GR 10 Term 4 2019 Efal Literature Summary
GR 10 Term 4 2019 Efal Literature Summary
GR 10 Term 4 2019 Efal Literature Summary
FIRST
ADDITIONAL
LANGUAGE
Literature
Summary
Grade 10
TERM 4
A message from the NECT
National Education Collaboration Trust (NECT)
DEAR TEACHERS
This learning programme and training is provided by the National Education Collaboration
Trust (NECT) on behalf of the Department of Basic Education (DBE). We hope that this
programme provides you with additional skills, methodologies and content knowledge that
you can use to teach your learners more effectively.
WHAT IS NECT?
In 2012 our government launched the National Development Plan (NDP) as a way to
eliminate poverty and reduce inequality by the year 2030. Improving education is an
important goal in the NDP which states that 90% of learners will pass Maths, Science and
languages with at least 50% by 2030. This is a very ambitious goal for the DBE to achieve on
its own, so the NECT was established in 2015 to assist in improving education and to help
the DBE reach the NDP goals.
The NECT has successfully brought together groups of relevant people so that we can work
collaboratively to improve education. These groups include the teacher unions, businesses,
religious groups, trusts, foundations and NGOs.
Novels 1
Novel Revision Guidelines 2
Finders Keepers 7
Mhudi 22
Drama 53
Drama Revision Guidelines 54
The African Dustbin 59
Short Stories 69
Short Stories Revision Guidelines 78
Her Three Days 83
I Am Not Talking About That Now 92
Nostalgia 101
Prayer from the Living 109
The Boy Who Painted Christ Black 115
The Darling 122
The Late Bud 132
The Park 139
Poetry 135
Poetry Revision Guidelines 148
No man is an island 151
Cattle in the rain 158
The Will 166
The Clothes 172
Those Winter Sundays 180
Excuses, excuses 188
African Thunderstorm 196
How Poems are Made – A Discredited View 202
I have my father’s voice 210
Handcuffs 217
Introduction
Welcome to the NECT Term 4 EFAL revision programme!
This revision programme is aimed to support teachers by providing an approach to revising
literature and writing in the FET phase.
This is done by providing a set of guidelines that cover literature and writing revision in
a systematic manner. The routines and structures of the lessons, and the methodologies
used, are repeated over and over again. This provides scaffolding and support for teachers
and learners.
In order to implement the Term 4 FET EFAL Learning Programme effectively, the NECT
has provided you with the following materials:
1 A Summary of each prescribed text, together with sample exam questions
• One summary is provided for each prescribed text
• All summaries are structured in the same way
• The summaries include key information to help learners revise and
prepare for exams
• They also include sample exam questions and memoranda
2 A Genre Guideline for each of the writing genres
• For each writing genre there is an example of a well-written text
• There is also a list of important things for learners to study (such as correct the
format, register, useful phrases, etc.) so they are prepared for the writing section
of the exam
3 A Planner & Tracker to help plan lessons and monitor curriculum coverage
(separate document)
• The planner & tracker is useful for preparing all lessons not covered in the booklets
• This document breaks down each approved textbook into CAPS-aligned lessons
TERM 4:
Literature Summary vii
Novels
Novel Revision Guidelines
Literature Summary 3
Novel Revision Guidelines
REVEREND KUMALO
Important actions:
Relationships:
Personality traits:
Physical description:
Activity:
1 Explain to learners what each of the headings (‘Important Actions’, ‘Relationships’,
‘Personality Traits’ and ‘Physical Description’) means. You can give them examples from
the table in the summary if you need to.
2 Split the learners into small groups with no more than 5 or 6 learners in each group.
3 Give each group a different character to work with, and hand out the relevant paper that
you have prepared.
4 Each small group must work together to write down what they know / what ideas they
have about that character.
5 Give the small groups a few minutes to discuss and write down their ideas.
6 Then, instruct the small groups to pass their papers clockwise to the next small group.
7 Instruct learners to read the notes that have been written so far, and then to add their
own ideas to this.
8 Continue until each group has written on each piece of paper.
9 Repeat steps 3-8 for each of the characters.
10 Read through the final papers with the whole class – let them see how much they
collectively know and understand about each character.
11 If learners have left anything information that is not on their A4 pages that you feel
needs to be on there, give them this information from the Character table.
5 Instruct learners stand in two circles (an inner and an outer circle). The learners must
face each other. Each learner should be looking at another learner.
6 Start with the first theme, for example, ‘Apartheid’.
7 Instruct learners in the inner circle to give evidence from the text for ‘Apartheid’
whilst their partner from the outer circle listens. For example, evidence for the theme
‘Apartheid’ could be “The little boy was not allowed to play in the ‘whites only’ park
because he was black”.
8 Repeat the theme.
9 Instruct the learners in the outer circle to add some different evidence for the theme to
that which their partner said.
10 After both partners have had an opportunity give evidence for that theme, instruct the
inner circle to rotate clockwise to find a new partner.
11 Repeat with another theme until you have finished all the themes.
12 You will need to move around the class and make sure that learners are providing
correct evidence. (You can use the notes under ‘Evidence of Themes’ in the
Literature Summary.)
Literature Summary 5
Novel Revision Guidelines
2 Write up the ‘Sample exam questions’ for the corresponding text on the right-hand side
of the chalkboard BEFORE the next lesson.
(NOTE: If you have not finished the previous activities in time, you can use 1 hour of
this time and give the exam questions to the learners to complete for homework and
mark them in class.)
Activity:
1 Explain to learners, that in Grade 12, the examiners use very academic words to ask
questions.
2 Explain that learners need to know what these words mean so that they know what the
examiners are asking them.
3 Go through each of the definitions.
4 Learners must copy the glossary into their books.
5 Learners need to study these words and question types as part of their exam
preparation. (NOTE: Learners only have to do this for Text 1 Revision. i.e. It can be
excluded when revising the second text.)
6 Turn to the ‘Sample Exam Questions’ section in the Literature Summary.
7 Tell learners to take out their copies of the text.
8 Tell learners the page and paragraph numbers of the extract used for the sample exam
questions. Tell learners to mark this extract in pencil.
9 Learners must answer the questions on the right hand side of the board in their exercise
books. (NOTE: If learners are going to do this for homework, they must write the
questions off the board and answer them at home.)
10 Go through the answers with the class.
PLOT SUMMARY
Lufuno Mukwevho is a girl from Johannesburg who has just moved to Cape Town. Her
parents have found work in a bread factory. Lufuno misses her best friend, Dudu, and
thinks about her all the time. At the beginning of the story, we think that Dudu is still in
Johannesburg, but then we find out that she is actually dead.
Lufuno has ordinary teenage problems, such as looking after her annoying little sister,
Tshilidzi. Her biggest problem in the story is that she has to go to a new school: Victory
High School. Lufuno and her family are VhaVenda. Their skin is darker than most South
Africans’. In her new high school, everyone speaks isiXhosa and she worries about being
new and different to all the other learners.
On Lufuno’s first day, a girl named Sindi bullies her. Sindi is jealous that Lufuno is getting
attention from a boy, Mandla, the good-looking star of the soccer team and also a chief ’s
son. Some other learners also tease Lufuno about her dark skin and her VhaVenda heritage.
Lufuno feels angry and powerless. She concentrates on making up fantasy romantic film
stories to tell Tshilidzi, instead of dealing with the difficult things in her daily life.
Soon, however, she finds new friends: Chantelle and Noki. These friends show Lufuno how
to stand up to a group of boys who harass her, and how to shout back at them.
Lufuno and Mandla like each other. One day Sindi pushes Lufuno down, and Lufuno’s bead
bracelet falls to the floor. Mandla helps Lufuno up and rescues the bracelet. The bracelet is
very special to Lufuno because her grandmother made it. Mandla keeps it so she has to see
him again. Mandla tells Lufuno ‘Finders, keepers’. This is a shortened version of the saying,
‘Finders, keepers; losers, weepers’. This saying means it is good luck for the person who
finds something unexpectedly as they can keep it, and too bad for the person who has lost
it, as it is no longer theirs.
Mandla and Lufuno want to date, but both their families do not want them to be together.
Lufuno’s parents don’t want her to date anyone. Mandla’s family objects because his father,
the chief, is very strict. He wants Mandla to prepare to serve as chief. He and Mandla do
not agree on many issues. Mandla is also especially angry with his father and cannot talk to
him. Mandla thinks that it is his father’s fault that his sister, Nandi, died of asthma.
Lufuno and Mandla disobey their parents and meet each other secretly. They have
both experienced someone close to them die: for Lufuno, it is her friend Dudu, and for
Mandla, it is his sister Nandi. Their friendship helps them to accept that their two loved
FINDERS KEEPERS
ones are gone.
The climax of the story comes when there is a strike at the bread factory where Lufuno’s
parents work. The union wants to punish everyone who does not join the strike, but the
workers need money to survive. Lufuno’s family fears they will be attacked because they are
VhaVenda, and because they do not join the strike. Mandla’s father and Lufuno’s family are
on opposite sides of the strike. The strikers attack Baba Mukwevho because he goes in to
work, and his leg is badly injured.
When her parents go in to work, Tshilidzi goes missing. No one realises that she has gone
to hide in her own house. Then someone sets the Mukwevho house on fire while Tshilidzi
is stuck inside. Mandla comes to check that Lufuno is alright. She is not there, but he goes
into the house and rescues little Tshilidzi, with his father’s help. The chief admits that he was
wrong to ignore the seriousness of Nandi’s asthma attack and that Nandi had been in real
trouble with her asthma. He apologises to Mandla, and Mandla forgives his father. Lufuno’s
family is very grateful that Tshilidzi is safe, and the two families realise that they both want
the best for their children. They also realise that they both want to keep their culture alive.
They accept that Lufuno and Mandla are together. Mandla returns Lufuno’s bead bracelet
to her. Lufuno finally understands that she does not have to make up fantasy love stories
anymore, because she has her own real love, with her family, her friends, and with Mandla.
SETTING
The novel is set in a township in present-day (now) Cape Town. Sometimes, Lufuno thinks
about her grandmother’s village (the past) in rural Venda, and misses the landscape, her
friend Dudu, and her grandmother.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
There is a lot of competition among people for employment in South Africa. Some
urban (city) people worry that rural (country) people and foreigners (people from other
countries) will take their jobs.
Unions are organisations that are supposed to protect workers’ rights. Sometimes workers
have to strike (not work) until their employees negotiate with them for better conditions
(such as more pay or fewer hours). Every worker has to join the strike in order for it
to be successful. Those who come to work during the strike are often punished by the
other workers.
Literature Summary 9
Novel: Finders Keepers
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their own
mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
8 The Mukwevho family’s house is burned down.
9 Tshilidzi goes missing.
10 Lufuno and Mandla plant two trees.
7 Baba Mukwevho’s leg is injured.
6 Lufuno is almost hit by a taxi.
3 Lufuno meets Mandla.
5 The workers go on strike at the bread factory.
1 Lufuno moves to Cape Town.
4 Mandla keeps Lufuno’s bead bracelet.
2 Sindi shoves Lufuno to the ground.
FINDERS KEEPERS
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
to bully (v.) / a bully (n.) Bullying someone is when you make them feel bad about themselves by
insulting them, or when you make them do something they don’t want
to do. Some bullies bully by physically injuring others. Often the bully will
only leave a person alone when they can see that they have successfully
hurt them emotionally or physically. This is called harassment. In ‘Finders
Keepers’, Sindi tries to bully Lufuno by making Lufuno feel bad because
her skin is dark and because she is an outsider (Lufuno did not grow up
in Cape Town). The factory workers on strike also try to bully (intimidate)
Lufuno’s parents into not going to work.
communal (adj.) / A community is a group of people who live together, with similar feelings,
a community (n.) ideas or beliefs. The opposite of ‘community’ is ‘individual’. In ‘Finders
Keepers’, Lufuno’s community is the Mukwevhos’ neighbours, Lufuno’s
friends at school, and the striking workers.
a duty (n.) Your duty is a thing you have to do because people expect you to do it.
‘Duty’ is similar to ‘responsibility’ or ‘job’. In ‘Finders Keepers’, Lufuno’s
duty is to look after Tshilidzi. Mandla’s duty is to train to be chief after he
finishes school.
a fantasy (n.) A fantasy is in your imagination; unreal ideas or made-up stories in your
head. ‘In Finders Keepers’, Lufuno tells (untrue) romantic film stories to
entertain Tshilidzi.
an individual (n.) An individual is one person (the opposite of community). In ‘Finders
Keepers’, Mandla wants to be an individual because he wants to be his
own man, not in his father’s shadow. He does not want to fit the mould of
what his father (and community) expects of him.
to negotiate (v.) When you negotiate, you have peaceful talks to decide what is fair to
everyone in a situation where there is conflict (trouble). In ‘Finders
Keepers’, the strikers want to negotiate better working conditions with
their bosses at the bread factory.
prejudiced (adj.) If you are prejudiced, you think other people or groups are not as good as
you are, without knowing them. ‘Prejudiced’ is the opposite of ‘tolerant’. In
‘Finders Keepers’, Sindi is prejudiced against Lufuno because Lufuno has
darker skin than she does, and has a Venda (not Xhosa) heritage. Sindi’s
prejudice causes her to be mean to Lufuno.
reality (n.) Reality is things as they actually (really) are. At the end of ‘Finders Keepers’,
Lufuno understands that her reality is quite good, and she begins to
enjoy her real life with her family, her friends and Mandla. She stops living
through her past, but rather lives in her real life.
rural (adj.) The rural areas are the areas in the countryside (the opposite of urban,
which is in the cities). In ‘Finders Keepers’, Lufuno thinks back fondly to her
childhood visits to her grandmother’s village in a rural area.
strict (adj.) Strict means having lots of rules and set ideas about how things should
be. In ‘Finders Keepers’, both sets of parents have strict ideas about
keeping their cultural traditions alive. Mandla’s father wants him to be the
next chief. Lufuno’s parents do not want her to date.
Literature Summary 11
Novel: Finders Keepers
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
a strike (n.) A strike is when people (or a union) decide to refuse to work in order
to get something from their employer. In order for a strike to work
properly, everyone in the union must not work. During a strike, the
workers negotiate (talk) with their employers to improve work hours and
workplaces. In ‘Finders Keepers’, the bread factory workers go on strike
because they want more pay and fairer working hours.
tolerance (n.) Tolerance is the understanding and acceptance of beliefs of other people
or groups that are different to our own (the opposite of prejudice). In
‘Finders Keepers’, Mandla’s father learns that he must tolerate Mandla’s
ideas and let his son have more freedom. Lufuno’s schoolmates also get
to know her and like her – they become tolerant of her differences.
tradition (n.) Tradition is the habits and cultural practices passed down from older
people to younger people. In ‘Finders Keepers’, Mandla’s father expects
people to respect and obey him because in isiXhosa tradition, that is what
happens.
a union (n.) A union is a workers’ group that negotiates for their rights. In ‘Finders
Keepers’, the bread factory workers belong to a union. The union calls for
the strike to start.
urban (adj.) Urban areas are city areas (urban is the opposite of rural). In ‘Finders
Keepers’, Cape Town is the urban setting.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Lufuno moves to Cape Town and goes to a new school.
2 Lufuno gets bullied, but she learns how to stand up for herself.
3 Lufuno starts dating Mandla behind her parents’ backs.
4 Lufuno meets Mandla at the playground secretly, where thugs try to
scare them. Mandla’s father has to rescue them.
5 After a party, she runs into the road and is nearly hit by a taxi.
Mandla rescues her.
RELATIONSHIPS She is Mandla’s girlfriend; Tshilidzi’s older sister and the main character
of the novel.
PERSONALITY TRAITS Lufuno is caring, dreamy and intelligent. She has an active imagination,
and so she makes up stories for films that do not exist, to entertain
herself and her little sister Tshilidzi. Lufuno is almost always brave and
loving in the story. She keeps the memory of Dudu alive in the stories
she tells and the trees that she plants. She is a loving girlfriend to
Mandla.
PHYSICAL Lufuno is dark-skinned, and has cornrow braids. The other girls have
DESCRIPTION complicated weaves and wigs.
FINDERS KEEPERS
MAJOR CHARACTERS
Lufuno learns how to stand up to the boys who bully her, and shouts
back at them. More importantly, Lufuno accepts that Dudu is dead and
CHANGES
that her imagination is not as important as looking after her family that
is still alive and well. She learns to live in the present, rather than dwell
on (think about) the past.
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Mandla keeps Lufuno’s bracelet so she has to be friends with him. He
persuades her to like him.
2 Mandla stands up to Dumi and his friends. He also rejects (says no
to) Sindi, even though she is the coolest girl at school. Mandla is not
afraid to be different.
3 Mandla disagrees with his father about his duties in the rural areas
that are expected of him, as he is the chief’s son.
4 Mandla keeps seeing Lufuno, even though his father does not want
him to.
5 Most importantly, Mandla is heroic (a hero) in the fire, because he
pulls Tshilidzi out of the burning house.
RELATIONSHIPS He is the chief’s son, and also a main character. He becomes Lufuno’s
boyfriend even though she is not popular.
PERSONALITY TRAITS Mandla is resentful, rebellious and angry because he thinks his father
should have done more to save his sister Nandi from dying from an
asthma attack. He is also brave and unafraid to be different: both by
going out with Lufuno and by defying his father’s plan for him to be
chief.
PHYSICAL He is strong, handsome and athletic, because he is talented at soccer.
DESCRIPTION
CHANGES Mandla’s father admits he was wrong to ignore Nandi’s asthma attack,
and so Mandla learns to forgive his father for her death.
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Mma and Baba Mukwevho get jobs at a bread factory and move their
family from Johannesburg to Cape Town.
2 Her parents forbid Lufuno from seeing Mandla, which Lufuno thinks
is unfair. They also give Lufuno chores to do.
3 Mma and Baba both go to work even though the strike is on.
4 Baba Mukwevho is attacked by the workers and his leg is injured.
5 At the end of the book, Lufuno’s parents accept that Lufuno and
Mandla are in a relationship.
RELATIONSHIPS Mma Mukwevho and Baba Mukwevho are Lufuno and Tshilidzi’s parents.
Tshilidzi is Lufuno’s annoying little sister.
Literature Summary 13
Novel: Finders Keepers
MAJOR CHARACTERS
PERSONALITY TRAITS Mma and Baba are caring and hard-working people. Because they work
hard at the bread factory, their daughters have enough to eat and a
place to live. They are also proud of their Venda heritage. They want to
keep some traditions alive, such as not dating outside their community.
They are also spiritual people: Mma loves listening to her Christian
gospel music.
Tshilidzi is a typical playful, loving, curious little girl. She is naughty
because she often hides from her family. This gets her into serious
trouble when she is trapped in the fire at their house, and Mandla has to
risk his life to save her.
PHYSICAL The whole family is darker-skinned than the community around them
DESCRIPTION because of their Venda roots. Baba has a hurt leg from the attack by the
striking workers.
CHANGES At the end of the story, Baba and Mma thank Mandla for saving Tshilidzi.
They come to accept that Lufuno can make her own decisions, so they
allow Lufuno and Mandla to be a couple. Tshilidzi understands that she
must be more responsible and not make her family worry about where
she is.
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 He tries to train Mandla to be the next chief, and takes him out of
school whenever he thinks Mandla should be learning how to be
chief.
2 He is partly responsible for the death of his daughter Nandi, because
he did not get her to a hospital the night she had a severe asthma
attack, and she died as a result.
3 He saves Lufuno and Mandla from the gang in the deserted
playground.
4 Near the end of the story, he drives Mandla to the Mukwevhos’
house and so enables the rescue of Tshilidzi.
5 Chief Nkosi accepts that Mandla and Lufuno are in a relationship.
RELATIONSHIPS He is the chief of his community, as well as Mandla’s father. He expects
obedience from his subjects (his people) as well as his son.
PERSONALITY TRAITS The chief is powerful, commanding, dominant and stubborn. When he
speaks, he expects everyone to listen. However, he is also polite and
forward thinking. He cares about the people in his village, as we see
when he studies solar technology to improve the lives of his villagers.
PHYSICAL He is large; he controls a room when he is in it. People obey him.
DESCRIPTION
CHANGES The chief apologises to Mandla about Nandi’s death. He tells his son
that he was wrong to wait before taking her to the hospital. The chief
becomes more tolerant of others and accepts that Mandla is his own
person. He allows Lufuno and Mandla to see each other, and he is polite
to her.
FINDERS KEEPERS
THEME 1
PREDJUDICE VERSUS TOLERANCE
Prejudice is thinking that a person or a group is bad or inferior to you before you really
know them. Sometimes, prejudice leads people to be mean and bully others. Tolerance is
learning to respect other people who are different from us.
THEME 2
INDIVIDUALS AND COMMUNITIES
Friends, family and communities put pressure on people to do things in a particular way for
the benefit of the group as a whole. Sometimes, individuals struggle with this, when what
they want is different from what the group (be it family, friends or community) wants. The
characters in the novel struggle to balance their individual wants with their community’s,
family’s or friends’ wants.
Literature Summary 15
Novel: Finders Keepers
to work. Both the individual needs (for salaried work) and the group’s needs (for fairer
working conditions) are achieved by the end of the novel.
THEME 3
DIFFERENT KINDS OF LOVE
There are various ways of connecting with people – familial (family), friendly (platonic)
and romantic. Love has the power to heal us as we form new emotional connections
with people.
The falling action happens when Mandla and his father rescue Tshilidzi, and Lufuno’s
FINDERS KEEPERS
family is safe.
In the denouement and resolution (where the story is resolved), the families decide to trust
one another. Lufuno and Mandla are allowed to see each other.
There is an epilogue at the end, to balance the prologue at the beginning of the story. The
epilogue tells us what finally happens to all the characters. Lufuno and Mandla plant two
trees together. Lufuno tells us that she is happy to live in the real world now. She is able to
focus on the love of her family, her friends and Mandla. She does not need to live in the
past anymore.
2 NARRATIVE VOICE:
The narrative voice in a story is the angle from which the story is told. Sometimes we see
the story through the eyes of a character (a person in the story) and sometimes we see it
through the eyes of an omniscient narrator (a narrator who is not in the story, but knows
the thoughts and feelings of the characters). There are two points of view in this story:
Lufuno’s point of view and Mandla’s point of view.
a Lufuno starts telling (narrating) the story. She says ‘I’and ‘we’, so we know that the story
is from her perspective, in the first person. The advantage (good thing) about this is
that the reader knows her thoughts and feelings. We get lots of intimate, personal details
and secrets. It is reflective like a mirror: we see what she reflects on, or thinks about, as
well as what happens from her perspective (point of view). The disadvantage (bad thing)
is that it is a biased or one-sided (subjective) view only.
b The second point of view is Mandla’s. When he talks, the reader understands the story
from his perspective. Mandla uses third-person narration. Words such as ‘he’, ‘she’ and
‘they’ tell us this. The advantage of the third-person narration is that we get a more
trustworthy, objective point of view. The disadvantage is that there are fewer details.
3 REGISTER:
The writer chooses a certain register (level of language) to make the story feel believable or
like reality.
a In the text, the writer, Rosamund Haden, uses code-switching (when more than one
language is used in a sentence). She does this because this is how people often really
speak. We see code-switching when Lufuno says (on pg. 30): ‘Ndo livhuwa, Mma’. This
means ‘Thank you, Mother,’ in Tshivenda.
b The writer also uses slang (very informal language). This makes the dialogue (spoken
language used by the characters) easy to relate to, as it is how people really speak.
Lufuno uses slang on pg. 8: ‘smileys’ (sheeps’ heads) and ‘chiskop’ (a short style of
haircut). There are many other examples throughout the novel.
Literature Summary 17
Novel: Finders Keepers
4 FIGURES OF SPEECH:
There are different figures of speech in the novel. Making out the meaning of figures of
speech requires us to think about the literal (actual) meaning of what is being said.
Then, we work out the extra, figurative meaning afterwards.
a Figurative language compares two things (using metaphors and similes). When you
compare two things, you show how they are the same. Here are some examples of
metaphorical or figurative language in ‘Finders Keepers’:
• ‘Their buoyant spirits’ on pg. 93: ‘buoyant’ literally means light or floating like
a balloon. The writer compares the girls’ spirits to something that has no heavy
weight. The figurative meaning is that they have no worries.
• ‘wobbling on her high heels’ on pg. 96: ‘wobbling’ literally means unsteady. The
girl, however, is also aware that she is in a dangerous position, so we can say she is
‘having a wobble’ which means she is panicking about her situation. The figurative
meaning of ‘wobble’ is to panic.
b An idiom is a phrase or an expression, often used in a particular language, that has
mostly a figurative meaning.The reader has to work out the meaning because it isn’t
literal. Here are some examples of idiomatic language, as well as their meanings, in
‘Finders Keepers’:
• ‘show you the ropes’ on pg. 2: to explain how things work
• ‘daggers in her eyes’ on pg. 11: to give someone a bad look
• ‘the silent treatment’ on pg. 75: to ignore someone and refuse to talk to them
because you are angry about something they have done.
c A symbol is a real (literal) thing which represents (stands for) something else with a
figurative meaning. In ‘Finders Keepers’ there are two symbols:
• Lufuno has a beaded bracelet made by her grandmother in Venda. The figurative
symbol of the bracelet is her grandmother’s love for Lufuno, as well as a reminder
of her culture and traditions. The bracelet represents (stands for) love, acceptance
and security for Lufuno. She feels very insecure when Mandla has her bracelet as she
does not have it as a reminder of her grandmother’s love.
• Lufuno and Mandla plant two trees at the end of the story. As they grow, they
will give shade to the people in the park. But they are also a memorial (like a
gravestone), because they are a symbol of their loved ones, Dudu and Nandi who
have passed away. When Lufuno and Mandla look at the trees, they will remember
Dudu and Nandi. As the two trees grow, their branches will touch and intertwine.
They are also a symbol of time passing, as well as Lufuno and Mandla’s love
growing stronger.
5 TONE:
Tone tells us what the characters sound like when they speak. A speaker’s tone also tells us
how they are feeling at that particular time. In ‘Finders Keepers’, the writer uses parts of
speech to give us more information about the tone:
a Adverbs tell us how characters’ voices sound, so we know how they are feeling. On
FINDERS KEEPERS
pg. 36, Mandla’s teammates are full of joy because they have won their soccer match.
‘His teammates shouted jubilantly’ tells us that they were very happy. Most, but not all,
adverbs end with the suffix ‘-ly’.
b Adjectives describe nouns, so they tell us more about people or things. On pages
38–39, Mandla’s aunt wants to discuss Mandla’s attitude to his father. We learn that he
is ‘defensive’ to his aunt telling him to stop blaming his father for Nandi’s death. He says
that he should not feel so ‘defensive’ towards his aunt. This helps us to understand that
he wants to defend himself against his aunt telling him to stop blaming his father for
Nandi’s death. When someone is defensive, they are ready to argue their point of view.
c Strong or unusual verbs tell us what people feel too. On pg. 51, Lufuno sees black smoke
in the distance and is worried that it is the factory where her parents work: “’It’s OK, it’s
just the rubbish dump,’ he reassures me.” The author has used the word ‘reassures’ rather
than ‘says’, so that we can see that Mandla is kind and caring and that he can sense
Lufuno’s fears.
EPILOGUE
The strike is over and summer’s here. The wind blows fresh and clean from
the sea. My father’s leg is better, and everyone has gone back to work. On
weekends my parents take us down to the beach. My father is teaching us
to swim. We laugh at Mma who refuses to swim in the sea.
Mandla’s father is in back in the Eastern Cape. But before he left he allowed 5
me to visit Mandla, and was polite and kind. He sent regards to my mother
and father and when he is back we are going to have a braai together.
Now, in my mother’s eyes, Mandla can do no wrong.
Mandla and I see each other nearly every day. I love to watch him at soccer
practice. He is in the small video clips I take on my cell phone. These are 10
real movies, not fantasies. I am happy to live in the real world now. It’s not
such a lonely place any more. Mandla says I am good at making films and
that one day I should be a film director. I make him laugh with my stories.
It is evening. We go to plant two trees in the park. One for Dudu and one
for Nandi. They are small now, but we will watch them grow, see how 15
their branches intertwine. As we gently pack soil around our trees’ roots,
I remember Dudu’s clear, laughing voice as she used to say, “Don’t cry
because it’s over. Smile because it happened”.
Mandla places a circle of small rocks around the tree saplings.
Together we walk home in the dusk, hand in hand. 20
Literature Summary 19
Novel: Finders Keepers
Lufuno (Mukwevho)(3)
b Choose the correct answer to complete the following sentence. Write only the
letter (A-D) next to the number 2, in your answer. [1]
The point of view in the Epilogue is …
A first-person narration
B second-person narration
C third-person narration
D omniscient narration
c Quote one word from the Epilogue to back up your answer to question 1 (b)
above. [1]
‘We’ (3) OR
‘I’ (3)
2 How did Lufuno’s father’s leg get hurt? [2]
He was attacked and injured by the other striking workers (3) because he refused to
strike (3) and still came in to work.
3 Refer to the sentence: ‘Now, in my mother’s eyes, Mandla can do no wrong’.
a ‘In my mother’s eyes’ is a figure of speech. In your own words, explain the
figurative meaning. [1]
In her opinion. (3) OR
The way she thinks about things. (3)
b What ‘wrong’ did Mandla do before, in Lufuno’s mother’s eyes? [2]
He dated Lufuno (3) even when the Mukwevhos forbade it. He was disobedient and
disrespectful (3) for not listening to their family rules.
4 Refer to the sentence: ‘These are real movies, not fantasies.’
a Describe the fantasies that the character used to talk about. [2]
Lufuno used to tell Tshilidzi stories (3) to help her go to sleep. The stories were
always far-fetched, like soap operas or movies. (3)
b How has the character in this extract changed? What changed them? [3]
Lufuno used to live in this dream world (3) because it helped her to feel close to
Dudu. (3) The girls used to make up stories together. Lufuno has changed because
now she wants to live in the present (3) and appreciate her life as it is now. She
doesn’t want to live in the past or in a world of imaginary characters (3) because
there are real people (3) to be involved with now. [Any 3 correct answers]
c In your opinion, is this a positive (good) or a negative (bad) change? Why? [2]
I think this is a good, positive change, because it has helped Lufuno to heal (3).
FINDERS KEEPERS
Now she is able to remember Dudu in a happy way, instead of feeling pain (3)
whenever she thinks of her lost dead friend. Also, Dudu would want Lufuno to have
a happy, joyful life.
(NOTE: Learners must state whether or not they think the change is negative
or positive, but no marks are awarded for this. Marks are awarded for a detailed
explanation of why the change is positive or negative.)
5 The trees are symbols: they have another meaning. Comment on why the trees’
growth is important. [2]
The trees are small now, but as time passes (3), their branches will grow together (3).
The trees are a symbol of human relationships (3), and how Nandi and Dudu are joined
because of Mandla and Lufuno’s relationship. Also, like the branches of trees, we are
stronger together (3), and we need each other to lean on (3). [Any 2 correct answers]
TOTAL: 17 MARKS
Literature Summary 21
Novel: Mhudi
Novel: Mhudi
GENRE: Novel
TITLE: MHUDI
MHUDI
PLOT SUMMARY
NOTE: In the novel ‘Mhudi’, the word ‘Hottentot’ (sic) is used. This is a derogatory and
offensive term. The term used today is ‘Khoi San’. In this summary we have used ‘Khoi San’
rather than ‘Hottentot’ (sic).
The Matabele have conquered the Barolong clans and demand that tributes (a form of tax)
are paid yearly to them. One year, when the tax collectors Bhoya and Bangela arrive to
collect the taxes, Chief Tauana (the chief of the Barolong clan) orders their deaths. Then
Mzilikazi, chief of the Matabele, attacks Kunana, the capital of the Barolong, (nowadays
Setlagole) in revenge. The Matabele do not only kill the warriors but also the unarmed
women and children in a very brutal way. Ra-Thaga is the son of a wealthy Barolong
chieftain. His family is killed, but he survives. There are some scattered Barolong survivors.
Ra-Thaga spends nearly two months alone wandering in search of his people. Unexpectedly,
he meets Mhudi, a young girl who is fleeing from a lion. She has been wandering in the
bush like Ra-Thaga. Together, they scare the lion off and take the eland it has killed. They
eat a meal together and she tells him that she, too, has lost her family in the massacre
(killing). She explains how she has survived – she managed to hide away from the Matabele
men who were following her. She tells Ra-Thaga that she has come across a number of wild
animals in the bush. She tells him that she had a dream about being attacked by a lion but
being saved by a man. She explains that the dream has come true: she found Ra-Thaga
while running from a lion.
Meanwhile, the Matabele are celebrating their victory with a feast at Inzwinyani, their
capital city. Mzilikazi has invited other chiefs from the Bechuana (Setswana) tribes to
feast with the Matabele, as a way to show his power and to warn the other chiefs not to
go against him. It is a magnificent celebration. The Matabele divide the cattle that they
have taken from the Barolong. Langa, Mzilikazi’s son, returns from leading the fighting
in Kunana and the people praise him highly. However, Gubuza, the commander-in-chief,
warns the Matabele warriors. He says that there are many cattle owners who will want to get
their cattle back. He means that the Barolong will want revenge for the terrible massacre.
However, Mzilikazi doesn’t listen to this warning. Instead, he speaks of further plans to
conquer more territories.
In the forest, Mhudi and Ra-Thaga have become husband and wife and have built a home
together. When she falls ill with a fever, Ra-Thaga goes to find a medicinal herb to help her.
Literature Summary 23
Novel: Mhudi
On his return, he finds a lion climbing over the outside fence. He grabs it by the tail and
shouts for Mhudi to bring his assegai (iron-tipped spear). He gives her instructions to kill
the lion. She listens carefully, and successfully kills it. Mhudi tells Ra-Thaga a story about
another time she came face-to-face with a lion. He has heard the famous story before, but
he did not know the name of the girl involved. He is surprised to find out that Mhudi was
the girl in the famous story. Mhudi and Ra-Thaga have many conversations. Mhudi tells
him she turned down many men’s offers of marriage. In addition, Mhudi and Ra-Thaga
have arguments about whether Mzilikazi had the right to attack the Barolong. Ra-Thaga
believes the land rightfully belongs to Mzilikazi because he conquered it, but Mhudi
disagrees. Through these conversations, we see that Mhudi is strong and opinionated.
One day, a group of Koranna hunters come past and persuade Ra-Thaga and Mhudi to leave
the forest and come with them to their city, Mamuse. Ra-Thaga and Mhudi leave the bush
to make their home in Mamuse. The Koranna Chief, Massouw, likes Ra-Thaga very much.
Mhudi does not trust the Koranna headman, Ton-Qon. Ra-Thaga thinks she is mistaken.
He decides to go hunting with a hunting party lead by Ton-Qon. Ton-Qon does not leave at
the same time as the hunting party – he plans to follow the party the next day on horseback.
While Ra-Thaga is away, Ton-Qon visits Mhudi. He and Mhudi speak. From what Ton-Qon
says, Mhudi realises that he plans to kill Ra-Thaga in the bush so that he can marry her. She
leaves the city and walks for two days through the bush to find Ra-Thaga. In the meantime,
Ra-Thaga has found a tiger. He calls Ton-Qon to shoot it with his gun, but Ton-Qon lets
the animal attack Ra-Thaga and leaves him to die. Mhudi finds Ra-Thaga and nurses him
back to health. Ton-Qon is put on trial. The Chief shows mercy and fines him rather than
sentencing him to death. Through this event, we see that Mhudi is very wise, brave and
determined.
After seven years, Ra-Thaga receives news that Chief Tauana survived the massacre and has
moved with the Seleka branch of the Barolong to Thaba Nchu. Mhudi and Ra-Thaga leave
Mamuse for Thaba Nchu. They now have two sons. When they finally arrive in Thaba Nchu,
Mhudi finds her cousin, Baile. She thought Baile had been killed in the massacre, but is
overjoyed to find her still alive.
White men arrive in the area of Thaba Nchu. Sarel Cilliers is the leader of this group of
Boers. They are Dutch immigrants from the Cape Colony. They have left the Cape in their
wagons because they feel oppressed by the English rulers. They agree to be allies (fight
together with the Barolong) against Mzilikazi.
Umnandi is Mzilikazi’s favourite wife. She is beautiful and charming; she cooks and
brews beer excellently; she is popular among the people because she goes out of her way
to help those in need. She is not able to have children. She wants to talk to a witch doctor
from Zululand about this problem. One of Mzilikazi’s other wives, Nomenti, is jealous
of Umnandi and plots against her because Umnandi is Mzilikazi’s favourite wife. One
of Umnandi’s maids, Nomsindo, warns Umnandi about Nomenti’s plot. Nomsindo and
Umnandi flee together.
The Matabele lose a battle against the Bangwaketse (near relatives of the Barolong) and the
bone-throwers say it is because of the massacre of Kunana. They say the Barolong have cast
(made) spells that affect the Matabele. They believe that the king should move the Matabele
people north, away from the Barolong spells. However, Mzilikazi’s pride will not allow that
– he sees it as running away. Instead he threatens the witch doctors. He demands that they
make a potion to stop the Barolong spells or he will kill them. He also decides to kill the
soldiers who survived the lost battle. Messengers come to report that herd boys have been
killed by ‘three red devils’ (pg. 66).
MHUDI
(The devils are the Boers with their guns – the Matabele have never seen guns before).
Mzilikazi discovers that Umnandi is missing. All of this bad news makes Mzilikazi very
angry. He gives orders to kill the thirty witch doctors and the soldiers. Gubuza stops the
killing of the soldiers by explaining that he needs the soldiers to fight, but the witch doctors
are killed.
At Thaba Nchu, the chiefs of the two clans hold a nine-mile foot race. The winner gets a
heifer (a young bull) from the chief of the opposing clan. The losing chief also provides
a huge bullock to be slaughtered for the festivities. Ra-Thaga wins the race. However, he
forgets to take the white ox-tail switch (which is one of the rules of the race). Some young
men argue about whether Ra-Thaga can really be the winner if he did not have the switch in
his hand. One young man hits the other with a stone and makes him bleed. Chief Moroka
(Chief of the Seleka branch of the Barolong) is angry to hear of this. He calls for the young
man who committed the injury to come before him. The Chief says that anyone who wants
to spill human blood should go and join the Matabele. The crowd asks for mercy for the
young man. The Chief shows mercy in his judgement – he says the young man’s father must
give two bullocks to be slaughtered for the men who ran in the race.
After this judgement, one of the Boers comes to tell the chiefs that the Matabele have
attacked them and stolen all their oxen and sheep. Chief Moroka sends oxen to help the
Boers move their wagons to a nearby place under the protection of the Barolong. The Boers
set up camp there and they call the place Moroka’s Hoek after Chief Moroka. Ra-Thaga and
De Villiers, a young Boer, become friends. They teach each other their languages. Ra-Thaga
visits the Boer settlement and admires much about them. However, Mhudi does not share
his feelings of admiration for the Boers, especially after she sees a Boer woman mistreating
one of the Khoi San servants. Ra-Thaga is mistreated when he drinks water from one of
the Boers’ drinking vessels. One of the Boer children shouts and points at him. Many other
Boers come running. They seem angry with him. De Villiers explains that the Boers never
allow black people to drink out of their vessels. Ra-Thaga must admit that Mhudi is perhaps
right about the Boers.
A young man called Rantsau is chosen to go spy on the Matabele. Ra-Thaga, De Villiers and
another young Boer, Viljoen, are sent together with Rantsau. They hide from the Matabele
among Chief Mogale’s people who live in the Mogaliesberg area. Mogale’s people have not
seen a white man before and cannot stop looking at and touching the white men. Rantsau
and Ra-Thaga make secret trips into Matabele territory to spy on the Matabele. The people
Literature Summary 25
Novel: Mhudi
at Thaba Nchu hear no news of the spies for a month. The Boers are impatient and send out
a Boer party to search for them. They return after ten days with no news of the spies but say
they saw some Matabele scouts and fired shots at them. It turns out that they have killed
two Basuto men and injured two others, which makes Chief Moseme of the Basuto clan
very angry. Chief Moroka has to intervene to stop the Basuto from attacking the Boers. To
make matters worse, some travellers bring news of the spies. These events make the Boers
look quite foolish.
Chief Moroka has to rule on another domestic incident. Two important families in
Barolong society are fighting because the husbands and wives have been unfaithful to each
other. The fighting between the relatives has got so bad that the children have a physical
fight. Chief Moroka has to settle the dispute. He listens to the husbands, the wives, and the
relatives. The hearings last all day. In the afternoon, Sarel Cilliers and six other Boers arrive
and are invited to give their opinions. Sarel Cilliers says that the Boers believe that husbands
and wives must stay married even if they are unhappy. Chief Moroka declares that everyone
has had a chance to say something about this matter; even the view of the white men has
been heard. Chief Moroka explains the outcome of a similar case in the past, where the
husbands were each fined five head of cattle and the wives were whipped and ordered to
return to their original husbands. They were all threatened with death if they did it again.
However, Chief Moroka chooses a wiser and kinder solution. He says the husbands must
swap wives, which is what they all want. He also makes each of the men pay one bullock
for the children who fought. Everyone is very satisfied with this decision. Here, we see the
kindness and wisdom of Chief Moroka.
At Inzwinyani, there is much speculation (talk) about what happened to Umnandi. The king
is very angry that his favourite wife has gone missing, and he kills anyone who he believes is
lying to him. He has sent huge search parties to find Umnandi.
Nomenti asks Umpitimpiti to tell Mzilikazi about Umnandi’s ‘affair’ with the Zulu doctor
and then to report what Mzilikazi’s reaction was to hearing about Umnandi and the doctor’s
relationship. We learn that Umpitimpiti was too afraid to tell Mzilikazi about it and is now
very scared of what is going to happen to him if the king finds out he has been withholding
(keeping) information. He sets out to find the doctor, but we learn that he has already fled
from Inzwinyani. He has fled because he is scared of what the king will do when he finds
out that he was the doctor in Umnandi’s room. He is also scared that the king will find out
he put a curse on Umnandi. Umpitimpiti also flees (runs away) from Inzwinyani.
Rantsau, Ra-Thaga, De Villiers and Viljoen are away for so long that the Boers again
become impatient for news of them. They send another young Boer, Van Zyl, with two
Barolong guides to find them. Van Zyl and his two guides are captured by Matabele scouts
and taken to Mzilikazi.
News comes back to Thaba Nchu that Ra-Thaga, De Villiers, and Viljoen have been found
and killed by the Matabele. Mhudi mourns the loss of Ra-Thaga. She is surprised when Ra-
Thaga and De Villiers return. They explain that it was actually Van Zyl and his guides who
were captured – they have been safe all along.
The Matabele continue to make raids on other tribes from time to time. On one
occasion, they steal some of King Moshueshue’s cattle and try to attack his territory.
King Moshueshue’s soldiers attack the Matabele warriors in retaliation. However,
Moshueshue knows that Mzilikazi will kill the Matabele warriors for being defeated in
battle. Moshueshue sends a herd of bullocks after the warriors with a friendly message. The
message says that he believes the Matabele warriors were so hungry that they had to steal
some of his cattle. Moshueshue gives them the cattle so that they will not be hungry on their
journey home. He also sends a white ox as special gift for Mzilikazi. He asks that the lives of
the Matabele warriors be spared in exchange for this gift. All of the Matabele are amazed by
MHUDI
Moshueshue’s generosity. Therefore his people, the Basuto, are left in peace.
A few months after this, Mzilikazi calls a bone-thrower to throw the bones again. He
prophesises Mzilikazi’s move north and talks about the coming of the star with the long tail.
The star with the long tail is Halley’s Comet. The bone-thrower says that Halley’s comet will
be a messenger of change and bad luck for the Matabele. He says that the Matabele should
move north before the comet appears. Mzilikazi refuses to believe the warning of bad
luck. He says they will fight. Some warriors bring Van Zyl and his guides to Mzilikazi. Van
Zyl and the guides are led away to be killed. However, before they are executed, someone
accidentally fires Van Zyl’s rifle. Mzilikazi decides to keep the prisoners alive to find out
more about how these weapons work.
Potgieter (another one of the Boer leaders), negotiates with Chiefs Tauana and Moroka to
get support in the fight against the Matabele. Potgieter and the two chiefs agree on how they
will divide the land once the Matabele have been defeated. Chief Tauana asks the Griquas
(another tribe in the region) to fight alongside the Boers and the Barolong. The allied
(joined) forces of the Boers, the Barolong and the Griquas march to the Matabele outposts.
Along the way, they are joined by large numbers of Bakwena, Bakhatla, and Bahurutshe
people who live in the areas the allied forces are marching through. The allied forces kill or
capture the Matabele who are there. Gubuza gathers the Matabele troops and they march on
the allied forces. Halley’s comet appears in the sky and some of the Matabele warriors notice
that its tail seems to be pointing straight to Inzwinyani. The warriors think this shows that
Inzwinyani will be destroyed. There is a battle. The Matabele cannot win against the Boers’
guns and the Griquas’ horses, but Gubuza bravely carries on fighting. The Matabele finally
retreat, leaving many dead. All the other tribes celebrate the downfall of the Matabele. The
Matabele – the oppressors of the time – are finally beaten.
Mhudi has a fever attack and dreams that Ra-Thaga is wounded. She goes on foot through
the bush to find him in battle. After a few days, Mhudi catches up with the Boer wagons
that are following the battle and gets a lift. While with the Boers, she witnesses (sees) more
bad treatment of the Khoi San servants. However, she also meets Hannetjie, a soft-spoken
compassionate Boer woman. Mhudi leaves the Boers who are travelling too slowly for her.
She meets Umnandi, who has been hiding among Mogale’s people, and makes friends with
her. Umnandi is trying to find Mzilikazi as she feels he will need her because of his defeat.
Mhudi and Umnandi agree that men should stop making war on each other. Mhudi finally
Literature Summary 27
Novel: Mhudi
finds Ra-Thaga who has been wounded (just like in her dream) and nurses him. While Ra-
Thaga is recovering from his injury, he tells De Villiers to marry Hannetjie.
Mzilikazi decides he will lead a regiment into battle. He finds and kills a group of allied
scouts and then meets up with Gubuza. A few Matabele messengers run in to say that
another group of allied forces is going to attack them. Gubuza tells Mzilikazi to lead the
people north while he tries to carry on fighting. The Matabele army has lost. Mzilikazi
learns that his son, Langa, has been killed. He tells the story of Zungu who keeps a pet
lion. The pet lion turns on him, kills his family, and almost kills him. Mzilikazi uses this
story to predict that the Boers are going to betray the Barolong in the future and turn them
into slaves. Then, Mzilikazi rallies his people and leads them north to settle at Bulawayo.
Umnandi finally finds him. When they are reunited, it brings hope to the Matabele people.
Mzilikazi and Umnandi finally have a baby son.
De Villiers brings news to Hannetjie’s parents that their son, Van Zyl, is alive. He also asks
for permission to ‘sit up’ with Hannetjie – this custom shows that De Villiers and Hannetjie
will be married. Mhudi and Ra-Thaga say goodbye to De Villiers and Hannetjie. De Villiers
gives Mhudi an ox wagon and two oxen as a gift because he admires her for her bravery in
walking alone through the bush to save Ra-Thaga. The other Boers are shocked by this gift;
they think it is too big a gift for a black woman. De Villiers defends his decision by quoting
a verse from the Bible about all people being one in Jesus. Mhudi and Ra-Thaga return to
Thaba Nchu in her ox wagon. He promises never to leave her again.
SETTING
The story is set in the years 1832 to 1839 in the area of central South Africa called
Bechuanaland. This area stretches from the Kalahari Desert in today’s Northern Cape,
across the North West Province and Gauteng, and into the Free State, all the way to the
Lesotho border. ‘Bechuana’ is an English word for Setswana. Many of the places spoken
about in the novel are known by different names today:
• Kunana is now called Setlagole. It is on the Setlagole River south of Mafikeng. This is the
where the massacre took place in 1832.
• The area between today’s towns of Kroonstad and Heilbron is where the battle at
Battlehill (Vegkop) took place in 1836. The Battle of Mosega (17 January 1839) also took
place in this area.
• Mamuse, where Mhudi and Ra-Thaga go to live with the Koranna people, is known as
Schweizer-Reneke today.
• The capital of the Matabele people in the story is Inzwinyani, which is known today
as Silkaatskop. The name ‘Silkaats’ comes from Mzilikazi’s name. Silkaatskop is found
north of Groot Marico.
• The Mogaliesburg, where Chief Mogale used to live and where Ra-Thaga and De Villiers
go on a spying expedition is now called the Magaliesberg.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Sol Plaatjie (1876–1932) was born to Barolong parents on a farm in the Free State. He went
to school at the Pniel Lutheran mission station near Barkley-West. After school, he first
worked in the post office, then became a court interpreter at Mafikeng. During the siege
of Mafikeng in the Anglo-Boer War, he kept a diary in English. After the Anglo-Boer War,
he edited ‘The Bechuana Gazette’ (a Setswana newspaper) and other bilingual newspapers.
MHUDI
He was appointed the first General Corresponding Secretary of the SANNC (which would
later become the ANC) in 1912. He was an active spokesman for black rights. His book,
‘Native Life in South Africa’, which was a protest about the effects of the 1913 Land Act
on black South Africans, was published in London in 1916. He went to London as part of
a delegation to appeal to the British Government against the 1913 Land Act, which took
away black people’s right to own land. He stayed in England until 1924. When he came back
to South Africa, he spent his time travelling the country speaking out for black rights. He
and his wife Elizabeth settled in Kimberley. He died unexpectedly from pneumonia on 19
June 1932.
Literature Summary 29
Novel: Mhudi
south from Central Africa around the year 1400. Morolong was the original founder
of the Barolong nation around 1400. The 14th chief was the warrior, Tau, who became
chief in about 1740. At this time, the Barolong had reached the Harts and Vaal rivers.
Tau built his capital, Taung, on the Harts River. The Barolong were at the peak of their
power during Tau’s reign. His sons formed separate clans – Ratloa, Tshidi, Rapulana,
and Seleka clans. In the novel, Ra-Thaga is part of the Tshidi clan.
4 Mzilikazi, with his well-trained armies, trekked from the east, conquered the Bechuana
tribes and proclaimed himself the supreme ruler of Central South Africa. In the novel,
Mzilikazi makes it clear he wants to conquer further to ‘govern from the desert to the
sea’ until ‘Shaka himself acknowledged our supremacy’. After the Kunana massacre, four
thousand Barolong survivors from the Ratlou and Tshidi clan joined other Barolong
clans and moved south to Thaba Nchu. It was here that the Boers first met the Barolong.
5 The Boers were then attacked by Mzilikazi’s warriors at Vechtkop in the Heilbron
district. They lost every head of cattle. After hearing this, Chief Moroka sent teams
of oxen to bring the Boers back to Thaba Nchu. He gave the Boers cows, goats, and
hides to make shoes. He provided the Boers with a place to recover from the attack
of the Matabele, which became known as Moroka’s Hoek. The Boers recovered here,
and more groups of Boers arrived from the south and Natal. The Boers joined forces
with the Barolong and Griquas to drive the Matabele from Bechuanaland to Rhodesia
(Zimbabwe). Later more groups of Boers arrived. The Boers occupied the Free State
plains. They established the Boer Republic with Bloemfontein as its capital.
6 The alliance between Chief Moroka and the Boers eventually became very one-sided.
The Barolong people gave service and goods to the Boers, but little to nothing was given
to them in return. In fact, the descendants of the original Boers took every chance they
had to take away the lands belonging to the Barolong and other black people. Mzilikazi
predicts this betrayal by the Boers in the novel. He says “‘They [the Boers] will despoil
them [the Barolong] of the very lands they have rendered unsafe for us; … use them as
pack-oxen, they will refuse to share the spoils of victory.’” (pg. 133)
7 Another reason Plaatjie wrote ‘Mhudi’ was to criticise the injustice of land distribution
in South Africa in 1919 (which was when he was writing the novel). The novel poses
moral questions to the descendants of the Boers, who were welcomed to the land and
saved by a chief ’s generosity. The Barolong then helped the Boers to drive off the people
(the Matabele) who threatened the Boers’ dream of self-rule. Chief Moroka envisioned
a state of cooperative living. The descendants of the Boers, on the other hand, sought to
take over (just as the Matabele had tried to do). The novel uses what happens in history
(the 1830s) as a way to describe what was happening in 1919, at the time the novel was
written. Gradually, and in different ways, land was taken away from black owners until
the 1913 Land Act was passed which prevented black people from owning land, at all.
White people took over all the land. To make matters even worse, black people were still
forced to work on the land to earn a living. President Brand (the fourth president of the
Orange Free State from 1864 to 1888) took possession of Moroka’s territory. President
Brand banished Moroka’s surviving son and confiscated all Barolong lands. In the end,
black people were prevented from buying the very land for which their ancestors fought
8 Plaatjie’s novel has a woman as its main character, which is unusual for the time in
which it was written. The novel is a tribute to the strength, loyalty, and healing power
of women. ‘Mhudi’ challenges (goes against) the patriarchal (male dominated) society
that exists in South Africa. The character Mhudi is shown to be resilient, resourceful,
and wise. Other women are significant in the novel as well. Mzilikazi can only start
to properly restore his nation when he has Umnandi at his side. Hannetjie represents
the compassion of women. However, Plaatjie uses a stereotype of ‘the perfect woman’.
For example, all three are women are excellent cooks and show no flaws. This type of
woman reflects what is ideal (perfect) in a patriarchal society. Therefore, we can say the
MHUDI
way he depicts women is still problematic (has problems). In a non-patriarchal society,
women would be free to be any way they want to be – the idea of a ‘perfect woman’
would not exist.
Literature Summary 31
Novel: Mhudi
Chief Moroka sends help to the Boers after they are attacked by the
Matabele. Nomenti plots against Umnandi, who then flees.
The bone thrower advises Mzilikazi to move north but he is too proud.
Halley’s comet is seen with its tail pointing towards Inzwinyani.
De Villiers proposes to Hannetjie.
De Villiers gives Mhudi an ox wagon as a gift. Gubuza warns that there will
be retribution.
Umnandi is reunited with Mzilikazi.
1 The massacre at Kunana takes place.
Ra-Thaga and Mhudi scare off the lion.
The Matabele suffer a defeat and Mzilikazi orders the witchdoctors to be
killed.
Gubuza advises Mzilikazi to take his people north.
Mhudi kills a lion that Ra-Thaga has caught by the tail.
Mhudi walks through the bush to save Ra-Thaga from Ton-Qon.
Mhudi has a dream in which Ra-Thaga is injured, so she walks through the
bush to the battlefront to get to him.
Ra-Thaga and De Villiers go on a spying expedition. They hide with Chief
Mogale.
Mhudi is reunited with her cousin Baile at Thaba Nchu.
Mhudi visits the Boer camp and sees a Boer ill-treating a Khoi San servant.
The Barolong and the Griquas join forces with the Boers and defeat the
Matabele.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their own
mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
9 Chief Moroka sends help to the Boers after they are attacked by the Matabele.
7 Nomenti plots against Umnandi, who then flees.
10 The bone thrower advises Mzilikazi to move north but he is too proud.
14 Halley’s comet is seen with its tail with pointing towards Inzwinyani.
17 De Villiers proposes to Hannetjie.
19 De Villiers gives Mhudi an ox wagon as a gift.
MHUDI
the battlefront to get to him.
12 Ra-Thaga and De Villiers go on a spying expedition. They hide with Chief Mogale.
6 Mhudi is reunited with her cousin Baile at Thaba Nchu.
11 Mhudi visits the Boer camp and sees a Boer ill-treating a Khoi San servant.
13 The Barolong and the Griquas join forces with the Boers and defeat the Matabele.
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
an alliance (n.) When people make an alliance, they join together to achieve something.
The Barolong, Griquas and Boers make an alliance to beat the Matabele in
battle.
compassion (n.) When you have compassion, you have sympathy and show concern for the
misfortunes of others. In the story, we see that Hannetjie has compassion
for others when she chides (scolds) her mother for not speaking up against
the whipping of Jan, a Khoi San servant.
a fable (n.) This is a short tale to teach a moral lesson. Mzilikazi tells the fable of Zungu
who catches a lion cub and raises it as a pet. In the tale, the lion lands up
killing Zungu’s children and his wives and nearly Zungu himself. Mzilikazi
uses this fable to say that the Boers will one day betray the Barolong.
history (n.) / historical When something is historical, it means it happened in the past. Plaatjie tells
(adj.) the history of the Matabele, the Barolong, and the Boers. Plaatjie tells these
historical events from an African perspective.
hospitality (n.) When you have hospitality, you are friendly and generous to guests and
visitors, even when they are strangers. The chief of the Koranna tribe says
that ‘every person in my dominion, whether a Bldi [Barolong], a Khoi San, a
Griqua or anything else, is one of us. My home is his home, my cattle are his
cattle, and my law is his shield’. This means that he believes it is important
to treat others with hospitality.
a massacre (n.) This is the deliberate and brutal killing of many people. A massacre
happens in the beginning of the novel when the Matabele attack the
Barolong and kill everyone, including the women and children.
to negotiate (v.) When you have peaceful talks to debate and decide what is fair to
everyone, you negotiate. Chief Tauana and Chief Moroka negotiate with
Potgieter about how to divide the land after defeating the Matabele.
Literature Summary 33
Novel: Mhudi
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
MAJOR CHARACTERS
NAME MHUDI
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Escapes from the massacre and evades (gets away from) the men
following her.
2 Faces lions three times, killing one with an assegai.
3 Argues with Ra-Thaga about whether Mzilikazi had the right to attack
the Barolong.
4 Follows Ra-Thaga when he goes hunting with Ton-Qon and saves
him.
5 Is reunited with her cousin Baile at Thaba Nchu.
6 Expresses her disapproval at how the Boers treat their Khoi San
servants.
7 Has a dream that Ra-Thaga is wounded (hurt) in battle.
8 Goes to the battle to find Ra-Thaga and nurses him.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
9 Gets a lift from the Boers to cross the Vaal River. Befriends Hannetjie
because she shows compassion towards the Khoi San servants.
10 Meets Umnandi and become friends with her.
11 Accepts the gift of an ox wagon and two oxen from De Villiers.
MHUDI
believes in. Mhudi is close to her cousin Baile. She becomes friends
with Umnandi and Hannetjie. She and De Villiers have respect for one
another, although they are not friends.
PERSONALITY TRAITS Mhudi is resourceful – she can dig for roots and find water and she can
use the stars in the sky to find her way, for example. Mhudi shows that
she is brave when she faces and kills a lion. She is wise and loyal to her
husband and saves his life twice. She works out Ton-Qon’s (the Koranna
headman) plan to kill Ra-Thaga. Twice, she goes into the bush to save
Ra-Thaga without asking for anyone’s help. She is independent – she
thinks for herself and challenges (argues against) things she disagrees
with.
PHYSICAL When Ra-Thaga meets Mhudi, he admires her: ‘carefully trimmed [hair]’,
DESCRIPTION ‘magnificent figure’, ‘deep brown [skin]’, ‘brilliant black eyes’, ‘pretty pair
of dimples’, ‘even set of ivories’ and ‘bewitching mouth and beautiful
lips’(pg. 11). Ra-Thaga notes how she is dressed in an ‘apron of thin
twisted strips, suspended evenly from a belt around her waist, reaching
just above the knees, while a springbuck skin drooping from her hips
downward formed the kirtle that matched her beautiful form. Round her
shoulders hung a furry rug of speckled lamb-skins very carefully tanned’
(pg. 11). He then admires Mhudi’s legs: ‘she had above her beaded
anklets the most beautiful limbs he had ever seen’; ‘perfectly proportioned’
(pg. 11) as well as how she moves: ‘elegant in every movement’ (pg. 11).
We know that Ra-Thaga thinks that Mhudi is very beautiful.
CHANGES Mhudi does not really change during the novel; rather we find out
more about her character that helps us to understand her better. We
see her traits of bravery, wisdom and independence in different ways
throughout the story. For example, we know Mhudi is brave because she
walks to save Ra-Thaga from the tiger. We see this again when she puts
herself in danger to get to Ra-Thaga at the battlefront.
NAME RA-THAGA
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Fights against the Matabele and manages to not be caught when the
Barolong are defeated.
2 Saves Mhudi from the lion by scaring it away.
3 Goes to find a medicinal plant for Mhudi’s malarial fever. When he
comes back, he finds a lion about to climb over the fence. So he
grabs it by the tail and shouts for Mhudi, telling her how to kill it with
his assegai.
4 Shows his physical strength and determination when he wins the
running race at Thaba Nchu.
Literature Summary 35
Novel: Mhudi
MAJOR CHARACTERS
5 Makes friends with De Villiers and spends time in the Boer camp,
learning about the Boers’ way of life.
6 Goes on the spying expedition with Rantsau, De Villiers and Van Zyl.
7 Fights with the allied forces against the Matabele to take revenge for
the massacre of the Barolong. He is injured in the fighting.
8 Encourages De Villiers to propose to Hannetjie. Praises Mhudi as
part of his argument for why De Villiers should marry.
9 Promises Mhudi he will not leave her again.
RELATIONSHIPS Ra-Thaga is the son of a wealthy chieftain but loses his family in the
massacre. He is Mhudi’s devoted husband and becomes a close friend
of De Villiers. He is respected by many – he finds favour with the
Koranna chief, Massouw, and also Chief Mogale and Chief Moroka.
PERSONALITY TRAITS He is a strong warrior and trained hunter. Throughout the story, he
wants revenge on the Matabele for killing his people. We see his bravery
when he grabs the lion’s tail to save Mhudi. He is loyal to his wife and his
friend De Villiers. He is curious about others – he enjoys learning about
new things during his time in the Boer camp. He treats his wife as his
equal. He respects his wife’s opinions and feelings.
PHYSICAL He is tall and powerful - strong enough to grab a lion by the tail and hold
DESCRIPTION it tight. He is quick and strong enough to win the running race for the
clan. He has scars on his forehead from the tiger that attacked him.
CHANGES During the course of the story, Ra-Thaga comes to realise fully how
clever and wise Mhudi is. At first, he believes that women are timid, but
he learns the power and strength of women through Mhudi’s actions.
Ra-Thaga feels a sense of satisfaction when the Matabele are defeated
at last. At this point, he realises that his love for Mhudi is more important
than anything else, and he decides to never leave home again. Ra-Thaga
doesn’t change that much as a person throughout the novel, but more is
revealed (shown) about him as the novel goes on.
NAME MZILIKAZI
RELATIONSHIPS Mzilikazi is proud of his warrior son, Langa. He relies on his commander,
Gubuza and is quite close to him. He has numerous wives. His favourite
wife is Umnandi, who he refers to as ‘the central pillar of the life of
Mzilikazi’ (pg.137). This favoritism makes his other wives jealous of
Umnandi.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
PERSONALITY TRAITS He is called ‘the Great One’ (pg. 25); ‘the terrible ruler of lands and
clouds’ (pg. 24) and ‘Mzilikazi the Most High’ (pg. 25). He is moody (his
mood changes quickly and without any reason) and self- absorbed. He
thinks he is more important than others. For example, we are told that
at the Matabele celebrations after the massacre, ‘the Great One joined
the discussion, which meant that everybody else had to listen and
applaud’ (pg. 29).
He can get easily upset or irritated and then he can be cruel and brutal.
MHUDI
In the text it says that ‘it was no uncommon thing for a joyous festival
of the kind to end with a death sentence on any who might upset the
uncertain temper of Mzilikazi the Terrible; therefore men grasped their
shields and gripped their spears and stood erect, lest a faulty pose
should irritate the eye and rouse the ire of the Great One’ (pg. 22).
He commands complete obedience – people must listen to everything
he says. This is seen in ‘Suddenly King Mzilikazi gave a signal and the
dancing and the singing in the inner circle ceased’ (pg. 23).
Mzilikazi is also incredibly proud – he will not retreat from his fight to go
north, despite the advice of the witchdoctors.
PHYSICAL None given.
DESCRIPTION
CHANGES By the end of the story, Mzilikazi realises that he was wrong not to
heed (listen to) the advice of the bone-throwers and go north. At first,
he will not run away, saying “‘A Zulu…had never turned his back upon
trouble’” (pg. 65). However, he later acknowledges “‘I alone am to blame;
notwithstanding that my magicians warned me of the looming terrors, I
heeded them not. … I have lost all!’” (pg. 131). He realises that he should
not have been so proud.
NAME DE VILLIERS
Literature Summary 37
Novel: Mhudi
MAJOR CHARACTERS
PERSONALITY TRAITS De Villiers stands up for what he believes. He does not just go along
with what other people (the Boers) believe. The other Boers think his
friendship with Ra-Thaga is shocking. However, this does not impact
his friendship with Ra-Thaga. De Villiers cares about others. He shows
his compassion when he frees the Khoi San servant from a vice grip
(a clamp to hold a piece of wood or metal). De Villiers is interested in
learning about the Barolong culture. He learns Barolong and teaches
Ra-Thaga his language.
PHYSICAL None given.
DESCRIPTION
CHANGES De Villiers’s understanding of the Barolong grows through his friendship
with Ra-Thaga. Their friendship represents the possibility of a mutual
understanding between races and ethnic groups. De Villiers also realises
that there are things about his own people that he does not like.
MINOR CHARACTERS
UMNANDI (THE SWEET Umnandi is a symbol of the ‘perfect wife’ in traditional (and patriarchal)
ONE) society. She cooks very well and brews good beer. Umnandi is popular
because she is kind to people who need help. The other wives are
jealous of her. Umnandi flees when another wife, Nomenti, plots against
her. She stays faithful to Mzilikazi even in bad times. When Mzilikazi is
defeated, she follows him to the north. When Umnandi is reunited with
Mzilikazi, they have a son. Plaatjie wants the reader to understand that
Mzilikazi could not have restored his nation without Umnandi.
HANNETJIE Hannetjie is the sister to Van Zyl and she becomes De Villiers’s fiancée.
Hannetjie is quiet and shy but she is strong in a quiet way. Hannetjie
also shows compassion – she chides her mother (tells her mother off)
for not doing more to stop the beating of a Khoi San servant.
CHIEF TAUANA (LION’S Chief Tauana is the chief of one of the Barolong clans. He orders the
WHELP) execution (killing) of the tax collectors which leads to the massacre of
the Barolong. Chief Tauana moves to Thaba Nchu with Chief Moroka and
plans revenge against the Matabele with the other leaders.
CHIEF MOROKA Chief Moroka is the chief of another Barolong clan. He sends oxen to
(RAINMAKER) save the stranded Boers and move them to safety. He also gives them
milk, cows, and hides for shoes to help them. Moroka makes many wise
and kind decisions. He does not allow the unnecessary spilling of blood.
Moroka joins forces with the Boers to attack the Matabele. Moroka
also persuades the Griquas to join them. He facilitates (organises) the
planning of the attack.
MHUDI
loss, we must choose how we react to this in the long term. Do we dwell on the past forever,
or do we try to move on?
Renewal can follow loss, although not in every case. Sometimes, when people have suffered
a major loss, they do manage to recover, and to renew their lives by replacing some of the
things they have lost. These replacements may be emotional or physical.
Literature Summary 39
Novel: Mhudi
THEME 2
LOVE
Love is something that connects all humans – we all feel and need love in our lives. In the
novel, we see examples of the importance of love. We also see evidence of the different kinds
of love that exist.
THEME 3
VALUE OF TRADITIONAL LIFE
When Plaatjie was writing ‘Mhudi’, many elements of traditional life were at stake (at risk
of being lost). In addition, white people often looked down on the traditional way of life.
Through this story, Plaatjie shows us the beauty and benefits of traditional communities.
Harmony (living in peace) with nature and belonging to a community are other parts
of traditional life that are praised in the novel. Plaatjie explains that ‘Work was of a
perfunctory nature, for mother earth yielded her bounties and the maiden soil provided
ample sustenance for man and beast’ (pg. 1). In other words, the earth provided for people
and therefore, no one was over-worked. The author emphasises that in these communities,
people looked after each other and helped each other. He writes, ‘these simple folk were
perfectly happy without money and without silver watches. Abject poverty was practically
unknown; they had no orphanages because there were no nameless babies. When a man
had a couple of karosses to make he invited the neighbours to spend the day with him
MHUDI
cutting, fitting in and sewing together the sixty grey jackal pelts into two rugs, and there
would be intervals of feasting throughout the day’ (pg. 2). In the traditional communities
described by Plaatjie, there was no extreme wealth and no extreme poverty – people worked
together and lived in harmony.
Plaatjie also shows the different ideas of law or justice in a traditional society. White people
sometimes justified their own power by saying that South African society was absent from
laws and justice. This, of course, was wrong. Plaatjie wanted to challenge (go against) that
idea. In the novel, we see many examples of laws and justice through the Barolong Chiefs,
the Koranna Chief and King Moshueshue. In the novel, even the Boers recognise the
fairness and wisdom of traditional leaders. Plaatjie contrasts this with the harsh punitive
examples of the Matabele. Plaatjie challenges the idea that all black tribes behaved like
the Matabele at that time. It is the Boers, rather than the other tribal groups, who show
themselves to be cruel and punitive in their treatment of others.
We see many examples of progressive and thoughtful processes to justice within traditional
life. In one example, the leader of the Koranna says that Ton-Qon is a dog “‘not fit to live’”
(pg. 48). However, he decides to “‘adopt other means of punishing’” (pg. 48) him. Massouw
decides to fine Ton-Qon “‘twenty of [his] best cattle, his horse, his saddle and bridle and his
rifle’” (pg. 49) rather than killing him.
In another example, Chief Moroka shows a similar kind of mercy. During an argument,
one boy hits another youth with a stone and makes him bleed. Moroka says, “‘assault is a
crime according to Barolong law…anyone spoiling for human blood may go and join the
Matabele and there slake his thirst for blood. They are the only nation I know who delight
in bloody accidents’” (pg. 72). He criticises the Matabele’s use of violence. He then gives a
punishment which involves no violence or blood: he orders that two bullocks from the herd
of the father of the guilty boy be slaughtered as a fine.
As another example of how traditional court worked in a conflict between families, Chief
Moroka goes out of his way to listen to all sides of the issue. He even invites the Boer,
Cilliers, to give his opinion on the matter. Moroka says that the case has now “‘heard the
views of old men; you have heard the views of younger men and the views of women too;
you have heard the views of white men. And neither side can complain of having been
ignored’” (pg. 87). Cilliers’s opinion is uncompromising and will not make anyone happier
– he compares Cilliers’s view to a judgement given by a previous Barolong king, but he says
Literature Summary 41
Novel: Mhudi
the view is out of date. Instead, Moroka gives a judgement that shows progressive thinking.
The decision solves the problem and everyone is satisfied. Moroka’s judgement is more
modern and fair than the suggestion of the white man. This example challenges the view
that African thinking is ‘backwards’ or ‘primitive’.
THEME 4
DIFFERENT TYPES OF POWER
There are different ways to have power in society. One way to have power is to treat others
kindly and with respect. When people respect you, they want to listen to you. You have
power to influence their thoughts and actions because they care about you and want to
please you.
On the other hand, power can also be gained through fear. If people fear you, they will do
what you say because they are scared of what might happen if they do not listen. In this
situation though, people might come to hate you. They will often work to overthrow (take
away) your power.
In ‘Mhudi’, we see different leaders gain power in different ways.
In addition, the Matabele gained power through taxing people. After taking their lands, ‘the
Bechuana inhabitants were permitted to remain on condition that their chiefs should pay
tribute to Mzilikazi. Gradually enlarging their dominion, the Matabele enforced taxation
first upon one and then another of the surrounding Bechuana clans, including the Barolong
at Kunana’ (pg. 3). Mzilikazi gains power through fear – people fear him, and this makes
him feel powerful.
In the novel, we see that ruling through fear leads to hatred and other problems. When
one tribe oppresses another, hatred and resentment will build. This will eventually lead to
MHUDI
violence. Plaatjie is saying that rebellion under such conditions is inevitable (will happen
no matter what). In the beginning of the novel, Chief Tauana rebels against the oppressive
taxes by killing the Matabele tax collectors. The Matabele show power by taking revenge –
they show their might (strength) when they carry out the massacre at Kunana. This only
leads to more hatred of the Matabele. Gubuza warns that the Barolong will eventually come
to fight against the Matabele for the massacre of their people. The Matabele must live in fear
of those they have mistreated.
Cilliers explains to Chief Moroka that the Boers have left the Cape in search of freedom.
Cilliers says, “‘oppression is not conducive to piety. We are after freedom from the English
laws of the Cape England’” (pg. 52). Cilliers goes onto explain that, “‘there are always two
points of view. The point of view of the ruler is not always the viewpoint of the ruled. We
Boers are tired of foreign kings and rulers. We want only one ruler and that is God, our
creator: No man or woman can rule another’” (pg. 52). In other words, those who are in
power do not always see things the same way as the people over which they have power.
This statement is ironic words because the Boers are oppressive towards their Khoi San
servants – they treat them extremely badly. In addition, although Cilliers says that men and
women can’t rule each other, the Boers themselves end up becoming ‘foreign rulers’, trying
to take away power from all black South Africans.
This book serves as a warning to the Boers by showing them that power through fear and
terror never ends well.
THEME 5
PATRIARCHY / ROLE OF WOMEN
Patriarchy is the system of giving men more power than women. In patriarchal societies,
men have more power, more freedom, and more opportunities than women. Throughout
the story, Plaatjie questions (or challenges) some of the stereotypical ideas we are taught
about women.
Literature Summary 43
Novel: Mhudi
husband. She acts as she pleases. Mhudi has strong opinions that are different from the men
in her life; she doesn’t trust the Boers, for example, even though her husband does. Mhudi
is a character who thinks for herself and throughout the story, we see that ‘Ra-Thaga…had
benefitted much from the sober judgment of his clever wife’ (pg. 43). Mhudi’s actions and
ideas go against what is thought to be ‘proper’ and ‘appropriate’ for women. This would have
been especially true in 1919!
Ra-Thaga thinks that all girls are timid – a stereotype about women that still exists today.
He asks Mhudi how her friends, “‘these good girls’” (pg. 39) managed to scare away the
lion. Ra-Thaga does not believe that girls could scare away a lion by themselves – he does
not think they are brave enough. Mhudi explains to him that the girls did the same thing as
Ra-Thaga himself. She says, “‘Just as you did on the morning I met you…by shouting and
waving their peltries in the air’” (pg. 39). Mhudi explains that loyal women will be brave
in danger.
Often men are thought of as being protectors to women. However, Mhudi travels through
the bush (twice!) on her own to save to Ra-Thaga. She also kills the lion herself with Ra-
Thaga’s assegai. Mhudi does not need protection from her husband – she is able to protect
herself. In fact, she is the one who protects her husband.
In some ways, Plaatjie shows that women are venerated (thought of with deep respect) for
the role they play within tribal life. For example, Chief Moroka explains to Sarel Cilliers
that in Barolong culture, women are important and respected. Moroka puts women on the
same level of importance to the tribe as the king. He says, “‘There are two persons that we
Barolongs can never do without: a wife to mind the home and a king to call us to order,
settle our disputes and lead us in battle’” (pg. 53).
However, even though women are respected in the home, we can still say that this is
part of an unfair system for women. Women do not have decision-making power. For
example, women are not included in the tribal councils. Mhudi complains about this:
“‘How wretched’, cried Mhudi sorrowfully, ‘that men in whose counsels we have no share
should constantly wage war’’’ (pg. 125). Women are impacted by the decisions of the tribal
councils, but they do not get a voice in making those big and important decisions.
By including such a strong and independent main character (Mhudi), Plaatjie challenges
(goes against) the patriarchal (male dominated) society that exists in South Africa.
However, there are also problems with the way women are portrayed in the novel. For
example, all three are women are excellent cooks, and are always the ones to cook for
their husbands. This still reflects what is ideal (perfect) in a patriarchal society. In a non-
patriarchal society, women would be free to be take on any role in society – they would not
have to be the ones to stay at home and take care of their husbands.
THEME 6
PROPHECY
‘Mhudi’ is a moral fable, meaning that it is meant to send the reader a certain message about
right and wrong. To prophesise means to say something will happen in the future. Plaatjie
said, ‘A writer is a prophet and his duty is not only to prophesy but also to rebuke (scold),
when necessary, the people for wrongdoing, to criticise when the occasion demands… and
point the way to salvation’.
In this novel, Plaatjie uses the ideas of prophecy and prediction to warn the characters of
MHUDI
bad things to come. He also uses prophecy to send a message to the reader. ‘Mhudi’, is an
attack on how land was distributed in South Africa in 1919, when black people had no
right to own land. The idea of prophecy helps us connect what is happening in the story to
future events.
Literature Summary 45
Novel: Mhudi
THEME 7
FRIENDSHIP DESPITE DIFFERENCE
Everyone needs the love and support of friends. Society often sends the message we should
be friends with people like ourselves – people with the same culture, sexual orientation,
race and religion. In this story, we see that people form relationships with others who are
very different to themselves.
Matabele. The Boers meet with the chiefs to plan a joint attack. The tension is also built
through the prophecies in the story. The bone-throwers advise the Matabele to move to
the north because they will be defeated (beaten) in battle. The bone-throwers also predict
Halley’s comet as a bad omen (a sign of bad luck) for the Matabele.
The main problem, or the climax of the story, happens when the different forces attack the
Matabele together. The description of the battle and the moment when Mzilikazi accepts he
has lost is the most exciting part of the novel’s action.
The falling action happens when the allied forces come together after defeating the
MHUDI
Matabele. The Matabele prepare to flee north. Mhudi, who has been searching for Ra-
Thaga, is finally reunited with her husband. We see the characters prepare to settle down
– Ra-Thaga persuades De Villiers to marry Hannetjie. Hannetjie’s brother, Viljoen escapes
from the Matabele and re-joins the Boers. The resolution takes place when De Villiers
proposes to Hannetjie. Umnandi is reunited with Mzilikazi. Mhudi and Ra-Thaga travel
home to Thaba Nchu in the ox wagon that De Villiers gave her. The fighting seems to have
ended completely.
2 NARRATIVE VOICE:
The narrative voice refers to the person who is telling the story. ‘Mhudi’ is told in a third-
person narrative voice. This means that the narrator is not a character in the story. The
narrator of ‘Mhudi’ is omniscient (can see everything). An omniscient narrator is able to
tell the story from all points of view (from all sides). This means we know the thoughts
and feelings of all the characters in the story. At the beginning of the novel, the thoughts of
Ra-Thaga are revealed to us. At the end of the novel we hear Mzilikazi’s thoughts. When we
hear the thoughts of a character, it usually makes us more sympathetic to that character.
The narrator’s voice changes at times in the novel. Most of the time in the story, we are not
aware of a narrator. However, at some points in the story, the narrator reveals that he is
Mhudi and Ra-Thaga’s son. He says his name is Half-a-Crown. When Mhudi and Ra-Thaga
meet in the story, the narrator says, ‘That exactly is how my father and mother met and
became man and wife’ (pg. 31). This makes it sound like he has been told the story by his
parents and now he is telling us the story. The narrator is demonstrating an oral tradition –
passing stories from generation to generation.
3 REGISTER:
a Plaatjie writes in a formal style. This means that the story and even the dialogue use
complicated words like ‘plight’ or ‘mistook’ or ‘countenance’. These are not words
that are used in normal, everyday speech. Rather, the language often sounds like
language from the Bible. For example: Umnandi speaks about herself saying to Mhudi,
“‘Umnandi salutes you as well and thanks you for the brief but happy time we have
spent together’” (pg. 125). This formal language makes it sound like the writer is telling
a story as important as a story from the bible. It makes the words seem like they have
deep and true meaning. The formal style also makes the moments of prophecy more
Literature Summary 47
Novel: Mhudi
mysterious and more ominous (threatening). For example, the witchdoctor says, “‘The
bones tell me that there will be much death and tribulation before the new haven is
reached’” (pg. 101). This way of speaking makes what the speaker says sound very
important.
The writer uses stately (dignified) language when the chiefs address their people.
For example, Mzilikazi makes a speech to his people before they leave for the north.
He uses different types of persuasive language to get his listeners to agree with what
he says: “‘Amandebele, O People of Matshobani, listen to me!’” (pg. 132). Here he
addresses them in a manner that will make them feel as if they are important. He
continues: “‘Have I not been kind to these Bechuana traitors?’” (pg. 132) Mzilikazi
poses a rhetorical question (a question that is really making a point and does not need
an answer). He does this to get his listeners to agree with him. He then goes on to give
them a set of instructions. This will motivate his people to take action: “‘Rally now to
your burdens, Amandebele mothers; strap your babies to your waists; let us direct our
toes to the north, for there is refuge there’” (pg. 133). Later in his speech he says: “‘Arise,
Amandebele! Let us from hence. Pambili lonke! (forward, everybody!)’” (pg. 133). The
exclamation marks show us that he is speaking in an encouraging tone.
b Plaatjie, uses code-switching (more than one language) when characters speak to each
other. The author does this to remind us that the African tribes did not speak English to
each other. This makes the story and characters seem realistic. For example, “‘Mercy, O
Chief!’ shouted the crowd. ‘A e ne modiga (mercy on him)!’” (pg. 72).
c The writer also uses dialogue (spoken language used by the characters) to let us get
to know the characters better and make us feel part of what is going on. When the
characters use dialogue, we get to see their relationships with other characters. For
example, the conversation between Ra-Thaga and De Villiers on page 119 shows what
good friends they have become. They joke good-naturedly with each other and feel
comfortable to talk about personal topics, like love and marriage.
4 FIGURES OF SPEECH:
There are different figures of speech in the novel. Making out the meaning of figures of
speech requires us to think about the literal (actual) meaning of what is being said.
Then, we make out the extra, figurative meaning afterwards.
a Figurative language compares two things (using metaphors and similes). When you
compare two things, you show how they are the same. Here are some examples of
metaphorical or figurative language in ‘Mhudi’:
• The Barolong warriors were horrified by the terrible way the Matabele were killing
their women and children and so they ‘fought like fiends possessed’ (pg. 5). This is a
simile comparing the Barolong to fiends. Literally, a fiend is an evil spirit that is said
to possess (take over) people and make them crazy. The Barolong were not actually
fiends but they fought in the same crazy way that fiends would act.
• Mzilikazi refers to Umnandi as “‘the jewel of bygone days’” (pg. 131). This is a
metaphor. Literally, a jewel is a gemstone that is beautiful and worth a lot. He
is saying that Umnandi is beautiful and worth a lot. She was the best part of his
time in power.
b Sometimes the metaphors are also proverbs. A proverb is a saying that has an important
meaning. Here are some examples of proverbs in ‘Mhudi’:
• “‘Old people say the quarry of two dogs is never too strong’” (pg. 78). What this
means is: If two people work together, they will be stronger. These words form part
of Chief Moroka’s proposal that the Boers and the Barolong should work together to
overthrow the Matabele.
• “‘Lightning fire is quenched by other fire’” (pg. 75): Sometimes the way to stop
MHUDI
something is with something that is the same, or similar to it. One of the men says
this at the meeting held about helping the Boers after the Matabele attack them.
He says that the Boer women helped the men to fight the Matabele. The women
helping the men made sure that the Boers survived the attack. The women were the
“‘other fire’”.
• “‘Never be led by a female lest thou fall over a precipice’” (pg. 43): This means that a
man should not completely believe what a woman says because it may get him into
trouble. This supposes that men are so in love with women that they can not think
clearly. Ra-Thaga says this when Mhudi advises him not to go hunting with Ton-
Qon. On this occasion, ironically, Ra-Thaga should have listened to Mhudi.
5 TONE:
Tone tells us what the characters sound like when they speak. Plaatjie uses parts of speech
to give us more information about the tone of the characters.
a Adverbs tell us how characters’ voices sound, so we know what mood they are in.
“‘What did Mzilikazi say to you, Umpitimpiti?’ repeated the lady impatiently.” The
adverb ‘impatiently’ tells us that Nomenti is losing her patience. Most, but not all,
adverbs end with the suffix ‘-ly’.
b Adjectives tell us a how a character feels. For example, “Gubuza made a reluctant reply.
He said, ‘I am sorry if my words wounded the feelings of the chiefs’” (pg. 28). The word
‘reluctant’ means unwilling or unsure. It shows that he was not sure what to say because
he did not want to upset anyone.
c Verbs also tell us what a character sounds like when they say something. “‘Stop this
child’s play!’ cried Mzilikazi” (pg. 102). The verb ‘cried’ shows Mzilikazi is angry and
impatient.
Literature Summary 49
Novel: Mhudi
Read the following excerpt from ‘Mhudi’ and answer the questions that follow it:
The army marched all night. Towards dawn their attention was drawn to
the eastern skies where they saw the tail of a comet transfixed above the
horizon. The repeated prophecies of Matabele seers at once came back
to mind and many of the soldiers began to murmur. They complained that
they were driven to fight against the forces of aerial sorcery, which were far 5
above the powers of their own witchcraft.
‘I know,’ said one sable warrior, ‘that our doctor can perform miracles on
earth; but I am also sure that I have never heard of any Matabele whose
wizardry planted a lodestar in the skies to confound his enemy and lead his
warriors to victory as our present enemy is apparently doing. Don’t you see! 10
Look at the tail of that star,’ and many heads were turned upward. ‘Why,
the tail is pointing straight in the direction of Inzwinyani!’ What could we,
poor mortals, do to a heavenly rod which, predicted years ago by our own
wizards, is now visible to the eye of the uninitiated?’
Gubuza too remembered the prophecies. He knew what the effect of the 15
apparition would be on the minds of the men of his army, but he did his
best to cheer them on.
Behind a distant ridge, the invaders waited with beating hearts, their fingers
on the triggers, and prayed that the Matabele arrival should be delayed
till after daybreak, when the good light would aid them to shoot more 20
effectively. Gubuza’s great army continued to advance and gathered fresh
courage as the sun rose above the treetops. But with dramatic suddenness
there emerged from the top of the swell four hundred horsemen of the
allies who galloped up to meet them. Gubuza ordered his men to the
attack. The horsemen stopped, dismounted and fired. 25
The crash of the volley was frightful, and the effect of the fire was appalling.
The Matabele had never seen horses before; and, to them, each horse with
a man on its back resembled one hideous monster. Hence the mounted
men advancing en masse presented a spectacle so grotesque as to form
a horrible apparition. When the riders dismounted to shoot, the Matabele 30
were further bewildered by the strange action of creatures dividing
themselves into two parts and still continuing to act.
Glossary of words:
• transfixed – fixed, not moving, focused
• sable – very dark, almost black colour
• confound – prevent, stop
• lodestone – (literally magnetic stone), focus or centre of attention
• volley – lots of shooting
MHUDI
C confident
D sad
B nervous (3)
b What do the soldiers do that shows how they feel? Quote one word from the
passage to support your answer to question 2 a. [1]
murmur / bewildered / (3)
3 Explain what prophecy the passage is talking about? [2]
The prophecy is made by the bone-throwers (3). It is the prophecy that the Matabele
should move north before the star with the long tail appears (3). If they don’t then they
will all die and their sheep and cattle with them (3). [Any 2 correct answers]
4 Why have they not obeyed the prophecy? [2]
The allies are the Boers (3), the Barolong (3), and the Griquas (3). They have joined
together to fight the Matabele. (3).
6 Refer to lines 27–28: ‘The Matabele had never seen horses before; and, to them, each
horse with a man on its back resembled one hideous monster’.
‘Hideous monster’ is a metaphor. In your own words, explain why this is a good
comparison. [2]
The metaphor compares the sight of a man on a horse to the sight of a hideous monster.
A monster is something too frightening to look (3) at and a monster is something that
cannot be defined which also makes it something frightening (3).
(NOTE: Accept any similar answers which show an understanding of the comparison
and the effect it creates.)
7 Explain why the following statement is TRUE: Plaatjie hoped the fable of Zungu
would make people think about the kind of life black people had in South Africa in
1919. Explain what point he is trying to make. [2]
Literature Summary 51
Novel: Mhudi
In 1919 in South Africa (the time the novel was written), black people are oppressed.
He uses prophecy to say that just like the Boers in the novel were going to oppress the
Bechuana tribe, (3) so too will the Afrikaners oppress black people (3).
8 In this passage, how does Plaatjie makes us feel sympathy for the Matabele soldiers
Support your answer by referring to the passage. [2]
We feel sympathy for the Matabele soldiers now because we can see how uncertain and
nervous they are when they see the comet (3). They are also ‘bewildered’ by the sight of
the horseman dismounting from their horses and firing at them. They have never seen
this sight before (3).
9 Refer to the novel as a whole. Do you feel the Matabele deserved to be defeated? Why
or why not? [2]
The Matabele deserve what happens to them (3) after the way they brutally massacred
the Barolong (3). I feel that they deserved to be defeated because of their arrogant and
offensive behaviour (3), like when they walk around naked even though it is offensive
to the other tribes. They deserve to feel defeat finally because they are unkind and did
not ever show any mercy to any members of other tribes (3). [Any 2 correct answers]
OR
I feel that the Matabele did not deserve to be defeated (3). It is unfair for the Boers to
use guns against the Matabele – their weapons stand no chance against gunfire (3).
Also, it was actually the Boers who started shooting first, killing the Matabele herdsmen
for no reason (3).
(NOTE: Learners must offer a substantial reason for their opinions and show
knowledge of the text by referring to a relevant moment in the story to get the
full 2 marks.)
TOTAL: 18 MARKS
Literature Summary 55
Drama Revision Guidelines
REVEREND KUMALO
Important actions:
Relationships:
Personality traits:
Physical description:
Activity:
1 Explain to learners what each of the headings: ‘Important Actions’, ‘Relationships’,
‘Personality Traits’ and ‘Physical Description’ mean. You can give them examples from
the table in the summary if you need to.
2 Split the learners into small groups with no more than 5 or 6 learners in each group.
3 Give each group a different character to work with, and hand out the relevant paper that
you have prepared.
4 Each small group must work together to write down what they know / what ideas they
have about that character.
5 Give the small groups a few minutes to discuss and write down their ideas.
6 Then, instruct the small groups to pass their papers clockwise to the next small group.
7 Instruct learners to read the notes that have been written so far, and to then add their
own ideas to this.
8 Continue until each group has written on each piece of paper.
9 Repeat steps 3-8 for each of the characters.
10 Read through the final papers with the whole class – let them see how much they
collectively know and understand about each character.
11 If learners have left anything information that is not on their A4 pages that you feel
needs to be on there, give them this information from the Character table.
5 Instruct learners stand in two circles (an inner and an outer circle). The learners must
face each other. Each learner should be looking at another learner.
6 Start with the first theme. For example, ‘Apartheid’.
7 Instruct learners in the inner circle to give evidence from the text for ‘Apartheid’
whilst their partner from the outer circle listens. For example, evidence for the theme
‘Apartheid’ could be “The little boy was not allowed to play in the ‘whites only’ park
because he was black”.
8 Repeat the theme.
9 Instruct the learners in the outer circle to add some different evidence for the theme to
that which their partner said.
10 After both partners have had an opportunity give evidence for that theme, instruct the
inner circle to rotate clockwise to find a new partner.
11 Repeat with another theme until you have finished all the themes.
12 You will need to move around the class and make sure that learners are providing
correct evidence. (You can use the notes under ‘Evidence of Themes’ in the
Literature Summary.)
Literature Summary 57
Drama Revision Guidelines
2 Write up the ‘Sample exam questions’ for the corresponding text on the right-hand side
of the chalkboard BEFORE the next lesson.
(NOTE: If you have not finished the previous activities in time, you can use 1 hour of
this time and give the exam questions to the learners to complete for homework and
mark them in class.)
Activity:
1 Explain to learners, that in Grade 12, the examiners use very academic words to ask
questions.
2 Explain that learners need to know what these words mean so that they know what the
examiners are asking them.
3 Go through each of the definitions.
4 Learners must copy the glossary into their books.
5 Learners need to study these words and question types as part of their exam
preparation. (NOTE: Learners only have to do this for Text 1 Revision. i.e. It can be
excluded when revising the second text.)
6 Turn to the ‘Sample Exam Questions’ section in the Literature Summary.
7 Tell learners to take out their copies of the text.
8 Tell learners the page and paragraph numbers of the extract used for the sample exam
questions. Tell learners to mark this extract in pencil.
9 Learners must answer the questions on the right hand side of the board in their exercise
books. (NOTE: If learners are going to do this for homework, they must write the
questions off the board and answer them at home.)
10 Go through the answers with the class.
PLOT SUMMARY
‘The African Dustbin’ is a play about toxic (poisonous) waste dumping. Regulations prevent
companies from dumping toxic waste anywhere in Europe. These regulations protect the
environment. The same regulations are often difficult to apply or do not exist in African
countries. So, in the play, the toxic waste from Europe is dumped in Africa.
In Scene 1, members of the board of the United European Chemical Company meet in
London. The European Union has informed them they can no longer dump their waste
in the seas. Robert Haig, a board member, proposes they pay to dump their waste in an
African country. The majority of the board members believe they will be helping the ‘poor
savages’ in that country out of poverty. Only two board members, Mineka Lubbe and
Gustav Gustavuson, oppose this proposal. They know the people and the environment
will suffer. Relations between black and white people will also be harmed. The two board
members decide to resign from the board and campaign against the board’s decision.
Scene 2 of the play is set in Paul Anderson’s office in Mpumelelo, the capital of the
Republic of Nkululeko in Africa. The Republic of Nkululeko is a fictional country in
Africa. Anderson is the Manager of African Chemical Enterprises Ltd., a subsidiary of the
United European Chemical Company. Mthengisi Gwala, Nkululeko’s Director of Natural
Resources and Environmental Protection, meets Anderson. They have been friends since
their university days. Anderson bribes Gwala to turn a blind eye when the United European
Chemical Company dumps its toxic waste in Nkululeko. Other officials will also be paid to
remain silent. Anderson expects to be promoted for solving the company’s waste disposal
problem. He dreams of even becoming chairman of the board one day.
In Scene 3, we meet Dr Nosizwe Thebe in a ward at the Mpilwenhle Central Hospital in
Nkululeko. Dr Thebe chats to a nurse about a seriously ill patient, Mpho Moyo. Dr Thebe
is very kind and respectful towards her patients. Moyo knows he is dying, but is very brave
and positive. He believes Dr Thebe has already done her best to help him. Moyo is suffering
from contamination from toxic material. Dr Thebe is awaiting test results to know what toxic
material Moyo was exposed to. Dr Thebe and Sister Dube suspect others may also be affected.
In Scene 4, Dr Mzenzisi Sibanda chats with his friend, Dr Musa Gwebu, in Mpilwenhle
Central Hospital. Dr Sibanda is the Senior Consultant Physician, and Dr Thebe’s superior.
Dr Gwebu is the Consultant Paediatrician. Dr Thebe informs Dr Sibanda that test
results prove that many of her patients from Hlezikahle District are suffering from PCB
contamination. The chemical PCB causes serious health problems in humans and animals.
All their patients from Hlezikahle District had come into contact with toxic material
leaking out of drums found in that district. The drums bear the name of the United
European Chemical Company. This tells us that this company has dumped the drums of
toxic waste in Hlezikahle District.
Dr Thebe believes it is her duty as a doctor and as a citizen to take action. Dr Sibanda and
Dr Gwebu believe it is the job of politicians, not doctors. Dr Sibanda warns Dr Thebe she
is putting her future at risk for ‘some illiterate people from the bush’ (pg. 42). Dr Gwebu
supports Dr Sibanda. Dr Thebe is shocked, because the patients are their own countrymen.
Dr Thebe tells them she will do what her conscience tells her to.
Scene 5 is set in Gwala’s office. Dr Thebe informs Gwala (who is supposed to be in
charge of protecting Nkululeko’s environment as he is the Director of Natural Resources
and Environmental Protection) about the PCB contamination. He claims Dr Thebe is
THE AFRICAN
exaggerating. Dr Thebe reminds him of his responsibility to protect the environment. She
DUSTBIN
believes he might even be involved in the dumping. Gwala warns Dr Thebe she will get into
trouble if she keeps investigating this, but she says she will not give up the fight. She warns
him he will be fired for not doing his duty. Gwala becomes angry and asks her to leave.
Gwala realises he must stop Dr Thebe.
In Scene 6, Dr Sibanda informs Dr Thebe he has written to the hospital Superintendent
to suspend her from work for insubordination (not obeying orders). Dr Sibanda knows
Dr Thebe is campaigning to expose the contamination in Hlezikahle District. During
their argument, we see that Dr Thebe is compassionate, respectful to all the workers at the
hospital, and takes her duty very seriously. Dr Sibanda, on the other hand, is pompous,
disrespectful towards hospital workers, and not concerned about his patients. He tries to
frighten Dr Thebe into silence, but she knows her rights and will not give up her fight.
In Scene 7, Dr Thebe asks Jabulile Ncube and Vusumuzi Nyathi for help. Ncube is a lawyer,
and Nyathi a journalist. They read her letter of suspension. Ncube reveals that Anderson
and Gwala are close friends, and that Dr Sibanda is a close friend of Gwala’s. All of them,
including Ncube, were students in England at the same time. According to Nyathi, President
Mkhululi has already asked for a report on the dumping after he had heard of demonstrations
by the people. Nyathi promises to expose Dr Thebe’s unfair suspension in his newspaper.
Scene 8 takes place in the Cabinet Room in Mpumelelo. President Mkhululi asks various
ministers about the contamination in Hlezikahle District. The president declares a state of
emergency. Gwala, Dr Sibanda, and four board members of the United European Chemical
Company have already been arrested. Dr Thebe has received apologies from the Ministry
of Health and has been reinstated. Letters of protest will be sent to the governments of
the European countries of which the board members were citizens. The United European
Chemical Company must remove its waste, pay for cleaning up afterwards, and pay the
victims’ medical expenses. The Nkululeko government will assist families wishing to sue the
United European Chemical Company, and will also bring charges against the company. The
Literature Summary 61
Drama: The African Dustbin
president will announce these decisions at a rally. Dr Thebe will be awarded the Order of
the Republic for her bravery and patriotism.
In Scene 9, Nyathi and Ncube meet Dr Thebe. None of the Hlezikahle patients is expected
to survive. Other countries are helping the Nkululeko government to deal with the crisis.
The United European Chemical Company has agreed to all the demands. Dr Thebe’s award
is announced in ‘The Government Gazette’. The three friends will hold a victory celebration.
Dr Thebe would like to write a play about the whole incident, titled ‘The African Dustbin’.
SETTING
The play is set in an imaginary African republic called Nkululeko, and in London, England.
The first scene is set in London, at the headquarters of the United European Chemical
Company. Scenes 2 to 9 are set in different places in Mpumelelo, the capital of Nkululeko.
NOTE: A republic is a state in which the people and their elected representatives have
supreme power. A republic has an elected or nominated president, not a king and / or
a queen. In Africa, many countries became republics after gaining independence from
colonial rulers. South Africa is a republic.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The writer, Victor C. D. Mtubani, is a Zimbabwean university lecturer and playwright.
‘The African Dustbin’ is one of the plays he has written about the issue of environmental
pollution in Southern Africa. His aim is to educate young people on the dangers of
environmental pollution, and on the role they can play in protecting the African continent.
PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls / polychlorobiphenyls) are organic chlorine compounds or
chemicals. The chemical formula for a PCB is C12H10-xClx. PCBs used to be widely used
in electrical apparatus, copy paper and heat transfer fluids. PCBs from industrial waste have
contaminated large areas of land, rivers, seas and lakes in many parts of the world. These
chemicals have a serious impact on human and animal health, and also on the environment.
PCBs enter our bodies through the food we eat and the water we drink.
These are some of the dangers of PCBs:
• They are toxic to the environment.
• They are known to cause skin rashes and cancer in humans and animals.
• PCBs interfere with the functioning of the thyroid system in humans and animals.
• They damage the liver in both animals and humans.
• PCBs interfere with the body’s immune system.
• They lead to defects in babies born to pregnant women who were exposed to PCBs.
In this play, waste from European countries is dumped into an African country. This leads
us to ask the question: Why are countries in Africa chosen to receive toxic waste from other
countries?
THE AFRICAN
allowed into a country.
DUSTBIN
• In much of Africa, there is a general lack of awareness of the impact of hazardous waste.
• When information is leaked about toxic waste being exported to another country, it is
usually denied by both the exporters and the government receiving the waste.
Below is a summary of the plot of the play. Fill each of the gaps with a word / a
few words:
Literature Summary 63
Drama: The African Dustbin
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 country / republic
2 European / chemical
3 PCBs / polychlorobiphenyls
4 Hlezikahle
5 leak / spill
6 sick / ill / contaminated
7 Mpilwenhle
8 junior / young / female /kind / caring /etc.
9 laboratories
10 Physician
11 protect / cover
12 involved
13 job / work / duty / patients
14 silent / quiet
15 suspended
16 cabinet
17 arrested / punished / caught / found out
18 expenses / bills / cost
19 victims / patients
20 remove / dispose of / get rid of
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
capital (n.) Wealth in the form of money or assets (big things you own, like a house). The
desire to gain capital makes people work. In business, capital is the money
owned by a business. The majority of the Board of the United European
Chemical Company are only interested in capital; they do not care about
people or the human suffering their actions cause.
a capitalist (n.) A wealthy person who invests in trade and industry for profit (in accordance
with the principles of capitalism). The members of the Board of the United
European Chemical Company are capitalists because their aim is to make as
much profit as they can.
capitalism (n.) An economic system in which a country’s trade and industry are controlled
by private owners for profit, rather than by the state. This system is used
in most countries of the world. In such countries, there are usually vast
differences in the standard of living of the wealthy and the poor. Those who
own industries, mines, businesses, etc. remain wealthy. Those who work in
these industries, mines, businesses, etc. usually remain poor. This system is
regarded as the opposite of communism.
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
corruption (n.) This refers to dishonest behaviour by those in power. It often involves taking
a bribe. In the play, Mthengisi Gwala, the Director of Natural Resources
and Environmental Protection, is guilty of corruption. He accepts a bribe
from Paul Anderson to allow the dumping of toxic waste. This is extremely
dishonest because his job is to protect the environment.
to exploit (v.) To exploit means to use someone (or a situation) in a dishonest and selfish
way, so that you benefit. The United European Chemical Company exploits
the situation in Nkululeko to make a profit. They know that it is easy to dump
toxic waste in many parts of Africa and to not face any consequences for it.
a collaborator (n.) A collaborator is a person who works jointly on an activity or project. The
word is often used to mean a person who cooperates with the enemy.
In Scene 8, Mthengisi Gwala, the Director of Natural Resources and
THE AFRICAN
Environmental Protection, is identified as one of the collaborators who
DUSTBIN
worked closely with the officials of the United European Chemical Company
to bring harm to his own people.
communism (n.) A political theory derived from Karl Marx. In communism, people all belong
to the same social class. This means there will be no very rich or very poor
people. The aim is to develop a society in which all property is publicly
owned. In a communist system, each person works for the advantage of all
members of the group, and all goods or produce are equally shared by the
people.
a communist (n.) A person who supports or believes in the principles of communism. At the
board meeting in Scene 1, Robert Haig calls the officials of the European
Union communists. He believes they are communists because they are
against people like him, who are interested in getting and staying rich.
contamination (n.) Contamination happens when water, food or a person is exposed to
something poisonous. The patients from the Hlezikahle District have suffered
PCB contamination. The exposure to this toxic chemical is making them sick.
insubordinate (adj.) / Someone who is insubordinate refuses to obey the orders of someone who
insubordination (n.) is in a position of power. When someone is insubordinate, they might get a
warning of suspension for refusing to obey orders. Dr Thebe is suspended
for refusing to obey Dr Sibanda’s orders. He wants her to remain silent and
do nothing about the toxic waste that has been dumped in the Hlezikahle
District. Instead, she is insubordinate (she doesn’t listen to what he has
said) and tells the press about the people who have become ill from PCB
contamination.
a patriot (n.) A person who vigorously supports their country and is prepared to defend
it. Dr Thebe is a true patriot in the play. She is concerned about the health of
her patients. She takes up the issue of the Hlezikahle patients even though
she knows Dr Sibanda will ruin her career. She is willing to do anything to
protect her country and the people who live there. In Scene 8, the president
hails Dr Thebe as a patriot.
a physician (n.) A person who is a highly-qualified specialist doctor. Dr Mzenzisi Sibanda is a
Senior Consultant Physician.
Literature Summary 65
Drama: The African Dustbin
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
a paediatrician (n.) A doctor specialising in children and their diseases. Dr Musa Gwebu is a
paediatrician.
Polychlorobiphenyls Poisonous chemical compound that has many harmful effects on plant,
(PCBs) animal and human life. The play is about what happens when dangerous
chemicals like PCBs are dumped.
a savage (n.) This is an offensive word to describe people thought to be uncivilized and
primitive. The majority of the members of the Board of the United European
Chemical Company see the people of Africa as savages.
This shows that they are extremely racist.
a subsidiary (adj.) This is a company owned and controlled by a parent or holding company.
company African Chemical Enterprises Ltd. is a subsidiary of (is owned by) the United
European Chemical Company. Paul Anderson is the manager of African
Chemical Enterprises Ltd.
toxic (adj.) Toxic means the same as poisonous. Toxic chemicals make many people sick
in the play.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Went on trial for supporting the freedom fighters while still a
student at university.
2 Treats the patients from the Hlezikahle District that have been
contaminated by PCBs.
3 Reports to Dr Sibanda on the results of the laboratory tests done
on samples taken from people from the Hlezikahle District.
4 Tries to convince Dr Sibanda that they need to take some action to
prevent more people from being contaminated by the toxic waste.
5 Ignores Dr Sibanda’s warning not to take any action about the PCB
contamination.
6 Visits Gwala to tell him about what has made the patients from
the Hlezikahle District sick. She hopes to get his help to solve the
problem of the toxic waste that was dumped in the Hlezikahle
District.
7 Tells Gwala that it his responsibility to protect the environment
because he is the Director of Natural Resources and Environmental
Protection.
8 Threatens Gwala that she will ‘pull him down’ (pg. 54) in the end.
9 Warns Gwala he will be fired for not carrying out his duties.
10 Holds meetings at the hospital to inform everyone about the cases
of PCB contamination.
11 Asks her colleagues to help inform the public about the dangers of
toxic waste.
12 Asks her friends, Ncube the lawyer, and Nyathi the journalist, for
help and advice after receiving the letter of suspension.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
RELATIONSHIPS She is a doctor with good working relationships with most of the
workers at Mpilwenhle Central Hospital. She respects all who work
at the hospital, including the cooks and the cleaners. She is kind,
respectful and compassionate towards her patients in the hospital. We
see her kindness in the way she treats Moyo. She is friends with Ncube
and Nyathi. Ncube and Nyathi are full of respect and admiration for
her. They are proud of her as a citizen of their country, and when she
is awarded the Order of the Republic.
PERSONALITY TRAITS She is a born activist and leader. An activist is one who campaigns
vigorously to bring about social and political change. She is outspoken
and does not hesitate to fight for or to speak passionately about what
she believes in. She loves her country and Africa, and is proud of
her Africanness. She is patriotic and will make sacrifices to help and
protect the people of her country. She tackles problems head-on. She
is brave enough to fight against people in high positions. She is not
THE AFRICAN
afraid to face the consequences of fighting for what she believes in.
DUSTBIN
She remains humble despite the praise and the award she receives.
Her kindness and compassion are clearly seen. She is respectful to all
people. She does not see herself as superior to anyone else by virtue
of her position as a doctor. She is totally dedicated to her work and to
her patients.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION A young adult – probably in her mid-twenties.
CHANGES Remains the same.
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 He accepts a bribe from Paul Anderson on behalf of the United
European Chemical Company.
2 Asks for his bribe to be paid in American dollars and directly into
his Swiss bank account. This implies that he this is not the first time
he has taken a bribe.
3 Threatens Dr Thebe that he has important connections when she
asks him to do his duty.
4 Tries to convince Dr Thebe not to do or say anything about the
toxic waste dumped in the Hlezikahle District but fails.
RELATIONSHIPS He has been close friends with Dr Mzenzisi Sibanda and Paul
Anderson since their university days.
PERSONALITY TRAITS He is selfish and has no interest in the welfare or safety of his people.
He is pompous (irritatingly full of his own importance). He is totally
corrupt and is therefore easily bribed. He values money above
human life. He exploits his position as Director of Natural Resources
and Environmental Protection to enrich himself. He is a shrewd
businessman.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION None given in the play.
CHANGES At the beginning of the play, he has much power because of his
position and has he important connections. By the end of the play he
has been arrested.
Literature Summary 67
Drama: The African Dustbin
MAJOR CHARACTERS
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Calls Gwala to his office to discuss issues of dumping in Nkululeko.
2 Bribes Gwala to do nothing when waste from his company is
dumped in Nkululeko.
3 Invites Gwala to his home to celebrate their deal over drinks.
4 Sends message to the chairman of the Board of the United
European Chemical Company that Gwala has agreed to the deal.
RELATIONSHIPS He is a representative of the United European Chemical Company.
He manages their subsidiary company in Africa, African Chemical
Enterprises Ltd. He has been friends with Gwala and Sibanda since
their university days.
PERSONALITY TRAITS He is very ambitious. He values money above human life. He is a
shrewd businessman and a smooth talker. He does not care about the
consequences of his actions. He is loyal to his company.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION None given.
CHANGES He was a successful company manager at the beginning of the play. At
the end of the play, however, he faces arrest.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 She reveals that Paul Anderson, Mthengisi Gwala and Dr Mzenzisi
Sibanda have all been friends since they were at university
together.
THE AFRICAN
2 She supports and advises Dr Thebe after her suspension.
DUSTBIN
RELATIONSHIPS She is friends with Dr Thebe and Nyathi.
PERSONALITY TRAITS She is loyal to and supportive of her friends. She is patriotic. She does
not give up easily. She is an optimistic person. She is fearless, despite
having to deal with powerful people.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION None given.
CHANGES Remains the same.
Literature Summary 69
Drama: The African Dustbin
THEME 2
RACISM
This is the belief that the people of each race have characteristics or abilities specific to
that race. According to this belief, one race may think they are superior or inferior to
another race because of these characteristics or abilities. This belief results in prejudice,
discrimination or hatred directed at someone of a different race.
THEME 3
ARROGANCE OF EDUCATED AFRICANS IN HIGH POSITIONS
Arrogance refers to a person’s inflated belief in himself and his abilities. People are said to
be arrogant if they believe that they know more than others, or that they are superior to
others in terms of their abilities, achievements, etc.
THEME 4
HEROISM
This has to do with great bravery. Heroism involves being able to stand up to the enemy,
even if they are more powerful than you are. It also involves fighting for what one believes
in even though there may be negative consequences for yourself.
her her job, or ruin her future and career. She is totally dedicated to her work as a doctor,
and to helping the people of her country.
THEME 5
THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENT
The government of any country has several important duties to fulfil. Besides ensuring that
the constitution of the country is upheld, it must also take action when things go wrong,
such as when there is a disaster in the country.
THE AFRICAN
a blind eye to the dumping. However, there is hope for the future of Nkululeko because
DUSTBIN
we see that the president places the health and safety of his people first. He takes swift
action: as soon as he hears about the problem, he gets his mnisters to investigate and report
their findings to him. He holds an emergency cabinet meeting where he hears the reports.
He then very quickly makes decisions on what actions to take. The ministers all respect
and support their president in the decisions that he makes. The president is not afraid
to approach the more powerful European governments whose citizens have caused this
problem in his country. He decides that the United European Chemical Company must
make amends for what they have done to his country and his people. The president tries to
ensure that those who have harmed his country and people face the consequences (jail or
the death penalty) for what they have done.
THEME 6
THE IMPORTANCE OF PROTECTING THE ENVIRONMENT
Environmental issues, such as the prevention of pollution, toxic waste disposal and nature
conservation are high on the list of priorities of most governments of the world. A lot of
damage has already been done to the environment. To raise awareness, these issues are
dealt with in schools and in the media across the world. It is hoped that in the future,
young people will be able to protect the environment better than previous generations have
been able to.
Literature Summary 71
Drama: The African Dustbin
hot summers. They usually have to rely on food aid from other countries. Thus, the play
sends out a powerful message about the importance of taking care of the environment.
2 MOOD / ATMOSPHERE:
Because of the the large amount of conflict between various characters in the play, there is a
tense atmosphere for much of the play. This means that readers feel the tension as they read.
The audience watching the play being performed will also feel the tension. The characters
involved in the illegal dumping of toxic waste are in conflict with the main character, Dr
Nosizwe Thebe. Dr Thebe wants those responsible for her patients’ illnesses to be punished.
She wants the toxic waste to be removed from her country. She fears that many more of
her countrymen will suffer greatly by coming into contact with the waste. The atmosphere
is especially tense when Dr Thebe has meetings with Dr Sibanda and Gwala. They both
threaten her and her career. However, Dr Thebe never backs down. She does not mind
sacrificing her future and her career for her fellow countrymen. The atmosphere lightens
in the last two scenes of the play. The president now knows about the toxic dumping
and people are going to be punished for their involvement with it. Dr Thebe has been
acknowledged for her bravery and commitment. There is a feeling of hope for the future of
Nkululeko, and a sense that good has triumphed over evil.
3 FIGURES OF SPEECH
a Irony is when the obvious (likely) thing we think will happen does not happen and vice
versa. There are some interesting examples of irony in the play:
• In Scene 2, it is ironic that the person whose job it is to protect the environment in
Nkululeko is actually the one who agrees for the toxic waste to be dumped there:
The Director of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection, Mthengisi Gwala,
is bribed to turn a blind eye to the dumping of toxic waste.
• In Scene 4, Dr Sibanda suggests that Dr Thebe will bring their hospital into
disrepute by speaking out about the toxic waste dumped in the Hlezikahle District.
The irony is that he is already bringing the hospital into disrepute by asking Dr
Thebe to remain silent on the matter. As a senior doctor, Dr Sibanda should set an
example of how a senior doctor should behave. Ironically, it is the junior doctor, Dr
Thebe, who sets the example by taking her work and her patients so seriously. Later
in the play, Dr Sibanda asks the hospital Superintendent to suspend Dr Thebe from
duty. Ironically, Dr Sibanda himself is later suspended from duty and arrested for
protecting his friend, Mthengisi Gwala. In the end, it is Dr Sibanda who brings the
hospital into disrepute.
THE AFRICAN
b Symbolism is when one thing represents (stands for) something else with a
DUSTBIN
figurative meaning.
The Republic of Nonkululeko is not a real country. It is a symbol that represents all
African countries. The play focuses on how people from Nonkululeko suffer while
people from Western countries exploit the African countries in order to make money.
A number of African countries have been affected by the dumping of toxic waste from
European countries.
4 TONE:
Tone tells us what the characters sound like when they speak. The attitude of a speaker is
often revealed by the tone used.
a Mtubani chooses the characters’ words carefully which show us their attitude to others.
His diction gives us insight into what the characters are feeling. Some examples of
this include:
• In Scene 1, Edwards uses a condescending or disdainful tone when he says: ‘We all
love these African natives, don’t we? That is why we have given them millions in aid.
We even feed their starving populations, don’t we?’ (pg. 11) Edwards clearly feels
superior to Africans.
• In Scene 2, Gwala uses an arrogant tone when he says, ‘No girl gives me the boot,
my friend’ (pg. 22). To ‘give someone the boot’ means to dump / break up with
them. He is saying that no one would dump him. This implies that only he would
ever dump someone else. Gwala has an exaggerated sense of his own importance.
• In Scene 3, Dr Thebe and Sister Dube refer to Moyo as ‘Baba Moyo’ (pg. 27–28).
They do this because he is their elder and addressing him as ‘Baba’ shows him that
they respect him.
• Dr Sibanda uses an arrogant and threatening tone when he speaks to Dr Thebe. He
is also patronising to her. For example, in Scene 6, he says, ‘Young lady, don’t forget
Literature Summary 73
Drama: The African Dustbin
who I am. (Pause) I repeat, do not forget who I am. (Pause) I have power, influence
and connections. (Pause) Remember that, or you will be sorry.’ (pg. 66)
b In some parts of the play, the stage directions indicate the tone used by the person.
Stage directions are the words that appear in italics and within brackets throughout the
play. These give the actors and the director of the play an idea about how words must
be spoken, and about the feelings and attitude that must be shown to the audience.
For example:
• “Sibanda: (Annoyed) Who are the ‘we’ that you are referring to, Nosizwe?” (pg. 36)
The actor playing Sibanda knows that he must use an annoyed tone to show the
audience that the character is getting annoyed with Dr Thebe.
• ‘Thebe: (Losing her temper) If you care for your patients,…’ (pg. 37) The actor has
to say the words that follow in an angry tone, so that the audience knows that she is
getting angry.
• ‘Thebe: (Bitterly) What will bring this hospital into disrepute…’ (pg. 40) suggests a
bitter (angry, hurt) tone.
• ‘Thebe: (Jokingly) Peace; there will be a time for your war later.’ (pg. 77) The tone
used by the actor will be humorous or light-hearted so that the audience knows that
Thebe is making a joke.
Read the following extract from the ‘The African Dustbin’ and then answer the
questions that follow it:
1 The extract above is from a scene in which there is a Cabinet meeting. Explain
briefly why this cabinet meeting is taking place. [3]
THE AFRICAN
DUSTBIN
People from Hlezikahle District were contaminated by the toxic waste that was dumped
there. (3) There were demonstrations by the people. (3) The President asked some of
his ministers to investigate and report on what had happened in Hlezikahle District. (3)
2 Refer to lines 1–4. (‘Thank you, your Excellency … in other hospitals’):
a Who was responsible for finding out what the patients had been exposed to? [1]
Literature Summary 75
Drama: The African Dustbin
6 What eventually happens to those people who were involved in the dumping? [1]
He wanted to expose the corruption that is so rife in African countries. (3) The play is
about the suffering that is caused to innocent people when greedy / corrupt people try
to make as much money as possible. (3)
OR
He wanted to educate people about the dangers of pollution / dumping toxic waste. (3)
The play exposes the harm caused to people and the environment when toxic waste is
dumped irresponsibly. (3)
TOTAL: 16 MARKS
7 Each small group must discuss their individual lists, and must narrow their 25 / 30
points down to the five most important points about the text.
8 Give the small groups time to work out their final list of five points.
9 Instruct each group to decide on a speaker.
10 Call the class back together.
11 The speaker for each group shares the group’s final list.
12 If time permits, the class can then discuss the lists and decide on the five most
important points for the class.
Literature Summary 79
Short Stories Revision Guidelines
REVEREND KUMALO
Important actions:
Relationships:
Personality traits:
Physical description:
Activity:
1 Explain to learners what each of the headings: ‘Important Actions’, ‘Relationships’,
‘Personality Traits’ and ‘Physical Description’ mean. You can give them examples from
the table in the summary if you need to.
2 Split the learners into small groups with no more than 5 or 6 learners in each group.
3 Give each group a different character to work with, and hand out the relevant paper that
you have prepared.
4 Each small group must work together to write down what they know / what ideas they
have about that character.
5 Give the small groups a few minutes to discuss and write down their ideas.
6 Then, instruct the small groups to pass their papers clockwise to the next small group.
7 Instruct learners to read the notes that have been written so far, and to then add their
own ideas to this.
8 Continue until each group has written on each piece of paper.
9 Repeat steps 3-8 for each of the characters.
10 Read through the final papers with the whole class – let them see how much they
collectively know and understand about each character.
11 If learners have left anything information that is not on their A4 pages that you feel
needs to be on there, give them this information from the Character table.
5 Instruct learners stand in two circles (an inner and an outer circle). The learners must
face each other. Each learner should be looking at another learner.
6 Start with the first theme. For example, ‘Apartheid’.
7 Instruct learners in the inner circle to give evidence from the text for ‘Apartheid’
whilst their partner from the outer circle listens. For example, evidence for the theme
‘Apartheid’ could be “The little boy was not allowed to play in the ‘whites only’ park
because he was black”.
8 Repeat the theme.
9 Instruct the learners in the outer circle to add some different evidence for the theme to
that which their partner said.
10 After both partners have had an opportunity give evidence for that theme, instruct the
inner circle to rotate clockwise to find a new partner.
11 Repeat with another theme until you have finished all the themes.
12 You will need to move around the class and make sure that learners are providing
correct evidence. (You can use the notes under ‘Evidence of Themes’ in the
Literature Summary.)
Literature Summary 81
Short Stories Revision Guidelines
2 Write up the ‘Sample exam questions’ for the corresponding text on the right-hand side
of the chalkboard BEFORE the next lesson.
(NOTE: If you have not finished the previous activities in time, you can use 1 hour of
this time and give the exam questions to the learners to complete for homework and
mark them in class.)
Activity:
1 Explain to learners, that in Grade 12, the examiners use very academic words to ask
questions.
2 Explain that learners need to know what these words mean so that they know what the
examiners are asking them.
3 Go through each of the definitions.
4 Learners must copy the glossary into their books.
5 Learners need to study these words and question types as part of their exam
preparation. (NOTE: Learners only have to do this for Text 1 Revision. i.e. It can be
excluded when revising the second text.)
6 Turn to the ‘Sample Exam Questions’ section in the Literature Summary.
7 Tell learners to take out their copies of the text.
8 Tell learners the page and paragraph numbers of the extract used for the sample exam
questions. Tell learners to mark this extract in pencil.
9 Learners must answer the questions on the right hand side of the board in their exercise
books. (NOTE: If learners are going to do this for homework, they must write the
questions off the board and answer them at home.)
10 Go through the answers with the class.
PLOT SUMMARY
Noumbe is excited because it is her ‘three days’. Her husband, Mustapha, will come to stay
with her for three days. He has three other wives. Each wife gets him for three days at a
time. Lately, Mustapha has been neglecting Noumbe. He has not visited her in two weeks.
Even though she has no money, she prepares a delicious meal. She wants him to enjoy his
time with her and not think about his other wives. The other women in her compound
joke with her about how much fun she will have with him. They sing and dance together.
She waits for Mustapha for three days, not eating, and hardly sleeping. On the first day,
she sends her son to look for him. She thinks about him spending this time with one of his
other wives. She knows she is no longer Mustapha’s favourite wife because he has married
a fourth wife, who is younger than she is. She gets more and more anxious and jealous. She
HER THREE
does not want to blame Mustapha for his own behaviour, so she blames his fourth wife for
DAYS
keeping him too long. There is also something wrong with Noumbe’s heart. She feels pain
and takes medicine. She does not want to go to the clinic to get more medicine in case
Mustapha arrives while she is out. To make her medicine last longer, she drinks a mixture of
water and wood ash to make her heart burn less.
On the second day, Mustapha’s second wife comes to visit. She pretends that she wants to
talk to Mustapha. However, Noumbe knows that she is only trying to make her feel bad
that Mustapha is not there. In the past when Noumbe was Mustapha’s favourite, he used to
spend extra time with Noumbe, even when he was supposed to be with the second wife.
Now she is enjoying seeing Noumbe suffer because she is no longer the favourite. On the
second night of waiting, Noumbe goes out into the village to look for Mustapha. However,
she quickly goes home because she does not want to embarrass herself.
On the third day she sends her children to his fourth wife to fetch him. She borrows money
from her neighbour, Aida, to buy a chicken. She hopes that the good smell of the cooked
chicken will make Mustapha want to stay with her. After waiting for hours, she starts to
cry. Mustapha only arrives at night. He comes into her shack with two of his friends. She is
very upset and does not talk much. When she answers his questions, she pretends that he
stayed at her shack the previous night. She does this to make him feel bad for not coming
to her when he was supposed to. Mustapha gets angry because she reminds him of how he
neglected her. He sees the three meals she cooked for him during his three days of absence
on the table. The men stand up to go. In her anger, Noumbe breaks all three plates. She
gets a sudden pain in her heart. She screams and falls on the floor. Mustapha is patronising
Literature Summary 83
Short Story: Her Three Days
towards her and thinks she is weak for getting jealous that he did not come and see her. He
and his friends complain about women wanting more rights. They comment that women
are trying to get rid of polygamy (the act of having more than one wife). They imply that
their lives would be very hard if they only had one wife. They leave. Her neighbours help
her to bed.
SETTING
The story is set in Senegal. Most of the story takes place in Noumbe’s one-roomed shack.
Her shack is in a compound. This is an area of a few shacks together. She is poor and there
is little furniture in her shack: a bed with a white cover, and a table with white china on
display. There are photographs on the walls. The story takes place over three days.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Different cultures have different rules and traditions about marriage. Polygamy is the
practice of one man having more than one wife. Polyandry is the practice of one woman
having more than one husband. In Senegal, polygamy is allowed. Men can have more
than one wife.
Noumbe is excited because it is her ‘three days’. Her husband, [1] ______________,
will come to stay with her for three days. He has three other wives. Each wife
gets him for [2] _______________ days at a time.
Lately, Mustapha has been neglecting Noumbe. He has not visited her in two
[3] _______________ . Even though she has no money, she prepares a delicious
meal. She wants him to enjoy his time with her and not think about his other
[4] _______________ . The other women in her compound joke with her about how
much fun she will have with him. They sing and dance together. She waits for
Mustaph for three days, not eating and hardly sleeping. On the first day, she
sends her [5] _______________ to look for him. She thinks about him spending
this time with one of his other wives. She is no longer Mustapha’s favourite
wife because he has married a fourth wife, who is [6] _______________ than she
is. She gets more and more anxious and jealous. She does not want to blame
Mustapha for his own behaviour, so she blames his fourth wife for keeping him
too long. There is also something wrong with Noumbe’s [7] _______________ . She
feels pain and takes medicine. She does not want to go to the clinic to get more
medicine in case Mustapha arrives while she is out. To make her medicine last
longer, she drinks a mixture of water and [8] _______________ to make her heart
burn less. On the second day, Mustapha’s [9] _______________ wife comes to visit.
She pretends that she wants to talk to Mustapha. However, Noumbe knows
that she is only trying to make her feel bad that Mustapha is not there. In the
past when Noumbe was Mustapha’s favourite, he used to spend extra time
with Noumbe, even when he was supposed to be with the second wife. Now
she is enjoying seeing Noumbe suffer because she is no longer the favourite.
On the second night of waiting, Noumbe goes out into the village to look for
Mustapha. However, she quickly goes home because she does not want to
embarrass herself.
On the third day she sends her children to his fourth wife to fetch him. She
borrows [10] _______________ from her neighbour, Aida, to buy a chicken. She
hopes that the good smell of the cooked chicken will make Mustapha want to
stay with her. After waiting for hours, she starts to [11] _______________.
Mustapha only arrives at night. He comes into her shack with two of his friends.
She is very upset and does not talk much. When she answers his questions,
she pretends that he stayed at her shack the previous night. She does this to
make him feel bad for not coming to her when he was supposed to. Mustapha
gets angry because she reminds him of how he neglected her. He sees the
three [12] _______________ she cooked for him during his three days of absence
HER THREE
on the table. The men stand up to go. In her anger, Noumbe breaks all three
DAYS
plates. She gets a sudden pain in her heart. She screams and falls on the
floor. Mustapha is patronising towards her and thinks she is weak for getting
jealous that he didn’t come and see her. He and his friends complain about
women wanting more rights. They comment that women are trying to get rid
of polygamy (the act of having more than one wife). They imply that their lives
would be very hard if they only had one wife. They leave. Her neighbours help
her to bed.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 Mustapha
2 three
3 weeks
4 wives
5 son
6 younger
7 heart
8 wood ash / ash
9 second
Literature Summary 85
Short Story: Her Three Days
10 money
11 cry
12 meals / dishes / plates
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
polygamy (n.) When a man is allowed to marry more than one woman. Polygamy is
legal in Senegal, where the story is set. Noumbe is Mustapha’s third
wife of four.
to long for (v.) A feeling of wanting something very much. Noumbe longs for
Mustapha to come stay with her. She is sad and lonely without him.
to neglect (v.) When you don’t give someone the attention they need. Mustapha
neglects Noumbe because he has a new younger wife.
henna (n.) A natural dye that people use to decorate their hands and feet in
some countries, including Senegal. Noumbe decorates her hands and
feet with henna to make herself attractive to Mustapha.
to poke fun at someone (v.) To mock them or tease them. At the end of the story, Mustapha gets
angry with Noumbe for pretending to be happy and obedient, when
she is really mocking him for not visiting her during her three days.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
NAME NOUMBE
RELATIONSHIPS She is married to Mustapha. She is the third of his four wives. She
used to be his favourite, until four months ago when he married a
younger woman. She has five children.
PERSONALITY TRAITS She works hard to make her husband happy. She is very sad that he
is neglecting her. She is a proud woman. She does not want people to
see how sad she is.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION She is thin and is of average height. She has a problem with her heart.
She is not old, but she has been pregnant five times and her body is
no longer strong. Her face is haggard (wrinkled). She has prepared for
Mustapha’s visit: she has plaited her hair and put henna on her hands
and feet. She is wearing a mauve (light purple) velvet dress.
CHANGES At the beginning of the story, Noumbe still believes that Mustapha
loves her. By the end of the story, she realises that he is no longer
interested in her because of his new wife.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
NAME MUSTAPHA
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Is supposed to spend his three days with Noumbe, but he does
not come. He stays with his fourth wife.
2 Eventually, on the third night, he comes to Noumbe’s shack, once
she has sent their children to fetch him.
3 Gets angry with Noumbe for being sad and, in his mind,
demanding.
4 Does not help her when she collapses (falls down) in pain. He
leaves with his friends.
RELATIONSHIPS He is married to Noumbe and three other women.
PERSONALITY TRAITS He is a selfish man. He stays with whichever wife he feels like
spending time with, even though there are rules for which wife
he should be with on which day. He is not kind or sympathetic to
Noumbe.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION None given.
CHANGES In the past, he cared about Noumbe and gave her a lot of attention.
Since marrying his fourth wife, he has neglected her. At the end of the
story, it is clear that he will not give her support or attention in the
future.
HER THREE
THEMES AND EVIDENCE OF THEMES IN TEXT
DAYS
THEME 1
PATRIARCHY
Patriarchy is the system of giving men more power than women. In patriarchal societies,
men have more power, more freedom and more opportunities than women.
Literature Summary 87
Short Story: Her Three Days
the system of polygamy. The fact that women did not even question the patriarchal society
that forces them to submit, indicates how brainwashed they are into believing it is normal
and acceptable.
2 DICTION:
The author has used diction (word choices) which is very descriptive. This is language that
describes how things look, sound, smell and taste. It helps us to imagine the things that
are happening in the story. The writer uses words to paint a picture in our imaginations.
For example:
• Sight: ‘In the far distance, high above the tree-tops, a long trail of dark-grey clouds
tinged with red was hiding the sun’. (pg. 67). This paints a picture of how the sky looked
– dark, but lit up by the sun. This is also an example of personification because it talks
about the clouds ‘hiding’ the sun. Personification is when human qualities are given to
inanimate objects.
• Feeling: ‘Her heart was troubling her, and she had a fit of coughing. Her inside seemed
to be on fire’ (page 68). This shows us the terrible pain Noumbe was feeling.This is also
an example of a metaphor as Noumbe’s pain is being compared to a fire.
• Sound: ‘There was a friendly atmosphere in the compound, with bursts of happy
laughter and sounds of guttural voices, while the women busied themselves with the
housework’ (pg. 71). This helps us imagine how the laughter sounds in the story –
loud and deep.
• Smell: ‘She swept the room again, shut the door and windows, but the heady scent of the
incense escaped through the cracks between the planks’ (pg. 72). A heady scent is a very
strong scent. We are meant to imagine the smell of the strong incense.
• Sight: ‘She did her hair again, put antimony on her lower lip, eyebrows and lashes, then
dressed in a white starched blouse and a hand-woven waist-cloth and inspected her
hands and feet’ (pg. 72). When we think about a white starched blouse, we think about
something that is perfectly in shape and very clean. This helps us to imagine how clean
and perfect Noumbe wants to look.
3 TONE:
Tone tells us what the characters sound like when they speak. Some examples of different
ways of expressing tone in this story are as follows:
a Demanding questions tell us the character is angry: “‘And just what are these plates
for?’” (pg. 74)
b Diction also tells us about how characters are feeling emotionally. “‘He’ll be here this
morning, Aida.’ Noumbe bridled.” (pg. 69). The word ‘bridled’ tells us that Noube is
angry and resentful towards Aida.
c Punctuation also helps to express tone. “‘You’re making fun of me!’” tells us that
Mustapha is possibly surprised / angry / speaking in a loud voice.
Noumbe remembered only too well that when she was newly married
she had usurped the second wife’s three days. At that time she had been
the youngest wife. Mustapha had not let a day pass without coming to
see her. Although not completely certain, she believed she had conceived
her third child during this wife’s three days. The latter’s presence now and 5
remarks that she let drop made Noumbe realize that she was no longer
the favourite. This revelation, and the polite, amiable tone and her visitor’s
eagerness to inquire after her children’s health and her own, to praise her
superior choice of household utensils, her taste in clothes, the cleanliness
of the room and the lingering fragrance of incense, all this was like a stab 10
in cold blood, a cruel reminder of the perfidy of words and the hypocrisy of
HER THREE
rivals; and all part of the world of women. This observation did not get her
DAYS
anywhere, except to arouse a desire to escape from the circle of polygamy
and to cause her to ask herself – it was a moment of mental aberration
really – ‘Why do we allow ourselves to be men’s playthings?’ 15
1 Refer to line 1–2 (Noumbe remembered only…wife’s three days’). Write only the
letter (A–D) next to the question number 1 in your answer. [1]
‘Noumbe remembered only too well that when she was newly married she had
usurped the second wife’s three days’. Another word for “usurped’ is…
A contributed
B taken
C arranged
D fixed
B taken (3)
Literature Summary 89
Short Story: Her Three Days
has not visited Noumbe in her three days / because Mustapha used to stay with Noumbe
during the second wife’s three days. (3)
4 Name TWO things that Mustapha’s second wife does during her visit in order to
make Noumbe feel bad. [2]
Any TWO of the following: (3)
• Enquires after her children’s health (and her own)
• Praises her superior choice of household utensils
• Praises her taste in clothes
• Praises the cleanliness of the room
• Praises the lingering fragrance of incense
5 Write only the letter (A–D) next to the question number 5 in your answer. [1]
Mustapha’s second wife’s motive for visiting Noumbe is …
A kindness
B fear
C payback
D patience
C payback (3)
6 At the end of the extract, Noumbe asks herself ‘Why do we allow ourselves to be
men’s playthings?’ What figure of speech is this and why is it used here? [4]
This is a rhetorical question (3). It is also a metaphor – comparing wives / women
to toys. It is used here to make the reader think about how women are treated in the
system of polygamy (3). The question does not have an easy answer – it is used here
to emphasise the theme of the short story – patriarchy (3). This question shows that
Noumbe is recognising how unfair the system is, but she still has no way out (3).
7 Identify and discuss the theme of this short story. [3]
The theme of this short story is patriarchy (3). Patriarchy is the system that gives men
more power in society than women (3). In this short story, we see that Mustapha can
do whatever he pleases because he is a man (3).
8 Quote FOUR consecutive words that show that Noumbe’s feelings were hurt. [1]
does not take care of herself properly – she does not go to the clinic even though she
needs medicine (3). At the end of the story, Noumbe is angry at her husband, but she is
not free to express her feelings – it is only Mustapha who can shout and yell (3). Finally,
I think that because it is men who make money, Noumbe doesn’t have the power to
leave her husband, no matter how badly he treats her. (3)
NOTE: Any 4 of the above and accept other valid responses that are well supported with
evidence from the story.
TOTAL: 20 MARKS
HER THREE
DAYS
Literature Summary 91
Short Story: I Am Not Talking About That Now
PLOT SUMMARY
Mamvulane wakes up with a headache and listens to her husband, Mdlangathi, snore. She
thinks about the story he told her the night before. Some boys forced a man to drink bleach
as punishment for being drunk. This story is set in Apartheid, and activists at the time
believed that black people needed to stay sober all the time because if they were drunk, the
police could control them more easily. There is also a consumer boycott which means black
people are not buying from white-owned shops as a way to protest against the pass laws of
Apartheid. There is also no food in the house because the consumer boycott has been going
on for three weeks. Mamvulane is hungry and worried about what she will make her family
to eat. Mdlangathi and the children demand food, even though she cannot go to the shops
to buy it.
That afternoon, Mamvulane walks all the way from Gugulethu to Mannenberg, where no
one will recognise her. She then takes a bus to Claremont and goes grocery shopping at
the Pick ‘n Pay. After shopping, she goes into a toilet at the station. There she squashes her
food into one packet and hides some of it in her clothes. She hides it in case the comrades
see her and suspect that she went shopping. They will be very angry if they realise that
she broke the consumer boycott. She takes the Nyanga bus past Gugulethu and gets off at
kwaBraweni. She does this so that she will not be seen by the comrades. She walks home
through a small forest so that no one will see her. When she is almost home, she is caught
by a crowd of young people. They rip open her bag. Her food spills out onto the road. They
stamp on it and kick it to make sure that she cannot use it.
When she gets home she shows Mdlangathi the few items of food that she was able to hide
in her clothes. She is very sad because one of the young men who attacked her was her son,
Mteteli. She is surprised that Mdlangathi does not get angry when she tells him. He usually
has a very bad temper. She is angry that he does not want to stand up for her, but also
relieved because she does not want a big fight between father and son. She serves dinner to
her family. Mteteli is out and misses the meal. Mamvulane and Mdlangathi complain that
Mteteli doesn’t listen to them anymore.
In the middle of the night, when they are sleeping, Mteteli comes home. He wants his
mother to give him dinner. He is very rude to her. Mdlangathi gets angry, shouts at Mteteli
and shakes him very hard. Mteteli continues to demand his food. Mdlangathi hits him
on the head with a knobkerrie that he keeps under the bed and cracks his skull. Their
neighbour refuses to take them to the hospital. He is one of the men who the comrades
forced to drink bleach. He does not want to help Mteteli because he knows that Mteteli was
involved in enforcing the boycott. Mteteli dies. Mdlangathi goes to jail. He does not ask for
permission to go to his son’s funeral.
SETTING
The story is set during the 1980s: a time when Apartheid was brutal, but resistance to
Apartheid was very strong. It is set in Gugulethu, a township in Cape Town. Most of the
story takes place at Mamvulane’s house. She also walks to Mannenberg, which is next to
Gugulethu, and takes a bus to the Pick ‘n Pay in Claremont. The whole story takes place
over one day.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
From 1985 onwards, many communities tried to fight against Apartheid by boycotting
white businesses. This means that they refused to buy things from businesses owned by
white people. They hoped that because they were losing money, white business people
would pressurise the government to end Apartheid. As part of this form of protest, people
encouraged their community members not to drink alcohol. This was a time when young
people were asking older generations to consider their behaviour more carefully. Young
people realised that there were many ways in which the Apartheid Government oppressed
them. They saw alcohol as a way for the Apartheid Government to control black people,
I AM NOT TALKING
ABOUT THAT NOW
because drunken people are less able to protest and resist oppression.
Literature Summary 93
Short Story: I Am Not Talking About That Now
see her and suspect that she went shopping. They will be angry if they realise
that she broke the [6] ______________ . She takes the Nyanga bus past Gugulethu
and gets off at KwaBraweni. She does this so that she will not be seen by the
[7] ______________. She walks home through a small forest so that no one will see
her. When she is almost home, she is caught by a crowd of young people. They
rip open her bag. Her food spills out onto the road. They stamp on it and kick it
to make sure that she cannot use it.
When she gets home she shows Mdlangathi the few items of food that she
was able to hide in her clothes. She is very sad because one of the young
men who attacked her was her [8] ______________ , Mteteli. She is surprised
that Mdlangathi does not get angry when she tells him. He usually has a very
bad temper. She is angry that he does not want to stand up for her, but also
relieved because she does not want a big fight between father and son. She
serves dinner to her family. [9] ______________ is out and misses the meal.
Mamvulane and Mdlangathi complain that Mteteli doesn’t listen to them
anymore.
In the middle of the night, when they are sleeping, Mteteli comes home.
He wants his mother to give him [10] ______________. He is very rude to her.
Mdlangathi gets angry, shouts at Mteteli and shakes him very hard. Mteteli
continues to demand his food. Mdlangathi hits him on the head with a [11]
______________ that he keeps under the bed and cracks his skull. Their neighbour
refuses to take them to the hospital because he is one of the men who the
comrades forced to drink bleach. Mteteli dies. Mdlangathi goes to jail. He does
not ask for permission to go to his son’s funeral.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 headache / sore head / pain in her head
2 drunk
3 three / 3
4 Mannenberg
5 Claremont
6 boycott / consumer boycott / rule / rules
7 comrades / activists / young people
8 son / child
9 Mteteli
10 dinner / supper / food / a meal
11 knobkerrie
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
a consumer boycott (n.) A boycott is a form of resistance. You refuse to buy something or go
somewhere because you are trying to put pressure on a group of
people or government. Lots of countries boycotted South Africa during
Apartheid. Sports teams refused to play against our team and lots of
musicians refused to tour here. Inside the country, local communities
boycotted buses and white-owned businesses at different times. The
boycotters wanted to ‘hurt’ the economy so that white people would put
pressure on the government to end Apartheid. The story takes place
during the consumer boycott that started in 1985. Mamvulane cannot
buy groceries from the shop in her community because she does not
want anyone to see her breaking the boycott.
a comrade (n.) In South Africa, this refers to someone who is a political activist. This
is someone who fights for freedom. In the story, the comrades stop
people from shopping during the consumer boycott and force drunk
men to drink bleach as punishment for being drunk.
to inform on (v.) To inform on someone is to get them into trouble by reporting
something they have done which they should not have done. In the
story, Mamvulane is scared that her neighbours will inform on her if she
goes shopping during the consumer boycott. She does not want the
youths to find out or they will attack her. ‘Denounce’ is a synonym for
‘inform’.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
NAME MAMVULANE
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Decides to break the consumer boycott so that she can feed her
I AM NOT TALKING
ABOUT THAT NOW
family.
2 Goes to Pick ‘n Pay in Claremont to buy food.
3 Hides the food in her clothes and in an old plastic packet.
4 Gets caught by the comrades, who destroy the food in the packet.
5 Serves her family dinner from the food she hid in her clothes.
6 Refuses to give Mteteli dinner when he gets home in the middle of
the night.
RELATIONSHIPS She has been married to Mdlangathi for twenty years. She is the
mother of Fezeka, Mteteli, and some other children.
PERSONALITY TRAITS She is a strong woman who can deal with difficult circumstances.
When she makes up her mind to do something, she does it. She takes
risks. She looks after her family.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION None given, but she is probably middle-aged as she has young, adult
children.
CHANGES At the start of the story, Mamvulane is dealing with difficult
circumstances. She needs to feed her family, but she cannot go
shopping because of the consumer boycott. By the end of the story,
her circumstances are much worse. Her son is dead and her husband
is in jail for killing him.
Literature Summary 95
Short Story: I Am Not Talking About That Now
NAME MDLANGATHI
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Demands food from Mamvulane, even though she is not allowed to
go shopping during the consumer boycott.
2 Refuses to give Mteteli food when he gets home in the middle of
the night.
3 Hits Mteteli on the head with a knobkerrie because he is so angry,
and accidentally kills him.
4 Refuses to ask the prison permission to go to his son’s funeral.
RELATIONSHIPS He is married to Mamvulane. He expects a lot from her and does not
always treat her with respect. He is the father of Fezeka, Mteteli, and
some other children.
PERSONALITY TRAITS He is a proud and stubborn man. He likes to feel like the boss in his
home. He likes to drink. He has a bad temper. This means that he gets
very angry.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION None given.
CHANGES At the beginning of the story, he is very angry that because of the
political situation; children are no longer listening to their parents. At
the end of the story he is much angrier. He is angry with his son, and
lands up killing him by mistake, because of his uncontrolled anger.
NAME MTETELI
IMPORTANT ACTIONS 1 Is among the crowd of boys who attacks Mamvulane and destroys
her food.
2 Misses dinner with his family.
3 Comes home in the middle of the night and demands food.
THEME 2
PATRIARCHY
Patriarchy is the system of giving men more power than women. In patriarchal societies,
men have more power, more freedom and more opportunities than women.
I AM NOT TALKING
ABOUT THAT NOW
EVIDENCE OF THEME IN TEXT
Apartheid made life difficult for all black people in South Africa. Women, however, had to
struggle with patriarchy at the same time. They were treated as unequal both because they
were black and because they were women. In the story, we see how Mamvulane struggles.
She is oppressed by Apartheid because she is black. At the same time, her husband does
not see her as an equal because she is a woman. He demands that Mamvulane is home
and waiting for him with dinner every evening, even though he often goes out to drink
without her.
The story is told in a third person omniscient narrative voice. This means that the narrator
who tells the story is not a character in the story, but knows the thoughts and feelings of the
characters. The narrator is all-knowing.
Literature Summary 97
Short Story: I Am Not Talking About That Now
2 DICTION:
a The author has used diction (word choices) which is very descriptive. This is language
that describes how things look, sound, smell and taste. It helps us to imagine the
things that are happening in the story. The writer uses words to paint a picture in our
imaginations. For example:
• Sight: ‘A big bold orange band lay on the carpet – painted there by the strong dawn
light pouring through the bright orange-curtained window’ (pg. 39). This is also an
example of personification because an inanimate object (the dawn) has been given
a human action (painting).
• Feeling: ‘Her right eye felt as though someone was poking a red-hot iron rod into
it from the back of her head, where he’d first drilled a hole’ (pg. 39). This is also an
example of a simile because there is a direct comparison between how her eye feels
and the heat from a very hot iron rod.
• Smell: ‘She could swear the air was faintly laced with the barest soupcon of the
bittersweet smell of coffee’ (pg. 39).
b When the characters speak to each other in direct speech, Magona often writes what
they say in isiXhosa first, and then translates it into English. She shows us that the
words in isiXhosa are in another language by putting them in italics. Although the
story is written in English, the characters would speak to each other in isiXhosa.
Magona includes the isiXhosa words because they give us a feel for what the characters’
conversations really sounds like.
Read the following extract from ‘I Am Not Talking About That Now’ and then answer
the questions which follow it:
‘All I want is my food. I’m not fighting anyone,’ said Mteteli sullenly. 1
‘I suggest you get out of my house and go and seek your food elsewhere. I
do not work hard so that I shall feed thugs.’
‘Now I am a thug because I want my food?’
Mdlangathi had had enough of sparring with Mteteli. Abruptly, he told him, 5
‘Go and look for your food from the sand, where you threw it away when
you took it from your mother by force’. Fuming, he got back into bed and
covered himself with the blankets till not even his hair could be seen.
‘Yes, Mteteli,’ Mamvulane added. ‘Remember all the sand, and samp you
and your group threw up down onto the sand, that was to be your supper. 10
You spilled your supper on the sand out there – birds will feast on it on the
morrow.’ ‘Andithethi loo nto mna, ngoku.’
‘Mteteli, your father goes to work tomorrow morning. Leave us alone and
let us have some sleep. You are the one who doesn’t have time for doing
this or that you come and go as you please, but don’t let that become a 15
nuisance to us now, please.’
COLUMN A COLUMN B
a Mdlangathi A Comes home in the middle of the night and demands
b Mamvulane
dinner.
B Goes all the way to Claremont for food.
c Mteteli
C Refuses to go to his son’s funeral.
a C (3)
b B (3)
c A (3)
B irritated (3)
b Why does the narrator use the word ‘sullenly’ to describe what Mteteli says? [2]
To show that Mteteli is annoyed / irritated / sulking (3) that his parents will not give
him food (3).
I AM NOT TALKING
ABOUT THAT NOW
3 Why is Mteteli demanding his dinner in the middle of the night? [2]
a tsotsi / a criminal / someone who does bad things / someone who beats
people up (3)
b Why does Mdlangathi call Mteteli a thug? [2]
Mdlangathi calls Mteteli a thug because he was part of the group that attacked
Mamvulane (in the street) (3) and destroyed her groceries (3).
5 Mamvulane should have fed her child when he came home in the middle of the
night. Discuss whether you agree or disagree with this statement. [3]
I do not agree with this statement. Mamvulane was right to not feed Mteteli in the
middle of the night (3). He chose not to listen to his parents about coming home for
dinner – if he misses dinner, that is his own fault (3). Mteteli should not expect his
mother to get out of bed and feed him in the middle of the night (3). Mteteli also
Literature Summary 99
Short Story: I Am Not Talking About That Now
helped the crowd of young people tear open his mother’s packet and destroy the food –
he doesn’t deserve to eat the little food she had left (3).
OR
I agree with this statement – Mamvulane should have fed Mteteli when he came home
(3). Mteteli is her child, and she should not force him to go through the night without
food (3). Mteteli only tore open his mother’s packet because he strongly believes the
boycott against Apartheid is important. She should try to understand that Mteteli is
working hard in his fight against Apartheid (3).
NOTE: Award a maximum of 3 marks for this question and accept any well-
reasoned response.
6 Why is Mteteli’s direct speech, ‘Andithethi loo nto mna, ngoku’ written in italics? [1]
TOTAL: 17 MARKS
TITLE: NOSTALGIA
PLOT SUMMARY
Ella returns to Cape Town to visit her mother. She left ten years ago, and her mother is
still angry with her for leaving. They sit in the lounge and talk. Ella wants to know why her
mother ignored all her letters. They argue. Ella goes to the window and looks down at the
square. She remembers her father working there, making leather handbags and belts. Her
mother is angry with her because Ella did not come home for his funeral. Her mother goes
to the kitchen to make tea. While she is there, she thinks nostalgically about how she misses
the way things were when she was younger. When she comes back into the lounge, Ella asks
her why she never protected her from her father. He used to drink and sexually abuse her.
Her mother pretends that she did not originally know about the abuse. She lies and says that
she only found out about it when Ella was old enough to protect herself. Ella is upset that
her mother still will not take responsibility for what happened to her when she was a little
girl. She decides to leave. She invites her mother to call her while she in Cape Town, but it
does not seem like she really believes that her mother will.
SETTING
The story is set in Cape Town. Ella visits her mother in her childhood flat on a noisy,
crowded and dirty square off Church Street. Most of the story takes place in the lounge.
Ella returns to Cape Town to visit her [1] ________________ . She left ten years
ago, and her mother is still angry with her for leaving. They sit in the lounge
and talk. Ella wants to know why her mother ignored all her [2] ________________
. They argue. Ella goes to the [3] ________________ and looks down at the
square. She remembers her [4] ________________ working there, making leather
handbags and [5] ________________ . Her mother is angry with her because she
didn’t come home for his funeral. Her mother goes to the kitchen to make
[6] ________________ .
Literature Summary 101
Short Story: Nostalgia
While she is there, she thinks nostalgically about how she misses the way
things were when she was [7] ________________ . When she comes back into the
[8] ________________ , Ella asks her why she never protected her from her father.
He used to [9] ________________ and sexually abuse her. Her mother pretends
that she did not know about the abuse until Ella was old enough to protect
herself. Ella is upset that her mother still will not take responsibility for what
happened to her when she was a little girl. She decides to [10] ________________ .
She invites her mother to call her while she in Cape Town, but it does not seem
like she really believes that her mother will.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 mother / mom
2 letters
3 window
4 father / dad
5 belts
6 tea
7 younger / a young woman
8 lounge
9 drink / get drunk
10 leave / go
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
nostalgia (n.) A wish to return to the happiness of the past. Ella’s mother is nostalgic about
the past, when she was young and beautiful. Ella does not think nostalgically
about the past, because she was so unhappy living with her abusive father.
to infer (v.) To infer something is to work it out, even though it is not said directly. We can
infer that Ella’s father used to sexually abuse her, even though we are not
told that directly. We make an inference.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
NAME ELLA
IMPORTANT 1 Ella goes home to visit her mother after ten years.
ACTIONS 2 They talk and argue.
3 She shows her mother that she is upset with her for not taking her away
from her father when she was a child because he sexually abused her.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
RELATIONSHIPS Ella has a bad relationship with her mother. She left South Africa ten years
ago to get away from her father. She wrote to her mother and invited her to
visit, but her mother ignored her. We do not meet her husband, but we know
they have an honest relationship because she has told him about her father’s
abuse.
PERSONALITY Ella is angry and sad that her father used to sexually abuse her, and her
TRAITS mother did not protect her. She tries to be calm, but she finds it difficult to
talk to her mother.
PHYSICAL She is 35 years old. She has streaked brown hair and elegant fingers. She is
DESCRIPTION wearing a wide blue cotton skirt and silk blouse.
CHANGES When the story starts, Ella is very nervous about seeing her mother. She
wants the conversation to go well. When she leaves, she realises that nothing
has changed. She invites her mother to contact her while she is in Cape
Town, but it does not seem likely that she will. She does not find peace.
Literature Summary 103
Short Story: Nostalgia
THEME 2
NOSTALGIA
Nostalgia is the feeling of looking back on the past with fond memories, and longing
for things to be the same as they were back then. When we feel nostalgic, we generally
remember only the good things about the past and we forget about the difficulties. Often
people feel nostalgia for their childhoods.
THEME 3
TAKING RESPONSIBILITY
Everyone makes mistakes in life. When we take responsibility for those mistakes, we are
able to heal the relationships we have damaged. If we will not take responsibility, it is
difficult to do that.
2 MEMORIES:
Although the story happens when Ella is an adult, we learn about her past from her
memories. For example, she remembers her father working down in the square and how
much she hated the noise and the dirt of the square. We get a different picture of the past
from her mother’s memories. She remembers how much she enjoyed the company of her
neighbours, and how she loved dressing up. These memories show us that Ella and her
mother had very different experiences in their pasts.
3 INFERENCE:
The narrator does not tell us directly that Ella’s father sexually abused her. However, we are
given clues throughout the story. These enable us to infer it, or work it out for ourselves.
These are some of the clues:
• When Ella remembers how badly her father was treated by the Apartheid police, she
thinks, ‘Perhaps that was why’ (pg. 200). We are not told directly what she means, but it
is a clue that something bad happened. We later infer that she is thinking that perhaps
he abused her because he was so angry about the way he was treated and did not know
what to do with his anger.
• Later we are told that when she tried to book a flight to fly home for his funeral, she
could not because, ‘...her hand froze on the receiver’ (pg. 201). We are not directly told
why, but it is a clue that she was too emotional to even come to his funeral. We can infer
that something terrible happened in her past involving her father.
• When Ella asks her mother, ‘Why?’ (pg. 202), we are not told directly what she means.
We infer that she is asking why her mother did not take her away when she discovered
that her father was abusing her. When Ella is leaving she tells her mother that she can
NOSTALGIA
call her. She says that her husband knows everything. She does not explain what he
knows everything about. This is a clue. We infer that he knows about the sexual abuse.
Literature Summary 105
Short Story: Nostalgia
Read the following extract from ‘Nostalgia’ and then answer the questions which
follow it:
1 Refer to ‘But you don’t see it, do you?’ (line 16). Choose the correct answer to
complete the following sentence. Write only the letter (A–D) next to the question
number 1 in your answer. [1]
When Ella asks her mother ‘But you don’t see, it do you?’ she is feeling…
A embarrassed
B sensitive
C frustrated
D cheerful
C frustrated (3)
2 Refer to ‘I must explain myself to you?’ (line 2). Choose the correct answer to
complete the following sentence. Write only the letter (A–D) next to the question
number 2 in your answer. [1]
When Ella’s mother asks, ‘I must explain myself to you?’, she means…
A I do not need to explain myself to you.
B You must explain yourself to me.
C I can’t explain myself to you.
D I want to explain myself to you.
3 What is Ella referring to when she says, ‘What he did was wrong.’ (line 14) [1]
Taking responsibility (for your actions) (3). Ella is saying that her mother should stop
making excuses / admit that what her father did was wrong / admit that she should
have protected her / that it does not matter what was happening in their lives, her father
should not have abused her. (3)
6 In this short story, we can infer (guess) that Ella has been sexually abused. Identify
and explain two clues from the story that allows us to make this inference. [2]
Ella didn’t come home for her father’s funeral. In the story it says she froze when she
tried to book a ticket home. This shows us something bad happened to her (3). Also,
she asks her mother ‘Why?’ This shows us that something bad happened, and she is
angry with her mother for not doing anything to stop the abuse (3).
7 Choose the correct answer to complete the following sentence. Write only the letter
(A–D) next to the question number 7 in your answer. [1]
The relationship between Ella and her mother can best be described as…
A amicable
B tense
C warm
D abusive
B tense (3)
NOSTALGIA
8 In your opinion, how is the fact that Ella’s mother is a self-centred woman conveyed
to the reader? [3]
Ella’s mother is angry at Ella for leaving Cape Town ten years earlier (3). She should
be understanding that Ella left because of the abuse she faced. However, Ella’s mother
can only think about herself (3). In addition, Ella’s mother thinks about the past and
thinks about how wonderful the past was. She wishes for the past even though the past
was horrible for her daughter (3). Again, we see that Ella’s mother can only think about
her own wants and needs – she doesn’t seem to care about anyone else, even her own
daughter (3).
NOTE: Accept any THREE of these points, or any other reasonable answers.
Literature Summary 107
Short Story: Nostalgia
Ella (3)
b To whom are these words directed? [1]
• Ella’s mother has positive memories about the past and about Ella’s father. Ella’s
memories about her father are negative (3).
• Ella wants to have an honest conversation with her mother. Her mother refuses
to be honest about the past (3).
TOTAL: 16 MARKS
PLOT SUMMARY
The narrator enters a town where many people have died. He has not eaten in three weeks
and he is starving to death. He imagines that he sees the souls of the dead celebrating around
him because they no longer have to suffer. Now they can live forever in the afterlife. He is
looking for his family and girlfriend. If they are dead, he can die in peace without worrying
about them. He searches through the bodies of the dead. He finds his mother and brothers’
bodies. Death has made them look different. He pours dust on their flesh out of respect
because he cannot bury them. He is so hungry and has suffered so much that he cannot
express any emotion. He hears singing coming from a school building. He is surprised
that people can sing so beautifully when they have suffered so much. He walks towards the
school. He is weak, and it takes him a long time to get there. A cow goes inside just before
him. When he gets inside he sees that everyone in the room is dead. He thinks that they
seem alive because they look peaceful. He thinks they look peaceful because when they died
they were not being selfish. He sits down in a corner and prays silently for everything on
earth. After many hours, he looks at the dead body next to him and realises that it is the body
of his girlfriend. He goes on praying. A journalist comes into the room and films the bodies
so that he can educate the world about what is going on. The narrator lies down, holds the
hand of his girlfriend and dies. He is smiling with relief that he will no longer have to suffer.
SETTING
The story is set in Biafra (now part of Nigeria) during the Biafran War between 1967 and
1970. (See Background Information below for more information). The narrator does not
name the town. He calls it ‘the town of the dying’ (pg. 182) because all the people who lived
there have died.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
PRAYER FROM
THE LIVING
The Biafran War was a war between Nigeria and Biafra that lasted between 1967 and 1970.
Biafra had been a region (part) of Nigeria. Biafra wanted to be an independent country. The
Nigerian government fought to force them to remain part of Nigeria. It was a brutal war.
Literature Summary 109
Short Story: Prayer from the Living
Hundreds of thousands of soldiers on both sides died in the fighting. The Nigerian army
also surrounded Biafra to stop food from being taken into the country. This caused a famine
(when there is not enough food for people to eat). Between 500,000 and 2 million Biafrans
starved to death because there was nothing to eat.
The narrator enters a town where many people have died. He has not eaten
in [1] _______________ weeks and he is starving to death. He imagines that he
sees the souls of the dead celebrating around him because they no longer
have to suffer. Now they can live forever in the afterlife. He is looking for his
[2] _______________ and girlfriend. If they are [3] _______________ , he can die in
peace without worrying about them. He searches through the bodies of the
dead. He finds his mother and brothers’ bodies. Death has made them look
different. He pours [4] _______________ on their flesh out of respect because he
can’t bury them. He is so hungry and has suffered so much that he cannot
express any emotion. He hears [5] _______________ coming from a school
building. He is surprised that people can sing so beautifully when they have
suffered so much. He walks towards the school. He is weak, and it takes him a
long time to get there. A [6] _______________ goes inside just before him. When he
gets inside he sees that everyone in the room is [7] _______________ . He thinks
that they seem alive because they look peaceful. He thinks they look peaceful
because when they died they were not being selfish. He sits down in a corner
and prays silently for everything on earth. After many hours he looks at the
dead body next to him and realises that it is the body of his [8] _______________ .
He goes on praying. A journalist comes into the room and films the bodies so
that he can educate the world about what is going on. The narrator lies down,
holds the [9] _______________ of his girlfriend and dies. He is [10] _______________
with relief that he will no longer have to suffer.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 three / 3 6 cow
2 family / mother and brothers 7 dead
3 dead 8 girlfriend / lover
4 dust 9 hand
5 singing 10 smiling
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
a civil (adj.) war A war between two opposing groups in one country. The war between Biafra
and Nigeria was a civil war because Biafra was originally part of Nigeria and
wanted to become independent from Nigeria.
a famine (n.) When there is no food. This leads to starvation.There was a famine in Biafra
during the war because the Nigerian army surrounded Biafra and would not let
any food into it.
the afterlife (n.) Most cultures and religions believe in a life after death. Some people believe
that when you die, your soul continues to live in the afterlife. Christians call
the afterlife heaven. In this story, the narrator imagines that he can see dead
people’s souls continuing to live around him. They are happy because they have
found peace in the afterlife.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
other words, people on different sides of wars can forget that the people they are fighting are
human beings, just like them.
Literature Summary 111
Short Story: Prayer from the Living
THEME 2
LIFE AFTER DEATH
In many cultures, people believe that when we die, it is only our bodies that die. According
to this belief, our souls continue to live on in the afterlife.
2 IMAGERY:
Throughout the story, the narrator describes the dead as if they are alive. He says that the
dead are ‘more joyful now; they are happier than we are; and they are everywhere, living
their luminous lives as if nothing had happened, or as if they were more alive than we are’
(pg. 182). He does not mean that they are really alive. He means that life has become so
difficult in Biafra that dying brings peace because you do not have to suffer anymore. He
might also mean that after death, your soul lives on in the afterlife. He imagines that in the
afterlife, people are happier than they were on earth.
3 MOOD:
The mood (also called ‘atmosphere’) in the story is sombre. This means it is very dark,
heavy and depressing. There are images of death everywhere. The narrator says, ‘In the
town everyone had died. The horses and cows were dying, too. I could say that the air stank
of death, but that wouldn’t be true. It smelled of rancid butter and poisoned meat and bad
sewage’ (pg. 183). However, this mood is contrasted by (the opposite of) his descriptions of
how happy the dead people are. He imagines that the souls of the dead are ‘Singing golden
songs in chorus, jubilant everywhere’ (pg. 183). Later he says that ‘The singing was like the
joyous beginning of all creation, the holy yes to the breath and light infusing all things’ (pg.
184). The sombre mood of the town is the opposite of the loving and joyful mood of the
afterlife. This emphasises that life in Biafra during the war was so terrible, it was better to be
dead than alive.
I opened my eyes for the last time. I saw the cameras on us all. To them,
we were the dead. As I passed through the agony of the light, I saw them as
the dead, marooned in a world without pity or love.
As the cow wandered about in the apparent desolation of the room, it must
have seemed odd to the people recording it all that I should have made 5
myself so comfortable among the dead. I did. I stretched myself out and
held the hand of my lover. With a painful breath and a gasp and a smile, I
let myself go.
The smile must have puzzled the reporters. If they had understood my
language, they would have known that it was my way of saying goodbye. 10
This short story is told in the first person narrative voice (3).
3 What is one word used in this extract that shows the narrative voice in number 1? [1]
They are there to film / record / video the dead bodies (3) to tell the world / educate
people about what is happening there / in Biafra/ in Nigeria/ in the war (3).
5 Refer to ‘The smile must have puzzled the reporters.’ (line 9):
a Write only the letter A—D next to the number 5 a.
PRAYER FROM
THE LIVING
Literature Summary 113
Short Story: Prayer from the Living
D confused (3)
b Why does the narrator think the journalists would be puzzled by his smile? [3]
Because the narrator has just died (3). We normally think about death as something
sad and painful (3). The journalists would be puzzled or confused about why
someone who has just died is smiling (3).
6 Why does the narrator describe the world as a place ‘without pity or love’? [2]
NOTE: Any TWO of the following answers or any other reasonable answers.
• He has suffered so much in the war (3)
• He has starved to death (3)
• He has lost all his loved ones (3)
• So many people have died (3)
7 Identify and discuss one of the themes of this short story. [3]
One of the themes of this short story is the horror of war (3). The narrator in this story
is suffering – he is starving to death (3). Life is so horrible, that he imagines the dead
are happier than the living. In the end, he smiles as he dies, because he can finally be at
peace (3).
OR
One of the themes of this short story is life after death. (3) The narrator hears dead
people singing / sees dead people smiling. (3) This shows that he believes that when we
die, it is only our bodies that die / our souls live on in the afterlife. (3)
8 In your opinion, how is the fact that the narrator is a kind and caring person
conveyed to the reader? [3]
Even though the narrator is starving and weak, he makes the trip back to his village to
find his loved ones (3). The narrator feels he cannot die without first checking to make
sure the people he loves are at peace (3). Even though he is suffering, he still puts the
people he loves ahead of himself (3).
9 What happens to the narrator at the end of the story? [1]
He dies. (3)
TOTAL: 19 MARKS
CHRIST BLACK
GENRE: Short Story
PLOT SUMMARY
Aaron Crawford is the most talented learner at his school. He is an excellent artist. He
paints a picture of Jesus as a birthday present for his teacher. Everyone is surprised because
he paints Jesus as a black man. On the last day of school, Professor Danual, the supervisor
of all the city’s schools, comes to visit the school. He becomes very angry when he sees
Aaron’s painting. Because he is racist, he believes it is disrespectful to paint Jesus as a
black man. He questions Aaron about it, and Principal Du Vaul steps in to protect Aaron.
Principal Du Vaul explains that he encouraged Aaron to paint Jesus as a black man. He
teaches his learners to be proud of their heritage as African-Americans. Mr Danual fires
him to punish him. Principal Du Vaul gets a part time job teaching a holiday art class. He
organises for Aaron to attend his classes. The narrator sees them leaving the school together.
They have not been broken down by their experience. Instead, they are full of pride and
dignity because they stood up to Mr Danual’s abuse.
SETTING
The story is set in the USA during segregation. This was a time when black people were
discriminated against by law. In this way, segregation was similar to Apartheid. Black and
white children were forced to go to different schools. The story takes place in the Muskogee
County School, which is for black learners only.
Literature Summary 115
Short Story: The Boy Who Painted Christ Black
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their own
mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 artist / painter
2 Jesus
3 black / negro / coloured / African-American
4 supervisor
5 sacrilegious / disrespectful (NOTE: you may need to use this as an opportunity to
teach learners this word.
6 Du Vaul
7 fires
8 art
9 Aaron
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
MAJOR CHARACTERS
NAME MR DANUAL
IMPORTANT 1 Stands up for Aaron when Mr Danual is angry about his painting. He tries to
ACTIONS take the blame for it. He says that he encouraged Aaron to paint Jesus as a
black man.
2 Gets fired, so he gets a job teaching holiday art classes.
3 Aaron joins the art classes, so that he can continue to help Aaron with his art.
RELATIONSHIPS He teaches his learners to feel proud of their heritage as African- Americans. He
has a close relationship with Aaron. He stands up to Mr Danual.
PERSONALITY Brave, wise and intelligent. He explains things clearly, and knows a lot about
TRAITS history. This gives him the power to stand up to racism.
PHYSICAL He wears horn-rimmed glasses.
DESCRIPTION
CHANGES He starts out as a dignified and brave man. Getting fired by Mr Danual does not
break him down. Instead, he seems even more sure of himself and proud of
himself for doing the right thing. He knows he has been a good role model to all
the children at his school, because they see him stand up to a racist bully.
Literature Summary 117
Short Story: The Boy Who Painted Christ Black
THEME 2
STANDING UP AGAINST INJUSTICE
It is important to stand up for yourself when someone treats you unjustly. It is also
important to stand up for others who are being treated unjustly, even when this puts
you at risk.
2 FIGURES OF SPEECH:
CHRIST BLACK
know what to do about it. He looks at the painting as if it is a ‘dangerous animal that would
rise any moment and spread destruction’ (pg. 148). This is a simile which compares the
effects of the painting to a dangerous animal that will cause damage. He is surpised at what
Aaron has done, because it is a blatant (obvious) rebellion against racial predjudice.
3 IRONY:
Irony is when what happens is the opposite of what you expected to happen. You would
expect Principal Du Vaul to feel sad and defeated because Mr Danual bullied him and
fired him. However, the narrator says that Principal Du Vaul had ‘an air of triumph’ and
walks with a ‘soldierly stride’ (pg. 149). This means that he takes big, bold steps, showing
confidence. He and Aaron look like ‘people who had won some sort of victory’ (pg. 150).
This is ironic, because it is the opposite of what we would expect. We would expect them to
be disheartened and like they have been defeated. It shows us that standing up for yourself
and doing what is right can make you feel powerful, even if you are treated badly for it.
Aaron put his books down, then smiling broadly, advanced toward the
teacher’s desk. His alert eyes were so bright with joy that they were almost
frightening… Temporarily, there was no other sound in the room.
Aaron stared questioningly at her and she moved her hand back to the
present cautiously, as if it were a living thing with vicious characteristics. 5
I am sure it was the one thing she least expected.
…
The teacher faced us. Her curious half-smile had blurred into a mild
bewilderment. She searched the bright faces before her and started
to smile again, occasionally stealing quick glances at the large picture
propped on her desk, as though doing so were forbidden amusement. 10
“Aaron,” she spoke at last, a slight tinge of uncertainty in her tone, “this is
a most welcome present. Thanks. I will treasure it.” She paused, then went
on speaking, a trifle more coherent than before. “Looks like you are going
to be quite an artist… Suppose you come forward and tell the class how
you came to paint this remarkable picture.” 15
Literature Summary 119
Short Story: The Boy Who Painted Christ Black
COLUMN A COLUMN B
a Aaron Crawford A Thinks Aaron’s painting is
b Mr Danual
sacrilegious.
B Gets fired for standing up for his
c George Du Vaul
beliefs.
C Paints a picture of Jesus for his
teacher.
a C (3)
b A (3)
c B (3)
b uncertain (3)
3 When Aaron gives his teacher the painting, how do we know from her actions that
she is shocked by it? [2]
• The narrator tells us that she touches it ‘as if it were a living thing with vicious
characteristics’. / She treats it as if it were a wild animal. (3) She is afraid of it. (3)
• Her facial expression shows she is shocked. (3) She has a ‘half-smile’ of ‘mild
bewilderment’ on her face. (3)
• She looks around at the learners for a while (3) because she does not know what to
say / how to respond (3).
• The narrator tells us that he hears ‘a tinge of uncertainty’ in her voice when she
thanks Aaron. (3) She doesn’t know what to say. (3)
NOTE: Accept any of these answers or a combination of these answers.
4 Give a reason for why the following statement is TRUE:
Even though the teacher is shocked by her present from Aaron, she is also very
happy with it. [2]
We know this is true because the narrator tells us that she occasionally steals ‘quick
glances at the large picture…as though doing so were forbidden amusement’. /She
smiles at it (3). This means that she is pleased by it / she likes it (3).
OR
She tells him that she will ‘treasure’ the gift (3) and describes it as a ‘most welcome
gift’ (3).
5 Identify and explain the figure of speech in ‘as if it were a living thing with vicious
CHRIST BLACK
This is a simile (3). The painting is compared to a living and vicious animal (3).
6 Why does the teacher describe Aaron’s painting as ‘remarkable’? [1]
There is irony in the story when Principal Du Vaul gets fired. We think Mr Du Vaul will
feel upset and bad about himself for being bullied (3). Instead, he feels confident and
proud (3).
8 Refer to ‘The teacher faced us.’ (line 7) To whom is ‘us’ referring? [1]
The word ‘us’ refers to the other learners in the class/the class (3).
9 In your own words, explain why Aaron’s painting is controversial. [3]
Aaron’s painting is controversial because he has painted Jesus as a black person (3).
Mr Danual is racist, so he thinks it is disrespectful to Jesus to paint him as a black
person (3). However, not everyone thinks the painting is offensive. For example, Mr Du
Vaul is proud of the painting (3).
TOTAL: 17 MARKS
Literature Summary 121
Short Story: The Darling
PLOT SUMMARY
Olenka falls in love with Kukin, a man who rents a room in her house. He is the director
of an open-air theatre. They get married. She starts to work in his theatre. She takes on all
Kukin’s opinions and interests. All she can talk about is the theatre. She complains about
people who do not like their plays. He dies while he is away on a business trip. Olenka is
distraught (very upset).
Three months later she meets Vasily Pustovalov. They soon get married. She works in the
office of the lumber-yard that he manages. Now all she can talk about is the business of
selling wood. She complains about the prices and taxes on wood. Vasily is very serious, and
so Olenka becomes very serious. They never go out or have fun. A man named Smirnov
rents a room in their house.
He is a vet who works for the army. He looks after the soldiers’ horses. While Vasily is away
on business, Smirnov keeps Olenka company. After six years, Vasily catches a cold and dies.
Olenka is devastated (very upset).
She mourns Vasily’s death for six months. After that, she falls in love with Smirnov. They
have to keep their relationship a secret because he is married, although he has separated
from his wife and she lives in another town. Now Olenka takes on his opinions. She
becomes obsessed with the health of animals. Soon the army sends him away to work
somewhere else. Olenka is extremely upset. She loses weight. She does not have ideas or
opinions about anything anymore.
Years pass. She gets older. She feels sad and empty. Then one day, Smirnov returns. He has
left the army and is back together with his wife. He brings his wife and son, Sasha, to live
at Olenka’s house. Olenka is excited and full of energy again. She becomes obsessed with
everything to do with Sasha’s studies at the gymnasium. Sasha’s mother leaves, and Smirnov
is often away for work. Olenka wants to take care of Sasha so she gives him a room next
to hers. She fusses over him. For example, she follows him to school. This irritates and
embarrasses him. She is crazy with maternal love for him. She is afraid that his mother will
want him to go and live with her. At the end of the story, Olenka hears a knock on the door
one night. She is afraid that it is a telegram being delivered from Sasha’s mother. Then she
realises that it is only Smirnov coming home. She is relieved. She goes back to sleep.
SETTING
The story is set in Russia. It was written more than a hundred years ago, so its setting is
in the past.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Satire is a style of writing in which the writer criticises someone by mocking (making fun
THE DARLING
of) them. The writing is funny, and often makes the reader laugh, but it is also serious. It
makes us question things by helping us to laugh at their flaws (problems or weaknesses). It
is important to read this story as a satire: it is meant to be funny and it is meant to criticise a
certain type of person. In this story, that person is Olenka.
In Russia, they have a different way of giving nicknames to people. Therefore, note the
following:
• Olenka and Olga are the same person.
• Kukin, Vanichka, and Ivan Petrovich are all the same person.
• Vasily Pustovalov, Vasily Andreyich, and Vasichka are the same person.
• Smirnov, Vladimir Platonych, and Volodichka are the same person.
• Sasha and Sashenka are the same person.
Before computers were invented, people communicated by sending letters. If you needed to
send an urgent message quickly, you could send a telegram from one post office to another.
This was expensive, so it was only done for urgent messages, like informing someone
of a death.
Olenka falls in love with [1] _______________ , a man who rents a room in her
house. He is the director of an open-air [2] _______________ . They get married.
She starts to work in his theatre. She takes on all Kukin’s opinions and interests.
All she can talk about is the theatre. She complains about people who do not
like their [3] _______________ . He dies while he is away on a business trip. Olenka
is distraught (very upset).
Three months later she meets [4] _______________ . They soon get married. She
works in the office of the [5] _______________ that he manages. Now all she can
talk about is the business of selling [6] _______________ . She complains about the
prices and taxes on wood. Vasily is very serious, and so Olenka becomes very
serious. They never go out or have fun. A man named [7] _______________ rents a
room in their house.
Literature Summary 123
Short Story: The Darling
He is a [8] _______________ who works for the army. He looks after the soldiers’
horses. While Vasily is away on business, Smirnov keeps Olenka company. After
six years, Vasily catches a cold and dies. Olenka is devastated (very upset).
She mourns him for six months. After that, she falls in love with Smirnov.
They have to keep their relationship a secret because he is [9] _______________
. Now Olenka takes on his opinions. She becomes obsessed with the health
of [10] _______________ . Soon the army sends him away to work somewhere
else. Olenka is extremely upset. She loses weight. She does not have ideas or
opinions about anything anymore.
Years pass. She gets older. She feels sad and empty. Then one day, Smirnov
returns. He has left the army and is back together with his wife. He brings his
wife and son, [11] _______________ to live at Olenka’s house. Olenka is excited and
full of energy again. She becomes obsessed with everything to do with Sasha’s
studies at the [12] _______________ . Sasha’s mother leaves, and Smirnov is often
away for work. Olenka wants to take care of Sasha so she gives him a room
next to hers. She fusses over him. For example, she follows him to school. This
irritates and embarrasses him. She is crazy with maternal love for him. She is
afraid that his mother will want him to go and live with her. At the end of the
story, Olenka hears a knock on the door one night. She is afraid that it is a
[13] _______________ being delivered from Sasha’s mother. Then she realises that
it is only Smirnov coming home. She is relieved. She goes back to sleep.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 Kukin / Ivan Petrovich / Vanichka
2 theatre
3 plays / performances / productions
4 Vasily Pustovalov / Vasily Andreyich / Vasichka
5 lumber-yard / timber-yard
6 wood / timber / lumber
7 Smirnov / Vladimir Platonych / Volodichka
8 vet / veterinarian / veterinary surgeon
9 married
10 animals
11 Sasha / Sashenka
12 gymnasium / school / high school
13 telegram / message
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
devastated / Very upset. Each time someone she loves dies, Olenka is devastated or
distraught (adj.) distraught.
a gymnasium (n.) In South Africa, this is a gym – a place to exercise. However, in some countries
it is a type of school. It is a high school that has a high standard to prepare
learners for university. Smirnov sends Sasha to the gymnasium for schooling.
THE DARLING
a lumber-yard (n.) A business that stores and sells wood. Vasily manages a lumber-yard.
a nickname (n.) An informal name that we give someone when we are close to them. In English,
this is often a shortened form of their full name. In Russian, it is often formed
by adding ‘-ka’ or ‘-ichka’ to the end of a name.
open-air (adj.) A theatre without a roof. Kukin runs an open-air theatre, so he is upset when it
theatre rains.
satire (n.) A style of writing in which the writer criticises someone by mocking (making
fun of) them. The writing is funny, and often makes the reader laugh, but it is
also serious. It makes us question things by helping us to laugh at their flaws
(problems or weaknesses). It is important to read this story as a satire: it is
meant to be funny and it is meant to criticise a certain type of person. In this
case, that person is Olenka.
a vet / A doctor for animals. Smirnov is a veterinarian.
veterinarian
/ veterinary
surgeon (n.)
MAJOR CHARACTERS
IMPORTANT 1 Marries Kukin and takes on all his opinions and ideas about the theatre.
ACTIONS 2 Marries Vasily Pustovalov and takes on all his opinions and ideas about the
business of selling wood.
3 Falls in love with Smirnov and takes on all his opinions and ideas about the
health of animals.
4 Takes on a maternal (like a mother) role with Sasha, Smirnov’s son.
RELATIONSHIPS She is first Kukin’s wife, then Vasily’s. Then she is in a relationship with Smirnov.
Years later, she becomes a mother figure to Sasha.
PERSONALITY She loves to be in love. Every time she loses someone, she finds a new person
TRAITS to love. She does not have a personality of her own. Instead, she copies the
interests, opinions and ideas of the men she loves.
PHYSICAL She is very pretty. She has full (chubby), rosy cheeks and pale white skin. There
DESCRIPTION is a dark mole on her neck. She has a kind, naïve (innocent) smile. She has the
kind of face that makes people like her.
CHANGES She has no identity of her own. Each time she is in a relationship, she changes
all her opinions and interests to match those of her partner. However, she
does not learn anything through all these changes, nor does she develop an
identity.
Literature Summary 125
Short Story: The Darling
MAJOR CHARACTERS
IMPORTANT 1 Lives in Olenka’s house. Keeps her company when Vasily is away.
ACTIONS 2 He goes away for many years.
3 When he comes back, he brings his wife and son.
4 His wife soon leaves. He is often away for work.
RELATIONSHIPS He is married to another woman. At the beginning of the story he is separated
from his wife. He has a relationship with Olenka. However, when he comes back
years later, he and his wife have got back together. He is the father of Sasha.
PERSONALITY He hates his wife because she lied to him.
TRAITS
PHYSICAL We don’t know how he looks at the beginning. When he returns years later, his
DESCRIPTION hair has gone grey.
CHANGES He does not change.
NAME SASHA
IMPORTANT 1 Smirnov brings him to live in Olenka’s house when he is ten years old.
ACTIONS 2 Feels embarrassed when Olenka follows him to school.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
THE DARLING
THEMES AND EVIDENCE OF THEMES IN TEXT
THEME 1
IDENTITY AND THINKING FOR YOURSELF
Identity is how you see yourself; what kind of person you think you are. It includes your
ideas, interests and opinions. Thinking for yourself is when you are able to form your own
opinions, interests and ideas without being influenced by other people.
THEME 2
THE UNRELIABILITY OF LOVE
Love is not reliable: you cannot depend on it. Firstly, the people you love may die or go
away. Secondly, no one is perfect and the people you love may not be worthy of your love.
Literature Summary 127
Short Story: The Darling
However, she keeps losing the people she loves. Her father dies before the story starts, both
of her husbands die, and Smirnov leaves her.
Secondly, the men she loves are not very nice. Kukin complains all the time and feels sorry
for himself. Vasily is boring. Smirnov is selfish. Sasha is just an ordinary boy who gets into
fights and gets irritated with her.
Perhaps the writer is trying to show us that you cannot base your whole life on love as that
involves other people and people (and the circumstances around those people) are not
always reliable. You need to have other things that are important to you as well.
2 DICTION:
The author has used lots of jargon. This is all the language that is connected to a particular
field, job or subject. Each time Olenka becomes obsessed with a new thing, she uses the
jargon from that subject. For example:
• Theatre jargon: actor, rehearsal, art, musician, conjurer, amateur player
• Lumber-yard jargon: book-keeping, dispatching orders, twenty percent rise, customer,
tax, beam, joint, plan, stave, lath, gun-carriage, clamp, boards, wagons
• Veterinarian jargon: sick, horse, cow, domestic animals, cattle plague, foot and mouth
disease, municipal slaughter houses
• School jargon: classical education, commercial course, graduated, satchel, cap, class,
Latin, lessons, studies
3 TONE:
When you first read the story, it seems like the narrator’s tone is dramatic (serious and
emotional). However, if you read more closely, you realise that the narrator is actually
mocking (laughing at) Olenka.
• For example, the first time he describes her suffering (when Kukin dies) it seems like
he is using a dramatic tone: ‘Olenka returned home on Wednesday; and as soon as she
entered her house she threw herself on her bed and broke into such loud sobbing that
she could be heard in the street and in the neighbouring yards’ (pg. 89).
• However, after only three months she falls in love with Vasily. When Vasily dies, the
narrator describes her suffering in a dramatic tone again: ‘She went about dressed in
black and weepers, and she gave up wearing hats and gloves for good. She hardly left the
house except to go to church and to visit her husband’s grave. She almost led the life of
a nun’ (pg. 91). This time, however, it is harder for the reader to take Olenka’s suffering
seriously, because we know how quickly she got over Kukin’s death.
• Then, only six months later, she falls in love again. Because this pattern is repeated three
times, Olenka looks like a silly fool and we laugh at her.
• Therefore, when you read the whole story, you realise that the narrator’s tone is actually
mocking: he is making us laugh at Olenka. He is also criticising the type of person she
is: she has no opinions of her own, and she changes herself completely each time she
falls in love.
THE DARLING
SAMPLE EXAM QUESTIONS
Read the following extract from ‘The Darling’ and then answer the questions which
follow it:
She felt as if she had been dealing in lumber for ever so long, that the most
important and essential thing in life was lumber. There was something
touching and endearing in the way she pronounced the words, ‘beam,’
‘joist,’ ‘plank,’ ‘stave,’ “lath,’ ‘gun-carriage,’ ‘clamp. ’ At night she dreamed
of whole mountains of boards and planks, long, endless rows of wagons 5
conveying the wood somewhere, far, far from the city. She dreamed that
a whole regiment of beams, 36 ft. x 5 in., were advancing in an upright
position to do battle against the lumberyard; that the beams and joists
and clamps were knocking against each other, emitting the sharp crackling
reports of dry wood, that they were all falling and then rising again, piling 10
on top of each other. Olenka cried out in her sleep, and Pustovalov said
gently: ‘Olenka my dear, what is the matter? Cross yourself.’
Her husband’s opinions were all hers. If he thought the room was too hot,
she thought so too. If he thought business was dull, she thought business
was dull. Pustovalov was not fond of amusements and stayed home on 15
holidays; she did the same.
‘You are always either at home or in the office,’ said her friends. ‘Why don’t
you go to the theatre or to the circus, darling?’
‘Vasichka and I never go to the theatre,’ she answered sedately. ‘We have
work to do, we have no time for nonsense. What does one get out of going 20
to theatre?’
Literature Summary 129
Short Story: The Darling
COLUMN A COLUMN B
a Kukin A Manages a lumber-yard.
b Vasily B Manages an open-aired theatre.
c Smirnov C Works as a vet in the army
a B (3)
b A (3)
c C (3)
An opinionated person is someone who has many strong opinions which they feel
passionate about (3). Olenka seems to have opinions, but they are not really her own
opinions (3). She doesn’t have opinions of her own – she takes on the opinions of her
lovers (3). If Olenka had strong opinions of her own, she would not easily adopt other
people’s opinions (3).
6 Refer to the story as a whole. Think about the tone of this short story.
a Write only the letter A—D next to the number 6a. The tone of this story can best
be described as …[1]
A depressing
B tragic
C ironic
D mocking
THE DARLING
D mocking
b What message is the author trying to convey through the tone of this story? [2]
NOTE: Accept any TWO of the following, or anything else reasonable:
The author is mocking or making fun of Olenka. He is not just making fun of her,
but of the type of person she is (3). He thinks it is ridiculous / silly for someone
to act like she acts in the story (3). He is making fun of the type of person who so
easily takes on the opinions and thoughts of other people (3). He thinks people
should have their own opinions (3).
TOTAL: 15 MARKS
Literature Summary 131
Short Story: The Late Bud
PLOT SUMMARY
Yaaba is a girl who really enjoys playing with her friends. She likes to break the rules and
does not like to help her mother with errands or chores at home. Yaaba overhears Maami,
her mother, complaining that she has no red earth to polish her floor for Christmas. She
decides to go with her friends, Panyin and Kakra, to the earth pit the next morning to fetch
some. That night, Maami beats her for not washing herself before going to sleep. After the
beating, Yaaba cannot sleep. She goes into the next room to fetch her tools for collecting
red earth. She slips in a bowl of water, hits her head and faints. Maami hears the noise and
thinks that there is a thief in the house. She screams. She goes into the next room, sees
Yaaba lying on the floor and screams again. People come running from all over the village.
They question Yaaba and Maami and discuss the event until morning. However, Yaaba
won’t answer them and no one can work out what happened. The next morning, while
Yaaba is sleeping, Panyin and Kakra come to fetch her. They tell Maami about the plan
to go to the earth pit. Maami is surprised and grateful that finally Yaaba was trying to do
something helpful. Yaaba is half asleep and confused, but she hears Maami calling her ‘my
child’. She is happy, because Maami is proud of her and she finally knows that she is really
Maami’s child.
SETTING
The story is set in Ghana, in the village where Yaaba lives with her family. It takes place on a
Saturday, the day before Christmas.
Yaaba is a girl who enjoys playing with her friends. She likes to break the
rules and does not like to help her mother with [1] _______________ or chores
at home. Yaaba overhears Maami, her mother, complaining that she has no
red [2] _______________ to polish her floor for Christmas. She decides to go with
her friends, [3] _______________ and [4] _______________ , to the earth pit the next
morning to fetch some. That night, Maami beats her for not [5] _______________
herself before going to sleep. After the beating, Yaambi cannot sleep. She goes
into the next room to fetch her tools for collecting red earth. She slips in a
bowl of [6] _______________ , hits her head and faints. Maami hears the noise and
thinks that there is a [7] _______________ in the house. She screams, and people
come running from all over the village. They discuss the event, but no one can
work out what happened. The next morning while Yaaba is [8] _______________
Panyin and Kakra come to fetch her. They tell Maami about the plan to go to
the earth pit. Maami is surprised and grateful that finally Yaaba was trying to do
something [9] _______________ . Yaaba is half asleep and confused, but she hears
Maami calling her ‘my child’. She is happy, because now she knows that she is
really Maami’s [10] _______________ .
MARKING MEMORANDUM
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
an errand (n.) A small job, e.g. going to the shops to buy something or going to another
classroom to deliver a message. Yaaba does not do errands for her mother.
a chore (n.) A small job, usually around the house, that needs to be done most days, e.g. like
washing the dishes. Yaaba does not do chores for her mother.
a trunk (n.) The base of a tree. Yaaba plays with her friends by the Big Trunk.
a pit (n.) A big hole in the ground. Yaaba decides to get red earth from the pit.
a hoe (n.) A hand-held farming tool. People use it to break up the ground before they plant
seeds. Yaaba plans to use a hoe to get red earth from the pit.
Literature Summary 133
Short Story: The Late Bud
MAJOR CHARACTERS
NAME YAABA
IMPORTANT 1 Decides to go with Panyin and Kakra to the pit to get red earth.
ACTIONS 2 Slips on a bowl of water, hits her head and faints.
RELATIONSHIPS Yaaba does not have a close relationship with her mother. Her mother calls
her other daughter, Adwoa, as ‘my child’ but does not call Yaaba this. Yaaba
wonders if she is not really her mother’s child.
PERSONALITY Yaaba likes to play and have fun. She does not help her mother with errands
TRAITS and chores, and she breaks all the rules. She thinks adults are boring.
PHYSICAL None given.
DESCRIPTION
CHANGES At the beginning of the story, Yaaba does not help her mother. However, when
she hears how sad her mother is about not having red earth to polish the floor,
she decides to get some for her. It is the first helpful thing she tries to do. At
the beginning of the story, Yaaba also wonders if she is really her mother’s
daughter. By the end of the story she knows that she is. This makes her happy.
IMPORTANT 1 Will not give Yaaba porridge because Yaaba does not help her with errands.
ACTIONS 2 Complains to herself that she has no red earth left to polish her floor.
3 Beats Yaaba because Yaaba goes to sleep without washing herself.
4 Finally calls Yaaba ‘my child’ when she realises that Yaaba wanted to do an
errand for her.
RELATIONSHIPS Benyiwa is Yaaba’s mother. Yaaba calls her Maami.
PERSONALITY Maami complains a lot about all the work she has to do at home.
TRAITS
PHYSICAL None given.
DESCRIPTION
CHANGES At the beginning of the story, Maami is frustrated that Yaaba spends all her time
playing, and does not help her around the house. She even beats her. At the
end of the story, Maami has forgiven Yaaba and shows her love because she is
grateful that Yaaba wanted to fetch red earth for her.
THEME 2
RECONCILIATION
Reconciliation means putting differences aside and finding a common ground on which to
build up a relationship. Reconciliation takes place after there has been a period of tension or
a big argument between people in a relationship.
THEME 3
PATRIARCHY
Patriarchy is the system of giving men and boys more power than women and girls
are given. In patriarchal societies, men have more power, more freedom and more
opportunities than women do. Women are often expected to stay home, take care of the
household chores and be obedient (do as they are told) to men.
Literature Summary 135
Short Story: The Late Bud
2 FIGURES OF SPEECH:
The title, ‘The Late Bud’ is a metaphor for Yaaba. A ‘bud’ is a young flower that has not
yet opened. Buds usually open at around the same time in spring, when the weather starts
to get warm. However, if there is a bud that opens later than the others, it can be called a
‘late bud’. Yaaba is being compared to a late bud. She is childish and does not behave like
her mother expects her to behave for her age. Therefore, she is like a bud that has not yet
opened. At the end of the story, she finally tries to do something helpful by going to the pit
to collect red earth for her mother. She is now like a bud that finally opens in that she has
matured from being selfish to being helpful.
3 REGISTER:
Register is how formal or informal the language is. This story is written in an informal
register. It sounds as if someone is casually speaking directly to the reader. For example, the
first paragraph ends with, ‘You know how it is’ (pg.129). Later, the narrator says, ‘But, you
see, one does not go around asking elders such questions. No, not at all’ (pg. 130) It is very
informal to say ‘you see’ directly to the reader. It sounds like a conversation.
4 TONE:
• Maami speaks in different tones at different points in the story. When she is angry and
beating Yaaba, she speaks in a harsh, aggressive tone. She says, “‘You lazy, lazy thing!
She cried. ‘You good-for-nothing, empty corn husk of a daughter…’” (pg. 132). We
know that her tone is aggressive because of the words she uses (‘good-for-nothing’), the
punctuation (the exclamation mark) and the repetition of the word ‘lazy’.
• However, at the end of the story, after Yaaba’s injury, when her mother has forgiven her,
she speaks in a kind and nurturing tone. She says, ‘My child, my child, I say thank you.
You were getting ready to go and fetch me red earth? Is that why you were holding the
hoe? My child, my child, I thank you’ (pg. 134). Here, the repetition of ‘My child, my
child’ is gentle and soothing and shows us that Maami has forgiven Yaaba’.
It was quite dark; the children could hardly see their own hands as they
threw the pebbles. But Yaaba insisted that they go on. There were only
three left of the eight girls who were playing the game. From time to time,
mothers, fathers or elder sisters had come and called to the others to go
home. The two still with Yaaba were Panyin and Kakra. Their mother had 5
gone away and that was why they were still there. No one came any longer
to call Yaaba. Up till the year before, Maami always came to yell for her when
it was sundown. When she could not come, she sent Adwoa. But of course,
Yaaba never listened to them.
COLUMN A COLUMN B
a Yaaba A Does not like to help with chores
b Maami
around the house.
B Is helpful around the house.
c Adwoa
C Wants red earth to polish the
floor for Christmas.
A A (3)
B C (3)
C B (3)
D defiant (3)
5 Why has Maami stopped coming to call Yaaba home at sunset? [1]
Literature Summary 137
Short Story: The Late Bud
8 Quote TWO consecutive words from the extract which tell you that Panyin and
Kakra are sisters. [1]
‘Their mother’ (3)
9 At the end of the story, Yaaba hears her mother refer to her as ‘my child’. Why is this
significant? [3]
This is significant because Yaaba and her mother do not have an easy relationship (3).
In the story, Yaaba hears her mother calling Adwoa her sister ‘my child’. Yaaba wonders
if she is also her mother’s child (3). At the end, when Yaaba hear her mother say this, it
lets her know that her mother loves her too (3).
10 In your opinion, is Yaaba a good daughter? Why or why not? [2]
Yes, Yaaba is a good daughter because she makes a plan to go get red earth for her
mother to polish the floor (3). Yaaba hears that her mother is upset about the floor
polish, and she makes a plan to surprise her (3). Yaaba’s mother has unfair expectations
of Yaaba because she is a girl (3).
(NOTE: Accept any 2 suitable answers)
OR
No, Yaaba is not a good daughter. Yaaba never helps her mother with chores around
the house (3). Yaaba never listens to her mother – her mother is always frustrated
with her (3).
TOTAL: 17 MARKS
PLOT SUMMARY
A boy is delivering clean washing that his mother has done to its owner. On his way, he
looks through the railings at a beautiful park full of jungle gyms. He remembers how he was
kicked out of the park the last time he was there. He is not allowed in it because he is black
/ coloured (it is not clear from the story which one he is) and the park sign says ‘Blankes
Alleen. Whites Only’. He does not understand why he cannot use the park. When he
delivers the bundle of clothes, he enters the house through the back door, into the kitchen.
The woman checks that all the clothing is there. She tells him that she is going away for a
month. She asks Annie, her domestic worker, to give him something to eat. When he is
finished eating, the woman gives him his mother’s wages and an extra five-cent piece for
him. As he walks away, he dreams about all the sweets he will buy with his coin. He goes
THE PARK
back to the park to watch the white children playing there. He is frustrated and angry that
he cannot join them. He swears, throws some rubbish into the park and runs away because
he is angry. This does not make him feel better.
At home, he gives his mother the money and she gives him some food. He tells her that the
woman is going away for a month. She is very upset because she does not know where they
will get money from. He plays with the boys in the street, but he cannot stop thinking about
the jungle gyms in the park. He is so sad that he starts crying. He goes to the shop to buy
sweets and eats them on the pavement.
At supper, he decides to go back to the park at night. No one else will be there. He is excited
and afraid. After supper, he does his chores quickly and goes outside. He runs through town
to the park. He climbs over the fence. He plays on the slide (the ‘chute’), the seesaw, the
merry-go-round, and the swings. As he swings, he feels like he can touch the moon.
The park attendant (the man who works there) is in a hut on the other side of the park.
The noise wakes him, and he leaves his hut. The attendant does not want to kick the boy
out of the park, but he has to because it is the law. He is also black, and he is angry about
the Apartheid laws. He threatens to call the police because the boy ignores him. The boy is
afraid, but he keeps on swinging. He wishes he were safe at home with his mother.
Literature Summary 139
Short Story: The Park
SETTING
The story is set in South Africa during Apartheid.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
One of the Apartheid laws was the Separate Amenities Act. This law made it illegal for
people of different races to use the same amenities: parks, beaches, train carriages, water
fountains, etc. All the best amenities were kept for white people. Black, coloured and Indian
people had inferior (worse) amenities. In this story, we see how the main character is not
allowed to use the park, which is reserved for white people. It is not clear whether the boy is
black or coloured. Either way, he is discriminated against by the Apartheid laws.
A boy is delivering clean washing that his mother has done to its owner. On his
way, he looks through the railings at a beautiful [1] _______________ full of jungle
gyms. He remembers how he was kicked out of the park the last time he was
there. He is not allowed in because he is [2] _______________ .
He does not understand why he cannot use the park. When he delivers
the bundle of clothes, he enters the house through the back door in the
[3] _______________ She tells him that she is going away for a [4] _______________ .
The woman checks that all the clothing is there. She asks Annie, her domestic
worker, to give him something to eat. When he is finished eating, the woman
gives him his mother’s wages and an extra five-cent piece for him. As he walks
away, he dreams about all the [5] _______________ he will buy with his coin. He
goes back to the park to watch the white children playing there. He is frustrated
and angry that he cannot join them. He swears, throws some rubbish into the
park, and runs away because he is angry. This does not make him feel better.
At home, his mother gives him some food. He tells her that the woman is going
away for a month. She is very upset because she does not know where they will
get [6] _______________ from. He plays with the boys in the street, but he cannot
stop thinking about the jungle gyms in the park. He is so sad that he starts
[7] _______________ . He goes to the shop to buy sweets and eats them on the
pavement.
At supper, he decides to go back to the park at night. No one else will be
there. He is excited and afraid. After supper, he does his chores quickly
and goes outside. He runs through town to the park. He climbs over the
[8] _______________ . He plays on the slide (the ‘chute’), the seesaw, the merry-
go-round and the swings. As he swings, he feels like he can touch the
[9] _______________ .
The park attendant (the man who works there) is in a hut on the other side
of the park. The noise wakes him, and he comes outside. The attendant does
not want to kick the boy out of the park, but he has to because it is the law.
He is also black, and he is angry about Apartheid laws. He threatens to call the
[10] _______________ because the boy ignores him. The boy is afraid. He wishes
he were safe at home with his [11] _______________ .
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their own
mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 park
2 black / coloured / a person of colour / not white
3 kitchen
4 month
5 sweets
6 money / income
THE PARK
7 crying / to cry
8 fence / railings
9 moon / stars / sky
10 police
11 mother / mama / mom
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
to be put out (adj.) If you are put out of a place, it means you are kicked out, or made to leave.
The main character was put out of the park because it is reserved for white
people.
a jungle gym (n.) A jungle gym is a mixture of swings, slides, seesaws, and other structures
made for children to play on. The boy in the story wants to play on the jungle
gyms in the park very badly, but he cannot because the parks are reserved
for white people. In the story, the jungle gyms are described as, ‘the gaily
painted red-and-green tubing, the silver chains and brown boards, transport
to never-never land’ (pg. 29).
a park attendant (n.) Someone who works in a park is called a park attendant. In the story, the
attendant does not want to kick the boy out of the park, but he has to
because of the Apartheid Separate Amenities Act.
a chute (n.) A chute is a long tunnel. In the story, the slide on the jungle gym is called a
chute. The boy loves sliding down the chute. It makes him feel like he is flying.
Literature Summary 141
Short Story: The Park
MAJOR CHARACTERS
THEME 2
RESPONSES TO INJUSTICE
Injustice is the opposite of justice. It is unjust when things are unfair. (Notice that the noun
‘injustice’ starts with an ‘i’, and the adjective ‘unjust’, starts with a ‘u’).
2 REGISTER:
THE PARK
When the boy talks to people in his community, the language is different from the language
in the rest of the story. The writer is trying to make the direct speech the same as people
would talk in real life. The register is very informal. For example:
• The boy’s mother asks, “‘Why? What the matter? What I do?’” (pg. 33). If this was
written in a formal register, it would be: “‘Why? What’s the matter? What did I do?’”
• One of the boys in the streets asks the boy, “‘You sleep?’” (pg. 33). If this was written in a
formal register, it would be: “‘Are you asleep?’”
• The boy’s sister says to him, “‘Mama say you must come’n eat” (pg. 34). If this was
written in a formal register, it would be: “‘Mama says that you must come and eat’”.
• The boy says to the park attendant, “‘I come back for the swings’” (pg. 36). If this was
written in a formal register, it would be, “‘I have come back for the swings’”.
4 FIGURES OF SPEECH:
Mathews uses figures of speech to make his writing more vivid. This means that they make
the things happening in the story easier to imagine. It is like he uses his words to paint a
picture in our minds. For example:
• A metaphor is a direct comparison of two things. When the boy is at the top of the
chute, the writer compares the boy to a bird who is free and can fly anywhere: ‘He was a
bird; an eagle’ (pg. 35).
• Onomatopoeia is when the word has the same sound as what it describes. The author
uses the word “‘Wheeeeeee!’” (pg. 35) when the boy goes down the ‘chute’. This word is
the sound the boy makes when he goes down the slide.
Literature Summary 143
Short Story: The Park
• Repetition is when the same word is used over and over to emphasise something. ‘Each
time he swept down the chute, he wanted the trip never to end, to go on sliding, sliding,
sliding’ (pg. 36). This emphasises that he would happily slide over and over again. ‘It
swept higher, higher, higher’ (pg. 36), emphasises that each time he goes up on the
swing, it goes higher than the time before.
• A simile is a comparison using ‘like’ or ‘as’. ‘He crouched like a runner, then violently
straightened’ (pg. 36). The boy is on the swing and tries to make the swing go higher.
He crouches down in order to move it. This makes him look like a runner at the start
of a race.
• Hyperbole is an exaggeration. The author writes ‘He could touch the moon’ (pg. 36)
and ‘No bird could fly as high as he’ (pg. 36). The boy cannot really touch the moon or
fly higher than a bird. The writer uses hyperbole to emphasise just how high the boy
is swinging.
Once clear of the district, he broke into a trot. He did not slacken his
pace as he passed through the downtown area with its wonderland shop
windows. His elation seeped out as he neared the park and his footsteps
dragged.
In front of him was the park with its gate and iron railings. Behind the 5
railings, impaled, the notice board. He could see the swings beyond. The
sight strengthened him.
He walked over, his breath coming faster. There was no one in sight. A car
turned a corner and came towards him and he started at the sound of its
engine. The car swept past, the tyres softly licking the asphalt. 10
The railings were ice-cold to his touch and the shock sent him into action.
He extended his arms and with monkey-like movements pulled himself up
to perch on top of the railings then dropped onto the newly turned earth.
The grass was damp with dew and he swept his feet across it. Then he ran
and the wet grass bowed beneath his bare feet. 15
He ran towards the swings, the merry-go-round, see-saw to chute, hands
covering the metal. Up the steps to the top of the chute. He stood outlined
against the sky.
He was a bird; an eagle. He flung himself down on his stomach, sliding
swiftly. Wheeeeeee! 20
He rolled over when he slammed onto the grass. He looked at the moon
for an instant then propelled himself to his feet and ran for the steps of
the chute to recapture that feeling of flight. Each time he swept down the
chute, he wanted the trip never to end, to go on sliding, sliding, sliding.
This is a metaphor (3). The author is comparing the boy to a bird (3). This emphasises
how high he feels, and how sliding down the slide makes him feel like he can fly (3).
4 Refer to ‘Each time he swept down the chute, he wanted the trip never to end, to
go on sliding, sliding, sliding’ (lines 23–24). Why does Mathews repeat the word
‘sliding’ three times? [2]
The repetition emphasises / demonstrates / shows/ tells us (3) how long he wants to
slide for / that he never wants the sliding to end (3).
5 Why must the boy go to the park at night? [3]
THE PARK
He must go to the park at night because he is not allowed in the park (3). The story is
set during Apartheid in South Africa, when amenities like parks were separated by race
(3). The little boy is black, and the park is only for white people (3).
6 Why does the park attendant feel conflicted about kicking the boy out of the
park? [2]
The park attendant is conflicted because it is his job to kick the boy out of the park, but
he thinks the law is unfair (3). The man thinks the boy should be allowed to play in the
park, but he needs to keep his job to survive (3). If he does not kick the boy out of the
park, and he gets caught, he might lose his job (3).
7 How and why do the little boy’s feelings about the park change throughout the
course of the story? [4]
At the beginning of the story, the little boy wants to go to the park (3). He has such a
strong desire to go to the park that he cries (3). He makes a plan to sneak away to the
park after supper (3). When he gets to the park, he has so much fun on the chute and
on the swings (3) – he wants to slide forever. However, the park attendant hears him
and tells him to get out of the park (3). He gets scared that the police will come and
arrest him (3). All he wants is to be back home with his mother (3). Even though he
loves the park, by the end of the story he just wants to be safe and at home (3).
(NOTE: Accept any 4, as well as any other suitable answers.)
Literature Summary 145
Short Story: The Park
8 The injustice of Apartheid is especially painful through the eyes of a child. Discuss
your opinion on this statement [3]
Through this story, we can see just how unfair the laws of Apartheid were. We see this
especially because the little boy in the story cannot understand why he is not allowed in
the park (3). His innocent questions show us just how unjust and ridiculous it was not
to allow children of any race into the same park (3). He is just an innocent child, and
we feel especially sad for him (3), especially when he cries alone. When he goes to the
park, we see how happy he is – being on the jungle gym is so much fun for him. He is
not trying to break the law – he just wants to enjoy the jungle gym like any child should
be able to (3). At the end of the story he is scared of being arrested. It is especially sad
and painful to see such a small child worry about getting arrested, just for playing on a
jungle gym (3).
(NOTE: Accept any 3, as well as any other suitable answers.)
TOTAL: 19 MARKS
SUMMARY (9 MINUTES):
1 Turn to the ‘Summary’ section in the Literature summary.
2 Read the ‘Summary’ out loud to the class.
3 After you have read the text, instruct each learner to write down five main points from
the summary.
4 Give learners a few minutes to write their points.
5 Split the learners into small groups with no more than 5 or 6 learners in each group.
6 Explain that each group must now make a list of the five most important points.
7 Each small group must discuss their individual lists, and must narrow their 25 / 30
points down to the five most important points about the text.
8 Give the small groups time to work out their final list of five points.
9 Instruct each group to decide on a speaker.
10 Call the class back together.
11 The speaker for each group shares the group’s final list.
12 If time permits, the class can then discuss the lists and decide on the five most
important points for the class.
Literature Summary 149
Poetry Revision Guidelines
SUMMARY
The poem explains that we are all connected to other humans, even though sometimes
we think we are separate. If we are all part of a common (shared) humanity, it means we
have to care about each other. Donne describes how all humans are connected and do
not live or die in isolation from one another. He philosophises that every individual’s life
affects everyone else’s life. The poem says that it doesn’t matter how small or big a person is,
whether you are related by blood or not, their death will affect you because all humans are
part of one collective.
The poem starts by comparing humans to land (‘islands’ and ‘continents’). Then it compares
humans with houses (‘manor’). Lastly, Donne uses the image of church funeral bells to say
that we all have to die someday. He means we are all equal in death, so we should behave
with respect towards other people in life. The poem’s message is very similar to the South
African maxim (saying) about ubuntu: ‘Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu’, which means ‘We are
who we are because of other people’.
ERA
NO MAN IS AN
ISLAND
This poem was written over 400 years ago: around about the same time as when
Shakespeare was alive in Elizabethan England. Slavery existed all over the world; women
had no civil rights (to work or vote); and there were still strict divisions between rich and
poor. A poem such as this one, which argued in favour of equality and respect, must have
seemed shocking at the time.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
John Donne lived in England from 1572 to 1631. He was part of the group of poets called
the metaphysical poets. This group was interested in understanding how humans interact
with each other. They were also interested in understanding what makes life satisfying. They
decided that knowing your purpose (what you are on earth to do) gives meaning to life.
They believed that all life forms are connected – humans, animals, and plants.
Literature Summary 151
Poetry: No man is an island
TYPE OF POEM
This is a short, philosophical (thinking about the meaning of life) poem. It comes up with a
rule for living: understand that we are all connected, because we are all human.
CHARACTERISTICS
It is written in free verse, but there is some internal rhyme. Every fifth line rhymes (‘sea’,
‘me’, and ‘thee’). Assonance (the repetition of vowel sounds) helps to make the poem
sound like a speech. The poem is built around one extended metaphor: the comparison of
people and land.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their own
mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 connected / linked
2 involved
3 lives
4 land
5 houses / manors
6 isolation
7 family
8 dies
9 less
10 fellow / man
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
a clod (n.) A clod is a lump of earth. Donne is saying that we are all bits / parts of the
planet, which come together in the same way that clods come together to make
continents (land masses: such as Europe or Africa).
to diminish (v.) Diminishes means gets less. The poet is saying that humans are reduced or made
less important every time someone dies: even if that person is a stranger. We lose
their knowledge and experience.
a manor (n.) A manor is a big, fancy house. Donne is saying that if someone else’s house (or
one you own) was destroyed, you would feel sad. He wants us all to feel that same
pity whenever anyone dies. He thinks we should have empathy (feel what they are
feeling) for others.
a promontory A promontory is a headland: a piece of land that sticks out into the sea. This is a
(n.) metaphor. Donne means that we should be upset whenever anyone dies (even
someone ordinary, not only rich or famous). They might be small clods, but clods
together make up a whole headland. The headland is part of Europe. Separately,
we are individual clods of earth. But put all the humans together and you have a
whole continent (society).
to toll (v.) A bell tolls (rings) when there is bad news. Here it is a funeral bell, telling the
townsfolk or village that someone has died.
NO MAN IS AN
ISLAND
2 VOICE:
The voice of the poem is calm, serious, reflective (thoughtful) and confident. This is because
the poet is sure that we are all connected by our common humanity. He is telling us about
an idea that he is passionate about and completely believes in it.
3 ADDRESSEE:
The poet is addressing both himself and all of humanity because he is writing about the
natural relationship between all humans. This is a message he wants everyone to hear.
Literature Summary 153
Poetry: No man is an island
that one death affects us all. We need to care about all humans – not only ourselves. Donne
wants us to understand that we all share the same hopes and fears. We are living through
each other’s experiences and can thus empathise with each other.
THEME 2
EQUALITY
The poem explains that it does not matter who you are, every human is an equally
important part of the human race. Our differences do not make us lesser or greater than
another person.
b Donne uses other images in the extended comparison: he compares people to ‘clods’ of
earth. He says when we are together we form a ‘promontory’ as big as ‘Europe’. These are
all part of the same comparison – humans as earth. The metaphor compares physical
separation (the islands and the continent) with emotional or spiritual separation
between people.
2 ALLITERATION:
Alliteration is a sound device that repeats consonant sounds (usually at the beginning of
a word). We see alliteration in the words ‘death diminishes’ (line 10). The / d / sounds are
hard, and they are meant to make us think about how final, sudden and shocking death
is. The poet wants us to understand how terrible the loss of another human is, and he uses
these hard sounds to do that.
3 ASSONANCE:
Assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds close together. ‘Every man’s death diminishes
me’ (line 10): The repetition of the /e/ sound draws out the line. The tone is sad, and the
poet wants us to reflect on the idea of death and loss. The vowel sounds slow down the pace
(how fast or slow something sounds). This gives us time to think and reflect.
4 SYNECDOCHE:
(Pronounced suh-nek-duh-kee) Synecdoche is like symbolism: when you use a part
of something to talk about the whole thing. ‘The bell tolls’ (line12) is an example of
synecdoche because the bells are part of the church, and churches are where funerals often
happen. Instead of saying, ‘There is a funeral happening, and the bells are ringing to tell
people that someone has died’, Donne uses this shortcut and just says ‘the bell tolls’. We
NO MAN IS AN
know that the bells tolling are symbolic of someone’s death.
ISLAND
Literature Summary 155
Poetry: No man is an island
Read the following poem and then answer the questions which follow it:
No man is an island
John Donne
No man is an island,
Entire of itself,
Every man is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.
If a clod be washed away by the sea, 5
Europe is the less.
As well as if a promontory were.
As well as if a manor of thy friend’s
Or of thine own were:
Any man’s death diminishes me, 10
Because I am involved in mankind,
And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls;
It tolls for thee.
An island is literally a piece of land separated from a mainland. It has water all around
it. Islands are independent. (3)
Figuratively, Donne means that we cannot live separately from others, as islands do. We
need our fellow humans for companionship and survival. (3)
3 Refer to ‘Europe is the…thine own were:’ (lines 6–9). The poet compares the loss of
a person with two other losses. In your OWN words, explain what these two other
losses are. [2]
The two other losses are: a crumbling mainland promontory / landmass, somewhere
on the edge of the European coast (3), and a friend’s (or your own) fancy house
(‘manor’). (3)
4 Refer to ‘And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls;’ (line 12):
a What figurative device is ‘the bell tolls’? Explain in full. [2]
It is synecdoche (3); when one part stands for the whole. ‘The bell’ is part of a
church tower. Churches are used for funerals. When ‘the bell tolls’ it announces the
death of a person (3).
b Why do you think the poet uses this symbolic language about the bell? [2]
It is poetic shorthand (3) to talk about the whole process of the funeral. Donne
thinks that his readers probably know how funerals work, so he does not have
to explain the whole system. Readers infer (guess or work out) that, if the bell is
ringing, (3) someone has died.
c Identify and discuss one the main themes of this poem. Use evidence from the
poem to support your answer. [3]
The main theme of this poem is community – that humans cannot live in isolation
(3) from each other. This is demonstrated by lines 1 and 3: the speaker says that
no humans live separated from others (island), but all humans belong to one large
NO MAN IS AN
collective (continent) (3). Even our deaths impact on one other (lines 10 and 11)
ISLAND
(3). We are connected just because we are all humans, and we should treat each
other with respect. (lines 12 and 13) (3).
OR
The main theme of this poem is equality (3) – no matter how rich or poor we are,
each person is worth the same. We need to care about the rights of every person,
regardless of their social status: (3) In ‘Any man’s death diminishes me’, Donne
means that losing any human being should make us sad, not only losing people we
know or admire. (3)
TOTAL: 16 MARKS
Literature Summary 157
Poetry: Cattle in the rain
SUMMARY
This poem describes the physical and emotional suffering a shepherd (someone who looks
after livestock) went through while looking after cows in rural Zimbabwe. The shepherd has
grown up and is now telling his story in retrospect (looking back).
At the time of herding the cattle, the boy thinks his terrible job will never end. It has
been raining for a long time, and the boy feels that he is not properly prepared: he has no
raincoat – only an old sack. The cattle do not want to obey him, and their resistance to his
efforts makes his job harder. He even wishes he was a girl, so he would not have to do this
kind of work (Girls worked the land and boys herded the cattle). He is so exhausted by the
physical effort of trying to herd the cattle that he cries.
When a wasp arrives, the whole herd stampedes (run away fast) and scatters in different
directions. The shepherd realises that he needs help to herd them again, but everyone else is
sheltered in their homes, out of the rain. He is tense, demoralised (feels like giving up) and
frightened. Even though he controls the most difficult bull, Gatooma, at last, he knows that
he will have to keep doing this very difficult job day after day.
ERA
This poem was written when the poet produced most of his work, in the 1970s and 1980s.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Musaemura Bonas Zimunya is a Zimbabwean poet and academic. He was born in Mutare
(Umtali) in 1949 and went to school at Goromonzi. His poetry explores the beauty and
hardship of Zimbabwean rural life.
TYPE OF POEM
This is a narrative poem because it tells a story.
CHARACTERISTICS
This poem is written in free verse. The poem is characterised by language that, in places, is
quite informal or conversational. It sounds as if someone is telling us a story or anecdote
(a little story about their own lives). There is no formal structure, regular rhythm or rhyme
scheme. The poem is written in the first person (‘I’) and is a shepherd’s personal testimony
about working in a tough rural environment. The tone is self-pitying and exhausted. The
speaker wants the audience to sympathise with (feel sorry for) the shepherd’s difficult life.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their own
mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
CATTLE IN
THE RAIN
Literature Summary 159
Poetry: Cattle in the rain
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
to cajole (v.) Cajole means persuade or ask nicely. The shepherd is trying to cajole the cattle to
move in the right direction, to graze (eat grass) and then go to the kraal.
jute (n.) Jute is a kind of plant fibre used to make sacks. It is brown and rough and
scratchy. The shepherd is poor and lives in a rural area. He does not own proper
rainwear that can keep him dry. He has a recycled sack made from jute to cover
himself, but it does not keep the rain out.
mucus (n.) Mucus is snot. The shepherd is crying so hard that he does not have time to wipe
his face, which is wet with tears from his eyes and snot from his nose.
to penetrate (n.) Penetrating means pushing through. The cattle do not go where he wants them
to go. They just push through the thin bush and go where they like.
to skelter (v.) To ‘helter-skelter’ means move in a disorderly and confused manner. The poet
means that the cattle are playful and unorganised. The word also sounds like
‘scatter’. The cattle are all over the place instead of together in one neat, obedient
herd.
a stampede (n.) A stampede is when cattle panic and then rush madly together. It is very
dangerous to get in their way because you can be trampled to death. The wasp
has made the animals panic and run away because they do not want to be stung.
2 VOICE:
The voice of the poem is conversational, as if the shepherd is speaking directly to the reader.
The poet uses very little punctuation. It sounds like someone telling a story. The tale is full
of tension and suspense, as the audience wants to know what happens next.
3 ADDRESSEE:
The poem could be addressing city-based readers who might otherwise never know how
it is to work in the rural areas. He includes many details and physical descriptions, and
also explains his feeling of helplessness and rage as a young boy. The speaker could also be
remembering (reminiscing) with other grown men about how hard it was to be a shepherd
in the rural areas.
THEME 2
ISOLATION VERSUS COMMUNITY
CATTLE IN
When you are helpless you feel as if you cannot do anything to change events. The shepherd
THE RAIN
feels weak and helpless this way. He is alone (isolated) and no one else is there to help him.
Everyone else is at home or doing another job.
He cannot stop doing the herding or give up, because he will be punished. He has to find
a way to get over his helplessness and isolation and get the cattle fed and back to the kraal.
His community relies on him to herd the cattle. This is his responsibility.
Literature Summary 161
Poetry: Cattle in the rain
2 ALLITERATION:
This is a word-sound device when words share the same consonant sound, usually at the
beginning of the word.
a ‘it made me cry and curse’ (line 6) both contain the hard /k/ sounds. The repetition of
these sounds emphasises the boy’s desperation. When you curse, you say swearwords to
vent your frustration.
b ‘hooves hammering’ (line 35)helps us to picture and hear the stampede of the cattle. The
repetition of the /h/ sound copies (mimics) the way their feet strike the wet earth. It is a
tense, frightening feeling or atmosphere.
3 ONOMATOPEIA:
This is a word-sound device when the word has the actual sound inside it. The word is the
sound that the object / person / animal makes. In ‘hooves hammering’ (line 35), the word
‘hammering’ sounds like the animals running fast as they stampede. It is a heavy, repetitive
sound. It helps us to feel, see and hear how heavily and fast the cattle are moving.
Literature Summary 163
Poetry: Cattle in the rain
Girls don’t have to herd cattle (3). He thinks his life would be easier if was doing
women’s work (farming, cooking, brewing beer) (3).
c In your opinion, would this change make a big difference to his life? Why or
why not? [3]
It would probably not make a big difference (3). He would find other unexpected
hardships (3) in all that ‘women’s work’ too. It is just as difficult (3).
4 Refer to ‘chugging after the rhythmic hooves hammering the earth’ (line 35):
a Identify and explain the onomatopoeia in line 35. [2]
‘hooves hammering the earth’ (3): This expresses how powerfully the cattle hit the
ground with their hooves (3)
b Describe how you think this sound makes the speaker feel. Why? [2]
The shepherd sees a herd of panicked cattle stampeding. It makes him feel anxious,
(3) enraged and afraid for two reasons: he will have to find each cow and ox again
to herd them back to the kraal, and he might be injured (3) as they strike him with
their flailing hooves.
5 Refer to ‘a bone of anger blocking my breath’ (line 34). Why does the boy feel as if he
has a bone in his throat? [2]
He is so angry (3) with the stampeding cattle and the rain that he feels as if he is
physically choking (3).
6 Refer to ‘and it still rained’ (line 36). Why does the poet keep repeating that it is
raining? Explain how the rain is connected to a major theme in the poem. [2]
The rain is something that frustrates (3) the herd boy and makes his life miserable. He
feels that he has to fight nature just to do his job: the theme is nature versus people (3).
NOTE: Accept any TWO points.
TOTAL: 17 MARKS
CATTLE IN
THE RAIN
Literature Summary 165
Poetry: The Will
SUMMARY
The speaker in this poem has left instructions in his will about the handling of his estate. He
is giving instructions about the literal distribution of his possessions. At the same time, he is
commenting on the wrongdoings of the Apartheid government.
The speaker is talking directly to his beneficiaries (those who will receive his things) and
each stanza mentions a different thing and how it must be dealt with.
The speaker has few possessions but does not want to leave anything behind for the
government to take from him, even when he has died.
ERA
A specific time is not mentioned, we can infer (guess) that it is sometime during the
apartheid era, when black people were required to carry a permit with them at all times.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Apartheid in South Africa severely restricted the rights of people of colour. The government
did not want people of colour and white people to live in the same areas. People of colour
were removed by force away from their areas, into areas to which the government sent
them. One of the laws of Apartheid forced black South Africans to carry a permit which
only allowed them to live in certain areas and to move around certain areas at certain times
of the day. The houses that were ‘given’ to people of colour did not belong to them, they
belonged to the government, so the government could easily take them away should they
choose to do so. In the poem, Sepamla says that if the government decides to take the house
when he dies, his children must just give it to them – they must not try to fight for it.
TYPE OF POEM
The poem is a lyrical poem.
CHARACTERISTICS
A lyrical poem expresses a poet’s feelings, rather than telling a story. There are two pairs of
rhyming words. One set is in the first and second stanzas: ‘vacate’ and ‘gate’ and the second
set is in the sixth and seventh stanzas: ‘Light’ and ‘white’. These sets of rhyming words
enhance the lyricism of the poem.
The speaker says the family bible will have to be shared amongst all the
children.
The peach tree is to be pulled out and moved to the homelands.
The speaker wants the black and white cat to be divided amongst all the
children too.
The speaker wants his elder son to inherit the burglar-proofing, the gate,
the bicycle and some bracelets.
1 The speaker says the house must be vacated and the permit given up.
The younger son will inherit the bedroom suite and the studio couch
because he is married.
The speaker leaves the kitchen-scheme, the utensils, the bathtub and two
brooms to his daughter.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
6 The speaker says the family bible will have to be shared amongst all the children.
5 The peach tree is to be pulled out and moved to the homelands.
7 The speaker wants the black and white cat to be divided amongst all the
children too.
2 The speaker wants his elder son to inherit the burglar-proofing, the gate, the bicycle
and some bracelets.
1 The speaker says the house must be vacated and the permit given up.
THE WILL
4 The younger son will inherit the bedroom suite and the studio couch because he
is married.
3 The speaker leaves the kitchen-scheme, the utensils, the bathtub and two brooms to
his daughter.
Literature Summary 167
Poetry: The Will
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
to vacate (v.) To vacate somewhere means to leave a place so that someone else can use it.
The speaker indicates that his family should leave the house they have lived in
without complaint, so that the government can give it to someone else.
to surrender To surrender means to stop fighting or trying to escape or to give something to
(v.) someone in authority.The family should not fight to keep their home, but should
give it up to keep the peace.
a permit (n.) A permit is an official written statement allowing someone to do something. In this
poem, the speaker needs permission to live in this particular house.
the homelands The homelands were areas of South Africa for black people to live in under the
(n.) apartheid system. In order for the apartheid government to keep black people
segregated, it created homelands away from designated white areas.
2 VOICE:
The tone of the speaker’s voice is bitter, because he is angry and upset because he cannot
make the decisions he wants to. This is unfair. It is also sarcastic. The speaker uses sarcasm
to express his anger that he is not allowed to make the decisions that he wants. An example
of sarcasm is the poet saying that he wants the cat to be divided: The cat cannot literally be
divided but is symbolic of the division of races in South Africa. He is reiterating how stupid
it is to not let black and white people live together.
3 ADDRESSEE:
The speaker is addressing his children directly: ‘to my elder son’ (line 6), ‘to my little girl’
(line 10), ‘to my younger son’ (line 14).
2 REPETITION:
Repetition is when words are used more than once in a poem, to make a point. The verb
‘will’ is used by the speaker in each stanza. ‘Will’ is used to indicate the future tense but in
combination with ‘have to’ means that something must happen. The speaker is determining
what will happen to his things once he is dead but he is not necessarily making these
decisions because he wants to.
a Stanzas 1, 6, 7 – ‘will have to’: Some decisions are out of the speaker’s hands. In stanza 1,
he would prefer his family to inherit his house so that they can have a place to live but
he is not able to leave it to them because he does not own it. In stanzas 6 and 7, the Bible
and the cat have to be shared, even though this is not really possible.
b Stanzas 2, 3, 4 - ‘will go’: Here the speaker is clearly instructing which of his children
will get what. Each child and item is mentioned individually.
3 ALLITERATION:
Alliteration is a sound device where words that are close together have with the same
consonant sound (usually at the beginning of the word).
a ‘bicycle’ and ‘bracelet (stanza 2), ‘bathtub’ and ‘bracelet’ (stanza 3): the / b / sound is
repeated in the things that the speaker leaves to his elder son and daughter. The strong
sound emphasises the practicality of these items.
b ‘God’s guidance’ (stanza 7): the /g/ sound is strong and guttural and points to the
strength the family must have in their faith in God.
THE WILL
Literature Summary 169
Poetry: The Will
The Will
Sipho Sepamla
The Bible 20
you will have to share
for you will always want its Light
1 Refer to ‘The house, by right, / you will have to vacate’ (lines 1–2). Explain why the
poet’s children will have to vacate the house. [3]
Black people were not entitled to own land; they merely had a permit to live on it. (3)
Once the permit holder died, the land had to be handed back to the state. (3) He could
therefore not leave his house to his children. (3)
2 Refer to ‘The peach tree uproot / it might grow in the homelands / so might it be
with your stem’ (lines 17–18). Quote one word from these lines that indicates the
poet is not sure the peach tree will survive in the homelands. [1]
‘might’ (3)
3 Refer to ‘for you will always want its Light’ (line 22). Explain why the poet’s children
will always want the ‘Light’. [4]
‘Light’ is synonymous with the guidance offered from the bible. (3) The children will
need the wisdom of the bible to guide them. (3) Light will bring them comfort in their
darkest times. (3) Light conquers evil and Apartheid was evil. (3)
4 Refer to ‘The cat spotted black and white /…/ for that you’ll need God’s guidance.’
(lines 23–25):
a Identify the figure of speech represented by ‘The cat’. [1]
Metaphor (3)
b Explain how this figure of speech is appropriate. [3]
The cat is a metaphor for the people of South Africa. (3) The poet is saying to his
children they will have to find a way to divide the cat with God’s help. (3) He is
commentating on the fact that they will also have to rely on God’s help to deal with
the division of races under Apartheid. (3)
c Explain what this line tells us about the poet’s attitude to Apartheid. [3]
It tells us that he thinks Apartheid is ridiculous. (3) Just like it is not possible to
divide up a cat between three people (3), so is it ridiculous to split up races. (3)
TOTAL: 15 MARKS
THE WILL
Literature Summary 171
Poetry: The Clothes
SUMMARY
The poem describes men’s clothing that has been washed. There is a pair of shoes, and on
the washing line hangs a jacket, a pair of trousers, and a shirt. Serote (the poet) tells us that
the shoes will no longer be used. This lets us know that the comrade (an activist or fighter
against Apartheid) who wore the shoes is now probably dead. More proof of his violent
death is his shirt, which has a rip in it like a stab wound. There are also pinkish stains on the
cloth. Stains are left behind when someone tries to wash blood out of material. The comrade
has been in a violent, fatal (caused his death) struggle.
ERA
Serote is a well-known Struggle (‘anti-Apartheid’) poet. He grew up during a time of great
poverty and suffering in South Africa. Thus, we know that this poem takes place during the
Apartheid era.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
After 1948, the National Party (NP) came to power. The NP believed that people of colour
were inferior to (not as good as) white people. All the land, goods and services in South
Africa were separated according to race by law.
White people were at an enormous advantage. Education for people of colour was inferior
(of a worse quality) to white people’s. People of colour were forced to live in separate
areas and decent amenities were only available to white people. These are just some of the
examples of how Apartheid affected the lives of people of colour. Serote was incredibly
bitter about the systems of Apartheid. He began writing poetry in the 1970s, when
Apartheid was at its most severe. There were many demonstrations and much violence
as different groups of people fought the oppressive government and police forces for
equal rights.
Sometimes friends reported (betrayed) each other to the Apartheid police. Many activists,
such as the one in the poem, died. Serote wrote this poem to make us understand and
remember the experiences of the people who suffered during Apartheid and those who
bravely fought against it.
TYPE OF POEM
THE CLOTHES
This is a narrative poem because it tells a story. It is about a fellow activist who has died, so
it is also an elegy (a remembrance poem said at a funeral).
CHARACTERISTICS
This poem is written in free verse. It does not rhyme or have a regular rhythm and does not
stick to any formal structure. The poem sounds like a personal account of something Serote
experienced. Perhaps the dead man was a friend of his. Each of the four stanzas are of a
different length, and each line varies in length. The intense, emotional imagery is typical of
protest poetry. This kind of poetry wants us to remember and honour people who died to
free South Africa from Apartheid’s injustice.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 The poet came home in the morning.
7 The shirt was stained pink and had a rip in it.
4 He was not used to seeing the shoes resting.
Literature Summary 173
Poetry: The Clothes
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
Apartheid (n.) Apartheid was a set of laws created by the National Party in South Africa in 1948.
Apartheid was the idea that white people were superior (better than) to black
people. Apartheid laws were meant to keep people apart; the laws split resources
in a very unfair way. The system forced black people to live and work in poverty
and suffering.
a comrade (n.) A comrade is a man or woman who fights with words and action (including with
weapons) for a moral or political cause. People who fought in the struggle against
Apartheid were called comrades.
dangling (adj.) Dangling means hanging down without support. It usually has a negative meaning.
In this poem, the trousers look limp, like a person who has died by hanging (having
your neck bones broken by a rope noose). Death by hanging was the sentence
given by the Apartheid government to kill activists.
an elegy (n.) An elegy is a funeral poem, speech or song. This poem is a kind of elegy because it
wants us to remember that the dead man was someone’s friend. He was individual
and special, as every life is individual and special. Serote wants us to remember
him and how he violently died, so that we appreciate our freedom. We only have
this freedom now because people fought and died during the struggle against
Apartheid.
a gash (n.) A gash is a cut inflicted with (made by) violence. The shirt has a gash because
someone stabbed this activist to death. It is a harsh-sounding word to help us
imagine the violence and force of the strike against the man’s body.
’neath (prep.) ‘’neath’ is a short form (abbreviation) of ‘underneath’ or ‘beneath’. Serote is playing
with words. The trousers hang like a rope underneath a man’s head (a noose).
2 VOICE:
The tone of the speaker’s voice is sad, despairing and angry. His comrade’s life has
THE CLOTHES
been taken.
3 ADDRESSEE:
The speaker is addressing (talking to) two audiences. The first audience is friends and the
community who already believe in Serote’s cause (the struggle to end Apartheid). The other
audience is readers today who are still learning about the terrible human suffering that took
place during Apartheid.
THEME 2
APARTHEID, POVERTY AND SUFFERING
Apartheid laws favoured white people, who got better jobs, education, services and land
than black people. This meant that most black people could work hard their whole lives and
Literature Summary 175
Poetry: The Clothes
still have very little by the end of it. Owning a house, for example, was not possible for most
South Africans. Poverty (being poor) was the reality for many people.
Poverty was one reason many people suffered. Just getting enough to eat, or a respectable
set of clothing, or a place to live in the cities, was difficult. Poverty made the country unsafe
too, because many people turned to crime as their only option. They felt there was no other
way for them to make a living. Ordinary people struggled.
The clothes in this poem, for example, are probably being washed so they can be handed on
to someone else who needs them.
b ‘crying reddish water’ (line 12): This image helps us to imagine that the dead man’s
clothes are crying. There is so much pain that the poet feels as if the clothes themselves
THE CLOTHES
are human and can grieve at the man’s death. The clothes are taking on Serote’s own
bitterness and sorrow.
2 REPETITION:
Repetition is using the same word over and over. The word ‘crying’ is repeated in the poem.
Everything around the poet seems to be crying in sympathy with him (feeling the same
emotions as he does). We cry when we are sad or in mourning (remembering the dead).
Serote is emphasising how sad and sorrowful he feels at the man’s death. Even though he is
not at his comrade’s funeral, he is still incredibly upset. The repetition reminds us that the
tone of the poem is sorrowful, heartbroken and bitter.
3 SIMILE:
A simile indirectly compares two things, using the words ‘like’ or ‘as’.
a ‘like a window crying dew’ (line 4) : This simile compares water with tears. Even
something as innocent and natural as morning dew seems to take on extra sorrow when
the poet sees it. He is grieving, so everything around him seems sad too.
b ‘like a man with a rope ’neath his head’ (line 21): The simile compares the limp trousers
hanging on the line to a man who has died by hanging. Both the material and their
bodies hang without life. This could be referring to the punishment of death that the
Apartheid government used against activists. It could also be referring to individuals
who killed themselves by hanging because they felt such hopelessness during Apartheid.
4 OXYMORON:
An oxymoron is a language device that puts two seemingly opposite ideas together. For
example: ‘death-live lives’ (line 15). Life and death are opposites. If you are alive, you
cannot be dead at the same time. But here Serote means that life under Apartheid causes
so much suffering and despair that it is like being dead. There is no joy or hope. People are
emotionally dead even though their physical bodies may be walking around.
Literature Summary 177
Poetry: The Clothes
Read the following poem and then answer the questions which follow it:
The Clothes
Mongane Wally Serote
I looked back,
On the washing line hung
A shirt, jacket and trousers 10
Soaked wet with pity,
Wrinkled and crying reddish water, perhaps also salty;
The pink shirt had a gash on the right,
And stains that told the few who know
An item of our death-live lives. 15
THE CLOTHES
A man comes home in the early morning and finds that his friend’s clothes and
shoes have been washed (3). It looks like there has been a fight. There is blood on
the clothes (3). The speaker fears that his friend is dead (3).
2 Refer to ‘Dripped water like a window crying dew’ (line 4). What figure of speech is
this? Explain why it is an effective figure of speech. [3]
This is personification (3). In ‘window crying dew’, there are no real human tears (3)
on the window pane; the dew is like tears. The speaker is directly comparing natural
dew (3) to tears of personal grief.
3 Refer to ‘Wrinkled and crying…on the right’ (lines 12 and 13). Explain what has
happened in these lines. [3]
These words show us that there has been a violent (3) struggle / fight (3) and that
the man has been injured (3). The colours are bloody (3). When bloodstains (3) are
washed, they leave pink marks behind. The man is probably dead (3). Someone has
tried to get rid of the evidence (3) of the fight.
Their lives are so physically and emotionally difficult (3) that it is as if they live
halfway (3) between being dead and alive. There is no happiness or optimism or
hope in their lives. They are dead in terms of their feelings (3) even though their
bodies are still breathing.
5 Refer to the poem as a whole. Serote writes about the dead man’s clothes and not the
actual man who has died. Why do you think he has done this? [3]
The poet writes about the dead comrade’s clothes because they are all that are physically
left (3) of him. The clothes are a way for the speaker to reconnect with his lost comrade.
The clothes are a symbol of (represent) the dead man (3). The finality of the symbolism
of the clothes helps us to understand the poet’s great loss (3). His friend will not
ever wear those clothes or shoes again, because he is dead (3). He has been taken
from the speaker. The loss is heart-breaking. Serote doesn’t know how to talk about it
directly (3).
TOTAL: 16 MARKS
Literature Summary 179
Poetry: Those Winter Sundays
SUMMARY
In this poem, the speaker is remembering his childhood. In stanza 1, the speaker
remembers how his father woke up early every day, even on the weekends.
Stanza 2 describes the speaker’s mixed feelings about his father, who also used to get very
angry very quickly.
In stanza 3, the speaker regrets the way he spoke to his father – he says he did not show him
proper appreciation. He now realises his father was loving as well as angry.
The poem is about the difficulties of communicating in families. Often love is not expressed
(told or shown) in words.
ERA
This is a twentieth-century poem. The poet lived between 1913 and 1980. This poem was
probably written in the 1940s.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Robert Hayden was an African-American poet who had a difficult childhood. He was
moved back and forth between his parents and a foster family who lived next door. His
father was a minister (church leader). He probably experienced first-hand the things he
writes about in his poems.
In 1976 he was the first African-American to serve as the Consultant in Poetry to the
Library of Congress (now called the U.S. Poet Laureate).
TYPE OF POEM
This poem is free verse.
CHARACTERISTICS
This poem has no set rhyme scheme but there are some repeated sounds and words within
the poem. It has fourteen lines, divided into three stanzas (verses). Stanza means ‘room’ in
Italian. Think of each verse as moving to another room, where the poet is showing us extra
or new information.
THOSE WINTER
SUMMARY REVIEW ACTIVITY: GROUP WORK SEQUENCING
SUNDAYS
The sentences below are in the wrong order. Put them in the correct order, as
they happen in the poem. Number the sentences from 1 to 8. Number 1 has been
done for you.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 The speaker’s father always gets up first on cold Sunday mornings.
6 The house is freezing, so he gets dressed.
5 He stokes the fires to warm the house for the rest of the family.
2 The speaker wakes up as the temperature rises.
7 He gets dressed, hoping his father does not get angry with him.
3 He speaks without love or emotion to his father.
8 His father has polished the speaker’s good shoes as well.
4 The speaker regrets not thanking his father or showing him more appreciation.
Literature Summary 181
Poetry: Those Winter Sundays
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
austere (adj.) Austere means plain, without fanciness or decoration. In the poem the speaker
means that sometimes love is shown in austere (plain and simple) ways. Because
his father did not make a big deal of all the chores he did out of love, no one
noticed or appreciated them – or even thanked him. Now as an adult, the speaker
is able to see this austere type of love.
to bank (adj.) Banking means damping down a fire so that it stays warm overnight but does not
a fire burn down the house. In the morning the father blows on the banked coals and
makes the flame return.
chronic (adj.) Chronic means constant, or coming back again and again. Something that is
chronic continues over an extended period of time. Sometimes, we use the word
chronic to describe an illness that never really goes away. In the poem, the speaker
describes the chronic anger in his house. This means that there was often anger in
the house.
indifferently Indifference is without care. The poet spoke to his father without showing him
(adv.) proper love, respect or appreciation. This probably hurt his father’s feelings.
labour (n.) and Labour and offices both refer to work. Labour is hard work, usually manual (with
offices (n.) hands). Offices are the various things a servant or priest does for someone else.
The poet’s father’s hands are cracked from rough work and the cold weather. He is
in pain, but he still does chores for his family out of love on the weekends.
2 VOICE:
The tone of the speaker’s voice is reflective, sad and regretful, but mixed with some
appreciation for his father’s service to the family in retrospect (looking back).
3 ADDRESSEE:
The poet wants readers to understand the difficulty of being a child at the mercy of adult
mood swings. He is also talking to himself, in that he is trying to understand both the love
and the violence in his own family background.
THOSE WINTER
SUNDAYS
which the speaker grew up.
This is contrasted with the intense warmth of the fires his father created out of love. The
speaker did not feel or understand the love when he was growing up. He only felt the rage
from his father. Now he has mixed feelings about his father, because he realises his father
kept the house warm for the family, even when it was not pleasant for him to do so.
THEME 2
MISUNDERSTANDING
For the sake of his family, the speaker’s father works hard all during the week. Even on the
weekends he gets up early and makes the house warm. No one thanks him or appreciates all
the little jobs he does. They only notice his rage. The father is a lonely person: most of the
time the family feels his anger more than his love. They do not understand him because he
swings between rage and gentle acts of love.
Literature Summary 183
Poetry: Those Winter Sundays
warm enough for them to leave their warm beds. His family did not acknowledge or notice
his good deeds.
We know that there is ‘chronic anger’ (line 9) in the house. This means that there is always
the possibility for the speaker’s father to be angry and in a bad mood. We do not know
exactly why. ‘No one ever thanked him’ (line 5) tells us that the family didn’t notice or
say anything about the father’s hard work. Perhaps the father is angry because no one
acknowledges (says thank you) all the his kind deeds. Perhaps it is because the father works
so hard that he is tired and grumpy: ‘cracked hands that ached’ (line 3) tells us that he
worked hard all week, and also that making fires for the family must have been unpleasant
for him. We do not know why the father is angry. However, we do know that the anger in
the house makes the speaker leave his room slowly.
The speaker does not trust his father because he gets angry quickly. The child speaks
indifferently (without care), because he thinks his father does not love him: ‘love’s austere
and lonely offices’ (line 14) suggests that the father tried to show his love by doing
household chores but did not feel connected to the family. He was lonely and suffered
because he gave love in surreptitious (not obvious) ways, but did not receive love in return.
The speaker in the poem misunderstood his father. We see that the lack of communication
(especially with regards to talking about feelings and love) in the speaker‘s household led
to hurt feelings, loneliness and sadness. It also leads the speaker to look back with regret
later in life.
2 REPETITION:
Repetition is when words or sounds are written more than once in a poem. The speaker
repeats the words ‘What did I know, what did I know’ (line 13). This repetition emphasises
the regret and sadness that the poet feels about not understanding his father. It shows that
the speaker can see now, as an adult, the things he did not understand as a child.
3 OXYMORON:
An oxymoron is two seemingly opposing ideas next to each other. When the oxymoron
is looked at more closely, it makes sense. ‘love’s austere and lonely offices’ (line 14) is an
oxymoron. The image in the oxymoron combines love (a warm, generous, positive feeling)
with austerity, which means plainness or poverty. The poet means this is a stern kind of
love. He also says the father performs love’s offices. Offices are usually things done by a
servant or priest, not a parent. It seems strange to put love and offices together. It makes
love sound like a duty – something you do because you have to, not because you want to.
The poet is also saying that small acts of service are also a type of love.
4 IRONY:
Irony is when we expect one thing to happen and, instead, the opposite happens. The title
THOSE WINTER
of the poem, ‘Those Winter Sundays’, is ironic. The title leads the reader to expect a poem
SUNDAYS
about the ordinary warmth, love and cosiness of family life. Sunday is a day to relax, and
when it is cold, we can think about a family relaxing at home, by a fire or under blankets to
keep warm together.
Instead, we get the opposite – an adult’s reflection (looking back) on his childhood with
an emotionally unstable father. The speaker is still talking about a kind of love, but it is a
difficult love. He has mixed feelings (some positive, some negative) about his father, who
was angry and maybe even violent (this might be why the speaker seems afraid to leave his
room). We know that Hayden did not always live at home with his family because he was
sometimes in foster care. Now he regrets not understanding all the work pressure his father
must have been feeling.
5 ALLITERATION:
Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds (usually at the beginning of words). In
‘weekday weather’ (line 4), the repetition of the soothing / w / sound reminds us of the
routine associated with the days of the week. ‘banked fires blaze’ (line 5) contrasts the soft /
w / sound with the harsh / b / sound. The change mimics (copies) the father’s mood swings.
First, he is gentle and loving, and then he flies into a rage. The fire getting hotter is also a
metaphor for his anger. It gets bigger and brighter during the day, and calms down at night
when he sleeps.
Literature Summary 185
Poetry: Those Winter Sundays
THOSE WINTER
Quote the full line that proves the following statement to be true: The father has
SUNDAYS
mood swings. [1]
‘fearing the chronic angers of that house’ (3)
6 Refer to ‘What did I know, what did I know’ (line 13):
a What do the words ‘What did I know, what did I know’ tell us about how the
speaker is feeling? [2]
These words show the speaker’s innocence and ignorance as a child (3).
The repetition emphasises the speaker’s sadness when he looks back at his
childhood (3).
b Explain how this line is linked to one of the major themes in the poem. [3]
One of the main themes of the poem is misunderstanding (3). The father suffers
because he thinks no one notices (3) all the extra acts of love he does. The speaker
suffers because he thinks his father does not really care and loses his temper all
the time. (3)
TOTAL: 15 MARKS
Literature Summary 187
Poetry: Excuses, excuses
SUMMARY
The poem is a humorous dialogue (two people talking) between a teacher and a learner. The
teacher asks the learner about three things: being late, not attending class for a test, and why
he cannot participate in a physical education (P.E.) class. For every question the teacher
asks, the learner has an excuse (all of which are untrue!)
First the boy says his grandmother has died – but he has already used that excuse three
other times in the same month. Then he says he had to go to the dentist and he was sorry
to miss the maths test – which is clearly not true. Lastly, the boy says that he cannot do P.E.
because his gym clothes have not been ironed and he has a sore hand – and it was always
his dead granny’s job to iron them! This is a circular argument (it goes around in a circle).
The clothes cannot be ironed, because his grandmother is dead (if we believe that excuse).
What we can infer (guess) is that he avoids doing the things at school that he dislikes.
The dialogue is supposed to be funny. But it does highlight how learners can feel that some
classes are a waste of time. It also looks at the frustration that adults and teenagers can feel
with one another.
ERA
This poem was written in the late twentieth century, when poets felt more freedom to
challenge traditional ways of writing poetry, and could experiment with different kinds
of poetry.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Gareth Owen was an English poet, novelist and actor, who lived between 1936 and 2002.
This poem could easily be performed on stage, because it is a dialogue. Owen is best known
for his poetry and novels for children. Most of his work is humorous (funny) but also deals
with the problems children face in their daily lives.
TYPE OF POEM
This is a narrative poem as well as a dialogue. It tells a story of a teacher and learner in mild
conflict (argument), using only their direct speech (the words they say).
CHARACTERISTICS
Because it is a dialogue, this poem has a conversational, free-verse form. It is intended to
be funny. The exchange is between an unnamed teacher and a learner (whose surname is
Blenkinsopp). Although we are not told directly who is speaking, we can clearly identify
two different characters by what they say to each other. The teacher asks the questions and
the learner comes up with answers. The short sentences make the poem stop and start a lot,
so there is no smooth rhythm.
EXCUSES,
EXCUSES
SUMMARY REVIEW ACTIVITY: CLOZE PROCEDURE
Below is a summary of the poem. Fill each of the gaps with a word / a few words:
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 teacher
2 Blenkinsopp
3 late
4 excuses / reasons
5 died
6 grandmothers / grannies
7 physical education / gym / P.E.
8 test
9 dentist
10 sore
Literature Summary 189
Poetry: Excuses, excuses
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
absent (adj.) Absent means away. The learner in the poem has not been in class.
a dialogue (n.) A dialogue is the spoken words between two speakers, taking turns when they talk
to each other. The teacher and the learner speak in a dialogue to each other.
kit (n.) Kit refers to special clothes or equipment usually related to sport / exercise. The
teacher is referring to the clothes that the learner needs to do gym / P.E. at school
– not his uniform.
P.E. (n.) P.E. is the abbreviation for physical education – gym class or exercise class during
the school day.
upsetting (adj.) When you are upset you are sad, anxious, or you feel like crying. The teacher is
suspicious (thinks that the learner is doing something wrong) because he says he
is ‘upset’ that his grandmother has died. When someone close to you dies, you
should be devastated or extremely sad – feeling stonger emotions than just ‘upset’.
2 VOICE:
The teacher’s tone of voice is frustrated, angry and aggressive. The learner’s tone of voice is
a mixture of calm, sarcastic / mocking, and with a sly rudeness. We can see that the learner
does not really care if the teacher believes his excuses or not.
3 ADDRESSEE:
The teacher addresses the learner and the learner addresses the teacher. We, the readers, are
like part of an audience in a theatre, observing (watching) a drama between two people.
THEME 2
EXCUSES,
EXCUSES
CONFLICT
If you are independent you think critically about things and you behave according to your
own rules. If you are conformist, you follow social rules about how to behave, and you do
what everybody else does without questioning things.
In the poem, the teacher wants the learner to conform to school rules and attend classes.
The learner wants his freedom. He is lazy and does not want to write tests or attend P.E.
class. This is why conflict arises between the two of them.
The learner wins the conflict: he uses his intelligence to outsmart the teacher.
Literature Summary 191
Poetry: Excuses, excuses
2 UNDERSTATEMENT:
This device makes a situation seem less serious or important than it really is. We usually
use understatement to make jokes, or to seem as if we are more casual and relaxed than we
really feel. ‘I know. It’s very upsetting, sir’ (line 12) is an understatement. Usually someone
would use a word such as devastating to express the death of a loved one. The learner uses
the word ‘upsetting’ which fakes seriousness. His grandmothers are probably alive and well.
He just wants to avoid P.E.!
3 HYPERBOLE:
Hyperbole is when someone exaggerates or overstates a situation. This device is the opposite
of an understatement. ‘She’s seriously dead all right, sir’ (line 9) is a hyperbole. This line is a
hyperbole because someone can only either be dead or alive (you cannot be any more dead
than just being dead!). To say someone is ‘seriously dead’ is to overstate the obvious. This
hyperbole is supposed to be funny.
4 REPETITION:
Repetition is when the same words are used over and over again, usually to emphasise
something.
a ‘sir’: The learner keeps saying ‘sir’, which is usually used to show respect. The teacher is
officially more powerful, but unofficially the learner is more powerful. This is because
the learner uses the word without its usual meaning or worth. ‘Sir’ loses its power
because it has been over-used. We understand that he is just using it to pretend to
respect the teacher, so he can avoid trouble.
b ‘Blenkinsopp’: The teacher repeatedly calls the learner by his surname, to show who is
more powerful. The student has to call the teacher ‘sir’. The repetition of the surname is
supposed to add humour to the poem.
Excuses, excuses
Gareth Owen
EXCUSES,
EXCUSES
Died?
She’s seriously dead all right, sir. 10
That makes four grandmothers this term, Blenkinsopp.
And all on P.E. days.
I know. It’s very upsetting, sir.
How many grandmothers have you got, Blenkinsopp?
Grandmothers, sir? None, sir. 15
You said you had four.
All dead, sir.
And what about yesterday, Blenkinsopp?
What about yesterday, sir?
You were absent yesterday. 20
That was the dentist, sir.
The dentist died?
No, sir. My teeth, sir.
You missed the maths test, Blenkinsopp!
I’d been looking forward to it, sir. 25
Right, line up for P.E.
Can’t sir.
No such words as ‘can’t’, Blenkinsopp.
No kit, sir.
Where is it? 30
Literature Summary 193
Poetry: Excuses, excuses
Home, sir.
What’s it doing at home?
Not ironed, sir.
Couldn’t you iron it?
Can’t sir.
Why not? 35
Bad hand, sir.
Who usually does it?
Grandma, sir.
Why couldn’t she do it?
Dead, sir. 40
calm / confident (3). He knows that he and the teacher are having a familiar power
struggle (3).
2 Refer to ‘That makes four grandmothers this term, Blenkinsopp’ (line 10):
a What excuse does the learner offer for being late for class? [1]
No, he does not. The teacher does not offer condolences (comfort) for the learner’s
loss (3). Instead, he questions how many grandmothers (3) have already died so
far. He does not believe the learner’s flimsy, half-hearted (3) excuse.
He does not want to write a maths test at all (3) – that’s why he did not go to school
and said he was at the dentist. He is saying the opposite (3) of what he means. He
is doing this because he has to give the teacher some excuse for not being in class
EXCUSES,
for the test (3). The learner also wants to show the teacher that he does not really
EXCUSES
care (3).
TOTAL: 16 MARKS
Literature Summary 195
Poetry: African Thunderstorm
SUMMARY
The poem describes a typical African thunderstorm. The effect of the storm is frightening
but also exciting. The force of nature is unrelenting (does not lessen) and anything in its
path is in danger. Nature and humans are vulnerable as the storm is unpredictable. The poet
uses the thunderstorm as an analogy (comparison) for the effects of colonisation and the
control of Western countries over poorer countries.
ERA
A specific time is not mentioned. However, the poem is written in the present tense which
gives the impression that this thunderstorm could be occurring at any time. As the poet was
born in 1930, we know that the poem is written in the twentieth century.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Explain to learners that people experience thunderstorms differently. Some people might be
scared by them by them and others may be excited by them.
The poem is a comparative description of an African thunderstorm and it describes the
effects of the extreme weather. On a figurative level, the poet uses the thunderstorm as a
metaphor for the destructive effects of the colonisation the Western world inflicted (forced
onto) on Africa.
TYPE OF POEM
Free verse
CHARACTERISTICS
The poem is written in a single stanza with short and longer lines. The poet uses different
line lengths to suggest movement related to the thunderstorm in the title. He also uses
sound words and images to capture the loud noises associated with a storm.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
THUNDERSTORM
1 Instruct learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
AFRICAN
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
3 Rounded clouds gather on hills.
8 Lightning starts.
9 It starts to rain heavily.
5 The children in the villages scream with delight.
1 Clouds move fast from the west.
7 Clothes fly away in the wind.
2 The clouds move things around like a madman.
6 Women with babies move quickly in and out their houses.
4 The wind comes next, causing trees to bend.
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
a plague This could be referring to a disease that spreads quickly and kills many people. It
(n.) could also mean a huge increase in the number of insects or animals that is difficult to
control. The storm is compared to a plague that is taking over; it is uncontrollable and
destructive.
sinister This means unpleasant or frightening in a way that seems bad or evil. The clouds look
(adj.) dangerous because they are dark and are about to burst.
a din (n.) This is a loud unpleasant noise. In the poem, the wind is making a loud noise.
Literature Summary 197
Poetry: African Thunderstorm
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
tattered When things are tattered, they are torn and shredded. In the poem, the clothes have
(adj.) been torn by the wind.
jagged When things are jagged, they have a sharp, rough edge. The lightning is jagged.
(adj.)
2 VOICE:
Emphasise that the predominant mood / tone is ominous (the feeling that something bad is
happening) but there are also moments of excitement.
3 ADDRESSEE:
As this poem is a description of a storm (with the possible figurative meaning being
a comment on the destruction brought about by colonisation) is aimed at a very
wide audience.
2 EXTENDED METAPHOR:
A metaphor is a figure of speech in which a direct comparison is made between two
unlike things that share a common quality. In an extended metaphor, the comparison
runs through more than one line. In this poem, the thunderstorm is a metaphor for the
THUNDERSTORM
destruction of the West. The West commonly implies North America and Western Europe:
AFRICAN
the colonisers of undeveloped countries.
3 ONOMATOPOEIA:
Onomatopoeia is the use of a word that sounds like the thing it is describing.
a The wind ‘whistles’ (line 14) and is ‘whirling’ (line 19). Both these adjectives sound like
the noise that wind makes.
b In line 31, the flashes of the storm ‘Rumble, tremble, and crack.’ The verbs describe the
noises that thunder makes.
Literature Summary 199
Poetry: African Thunderstorm
African Thunderstorm
David Rubadiri
From the west
Clouds come hurrying with the wind
Turning
Sharply
Here and there 5
Like a plague of locusts
Whirling
Tossing up things on its tail
Like a madman chasing nothing.
Pregant clouds 10
Ride stately on its back
Gathering to perch on hills
Like dark sinister wings;
The Wind whistles by
And trees bend to let it pass. 15
In the village
Screams of delighted children
Toss and turn
In the din of whirling wind,
Women – 20
Babies clinging on their backs –
Dart about
In and out
Madly
The Wind whistles by 25
Whilst trees bend to let it pass
Clothes wave like tattered flags
Flying off
To expose dangling breasts
As jagged blinding flashes 30
Rumble, tremble, and crack
Amidst the smell of fired smoke
And the pelting march of the storm.
1 Refer to ‘Pregnant clouds / Ride stately on its back / Gathering to perch on hills /
Like dark sinister wings;’ (lines 10–14):
a Identify the figure of speech in these lines. [1]
Personification. (3)
b Explain how this figure of speech is appropriate. [4]
The clouds are full of water (3). Because they are full of water, they look like a
pregnant woman (3). The clouds also gather on the hills (3). The clouds on the hills
look like vultures or other birds of prey (3).
c Identify the tone of these lines. [1]
THUNDERSTORM
Onomatopoeia (3) and Alliteration (3)
AFRICAN
b Explain how each of these sound devices work. [4]
Onomatopoeia is when the word makes the sound of the thing it is describing. (3)
In this line, the thunder rumbles and trembles and the lightning cracks. (3)
Alliteration is the repetition of a consonant sound. (3) In this line the / r / sound in
‘rumble’, ‘tremble’ and ‘cracks’ as well as the / mble / sound in ‘rumble’ and ‘tremble’
creates a sense of the repetition of the thunder and lightning happening again and
again. (3)
TOTAL: 14 MARKS
Literature Summary 201
Poetry: How Poems are Made – A Discredited View
SUMMARY
This poem is a possible explanation for why people write poems. Walker explains that a
poem is a place to express the mixed feelings that are still with us after a love affair ends.
Writing a poem can bring us relief because our true feelings are expressed. We should
find a good place for our feelings of rejection and not feel ashamed of them. We should
not pretend to be happy, when we are sad. Poems are a place where we can tell the truth,
remember the good as well as bad parts of the relationship, and find some inner peace.
ERA
Alice Walker is a black American activist. She wrote from the 1960s onwards. This was a
time of great change and struggle in America, which had a similar system to Apartheid (the
separation of races, and inequality for black people by law). The USA called it Segregation.
Walker often wrote about falling in love with people from different communities
to her own.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Alice Walker is an American human rights activist, poet and author. Her writing focuses
on the struggles of black people, especially women. Her most famous novel, ‘The Colour
Purple’, is partly about women finding their voice to express how they truly feel. This is a
similar theme to this poem, which is about how writing can help us heal ourselves.
TYPE OF POEM
Free verse
CHARACTERISTICS
There is no set structure or rhyme scheme. There is some internal rhyme. The repetition of
‘how poems are made’ is like a chorus or refrain (repeated lines). The free-verse style and
lack of traditional structure or rhyme scheme sounds like informal, spoken English.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 coping / managing / recovering
2 love / loving / romantic
3 feelings / emotions
DISCREDITED VIEW
4 pain / hurt / rejection
ARE MADE – A
HOW POEMS
5 pretend
6 hide / cover up
7 peace / closure
8 past / our history
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
Literature Summary 203
Poetry: How Poems are Made – A Discredited View
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
flagged (adj.) Figuratively, flagged means noticed. Literally, it is putting a flag in the ground to
mark a place. Walker is saying that every beat of her heart is important, and she
wants to make a note of it. She wants to remember every part of the love affair
– the positive things (such as her heart beating faster with desire) as well as the
negative things.
gradually (adv.) Gradually means slowly. Walker says that it took her a long time to know how
to write a truthful poem. She had to experience joy as well as pain and loss, for
herself.
stiff-neck (adj.) To have a stiff-neck means to be proud or arrogant. When we are hurt, sometimes
we try to hide our feelings. We try to laugh off the rejection. Literally, we hold our
heads high (with stiff necks) so others cannot tell how sad we feel.
2 VOICE:
The voice of the poem is a mixture of sadness and joy. The poet sounds detached (not
passionate) and calm. The tone is mostly hopeful. The speaker is stepping back from her
experience to try to make sense of it.
3 ADDRESSEE:
The speaker is having a conversation with herself; an internal monologue. But it is also
directed at us, the readers. Anyone who has had a failed relationship or has been rejected
will relate to the poem.
THEME 2
NARRATIVE THERAPY AND THE HEALING POWER OF WRITING
We can understand our lives better if we write about our experiences. This helps us to
heal ourselves after horrible things have happened to us. This is called narrative (telling
stories) therapy.
Life is a mixture of joyful and bitter events. Poems can help balance out our emotions.
Writing down our experiences helps us remember that we have happiness: ‘laughter’ (line
22). Writing can also help us remember the ‘tears’ (line 20). Remembering both positive and
negative experiences helps us to heal from a difficult event.
Poetry comes from our own experiences that we want to write down. Writing a poem lets
us share those emotions with other people who might relate to (be helped by) them.
DISCREDITED VIEW
poem is a place where the feelings of loss can go, rather keeping the feelings inside of us. A
ARE MADE – A
HOW POEMS
poem can express the hurt we feel when a relationship ends. Writing the poem makes that
feeling of loss less painful.
‘There is a place the gain must go’ (line 27). The poem helps the writer understand what
she has gained through her painful experience. By the end of the poem, Walker knows that
she has lost a partner – but she has gained knowledge. Now she knows that she can survive
hurtful events. Writing can help her to heal herself, and prepare her to love someone else in
the future. She has gained hope from her own writing.
Writing helps Walker understand and process the complex feelings that she has. Walker
understands that we feel a range of emotions, from joy to bitterness. She writes ‘They are
the tears / that season the smile’ (lines 20–21) Having difficulties in our lives (‘tears’) help us
appreciate our happy moments (‘the smile’) more deeply.
Walker writes ‘the flagged beats of a running / Heart’ (line 17–18). Flagging means noticing
or point out. Walker is saying that a poem documents or records how it feels to be in
love (when the heart beats faster). A poem can also acknowledge the good parts of a past
Literature Summary 205
Poetry: How Poems are Made – A Discredited View
relationship –‘the upbeat flight of memories’ (line 16). ‘Upbeat’ means positive. The partner
may be gone, but the poet has some happy memories of the love affair.
2 REPETITION:
Repetition is when the same words are used over and over.
a ‘How poems are made’ is the title of the poem. Walker repeats the phrase in three
slightly different ways throughout the poem:
• First, she ‘gradually’ (slowly) understands how poems are made.
• Then she ‘comprehends’ and ‘understands’ how they are made.
• Finally, she ‘knows’ how poems are made.
She moves from confusion to certainty. By the end of the poem she has worked out how
to live with her heartbreak – through writing a poem. She understands that poems are
made from a poet expressing their true feelings on paper.
b ‘the leftover love’ and ‘there is a place the loss must go’. These two phrases are both
repeated and help to emphasise the key emotional truth of the poem: that love is
painful. The repetitions push the message home to us and emphasise just how much
pain the speaker feels.
3 OXYMORON:
An oxymoron places two seemingly opposite ideas close together to tell a truth.
a ‘Letting go / in order to hold on’ (lines 1–2) sounds like it is an impossible task. Walker
does not mean she is physically holding onto another person. ‘Letting go’ means she is
trying to be at peace with (not bothered by) her failed relationship. To ‘hold on’ here
means to remember the good, positive experiences. She does not want her memories to
worry her and make her feel bad about herself.
b ‘Stiff-necked laughter’ (line 22): Stiff-necked means proud and proud people do not like
to laugh at themselves or feel stupid. But Walker means that people pretend that they
are happy even when they are suffering. We do not want other people to know how hurt
we are after a break-up, so we put on a brave face and say we are fine. We hold our heads
high (are stiff-necked) and fake laughter and merriment. The poet wishes that people
did not do this.
DISCREDITED VIEW
ARE MADE – A
HOW POEMS
Literature Summary 207
Poetry: How Poems are Made – A Discredited View
Read the poem below and then answer the questions that follow it:
Letting go
in order to hold on
I gradually understand
how poems are made.
I gradually comprehend
how poems are made. 15
To the upbeat flight of memories.
The flagged beats of the running
heart.
Walker says that poems are a place for all the emotions left over after a love affair
ends (3). These can be happy, positive ones (‘leftover love’; ‘the running heart’) (3)
as well as painful ones (loss) (3).
b Explain if Walker thinks other poets will agree with her about how to make
poems? [2]
No, she does not they will not all agree with her. She says it her view on making
poems is a ‘discredited view’ (3). This means that other people will not accept her
opinion or think it is valuable (3).
2 Refer to ‘The love that spills out / of the too full cup’ (lines 9–10):
a Identify the figure of speech in these lines. [1]
metaphor (3).
b Explain how this figure of speech is effective. [3]
The poet compares her love to a cup full of liquid (3). She means that the love
inside herself has become too much (‘too full cup’) (3) and is being rejected and
wasted (‘spills’) by her lover (3).
3 Refer to ‘The stiff-neck laughter’ (line 22):
a Identify the literary device in ‘stiff-neck laughter’. [1]
oxymoron (3)
b Explain how this literary device is effective. [3]
‘stiff-neck’ and ‘laughter’ are opposites. Laughter is usually associated with happiness
DISCREDITED VIEW
and being relaxed (3), but ‘stiff-necked’ suggests that the person laughing is tense
ARE MADE – A
HOW POEMS
(3). The person is hiding their true feelings pretending, by laughing and pretending
that nothing is wrong (3).
4 Refer to the poem as a whole. Identify and discuss the effect of the use of repetition
in the poem. [4]
Walker repeats the phrase ‘how poems are made’ (3). At first, she is confused about
what makes a poem feel real or trustworthy (3). Then she says than she understands
and comprehends how poems are made: she is learning through experience that real
feelings matter most in a poem (3). At last she is certain and says she knows how
poems are made – through accepting all our feelings and recording them in a poem (3).
The repetition of ‘how poems are made’ shows her natural progression of understanding
how poems are made. (3)
TOTAL: 17 MARKS
Literature Summary 209
Poetry: I have my father’s voice
SUMMARY
In this poem, the poet describes the things he has inherited from his father: the way he
moves and the way he uses his voice. He explores the contribution that his father has made
to his sense of identity. The voice is an instrument of discipline, but also of anger.
ERA
Although a specific time is not mentioned, van Wyk describes memories from his past and
observations he is making in the present. We can assume this poem is set in the 1960s when
van Wyk would have been a child.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Chris van Wyk was born in Johannesburg in 1957. He and grew up in Riverlea, a poor
suburb surrounded by dusty mine dumps. At the time, Riverlea was designated as a
Coloured township under the Group Areas Act of Apartheid. This was the law that
prevented different races from living in the same areas. Van Wyk was an activist against
Apartheid and much of his writing comments on the unfairness of Apartheid.
TYPE OF POEM
This is a narrative poem as it tells a story. It is written using free verse.
CHARACTERISTICS
The poem is constructed using 7 stanzas of varying line lengths. There is no rhyme scheme
or regular rhythm.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
1 size / height
2 laugh
3 bed
4 newspaper
5 study / work
6 noise
7 kitchen
8 later
9 mornings / morning
10 temper
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
FATHER’S VOICE
I HAVE MY
a guffaw (n.) This is a coarse or boisterous laugh. Both the poet and his father laugh in this way.
to bluster (v.) To bluster means to speak in a loud and angry way.The poet’s father would shout
at the children when they were noisy.
fuming (adj.) When you are fuming, you are very angry. The poet’s father has a temper, which
the poet has inherited.
to spew (v.) This means when something flows out quickly, with force and in large amounts.
The poet is letting words flow out of himself to create poetry.
Literature Summary 211
Poetry: I have my father’s voice
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
bequeathed This is when you arrange that someone will get something you own after you die.
(v.)
The poet has not consciously received his father’s voice as you would receive an
item that has been bequeathed to you. He cannot help having his father’s voice.
2 VOICE:
At the beginning of the poem, the poet’s voice is almost nostalgic, but this changes to
frustration at the end.
• nostalgic: The poet thinks about the similarities he shares with his father: his voice and
his mannerisms. There is a sense of fondness when the poet recalls his father: they both
‘guffaw’ (line 6).
• frustrated: van Wyk ends the poem by saying: ‘Everything a poet needs / my father
has bequeathed me / except the words.’ (lines 32 to 34) The poet is saying that that his
father has passed on the problem (anger) but not the solution (the means to express
the anger).
3 ADDRESSEE:
As this poem is a narrative poem, the speaker’s audience is the readers of his poem.
Van Wyk also tells us that he and his father have the same laugh: ‘and when we laugh we
aim the guffaw / at the same space in the air’ (lines 6–7).
The poet continues to say that he has his father’s voice as well as his temper: ‘I have my
father’s voice too / And his fuming temper / And I shout as he does’ (lines 27–29).
He ends the poem by stating that whilst there are many similarities between him and
his father, there is a big difference too. This difference is that the poet uses his poetry to
express his anger, but his father does not: ‘But I spew the words out / … / except the words.’
(lines 30–34).
2 TENSE:
Tense is the form of the verb you use to show when something happens: past, present
or future.
a The first two stanzas (lines 1 to 10) are written in the present tense and reflect on the
things the poet and his father have in common, like the way they put their elbows on
the table and throw back their heads when they laugh.
b Then the poet changes to the past tense in stanzas 3 and 4. The poet starts to reflect on
his relationship with his father, and that his father used his voice to discipline him.
c From stanza 5, the verbs in the present tense show the development of the darker side
of anger. The speaker remembers his father being late for work and shouting. In stanza
6, the poet summarises the poem, saying that he has inherited his father’s voice and also
his anger. However, the anger is used for a different purpose – poetry.
FATHER’S VOICE
I HAVE MY
3 IRONY:
Irony is the difference between what the situation appears to be and what the situation
really is.
The poet has everything he needs from his father’s legacy but he believes that he was not
given the thing he needs the most as a poet – the words. This is ironic because he is saying
that his father did not give him the words. However, the whole poem is about his father
giving him the words.
Literature Summary 213
Poetry: I have my father’s voice
1 Refer to ‘When I walk into a room / … / at the same space in the air’ (lines 1–7):
a State 3 ways in which the poet and his father are similar? [3]
They both put their elbows on the table. (3) They both throw their heads back when
they laugh. (3) They both talk loudly. (3)
b Does the poet identify these similarities for himself, or does someone tell him
about them? [1]
He works them out for himself. (3)
c Quote two lines to support your answer in 1b above. [2]
‘Before anybody has told me this I know’ (3) / because I see myself through / my
father’s eyes’ (3)
2 Refer to ‘When I was a pigeon-toed boy /…/ to scribble my may through matric.’
(lines 11–15):
a What does the phrase ‘pigeon-toed boy’ tell us about how the poet walked? [2]
When you are pigeon-toed, your toes point inwards to face each other. (3) The poet
is saying he was young and not yet completely steady on his feet. (3)
b Identify the tone in which his father would have ‘used his voice’ (line 12). [1]
The word ‘send’ (3) implies that his father is ordering him to bed. (3)
d What does the phrase ‘scribble my way through matric’ tell us about how
seriously the poet took school? [2]
When we scribble something, we do it in a rush. (3) This shows us that the poet
does not care about his work – he just wants to finish it (and be free to do fun
things). (3)
Literature Summary 215
Poetry: I have my father’s voice
TOTAL: 16 MARKS
Poetry: Handcuffs
GENRE: Poetry
TITLE: HANDCUFFS
SUMMARY
The poem describes the physical and mental suffering of someone during Apartheid. It
could be a protestor who has actually been put in handcuffs by the police, or it could be
anyone who feels emotionally trapped and helpless. The handcuffs feel painful because they
were put on too tightly. But the pain described is also emotional suffering. The handcuffs
are a symbol (a physical thing that stands for an idea) of the lack of political freedom for
black people in South Africa before 1994. The poem details the intense frustration of the
speaker because he has no freedom. It ends with the person trying to inspire himself not to
give up his struggle for liberation (freedom).
ERA
The poem was written in the 1970s, a time when people of colour in South Africa were
suffering under Apartheid, and liberation (freedom) seemed a long way off. People had to
encourage one another through protesting, marches, theatre and poetry. Mtshali wrote his
protest poetry to help other activists (fighters against Apartheid) remember that they were
fighting for everyone’s freedom, and to not give up hope for change.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Mtshali is a South African poet and teacher who writes in both isiZulu and English. He
studied at Columbia University in the USA, and he now lives in Soweto. His first volume
of poetry, ‘Sounds of a Cowhide Drum’, sold more copies than any other book of South
African poetry when it was published in 1970. His poems are mostly about the suffering of
those living under Apartheid.
TYPE OF POEM
This is a protest poem written in free verse.
HANDCUFFS
Literature Summary 217
Poetry: Handcuffs
CHARACTERISTICS
This poem does not rhyme or have a regular rhythm, but it does have some internal rhythm.
It has four stanzas but does not stick to any formal structure. The poem has many short
lines. This helps to make its message more blatant (direct) and powerful.
He seems to see a banner in the sky that tells him to have hope.
1 The speaker compares the pain of his handcuffs to a wild animal’s bite.
He frowns at the clouds in the sky.
He is so frustrated that his heart seems to itch.
His mind also feels captured, because he keeps thinking the same old
thoughts.
The itch grows worse, but he cannot scratch it.
This bite is more painful than many flea bites.
He feels physically trapped, as if he wears handcuffs.
MARKING MEMORANDUM
1 Instruct the learners to compare their answers, to see if they can correct their
own mistakes.
2 Discuss the correct answers with the whole class.
8 He seems to see a banner in the sky that tells him to have hope.
1 The speaker compares the pain of his handcuffs to a wild animal’s bite.
7 He frowns at the clouds in the sky.
3 He is so frustrated that his heart seems to itch.
6 His mind also feels captured, because he keeps thinking the same old thoughts.
4 The itch grows worse, but he cannot scratch it.
2 This bite is more painful than many flea bites.
5 He feels physically trapped, as if he wears handcuffs.
CONCEPTUAL VOCABULARY
a battalion A battalion is an organised group of soldiers, ready for battle. In the poem, the poet
(n.) compares his handcuffs to a whole battalion of fleas.
to billow (v.) When something billows, it moves and swells like a wave or a cloud. The poet means
that he sees a banner moving in the sky. He is probably imaging it, but people did
use banners like these to speak out against Apartheid.
emblazoned Emblazoned means decorated or written. The poet sees (possibly imagines) a
(adj.) banner with a motto (saying) written on it, reminding him to have hope.
ethereal Ethereal means airy or ghostly, without form. Mtshali imagines the cloud above him
(adj.) floating and changing shape.
fangs (n.) Fangs are sharp animal teeth. The poet means that the handcuffs around his wrist
feel like an animal’s teeth, biting him.
to grimace A grimace is when you frown or pull an ugly face. Often when people are lifting
(v.) something heavy, the effort makes them grimace. The poet is trying to show that he
is suffering. It is affecting him, but he is trying to bear it.
manacled Manacles are iron handcuffs for prisoners’ wrists. Mtshali’s wrists are trapped
(v.) (manacled) inside the handcuffs. He feels manacled in other ways too – he feels
trapped without real freedom.
shackled (v.) Shackles are thick iron rings for prisoners’ ankles (like handcuffs for the feet). The
poet feels completely trapped as his soul is shackled.
2 VOICE:
The tone of the speaker’s voice is angry but determined. He has hope that one day he will
find freedom.
3 ADDRESSEE:
The speaker is addressing the Apartheid oppressors who handcuffed him, as well as other
protestors against oppression. He is challenging the oppressors with the pain they are
causing, and also sharing his pain with the fellow protestors. In trying to inspire himself, he
is also trying to inspire others like him, who are suffering and fighting.
HANDCUFFS
Literature Summary 219
Poetry: Handcuffs
THEME 2
HOPE AND COURAGE (BRAVERY)
Even though his life is very difficult, the speaker keeps thinking about how to resist (stand
up to) and change his situation. He is brave (courageous) because he suffers physically in
the handcuffs: the metal cuts into his wrists.
The speaker shows courage because he thinks of the other activists who are also suffering.
He writes the poem to encourage them not to give up the fight for equal rights. He is brave
because even though he is just one person, he criticises (speaks against) the Apartheid
government, despite it having the power to jail him. His attitude is determined and
passionate. He will not give up the fight for justice and what he believes in.
painted onto cloth or cardboard). Protestors on a march usually hold banners to get
their message across to the people watching. The speaker imagines the message or
slogan over his head, like a cloud. It is probably not really there, but the idea helps to
inspire him to have hope that things will change.
Literature Summary 221
Poetry: Handcuffs
2 ALLITERATION:
Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds (usually at the beginning of words).
a ‘despair is for the defeated’ (line 19): The repetition of the hard / d / sound helps to
reinforce the tough, persevering attitude of the speaker.
b ‘a banner billowing in the sky, emblazoned’ (line 17): The repeated / b / sound helps the
reader to imagine the strong movement of the cloud. A cloud is not dangerous by itself,
but it appears before a storm to tell you that a storm is coming. The hidden metaphor
here is that a change in government is coming, like a cloud before a storm.
3 RHETORICAL QUESTION:
A rhetorical question is not a real question but a literary device. It is a question which does
not expect or need an answer.
The poet asks a question but then answers it himself. In the line, ‘How can I?’ (line 9), the
speaker asks himself how he can scratch ‘the itch in his heart’ (line 6). He then goes on to
say that he cannot give himself relief, because his hands are manacled (handcuffed). The
speaker is pointing out how trapped and helpless he feels. Both his mind (his personality
and ideas) and his body have been damaged by the systems of oppression under Apartheid.
Handcuffs
Mbuyiseni Oswald Mtshali
Handcuffs
have steel fangs
whose bite is more painful
than a whole battalion
of fleas. 5
How can I?
my wrists 10
are manacled.
My mind
is caged.
My soul
is shackled. 15
He is a protestor who has been arrested (3) and his wrists are being hurt by the
handcuffs. (3)
b Quote one word from the first stanza that supports the idea that he is suffering
physically. [1]
Literature Summary 223
Poetry: Handcuffs
‘painful’ (3)
2 Refer to stanza 1:
a Explain the literal and figurative meanings of ‘Handcuffs / have steel fangs’. [3]
Literally, the metal of the handcuffs is pinching and hurting (3) the speaker’s wrists.
The handcuffs are being compared to a metaphorical or figurative animal with fangs
/ sharp teeth (3). They are so tight that they feel as if they are alive and biting the
speaker. (3)
b In your opinion, is this an effective comparison? Provide reasons for your
answer. [3]
I think this is an effective comparison, because it enables us to imagine or picture
how tight and painful the handcuffs are (3). It is as if his wrist is caught between
the animal’s jaws or teeth (3) and the speaker cannot free himself. It is a vivid
image (3).
3 Explain why the speaker feels that the ‘itch’ is growing ‘deeper and deeper’? [2]
As time passes, nothing about the unfairness of Apartheid changes (3). The speaker
still feels trapped (3) The itch is injustice and suffering (3), and that is still going
on. It is making the speaker feel crazy and helpless (3).
He says that he cannot scratch the ‘itch’ (do anything about the injustice and
violence of Apartheid) (3) because he is ‘shackled’ (in leg-irons) and ‘manacled’ (in
handcuffs) (3). He is physically prevented by the police from protesting (3). But
he also means that he is emotionally and spiritually unable to resist: he is tired and
wants to give up (3).
TOTAL: 16 MARKS
TIMING SUGGESTIONS:
GRADE 10 AND 11:
• We suggest that you cover 9 genres in Grade 10 revision, and another 9 genres in Grade
11 revision.
• In Term 4 of Grade 10 and 11, there are 9 hours available for writing revision, which
means you can spend 1 hour revising each writing genre.
• We suggest that in Grade 10, you revise 3 essays, 4 long transactional texts and 2 short
transactional texts.
Literature Summary 225
Writing Genres: Summaries
• Then, in Grade 11, we suggest that you revise 2 essays, 5 long transactional texts and 2
short transactional texts.
• Alternatively, you can use your discretion to revise the genres you feel would benefit
your learners.
GRADE 12:
• For Grade 12, we suggest that you use the time to engage closely with the past paper
and assign two essays (spend 2 ½ hours on these), two long transactional texts (spend
2 ½ hours on these) and two short transactional texts (spend 1 hour on these), which
learners can work on in class and at home.
• You can use this opportunity to remind learners of the planning, drafting, editing and
publishing stages we use in the writing lessons. (Refer to the Writing Lesson Plans from
terms 1–3 if you need a reminder on how to do any of these stages.)
• You can use the marking guidelines and the rubrics in this pack to mark learners’ work
and to give them feedback.
ACTIVITY:
1 Write the following Genre Notes and Example Text up on the chalkboard before the
lesson to save time.
2 If you have access to a photocopy machine, please photocopy the Genre Notes and
Example Text as a reference for the learners to study from.
3 If you do not have copying facilities, please give your learners some time to copy down
the Genre Notes and Example Text.
4 Introduce learners to the genre that you are revising.
5 Read through the Genre Notes with learners.
6 Next, instruct learners to work in pairs or small groups, to look for the following in the
Example Text:
• Format (for transactional texts)
ESSAYS:
1 In the Grade 12 final examination, learners are not told which TYPE of essay they must
write in each question. They need to work this out for themselves.
2 Thus, it is very important that they learn the Genre Notes and purpose for each of
the different types of essay, so that they know which essay(s) are appropriate for
each question.
3 At the end of these writing revision lesson plans, you will find the Genre Notes and
Example Texts for each of the different types of essay.
NOTE: The example texts for the essays are for Grade 12, which means they have a
longer word allowance than Grade 10 or 11.
Literature Summary 227
Writing Genres: Summaries
Category C 6 Review
7 Newspaper article
8 Magazine article
9 Agenda and minutes of a meeting
10 Formal and informal report
Category D 11 Dialogue
12 Written interview
13 Written formal and informal speech
14 Written formal and informal speech
Category A 1 Advertisement
2 Invitation card
3 Flyer
4 Poster
Category B 5 Diary entry
6 Postcard
Category C 7 Instructions
8 Directions
Genre Notes
Literature Summary 229
Writing Genres: Summaries
If you turn off this road and drive through the suburbs for a few
minutes you arrive at a quieter place. Here the pavements are wider
STRONG VERB STRONG ADJ.
and tall trees drape the passersby in cool, green shade, even in the
STRONG ADJ.
burning midday sun. Turn right on one of these streets. After a short
distance you come to a face-brick house. The bricks are made of
Body
STRONG ADJ.
the reddish clay of the highveld. Over the driveway, two enormous SIGHT
STRONG VERB
jacaranda trees peer down from above and carpet the drive with a
STRONG ADJ.
rich, purple layer of fallen flowers. But be careful where you walk, as
TOUCH
the bees hovering inside these flowers don’t appreciate being trodden
on.
SMELL
If you arrive in spring, you’ll catch the sweet scent of the jasmine
STRONG VERB
flowers blooming next to the door. Inside, the house is furnished
SIGHT
STRONG ADJ.
in browns and muted natural colours. The furniture is old, but well-
Conclusion
maintained. The tiles are cool underfoot. The carpets must have been
TOUCH SIGHT
soft and thick once, but with the years they have worn thin. The room
SMELL
smells of cigarette smoke, which the curtains and walls have been
STRONG VERB TOUCH
absorbing for decades. Sit on the couch and rest your feet awhile.
Have a cool glass of water. There is a cat curled up on the pillow. If you
SIGHT
sit very still she might come over to say hello.
Literature Summary 231
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
Gender equality is the belief that men and women have the same rights,
responsibilities and opportunities regardless of their sex. People have been
fighting for gender equality for decades.
This is a controversial topic because people have different opinions about it.
People argue passionately about the topic, and there are strong beliefs on both
sides.
Some people think governments should be fighting for gender equality because
they believe that women should have equal rights to men. Such people argue
that it is very old-fashioned for people to still believe that women do not have
rights to be educated and to work.
Furthermore, supporters of gender equality believe women should also be paid
the same salaries as men. They argue that women put in the same amount of
effort and time into their jobs, so they should receive the same salary as their
male counterparts.
On the other hand, many people do not support gender equality. This is
because they believe that women are inferior to men. This is a belief that is
based on old religious principles, which promotes male superiority in society.
Another reason why some people do not support gender equality is that they
are threatened by it. Men have more power in a world of patriarchy.
In conclusion, there are arguments in favour of and against gender equality.
After examining the evidence, it is clear that gender inequality is based on old-
fashioned principles. In a progressive world, governments should be fighting for
gender equality.
Literature Summary 233
Writing Genres: Summaries
Gender equality is the belief that men and women have the same
Statement of issue
second argument
Conclusion with
against gender
Genre Notes
Literature Summary 235
Writing Genres: Summaries
Topic: Young people are influenced more by their friends than by their parents.
Are young people influenced more by their peers than their parents? In a
modern world, most certainly! Rapid change has taken place over the past 10
years in our modern world. Family values and norms have a question mark
behind them. Parenthood is not exactly what it used to be.
How can you explain why a grade seven boy would share a cigarette with his
friends in a portable toilet on the school premises? A number of factors need
to be considered to explain such actions: peer pressure, growing population
numbers and time.
There are definitely many factors that contribute to the influence of peers
dwarfing the influence of parents on youth. One reason is the number of
people in the world. With growing populations, it is becoming more difficult to
be unique and special. This is a big problem for teenagers, because they want
to be seen and recognised. Peer influences provide a solution where parent
influences do not. By doing what their friends want to do, youth make their
voices heard. Peers: 1 Parents: 0.
Another big contributor to peer influence is time. Teenagers spend much more
time with their friends. Apart from the time spent together at school, many
afternoons are spent together watching television. It is thus obvious that much
more time is spent with friends than with family. The more time spent with
peers, the more influence they have on youths. Peers: 2 Parents 0.
It is thus understandable why so many youths are influenced by their friends.
The facts show that in a modern society, this movement is inevitable.
(Adapted from: Mind the Gap: First Additional Language: Paper 3 Writing)
Topic: Young people are influenced more by their friends than by their parents.
Literature Summary 237
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
Tense Past
Register Formal and informal but no slang or colloquial language
Typical • Use reflective writing (not descriptive or narrative writing).
Features • Reflective writing is introspective. This means that the writer looks inside
themselves to see how they feel and what they think.
• Explain the experiences that made you feel this way.
• Write from a first person perspective. (E.g. ‘I feel…’)
• Structure the essay, with a new idea in each paragraph.
Structure Introduction: This must catch the reader’s attention and suggest what the essay is
about.
Body: This is the longest part of the essay.
It is divided into paragraphs.
Each paragraph usually contains one point about the essay topic.
Conclusion: This brings the essay to an end.
No new information is given.
Don’t forget! • The points you make in your paragraphs need to be relevant to the topic and
make sense.
• Aim to write a coherent essay – this means your ideas link together so the
reader can read and understand the essay easily.
• Your sentences and paragraphs need to be in a logical order so that your ideas
are easy to follow and understand.
Last Friday night was the most exciting night of my life. It all began at my best
friend’s house.
Lulu’s parents were in Johannesburg, so we decided to invite our friends to her
house. We felt very sneaky, and we were scared we were going to get caught,
but we were prepared to take the risk! As more and more of our friends found
out about the gathering, the excitement grew at school – you could almost
touch it.
I was a bit annoyed that our friends arrived late. However, when Sizwe from
Grade 11 arrived, my annoyance went away! He is so handsome. My palms
were sweaty and my hands shook as he greeted me. It was difficult to get my
pulse to stop racing so fast!
The more time we spent together during the evening, the more comfortable I
felt with him. We really got to know one another. In some way, it felt like I had
known him my whole life.
At the end of the night, Sizwe kissed me goodbye. My stomach had butterflies
in it and I couldn’t stop smiling. If it wouldn’t have looked so lame, I would
have skipped away. Luckily I managed to control myself. I hope I can always
remember how I felt that night.
Literature Summary 239
Writing Genres: Summaries
Last Friday night was the most exciting night of my life. It all began
at my best friend’s house.
REFLECTIVE 2nd
Sizwe from Grade 11 arrived, my annoyance went away! He is so point =
REFLECTIVE REFLECTIVE
handsome. My palms were sweaty and my hands shook as he Sizwe
REFLECTIVE REFLECTIVE
arriving
greeted me. It was difficult to get my pulse to stop racing so fast!
The more time we spent together during the evening, the more 2nd
REFLECTIVE
point =
comfortable I felt with him. We really got to know one another. In
REFLECTIVE time with
some way, it felt like I had known him my whole life. Sizwe
At the end of the night, Sizwe kissed me goodbye. My stomach
Conclusion
REFLECTIVE
had butterflies in it and I couldn’t stop smiling. If it wouldn’t have
REFLECTIVE REFLECTIVE
looked so lame, I would have skipped away. Luckily I managed to
control myself. I hope I can always remember how I felt that night.
Genre Notes
fallin
ac
g
in
g ac
ris
tion
ct
n fli
co
exposition resolution
beginning middle end
Structure Introduction: This must catch the reader’s attention and suggest what the essay is
about.
Body: This is the longest part of the essay.
It is divided into paragraphs.
Each paragraph usually contains one point about the essay topic.
Conclusion: This brings the essay to an end.
No new information is given.
Useful • Use dialogue including different speech tags e.g. ‘shouted’, ‘whispered’,
elements to ‘screamed’ etc.
remember • Can be written in first person or third person
• Use strong verbs and adjectives
• Use connectives that signal time: e.g. ‘Early that morning…’; ‘Later on…’
Don’t • The points you make in your paragraphs need to be relevant to the topic and
forget! make sense.
• Aim to write a coherent essay – this means your ideas link together so the
reader can read and understand the essay easily.
• Your sentences and paragraphs need to be in a logical order so that your ideas
are easy to follow and understand.
Literature Summary 241
Writing Genres: Summaries
Mrs Moyo’s raised voice could be heard clearly in the houses on either side.
“Why don’t you go to the doctor, Mpho? You are obviously very ill,” she scolded
her husband.
“I am just tired,” replied Mpho as he walked to the door.
“Wait, Dad!” shouted their son Phindo from the kitchen. Phindo hurried into
the tiny lounge.
“You can’t go to work, Dad. Twenty people from our street are already in
hospital, seriously ill.”
“Don’t worry, son,” said Mpho.
Mpho’s condition worsened during the day. He began vomiting, and
experienced difficulty breathing. He collapsed onto the floor and lay there,
unconscious.
His close friend Danie informed the supervisor, who called the ambulance.
Mpho was rushed to hospital. Later, Danie went to inform his wife about what
had happened.
At the hospital, they found Mpho hooked up to many machines, gasping for
breath. Mrs Moyo and Phindo knelt down at his bedside and prayed. A nurse
asked them to wait outside.
Some time later, a nurse came out to tell them Mpho had passed away, and
that he had come to them too late.
“If only he had listened,” wailed Mrs Moyo.
“I want to find those who dumped that waste on our street,” cried Phindo. “They
killed him.”
side.
“Why don’t you go to the doctor, Mpho? You are obviously very ill,” she
INTERESTING SPEECH TAG
“Wait, Dad!” shouted their son Phindo from the kitchen. Phindo
STRONG ADJECTIVE
hurried into the tiny lounge.
“You can’t go to work, Dad. Twenty people from our street are already
in hospital, seriously ill.”
rising action
His close friend Danie informed the supervisor, who called the
climax
TIME CONNECTIVE
ambulance. Mpho was rushed to hospital. Later, Danie went to inform
his wife about what had happened.
falling action
“I want to find those who dumped that waste on our street,” cried
STRONG VERB
Phindo. “They killed him.”
Literature Summary 243
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
Topic: You have seen a television programme about how much sleep teenagers need
and at what time of day teenagers are most likely to absorb information.
Write a letter to your headmaster on behalf of your grade requesting that school starts at
10.00am instead of 8.00am.
64 Victoria Street
Orlando
Soweto
1803
16 October 2018
Principal Gvebu
Greenfields High School
71 Nelson Mandela Avenue
Johannesburg
2000
Dear Principal Gubevu
Re: Request to Start School at 10am
I am writing to you on behalf of all the Gr 11s. We request that you change the
starting time of the school day. We would like you to consider starting school
at 10am, instead of the current 8am starting time. In this letter I will outline the
reasons why our suggestion is an excellent one.
Scientific research has proven that teenagers need, on average, 9 and a half
hours of sleep per night, which is more than that which is needed by adults.
Furthermore, this research has shown that our body clocks require us to wake
up later than adults. The early starting time of the school day is therefore
detrimental to our health. Many of the world’s top performing schools have
taken this research into consideration and changed their school timetables.
On the other hand, if you refuse to make this concession, you will be
responsible for continuing a situation that leaves us exhausted and stressed.
Sleep deprivation negatively affects our moods, behaviour, cognitive
performance and academic success. We may even fail our Matric exams
because we are so affected by this sleep deprivation.
In conclusion, I urge you to consider this argument and do the right thing. Be
the leader that we know you are, and shift the school’s starting time to 10am.
Yours sincerely
Relebohile Jara
Relebohile Jara
Literature Summary 245
Writing Genres: Summaries
64 Victoria Street
Orlando
Soweto
1803
TITLE AND ADDRESS OF RECIPIENT
16 October 2018
Principal Gvebu DATE
I am writing to you on behalf of all the Gr 11s. We request that you change
the starting time of the school day. We would like you to consider starting
school at 10am, instead of the current 8am starting time. In this letter I will
outline the reasons why our suggestion is an excellent one.
Introduction
On the other hand, if you refuse to make this concession, you will be
responsible for continuing a situation that leaves us exhausted and
Body
In conclusion, I urge you to consider this argument and do the right thing.
Be the leader that we know you are, and shift the school’s starting time to
10am.
Genre Notes
Topic: Write a letter to a friend who moved away your hometown a few months ago.
(NOTE: the example is on the next page, so you can see exactly how it must be formatted)
Literature Summary 247
Writing Genres: Summaries
15 Victoria Street
Johannesburg
Oaklands
2192
24 November 2017
Dear Yonela
Thank you so much for your letter – I am so glad your move
went well and that you got to Durban safely.
I'm so excited to share my news with you: my older sister
had a baby last night! His name is Jeremy and he's absolutely
gorgeous. He has the cutest little fingers and toes you've ever
seen.
Other than that, not much has happened around here since
you left. I'm still struggling in Life Science, but I passed my
last test so at least there's some improvement. Did you hear
that Mr Abrahams left the school? Apparently he's going to
work for the government or something like that. We had a big
farewell for him in assembly last week.
What's your new school like? Have you made friends? I bet
you're having the best time and going to the beach every day
after school. I have to admit that I'm a bit jealous of you for
living so close to the sea. I also miss you so much already.
Please write to me and let me know how you're doing.
Your friend
Michelle
15 Victoria Street
Johannesburg
Oaklands
2192
24 November 2017
DATE
Dear Yonela OPENING GREETING
Introduction
bet you're having the best time and going to the beach
every day after school. I have to admit that I'm a bit
jealous of you for living so close to the sea. I also miss
you so much already. SUITABLE ENDING
Literature Summary 249
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
EXAMPLE: OBITUARY
Topic: A famous South African Celebrity passed away recently. As a member of his / her
fan club you have been asked to write an obituary for an entertainment magazine. You must
also pay tribute to him / her.
Literature Summary 251
Writing Genres: Summaries
Topic: A famous South African Celebrity passed away recently. As a member of his / her fan
club you have been asked to write and obituary for an entertainment magazine. You must
also pay tribute to him / her.
Thandi Klaasen was known for being one of the era defining singers who emerged
from Sophiatown, where South African jazz took shape from the 1950s. She
WORK ACHIEVEMENT
went on to become very well respected along with singers like Dolly Rathebe and
Miriam Makeba. She travelled to many countries for her career. Klaasen received
AWARDS AND ACHIEVEMENTS
Klaasen was happily married to Jonathan Klaasen from 1955 until he passed away
in 2010. They had three daughters together, Lorraine, Maria and Jeannette.
WHO SHE LEFT BEHIND
Klaasen is survived by her three daughters and 7 grandchildren. Her funeral will
be held in Rosebank Union Church in Johannesburg on Friday, 19 January 2017 at
PRACTICAL INFORMATION ABOUT THE FUNERAL
11 o’clock.
Genre Notes
Tense Present
Register Formal
Structure Heading: Title and author
Introduction: Title, author and genre (type of book)
Body: 1st paragraph contains a summary of the plot of the story (but not
the ending)
2nd paragraph contains the learner’s opinion of the novel (this must
be positive)
Conclusion: Last comment and recommendation
Don’t forget! • Heading
• Title
• Author
Literature Summary 253
Writing Genres: Summaries
EXAMPLE: REVIEW
Topic: You recently read a remarkable novel which challenged your views on a wide array
of issues.
Write a review of this book.
Topic: You recently read a remarkable novel which challenged your views on a wide array
of issues.
Write a review of this book.
HEADING
TITLE
Introduction
AUTHOR GENRE
‘Where the Birds Sing’, by Rosie Smith, is a thrilling love story.
Skye and Taylor fall in love against a backdrop of Skye’s strange
family and the town’s prejudice towards them.
This story was intriguing. The author very cleverly made me Learner’s
rethink about my own prejudices towards people who are opinion
of the
‘different’ as well as my belief that murder is always wrong –
novel
regardless of the circumstances.
Conclusion
If you gripping stories with lots of twists and turns, then Last comment and
I highly recommend you read ‘Where the Birds Sing’. recommendation
Literature Summary 255
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
Topic: There has been an increase in various types of crime in your area.
Write an article for publication in your local newspaper suggesting ways to avoid becoming
a victim of crime.
Literature Summary 257
Writing Genres: Summaries
Topic: There has been an increase in various types of crime in your area.
Write an article for publication in your local newspaper suggesting ways to avoid becoming
a victim of crime.
WHAT WHY
The unfortunate reality is the crimes can and will happen. This is a direct result
WHERE WHEN
of the poverty that is prevalent in South African society today. Here are some tips
that will help you to avoid becoming a victim of crime.
Make is difficult for criminals. Look around you and get rid of any opportunities
before criminals can take advantage of them. Be aware of your surroundings.
At home, the basic rule is to keep your doors locked. Make sure your locks are
safe and sturdy. Install gates or sliding doors of the slam-lock variety so that you
elaborations
Dogs provide protection and give you warning in advance. Even a small dog has
DIRECT QUOTATION
a loud bark. ‘We have noticed a decrease in our suburb since people have got
dogs,’ says Sergeant Moloko of the Norwood police station.
Beware of phone and computer scams. Under no circumstances must you give
out personal or financial information over the phone.
conclusion
Finally, organise a buddy system. Your neighbours can be your eyes and ears just
as you can be theirs.
Genre Notes
Useful time ‘first’, ‘then’, ‘next’, ‘afterwards’, ‘just before that’, ‘at last’, ‘meanwhile’, ‘finally’,
connectives to ‘while’
remember
Don’t forget! • It must be written in the past tense
• The orientation and reorientation
Topic: Imagine you have lost something important to you recently. Write an informal
report documenting the incident.
Literature Summary 259
Writing Genres: Summaries
Topic: Imagine you have lost something important to you recently. Write an informal
report documenting the incident.
orientation
WHEN WHERE
After all that, I think I have to conclude that it was stolen. That was one
of the worst days of my life.
Genre Notes
EXAMPLE: DIALOGUE
Topic: Lufuno is a teenager who wants to start dating. Her mother, however, thinks she is
far too young. Mma Mukwevho catches Lufuno leaving the house and suspects she is going
to see a boy.
Write the dialogue that takes place between Lufuno and her mother.
(Mma is standing in the kitchen. She sees Lufuno about to open the front door
to leave the house.)
Mma Mukwevho: And where do you think you are going, my girl?
Lufuno: (Keeps her back to her mother) Just out.
Mma Mukwevho: Out? At this time of night? Are you going to see that boy?
Didn’t I tell you that I forbid it? Forget it! You’re staying
home to look after your sister.
Lufuno: You’re so unfair!
Mma Mukwevho: (Stands with her hands on her hips) It’s my duty to protect
you!
Lufuno: (Shouts) I’m not a child anymore!
Mma Mukwevho: Don’t you forget your culture. Our family does not behave
this way!
Lufuno: This is so frustrating! All of my friends are dating!
Mma Mukwevho: All of them? I pity those parents.
Lufuno: (Shakes her head) You never listen to me.
Literature Summary 261
Writing Genres: Summaries
CONTEXT
(Mma is standing in the kitchen. She sees Lufuno about to open the
front door to leave the house.)
Mma Mukwevho: And where do you think you are going, my girl?
COLONS AFTER
CHARACTERS’ NAMES
STAGE DIRECTION
Mma Mukwevho: Out? At this time of night? Are you going to see
names of speakers on left-hand side of page
that boy? Didn’t I tell you that I forbid it? Forget it!
You’re staying home to look after your sister.
STAGE DIRECTION
Mma Mukwevho: (Stands with her hands on her hips) It’s my duty to
protect you!
STAGE DIRECTION
Lufuno: (Shouts) I’m not a child anymore!
Mma Mukwevho: Don’t you forget your culture. Our family does not
behave this way!
STAGE DIRECTION
Lufuno: (Shakes her head) You never listen to me.
Genre Notes
Literature Summary 263
Writing Genres: Summaries
EXAMPLE: INTERVIEW
Topic: Your local municipality needs male and female administrative assistants. You have
applied for one of these positions. The municipal manager has invited you to an interview.
Write out the interview that takes place between the two of you.
NOTE: Use the dialogue format.
Topic: Your local municipality needs male and female administrative assistants. You have
applied for one of these positions. The municipal manager has invited you to an interview.
Write out the interview that takes place between the two of you.
NOTE: Use the dialogue format.
Mr Guevara: Thank you for the opportunity. NEW LINE MUST BE STARTED
EACH TIME A SPEAKER SPEAKS
Mr Guevara: Yes.
Manager: Thank you for your time. We will contact you next week
and let you know whether your application has been
successful.
(Adapted from: Mind the Gap: First Additional Language: Paper 3 Writing)
Literature Summary 265
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
EXAMPLE: SPEECH
Topic: Your school is having its annual election for class representatives. You have decided
to run for class representative for your class.
Write a speech convincing your classmates why they must vote for you.
Fellow students,
Are you happy with the way things are run at our school?
I stand before you today as a candidate for class representative. In this
position, I assure you I will work hard on our behalf, listen to your ideas and do
everything in my power to make our school the best it can be.
I stand before you today not only as a candidate but also as your friend. And
like a good friend, I will be honest with you about the challenges our school
faces. I will do my best to communicate with you and keep you informed.
As your friend, I will also be asking for your help. No one person has all the
answers or can do all the work. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link.
Together we must be strong and co-operate to achieve our goals.
I believe in you. I believe in this school. I believe in our ability to work together
for something great. As the author Margaret Mead once said, ‘Never doubt that
a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed,
it is the only thing that ever has.’
I stand before you today, to ask for your vote. I believe I have the qualities to be
an effective leader. I am also asking for your help. Let us begin the journey of
making our school the very best it can be today.
Thank you.
Literature Summary 267
Writing Genres: Summaries
Topic: Your school is having its annual election for class representatives. You have decided
to run for class representative for your class.
Write a speech convincing your classmates why they must vote for you.
Are you happy with the way things are run at our school? OPENER
for your help. Let us begin the journey of making our school
the very best it can be today.
Thank you.
Genre Notes
EXAMPLE: POSTER
Topic: There has been toxic waste dumping in your district. Residents need to be made
aware of the dumping and be given information on what to do if they discover toxic waste.
Write a social issues poster to convey this message to residents.
Literature Summary 269
Writing Genres: Summaries
RESIDENTS OF
EHLANZENI DISTRICT:
BE WARNED!
The health of all our residents is being seriously threatened by
containers of hazardous hospital waste illegally dumped in our area.
Department of Health:
021–5421940
RESIDENTS OF
EHLANZENI DISTRICT: 1st
statement
BE WARNED!
The health of all our residents is being seriously
threatened by containers of hazardous hospital reason
waste illegally dumped in our area.
2nd
KEEP FAR AWAY from these containers! statement
Warn friends and family members too. Children must not play with old
gloves, syringes, or medical samples. These items are very dangerous. REASON
Department of Health:
021–5421940
Department of Environmental Affairs: organisation
021- 532 1670 issuing the
poster
(These are TOLL-FREE numbers)
Literature Summary 271
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
Topic: Someone close to you has recently embarrassed you. You recorded your feelings
in a diary.
Write a diary entry over two consecutive days that describes your feelings.
25 March 2019
I’m so humiliated, I wish the ground would open up and
swallow me! My father saw me chatting to Sifiso at the
community sports day. He came up to us, acting super friendly
and introduced himself. You should have seen Sifiso’s face! He’ll
never ask me out now! I’ve been cursed with the world’s most
embarrassing father.
26 March 2019
I thought things couldn’t get worse. Well, I was wrong! At our
weekly family lunch earlier, my father decided to tell everyone
about how he saw me and Sifiso chatting. He loved that he
had embarrassed me! I hate my life!
Topic: Someone close to you has recently embarrassed you. You recorded your feelings
in a diary.
Write a diary entry over two consecutive days that describes your feelings.
EMBARRASSED TONE
Literature Summary 273
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
EXAMPLE: POSTCARD
Topic: You are far away from home on a school camp on a farm. Write the text (words) of a
postcard that you would send to a family member describing your experiences.
Note: Do not include illustrations.
Topic: You are far away from home on a school camp on a farm. Write the text (words) of a
postcard that you would send to a family member describing your experiences.
Note: Do not include illustrations.
Lots of love
Promise SENDER’S NAME
Literature Summary 275
Writing Genres: Summaries
Genre Notes
EXAMPLE: DIRECTIONS
Topic: You and your friends have decided to meet at your house to celebrate the end of
examinations.
Write out the directions you will give your friends to travel from the school to the house.
In your response you must include some distances, turns and landmarks. Do not include
sketches or maps.
Topic: You and your friends have decided to meet at your house to celebrate the end of
examinations.
Write out the directions you will give your friends to travel from the school to the house.
In your response you must include some distances, turns, and landmarks. Do not include
sketches or maps.
• From the front school exit, turn left into Ramphele Road.
• Continue straight down the road for 500 metres and cross the
bridge.
• After crossing the bridge, turn right at the first road into steps are in
Fairview Street. sequence
• At the robots, turn left at the Corner Café into Edward Street.
BULLETS
= imperative voice
Literature Summary 277
Writing Genres: Summaries
SECTION A: ESSAY
QUESTION 1
• Write an essay of between 250 and 300 words in length on ONE of the following topics.
• Write down the number and title of the essay you have chosen correctly, for example 1.1
No one knows…
• Give your own title if your choice is QUESTION 1.7.1 OR 1.7.2.
• Spend approximately 80 minutes on this section.
1.7.2
Literature Summary 279
Writing Genres: Summaries
2.2 OBITUARY
A famous South African celebrity passes away recently. As a member of his / her fan
club you have been asked to write an obituary for an entertainment magazine. You
must also pay tribute to him / her.
Write out the obituary. [30]
2.4 SPEECH
A group of Grade 12 friends has planned a party to celebrate the end of their
schooling.
They have asked you to present a speech at this party.
Write out your speech. [30]
TOTAL SECTION B: 30
3.1 POSTER
Your family wants to start a transport service for learners to and from school. They
have asked you to create a poster that will be placed in a local newspaper.
Write out the poster.
NOTE: Do NOT include illustrations or drawings. [20]
3.3 POSTCARD
You and your family have moved to a new country / province.
Write a postcard to your friend sharing some of these experiences in this new country/
province. [20]
TOTAL SECTION C: 20
GRAND TOTAL: 100
Literature Summary 281
Writing Genres: Summaries
SECTION A: ESSAY
QUESTION 1
Instructions to Markers:
• Candidates are required to write on ONE topic only.
• The ideas listed below the topics are only some ways in which the topic could be
interpreted.
• Full credit must be given for the candidate’s own interpretation.
• Marking must be objective. Give credit for relevant ideas.
• Use the 50-mark assessment rubric to mark the essays. The texts produced by
candidates must be assessed according to the following criteria as set out in the
assessment rubric:
• Content and planning (30 marks)
• Language, style and editing (15 marks)
• Structure (5 marks)
NOTE:
• Adhere to the length of 250–300 words as prescribed in the CAPS document. However,
should the maximum word count be reached mid-sentence, read to the end of
that sentence.
• No additional penalties may be imposed as the rubric itself imposes penalties.
• If narrative, the essay must have a strong story line and an interesting ending. The
essay is usually written in the past tense.
• If argumentative, the essay must reflect a specific argument or viewpoint for or
against the topic. The candidate should give a range of arguments to support
or substantiate his / her view. The conclusion should be a strong, clear and
convincing statement of the writer’s opinion.
• If discursive, the arguments for and against must be well-balanced and clearly
analysed in the essay. The candidate must provide supporting evidence for
arguments. The candidate may come to a particular conclusion at the end of the
essay, which should include recommendations.
NOTE: A candidate may write an essay which contains elements of more than one
type of essay / any other essay type. [50]
1.5 You are not a victim of circumstances; you are a product of your decisions. Do
you agree?
Argumentative / Discursive
• If argumentative, the essay must reflect a specific argument or viewpoint for or
against the topic. The candidate should give a range of arguments to support
or substantiate his / her view. The conclusion should be a strong, clear and
convincing statement of the writer’s opinion.
Literature Summary 283
Writing Genres: Summaries
• If discursive, the arguments for and against must be well-balanced and clearly
analysed in the essay. The candidate must provide supporting evidence for
arguments. The candidate may come to a particular conclusion at the end of the
essay, which should include recommendations.
NOTE: A candidate may write an essay which contains elements of more than one
type of essay / any other essay type. [50]
TOTAL SECTION A: 50
2.2 OBITUARY
A famous South African celebrity passed away recently.
• The tone must be formal.
• The following aspects of format must be included:
• Full name of the deceased
• Date of birth
• Date of death
Literature Summary 285
Writing Genres: Summaries
• Birthplace
• Where the person was living at the time of death
• Key survivors (spouse, children) and their names
• The following aspects may be included:
• Biographical information
• Cause of death
• Date, time and place of funeral
• A tribute must be paid to the deceased. [30]
2.4 SPEECH
Speech at a Grade 12 party
• The speech should be written using a suitable salutation / greeting.
• The tone and register should be appropriate for the audience.
• The speech must include the following:
• an introduction that attracts attention
• well-developed points
• a conclusion [30]
TOTAL SECTION B: 30
NOTE:
• Adhere to the length of 80–100 words as prescribed in the CAPS document. However,
should the maximum word count be reached mid-sentence, read to the end of
that sentence.
• No additional penalties may be imposed as the rubric itself imposes penalties.
3.1 POSTER
Transport service
• The poster should:
• have a catchy headline to attract the attention of the reader.
• create an interest in and desire for the service.
• have the following details: service rendered, cost involved and contact details.
• inspire action.
• The target market should be clear.
• The language may be formal or informal but not slang or colloquial.
NOTE: Do not award marks for illustrations. [20]
3.3 POSTCARD
Postcard to friend sharing experiences in new province or country.
• The postcard should be conversational and informative.
• Tone should be friendly. [20]
TOTAL SECTION C: 20
GRAND TOTAL: 100
Literature Summary 287
RUBRIC FOR ESSAYS
Awareness
• Exceptionally well and coherent • Reasonably coherence incoherent
Upper level
of purpose,
organised and coherent (connected), including organised and
audience and
(connected), including introduction, body coherent, including
context
introduction, body and and conclusion/ introduction, body
30 MARKS
conclusion/ending ending and conclusion/
ending
Lower level
coherent (connected), and conclusion of organisation coherence
including introduction, and coherence,
body and conclusion/ including
ending introduction, body
and conclusion
RUBRIC FOR ESSAYS (CONTINUED)
Upper level
and context; rhetorically effective in appropriate tone is meaning • Tone and diction • Vocabulary
tone used • Tone is appropriate are inappropriate limitations so
Word choice;
• Virtually error-free in • Largely error-free in • Rhetorical devices • Very limited extreme as to make
Language grammar and spelling grammar and spelling used to enhance vocabulary comprehension
use and • Very skilfully crafted • Very well crafted content impossible
conventions,
13 10 7 4
punctuation,
grammar, • Language excellent and • Language engaging • Adequate use • Inadequate use of
spelling rhetorically effective in and generally of language language
15 MARKS tone effective with some • Little or no variety
• Virtually error-free in • Appropriate and inconsistencies in sentence
grammar and spelling effective tone • Tone generally • Exceptionally
Lower level
• Skilfully crafted • Few errors in appropriate and limited vocabulary
grammar and spelling limited use of
• Well crafted rhetorical devices
STRUCTURE 5 4 3 2 0–1
Features of text; • Excellent development • Logical development • Relevant details • Some valid points • Necessary points
of topic of details developed • Sentences and lacking
Paragraph
• Exceptional detail • Coherent • Sentences, paragraphs faulty • Sentences and
development
• Sentences, paragraphs • Sentences, paragraphs well- • Essay still makes paragraphs faulty
and sentence
exceptionally well- paragraphs logical, constructed some sense • Essay lacks sense
Writing Genres: Summaries
construction
Literature Summary 289
constructed varied • Essay still makes
5 MARKS sense
RUBRIC FOR LONGER TRANSACTIONAL TEXT
features of the type of digressions focused – some • Not always coherent digressions
Purpose, audience, text • Coherent in content digressions in content and ideas • Not coherent in
features/ • Writing maintains focus and ideas, very well • Reasonably coherent • Few details support content and ideas
conventions and • Coherence in content elaborated and in content and ideas the topic • Very few details
context and ideas details support topic • Some details support • Necessary rules support the topic
18 MARKS • Highly elaborated and all • Appropriate the topic of format vaguely • Necessary rules of
Literature Summary 291
MARK RANGE 17–20 13–15 10–11 7–8 0–5