Due to natural and beautiful things present in our lives helps us to love our life in spite of troubles and sufferings. These beautiful and natural things us a healing power which helps us to forget all our sadness and sorrows and makes ourselves more loving and happier towards our lives.
What does the poet want for the children of the slums? How can their lives be made to change?
What is the kind of pain and ache that the poet feels?
Tick the item which best answers the following.
(a) The tall girl with her head weighed down means
The girl
(i) is ill and exhausted
(ii) has her head bent with shame
(iii) has untidy hair
(b) The paper-seeming boy with rat’s eyes means
The boy is
(i) sly and secretive
(ii) thin, hungry and weak
(iii) unpleasant looking
(c) The stunted, unlucky heir of twisted bones means
The boy
(i) has an inherited disability
(ii) was short and bony
(d) His eyes live in a dream, A squirrel’s game, in the tree room other than this means
The boy is
(i) full of hope in the future
(ii) mentally ill
(iii) distracted from the lesson
(e) The children’s faces are compared to ‘rootless weeds’
This means they
(i) are insecure
(ii) are ill-fed
(iii) are wasters
Why has the mother been compared to the ‘late winter’s moon’?
Why do you think Aunt Jennifer created animals that are so different from her own character? What might the poet be suggesting, through this difference?
What do the parting words of the poet and her smile signify?
Do you think the poet advocates total inactivity and death?
What will counting upto twelve and keeping still help us achieve?
What pleasure does a beautiful thing give us? Are beautiful things worth treasuring?
The walls of the classroom are decorated with the pictures of ‘Shakespeare’, ‘buildings with domes’, ‘world maps’ and beautiful valleys. How do these contrast with the world of these children?
Of what or of whom is Aunt Jennifer terrified with in the third stanza?
Do you think the poet advocates total inactivity and death?
What was the plea of the folk who had put up the roadside stand?
What will counting upto twelve and keeping still help us achieve?
The city folk who drove through the countryside hardly paid any heed to the roadside stand or to the people who ran it. If at all they did, it was to complain. Which lines bring this out? What was their complaint about?
What is the ‘sadness’ that the poet refers to in the poem?
What symbol from Nature does the poet invoke to say that there can be life under apparent stillness?
What does the line, ‘Therefore are we wreathing a flowery band to bind us to earth’ suggest to you?
The walls of the classroom are decorated with the pictures of ‘Shakespeare’, ‘buildings with domes’, ‘world maps’ and beautiful valleys. How do these contrast with the world of these children?
What is the kind of pain and ache that the poet feels?