XII English Notes
XII English Notes
Question 2.What do you understand by ‘the fiery misery’ of those subjected to make up?
Answer: The makeup room was glowed by many incandescent lights which produced very fiery heat. Artists
had to face that extreme heat as they had to sit there for makeup. They were pitiful and could not do
anything in this regard.
Question 6.What could be the reason of the shut of the story department?
Answer: The story department was comprised of many poets and writers and also a lawyer with them. But
later, it was closed. The possible reason for the shutting down of the story department may be its uselessness
or unbearable expenses or regular salary of the members and less output in return.
Question 7.Which poets from England were known to the Gemini Studios’ staff ?
Answer: The ordinary staff of the Gemini Studios knew or heard about Wordsworth and Tennyson; and the
more literate ones knew of Keats, Shelly and Byron or about Eliot. But they didn’t know about Stephen
Spender, who was invited at the Gemini Studios.
Question 8.‘The God That Failed’ was the composition of six eminent men of letters. Describe.
Answer: The God That Failed’ contained six separate essays of six renowned essayists about their journeys
into communism and their disillusioned return. Those six distinguished writers were : Andre Gide, Richard
Wright, Ignazio Silone, Arthur Koestler, Louis Fischer and Stephen Spender.
Question 9.What does the writer mean by ‘the fiery misery’ of those subjected to make-up?
Answer: The writer means that the artists who were subjected to make-up had to bear very intense heat due
to the multiple incandescent lights and reflecting big mirrors.
Question 10.What is the example of national integration that the author refers to?
Answer: Make-up department is the fine example of national integration that the author refers to as people
from various and distinct parts of India used to work there together.
Question 11.hat work did the ‘office boy’ do in the Gemini Studios? Why did he join the studios? Why was
he disappointed?
Answer: During the crowd shooting in the Gemini Studios, the office boy used to paint their faces slapping
with heavy paint. Thinking that he would become a top star, screen writer or a director or lyrics writer; he
joined the Gemini Studios. He couldn’t succeed and was disappointed due to his faliure and thought that his
talent was going to be wasted.
Question 12.Why did the author appear to be doing nothing at the studios?
Answer: The author’s duty was to cut the newspaper clip-pings for the subject, arrange them in a file and
some-times writing by hand and this work appeared to be ^useless or valueless in others’ view.
Poets and Pancakes Extra Questions and Answers Long Answer Type
Question 1.Write a brief note on what you have learnt about Subbu’s Character?
Answer: Subbu, KothamangalamSubbu was a Brahmin by caste and placed at no. 2 position at the Gemini
Studios. He always remained cheerful and satisfied. Though he was very generous to all people of the
Gemini Studios as well as all the relatives and acquaintances, yet he too was having his woes. People
disliked him because of his closeness to the boss. He was very loyal to his boss.At Gemini Studios, he had
the solution of all problems at one place. He seemed to be indulged in every important affair of the
company. He also had the artistic talent as he was a poet and novelist also. He used to write in a simple way
for common mass as he composed several folk dictions and deftly created characters for novel. He was an
amazing actor though never acted for a lead role but got more praise than the main character. He was a
tailor-made actor with unmatchable capacities.
The Interview
Question 5.How many copies of the novel ‘The Name of the Rose’ were sold?
Answer: More than 10 million copies of the novel ‘The Name of the Rose’ were sold.
Question 6.How and when did Umberto Eco start to write novels?
Answer: Umberto Eco started to write novels accidently at the age of 50. Then only on Sundays, he used to
write the content of the novels.
Question 7.Umberto Eco does many things, but says, “I am always doing the same thing but that is more
difficult to explain”. What does he mean to say?
Answer: Umberto Eco says that he has philosophical interests which reflect in all his writings : fiction and
non-fiction. In this way, he does the same thing, though he seems to pursue various activities : writing notes
for newspapers, novels, teaching, writing essays, children’s books etc.
Question 8.Despite the drawbacks, the interview is a ‘supremely serviceable medium of communication’.
Explain.
Answer: Despite its drawbacks, the interview has its own advantages. Though, interview is an intrusion into
the personal life of the interviewee, it is always a supremely serviceable medium of communication.
Through the interviews only, we get vivid impressions of our contemporary celebrities. We get a glance of
their way of working.
Question 11.Do you think Umberto Eco like, being Inter viewed? Give reasons for your opinion.
Answer:Umberto Eco surely likes being interviewed as a part of his interview is presented in this chapter.
He answers every question asked by Mukund and never frustrates and criticizes the interview like many
other celebrity writers.
Question 15.What is the reason for the huge success of the novel, The Name of the Rose?
Answer: The Name of the Rose is a serious detective story but delved into metaphysics, theology and
medieval history. The novel got a huge success and the reason Umberto Eco assesses is its favourable
publication time.
Question 1.Give a character sketch of Umberto Eco on the basis of the chapter ‘The Interview’.
Answer: Umberto Eco, a university professor at the university of Bologna in Italy, is an academician and a
famous novelist. He, through various interview discloses his secret of success in life and never hates the
interviewers. He has his taste in various fields of writings as academic texts, fiction and non-fiction, literary
fiction, essays, children’s books, newspaper articles etc.He always wanted to be called as an academician
not a novelist. He used to participate in academic conferences, on the other hand, he avoided the meetings of
writers and Pen Club Members. He has written forty scholarly works and novels only five. He used to
denote time for writing novels on only ‘Sundays’. He discovered a magical trick of working in interstices.He
used to use even the seconds of his time. He captured the empty spaces for writing notes or any content. He
had an expertise in ‘Semiotics’: the study of signs. He never became a slave of proud as he openely admitted
that his novel ‘The Name of the Rose’ got success accidently and the time was in his favour. He didn’t have
any attitude of the celebrity though his novel was bought by more than the 10 million of the readers.
Question 2.‘MukundPadmanabhan’ was a reporter from ‘The Hindu’. In the context of the chapter, re-veal
his traits as an interviewer.
Answer: MukundPadmanabhan was surely a successful and well thought-out reporter who always used to
ask answerable and dexterous questions to his interviewees. He used to plan and prepare to con-duct an
interview of a celebrity. He never asked ugly or embarrasing questions and on the other hand, the celebrity
whom he interviewed always seemed to be comfortable with his questions. Through the inteviews, readers
not only got the informationsabout the celebrities but many other important aspects of Mukund’s personality
also came in their knowledge. He asked brief and quality questions to his interviewees scrupulously. He let
the interviewees spoke in their own manner and never tried to interrupt or cross-questioned them.His
interviewees used to be free and frank with him. He was always a prepared interviewer. Mukund, in advance
arranged the informations and personality traits of his interviewees and then with full preparations, started
his sessions. In all we can say that MukundPadmanabhan was a disciplined and dedicated interviewer.
Going Places
Question 1.Who was Jansie and Sophie? Where were they likely to find work?
Answer: Jansie and Sophie were two school-going girls. They belonged to low middle class families. After
completing their school, they both were earmarked to work in a biscuit factory.
Question 5.Why didn’t Sophie want Jansie to know about her meeting with Danny?
Answer: Sophie thought if Jansie came to know about her meeting with Danny, she would tell everyone.
Then thousands of people would come to her house. It would make her father very angry. She thought that
her father could then possibly murder her.
Question 6.Why did Jansie discourage Sophie from entertaining thoughts about the sports-star Danny
Casey? .
Answer: Jansie knew her friend Sophie well. She knew that Sophie’s meeting with Danny Casey was just
her imagination. She wanted Sophie to be practical. She a Juiew such thoughts would create troubles for
Sophie. Therefore she discouraged Sophie from entertaining thoughts about the sports-star Danny Casey.
Question 7.It is natural for teenagers to have unrealistic dreams. What would you say are benefits and
disadvantages of such fantasising?
Answer: Teenage is considered the best period in person’s life. In this age, the person has maximum energy
and he is free from every responsibility. But it is also the age when the person has dreams and fantasies.
Every teenager has some role model also. It would be beneficial for the person if he goes into the direction
of his/her dreams diligently. But mere fantasising and dreaming bring nothing but disappointment.
Question 8.‘Damn that Geoff, this was a Geoff thing not a Jansie thing.’ Why did Sophie say so?
Answer: Sophie told her brother, Geoff about her meeting with Danny Casey. She was sure that that he
would not tell anybody her secret. But on the other hand, Geoff told that secret to Jansie’s brother and Jansie
asked Sophie about it. Sophie became very angry with her brother and said, ‘Damn that Geoff, this was a
Geoff thing not a Jansie thing.’
Question 9.How did Sophie’s father react when Geoff told him about her meeting with Danny Casey?
Answer: Sophie’s father turned his head on his thick neck to look at her. His expression was one of disdain.
Sophie told him that Danny Casey was going to buy a shop. At this her father muttered, “This is another of
your wild stories. One of these days you’re going to talk yourself into a load of trouble.” This shows that the
old man knew his daughter very well.
Question 10.What is the profession of Geoff ? How is he different from his sister?
Answer: Geoff left his school three years ago. Now he works as an apprentice mechanic. He has to travel to
his work to the far end of the city. But he is very introvert. He is not a daydreamer like Sophie. But he loves
his sister very much so he listens her wild stories patiently.
Question 11.Who was Danny Casey? How can you say that the members of Sophie’s family were great fan
of his?
Answer: Danny Casey was a young football player. He played for the United. Sophie and the members of
her family were a great fan of his. Sophie even started dreaming to have a date with him. Her family went to
see a football match in which Danny was playing.
Question 12.Where did Sophie meet Danny Casey as she claimed?
Answer: Sophie met Danny for the first time in the arcade. It was she who spoke first. She wanted an
autograph for her little brother Derek. But neither of them had any pen. Therefore, they just talked a bit.
Question 13.Do you think that Sophie’s meeting with Danny actually happened or it was just a part of her
imagination?
Answer: It appeared possible that Danny might have met with Sophie at the arcade. It also appeared possible
they might have talked a bit. But it didn’t appear to be I possible that Danny would have called her to meet i
the next week. The last part of her story is highly improbable. It was just a part of her imagination.
Question 14.What thoughts come to Sophie’s mind as she sit by the canal?
Answer: Sitting by the side of the canal Sophie waits for Danny Casey to come. The time keeps on passing.
She starts feeling pangs of doubt inside her. Then she remembers Geoff saying he would never come. She
thinks that she will never be able prove that the others were wrong to doubt her.
Question 15.Why did Sophie wriggle when Geoff told her father that she had met Danny Casey?
Answer: Sophie knew that her father would become angry when he came to know about her meeting with
Danny Casey. She knew he would scold her badly and severely. Therefore, she wriggled when Geoff told
her father that she had met Danny Casey.
Question 16.Does Geoff believe what Sophie says about her meeting with Danny Casey?
Answer: Geoff doesn’t believe Sophie when the latter tells him about her meeting with Danny Casey. He
knows his sister well and knows she lives in the world of dreams.
Question 17.Why didn’t Sophie want Jansie to know about her story with Danny?
Answer: Sophie didn’t want Jansie to know her story about Danny Casey. She thought that Jansie would tell
everyone about it. Then the people would come in large numbers to know about it in detail. Sophie was very
afraid of her father. She feared that her father would become’ furious. He could also murder her.
Question 1.Sophie lives in a world full of dreams which she does not know she cannot realise. Comment.
Answer: Sophie belongs to a low middle class family. She has no means to gain name and fame.Therefore,
she starts weaving in her mind the unrealistic dreams and fantasies. First of all she thinks that she would
open a fine boutique in the city. When her friend Jansie tells her that it would take a lot of money to open a
boutique, she says that she would become a manager to begin with. She does not realise that no one would
make her a manager straight off.Then she thinks of becoming an actress. She takes a chance meeting with
Danny Casey as a beginning of love-affair with him. She dreams of meeting with him. But this and her other
dreams are just a product of her imagination. She does not know how to realise them.
Question 3.Describe the character of Sophie’s father and the role played by him?
Answer: Sophie’s father belongs to labour class. He goes to his work on his bicycle. He is very careless and
care¬free person. He has very rough eating manners. He likes to enjoy himself by going to a pub. He doesn’t
care much even about his children. But this doesn’t mean that he knows nothing about the temperament of
his children.When Sophie keeps on saying that she has met Danny Casey, he looks at her disdain and says,
“This another of your wild stories? One of these days you are going to talk yourself into a load of trouble.”
In the end he proves true when Sophie has to meet disappointment regarding her supposed meeting with
Danny Casey.
Question 4.Sophie’s dreams and disappointments are all in her mind. Discuss.
Answer: Sophie belonged to a low middle class family. She had no means to gain name and fame. Therefore
she started weaving in her mind the unrealistic dreams and fantasies. First she thought that she would open a
fine boutique in the city. When her friend Jansie told her that it would take a lot of money to open a
boutique, she said that she would become a manager to begin with.She did not realise that no one would
make her a manager straight off. Then she thought she would become an actress. She took a chance meeting
with Danny Casey as a beginning of love-affair with him. She dreamt of meeting with him. But this and her
other dreams were just product of her mind and not based on any reality.
Question 5.What socio-economic background did Sophie belong to? What are the indicators of her family’s
financial status?
Answer: Sophie belonged to a low middle class family. She was going to leave her school within a few
months and was earmarked to work in a biscuit factory as a petty employee. This showed that she was not
going to do high studies. She lived in a small house which remained smoky. Her father belonged to labour
class and had only a bicycle to go to his work.He had very rough eating manners. He used to enjoy himself
in a pub. Her telder brother had left school about three years ago yet was just an apprentice mechanic. All
these were the indicators that showed that Sophie’s family was not a well-to-do family.
Question 6.Sophie and Jansie were class-mates and Mends. What were the differences between them that
show up in the story?
Answer: Sophie and Jansie were classmates and friends. But they were poles apart as far as their character
and temperament is concerned. Jansie was very down to earth girl. She knew that she belonged to a low
middle class. She knew her limitations. She had accepted her fate that she had to work in a biscuit factory as
a petty employee after her school education.On the other hand Sophie was an ambitious girl. She too
belonged to a low middle class. But she had very unrealistic ambitions and dreams. First she said that she
would open a boutique, then she said she would become a manager. She also wanted to become an actress.
In fact she didn’t know what she wanted to become. She wove a fantasy around a famous football player.
She imagined that he would come and meet her. As a result of her unrealistic dreams and fantasies she had
to face disappointment.
A Roadside Stand
Short Answer Type Questions:
Question 1.The city folk who drove through the countryside hardly paid any heed to the roadside stand or to
the people who ran it. If at all they did, it was to complain, which lines bring this out? What was their
complaint about?
Answer: Lines which bring this are :
“The polished traffic passed with a mind ahead, or if ever aside a moment, then out of sorts; At having the
landscape marred with the artless paint; Of signs that with N turned wrong and sturned wrong…” Their
complaint was that the wrongly made signs had spoiled the natural beauty.
Question 2.What was the plea of the folk who had put up the roadside stand?
Answer: The plea of roadside stand sellers was the ignorance by the vehicles.Theypleaed that nobody
stopped there to buy their products.
Question 3.What is the ‘Childish longing’ that the poet refers to? Why is it vain?
Answer: ‘Childish longing’ seems through the desire of the poor farmer who sits near the open window all
day and prays for the stopping of any car.
Question 4.Which lines tell us about the insufferable pain that the poet feels at the throught of the plight of
the rural people?
Answer: The lines about the insufferable pain that the poet feels are :
“Sometimes I feel myself I can hardly bear the thought of so much Childish longing in vain, the sadness that
lurks near the open window there.” “I can’t help owning the great relief it would be to put these people at
one stroke out of their pain.”
Question 2.Have you ever stopped at a roadside stand ? What have you observed ?
Answer:Yes, I’ve stopped at a roadside stand on a highway twice or thrice and found that the villagers have
too much expectations from us, who pass from those roads. They work hard for whole day and whole family
members of them sit there to sell fresh vegetables, fruits, juices and other products.Very few of us actually
purchase something but only use them for general queries like asking about road map, gas or petrol for our
vehicles or many a times to use that broad empty space to turn our vehicles. I also observed that those
farmers are pitiful and facing very miserable condition and fighting for their existence and survival.Those
merciful poor farmers should be helped and treated like the human beings and dwellers of cities. They
should not be cheated and used for the introversion purposes. They also contribute to the growth and
economy of the country as they grow crops for whole mankind.
Question 3.What is suggested by the image ‘massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band’ ?
Answer: The poet says that Uncle’s wedding band lies very heavily on Aunt Jennifer’s hand. She has to
work endlessly from morning till night and also have to bear Uncle’s tyranny. Aunt Jennifer has to slavishly
follow all the orders of uncle.
Question 4.Of what or of whom is Aunt Jennifer terrified with in the third stanza ?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer is terrified of endless household chores and Uncle in the third stanza. She thinks that
even after her death she will not be free from these household chores.
Question 5.What are the ‘ordeals’ Aunt Jennifer is surrounded by, why is it significant that the poet uses the
word ‘ringed’ ? What are the meanings of the word ‘ringed’ in the poem ?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer is surrounded by household chores. These chores are no less than ordeals for her be-
cause willingly or unwillingly she has to do them. The word ‘ringed’ has been used to convey that Aunt
Jennifer is so surrounded by her ordeals that she can never think to come out of them.
Question 6.Why do you think Aunt Jennifer created animals that are so different from her own character ?
What might the poet be suggesting, through this difference ?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer is old and submissive woman. But the tigers she is embroidering on the panel appear
to be bold and chivalric. The suggestion given here is that women give birth to men but the same men
tyrannise women when they grow up.
Question 8.What will happen to Aunt Jennifer’s tigers when she is dead ?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer has embroidered tigers on a panel. These tigers represent not only women’s creativity
but also tyranny of men towards women. It will continue even after the death of Aunt Jennifer. Therefore her
tigers will also keep prancing on the panel.
Question 9.Why did Aunt Jennifer choose to embroider tigers on the panel ?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer has been tyrannised by her husband all her life. Her husband has become a picture of
terror for her. She is in fact venting out all her inner feelings by embroidering tigers on the panel. In the
form of tigers she has in fact embroidered the fearful face of her husband.
Question 10.Aunt Jennifer’s efforts to get rid of her fear proved to be futile. Comment.
Answer: Aunt Jennifer embroidered tigers on the screen. These tigers are symbol of her husband, whom she
is very afraid. She thinks that by embroidering tigers she will get a sort of relief from her fear. But it proves
quite futile. The poet says that even after her death, the fear of her husband’s tyranny will keep on haunting
Aunt Jennifer.
Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers Extra Questions and Answers Long Answer Type
Question 1.What is the bond that unites the two, Mr Lamb and Derry? How does Mr Lamb inspire the boy?
Answer: Mr Lamb and Derry are suffering from the same sort of physical impairment. Mr Lamb does not
have one leg while Derry’s face is burnt from one side. They both are feeling lonely. No one ever comes to
see Mr Lamb and people have spread many stories about him. People look at awe at Derry’s face and
generally avoid him. Thus they both are suffering from common problems. This bond unites Mr Lamb and
Derry.
Question 3.What peculiar things does Derry notice about the old man, Lamb?
Answer: Mr Lamb is retired from the army. He leaves his doors always open. Everybody is welcomed in his
garden. There are no curtains on his windows. These are quite peculiar things for Derry.
Question 6.In what sense is the friendship between Mr Lamb and Derry fruitful?
Answer: The friendship between Mr Lamb and Derry proved quite fruitful for both of them. Mr Lamb instils
self confidence in the young boy. While the young boy’s company helps Mr Lamb to ward off his
loneliness.
Question 8.How does Mr Lamb react when Derry enters his garden?
Answer: Mr Lamb welcomes Derry in his garden. He only asks him to mind crab apples lest he should trip.
When Derry wants to run away from there Mr Lamb says that he need not go. Everyone is welcomed to
come in his garden.
Question 9.What kind of garden does Mr Lamb have? Why does he like it?
Answer: Mr Lamb has a garden-outside his house. It has flowers, grass, trees arid bees. He likes every inch
of his garden. He has positive attitude of mind. For him even weeds in his garden are living things. He likes
humming of bees. He passes his time by making jam from the crab apples. Thus, he remains busy due to his
garden. Therefore, he likes it very much.
Question 10.What does Derry hear people talking down the downstairs?
Answer: He hears people talking about him and saying, “What will he ever do? What is going to happen to
him when we are gone? How will he get on in this world with that face?”
Question 11.What realisation comes to Derry about his face at the end of the play?
Answer: At the end of the play, Derry realises that external looks do not matter much. The only thing
matters is the person’s worth. He decides now he would not care about anybody. He will care about what he
feels, thinks or hears.
Question 2.Why do you think Derry is so pessimistic? How does Mr Lamb give solace to the boy?
Answer: One side of Derry’s face is burnt due to acid. People look at him in awe. They say that it is the
ugliest’ thing that they have ever seen. Derry feels afraid of him when he sees himself in the mirror. He has
become highly pessimistic. He knows even his mother doesn’t love him truly. She just fulfils her duty as a
mother.Therefore, she never kisses him on the burnt side of his face; she would always kiss on the other side
of his face.But Lamb gives the boy great solace and inspiration. He tells him he is not handicapped like him.
He has two legs, two eyes, two ears and two hands. He can do anything in life. He also advises him to have
optimistic approach in life.
Question 3.What lesson of life does Mr Lamb tell Derry? What effect it has on him?
Answer:Mr Lamb has lost one of his legs in a war. He tells Derry he is not handicapped like him. He has
two legs, two eyes, two ears and two hands. He can do anything in life. He also advises him to have
optimistic approach in life. Then he starts explaining Derry about his own approach towards life. He says
every¬thing interests him that is created by God.He says that people say the bees buzz but according to him .
they hum. According to Lamb, every growing thing has life in it. For him even weeds are important. He tells
Derry that it’s not what he looks like; it’s what he is inside. This makes Derry understand that beauty is only
skin deep. He understands that he is not inferior to anybody. He can do whatever he likes.
Memories of Childhood
Question 1.What does this chapter tell us about the weather in the land of apples on the very first day?
Answer: Zitkala-Sa unfolds that the first day in the land of apples was a bitter cold one; for the snow still
covered the ground, and the trees were bare.
Question 2.How were the Indian girls dressed? Why did Zitkala feel sinking in the floor?
Answer: The Indian girls were in stiff shoes and closely clinging dresses. The small girls wore sleeved
aprons and singled hair. It appeared very immodest to Zitkala. She felt sinking in the floor because her
blanket had been stripped off from her shoulders.
Question 3.Who was Judewin? What did she tell Zitkala?
Answer: Judewin was a friend of Zitkala. She knew a little English. She had overheard the white woman
saying that they would shingle Zitkala’s long, heavy hair. She said that Zitkala had to submit to them.
Question 4.What had Zitkala’s mother told her about the tradition regarding hair in their tribe?
Answer: Zitkala’s mother had told her that only unskilled warriors who were captured had their hair
shingled by the enemy. Among her tribe, short hair were worn by mourners and shingled hair by cowards.
Question 7.At the dining table why did Zitkala-Sa begin to cry when others start eating?
Answer: At the dining table all the others started eating us¬ing knife and fork. But Zitkala began to cry. She
found eating by formula a very hard trial for her.
Question 8-How did Zitkala-Sa’s first day in the land of apples begin?
Answer: The first day in the land of apples was very cold. Zitkala saw. that the Indian people were bearing
tight clinging clothes which appeared very immodest to her. At the dining table, she began crying since she
could not eat with knife and fork. And in the end her hair were shingled.
Question 10.What did she see one day when she came from school?
Answer: One day, when she came to her street she saw at the opposite corner a threshing floor had been set
up, and the landlord watched the proceedings, seated on a piece of sacking spread over a stone ledge. The
people of her community were hard at work, driving cattle in pairs, round and round to tread out the grain
from the straw.
Question 12.When Bama did come to know about the social discrimination towards her community?
Answer: Bama came to know about it when she was just a school going girl. She saw an elder of their
commu¬nity carrying a packet of vadais from its string. She thought that in this manner, the packet could be
un done and the whole contents would be spilt out. But her brother told her that the reason for that was that
the person for whom that snacks brought belonged to high caste and he thought that the very touch of any
from their community would pollute him.
Question 14.Why did the landlord’s man ask Bama’s brother on which street he lived? What was the
significance?
Answer: The people of the community to which Bama be longed were segregated and lived in a particular
street. The landlord’s man wanted to ascertain the caste of Bama’s brother. Therefore he asked him on
which street he lived.
Question 2.What did Zitkala do to prevent her hair? How did her efforts prove futile?
Answer: Zitkala decided that she would not let her hair shingled. She watched her chance and when no one
noticed, she disappeared. She hid herself in a big room. The windows were covered with dark green
curtains, which made the room very dim. No one was there in the room. She crawled under a bed and hid
herself in the dark comer.From her hiding place she heard footsteps nearby. In the hall some voices were
calling her name. Even her friend Judewin was searching for her. The sounds came nearer and nearer.
Women and girls entered the room. She was dragged out. She resisted and cried aloud. They tied her fast in
a chair. She was shaking her head all the while until she felt the cold blades of the scissors against her neck.
Thus her hair were shingled.
Question 3.How long did Bama take to reach home from school and why? Write briefly what she did on her
way?
Answer: It was actually possible to walk the distance in ten minutes. But usually it would take her thirty
minutes at the very least to reach home. Many interesting things would tether her feet to the ground. There
could be a performing monkey. There could be a snake charmer with his snake kept in a basket. There could
be a cyclist who had not got off cycle for three days.She would watch the huge bell hanging at the temple.
She would watch the Pongal offerings being cooked. Then there could be some entertainments going on the
way-a street play, a puppet show or a magic show. These were the things that stopped her at many points in
her way.
Question 4.The two accounts that you read above are based in two distant cultures. What is the commonality
of theme found in both of them?
Answer: The first account refers to a Native American girl, Zitkala-Sa. The European settlers, there are
prejudiced against the native people. For them Native Americans are no better than enemies. They shingled
Zitkala’s hair much against her wish. They did not care to respect their culture. The second account is of
Bama. She belonged to a downtrodden community. The people of upper caste looked at them with hatred.
They thought that the very touch of the people of her community would pollute them. Thus we can see that
Zitkala and Bama belonged to different cultures and communities. Yet the theme of both the accounts is
same that people of downtrodden communities are treated like animals and racial prejudice is there in almost
every part of the world.
Question 5.It may take a long time for oppression to be resisted, but the seeds of rebellion are sowed early in
life. Do you agree that injustice in any form cannot escape being noticed even by children?
Answer: Elders of downtrodden communities become used to oppression. They consider it a part of their
destiny and thus do not protest against any oppression. But the minds of children are very impressionable.
They understand every oppression or humiliation. They generally rebel against any oppression.They feel
quite disturbed when they see injustice being done to someone. When they grow up, they try their best to
root out all the traditions that consider them to inferior beings. Thus, we can say that the seeds of rebellion
are sowed early in life.
Question 6.Bama’s experience is that of a victim of the caste system. What kind of discrimination does
ZitkalaSa’s experience depict? What are their responses to their respective situations?
Answer: Zitkala-Sa was a Native American. The European settlers have great prejudice against the Native
Americans. They consider them inferior beings. They have no respect for their traditions. That was
whyZitkala’s long was shingled. On the other hand, Bama belongs to a downtrodden community. The
people of high caste consider them inferior beings. They think that the very touch of theirs would pollute
them. Both Zitkala and Bama reacted to their respective situation in their own way.Zitkala hid herself in a
room to prevent her hair from being shingled. But she was found out and her hair were shingled. When
Bama came to know the humiliation of an elder of their street’ she was filled with anger. She studied very
hard so that the others realise her worth and come to her as friends.