English Balbharati

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 114

The Coordination Committee formed by GR No. Abhyas - 2116/(Pra.Kra.

43/16) SD - 4
Dated 25.4.2016 has given approval to prescribe this textbook in its meeting held on 29.12.2017
from the Academic Year 2018-19.

ENGLISH
BALBHARATI
STANDARD EIGHT

Maharashtra State Bureau of Textbook Production and


Curriculum Research, Pune.

The digital textbook can be obtained through DIKSHA App


on a smartphone by using the Q. R. Code given on title page
of the textbook and useful audio-visual teaching-learning
material of the relevant lesson will be available through the
Q. R. Code given in each lesson of this textbook.
First Edition : 2018 © Maharashtra State Bureau of Textbook Production and
Second Reprint : 2020 Curriculum Research, Pune - 411 004.


The Maharashtra State Bureau of Textbook Production
and Curriculum Research reserves all rights relating to
the book. No part of this book should be reproduced
without the written permission of the Director, Maharashtra
State Bureau of Textbook Production and Curriculum
Research, ‘Balbharati’, Senapati Bapat Marg, Pune 411004.

Chief Coordinator Co-ordination :


Smt. Prachi Ravindra Sathe Santosh J. Pawar
Assistant Special Officer, English
English Language Committee :
English Language Study Group :
Dr Prabha Sampath, Chairman
Dr Manjushree Sardeshpande, Member Shri. Akhil Bhosale Shri. Balkrishna Shinde
Dr Rohit Kawale, Member Dr Jyotimani Rocque Shri. Bhuvnesh Kumbhar
Dr Muktaja Mathkari, Member Smt. Manjusha Sagrolikar Dr Gajendra Mugale
Dr Lalita Vartak, Member Shri. Nilkantheshwar Patil Dr Juee Kulkarni
Dr Shruti Chaudhary, Member Shri. Pundalik Kaviraj Shri. Mahesh Dudhankar
Shri. Shridhar Nagargoje, Member Smt. Renu Dhotre Shri. Nadeem Khan
Shri. Nilesh Kedare, Member Smt. Saraswathi Suram Shri. Rajiv Sangpal
Shri. Santosh Pawar, Shri. Sharad Pandhare Shri. Raju Korde
Member-Secretary Smt. Smita Pore Shri. Rakesh Jadhav
Shri. Amol Kamble Shri. Santosh Gaikwad
Cover  : Shri. Vivekanand Patil Shri. Anil Petkar
Illustrations : Ashna Advani Shri. Ashok Gaikwad Invitee Expert :
Anupriya Joshi Shri. Mohan Bapat Smt. Samannaz Irani

Production :
Sachchitanand Aphale Publisher :
Chief Production Officer Vivek Uttam Gosavi
Typesetting : Controller
Sachin Mehta DTP Section (Languages) Maharashtra State
Production Officer Textbook Bureau,
Textbook Bureau, Pune.
Nitin Wani Prabhadevi,
Printer :
Assistant Production Mumbai - 400 025.
M/S. SPENTA MULTIMEDIA
Officer PVT. LTD., THANE
Print Order No. :
Paper :
N/PB/2020-21/1,10,000
70 GSM Creamwove
Preface
Dear Students,

A most hearty welcome to Std VIII. We are happy to place this textbook ‘English
Balbharati’ in your hands.

English has been a part of your studies since Std I. So far, you have learnt to use
English for communication in most situations. You have enjoyed some interesting
stories, passages and poetry in the previous textbooks. You have completed many
projects. You have also read the literary works of many well-known writers. Now
that you are in Std VIII, you will do all this and also learn to use English with a better
understanding of the language and the way it is used.

English is not just a subject in your curriculum. It is the medium through which
you learn all other subjects. A good command over the language will make it easier
for you to study other subjects too. English is a world language used internationally
for communication. Our main aim is to help you use English with confidence. We
want you to be able to ask questions, gain knowledge and new skills, be creative and
to spend your free time deriving joy from appreciation of good literary pieces. That is
why, we want you to take part in all the activities and exercises in the ‘Warming up’
and ‘English Workshop’ sections without feeling diffident. Talk to your teacher freely
about the problems and difficulties you face while studying this textbook. Many of the
activities are designed to show you ways of thinking and self-learning. The more you
use them, the better you will grasp, learn and achieve.

Useful audio - video teaching - learning material given in each relevant lesson will
be available through the Q. R. Code and through the medium of App for additional
information. It will be definitely useful for your study.

We will be happy if you share your feelings about the contents of this book with
us. We hope you enjoy studying it throughout the year.

Wish you all the best in your studies !

Pune
Date : 18 April 2018 (Dr Sunil Magar)
Akshayya Trutiya Director
Indian Solar Year : Maharashtra State Bureau of Textbook
Chaitra 28, 1940 Production and Curriculum Research, Pune.
English Balbharati Standard VIII - Learning Outcomes
Suggested Pedagogical Processes • understand the context for various types of
writing: messages, notice, letter, report, biography,
The learner may be provided opportunities in travelogue, diary entry etc.
pairs / groups / individually and encouraged to–
• take dictation of a passage with specific attention
• participate in classroom activities / school to words pronounced, punctuation and spelling.
programmes such as Morning Assembly /
extempore / debate etc. by being exposed to input-
• attempt various types of writing: notice, letter,
report, etc as well as personal / biographical
rich environment.
experiences and extrapolative writings.
• speak about objects / events in the class / school
environment and outside surroundings.
• use ICT (Net, mobile, website, Youtube, TED talks
etc) to browse for information, for projects / PPT
• participate in grammar games and kinaesthetic discussion, debate, class seminar etc.
activities for language learning.
• attempt creative writing, like stories, poems,
• use English news (newspaper, TV, Radio) as a dialogues, skits, dialogues from a story and story
resource to develop his/her listening and reading from dialogues.
comprehension, note-taking, summarizing etc.
• visit a language laboratory.
• watch / listen to English movies, serials, educational
channels with sub-titles, audio-video / multi-media
• read / write a book review.
materials, for understanding and comprehension.
• interview people from various professions such Learning Outcomes
as doctors, writers, actors, teachers, cobblers,
newspaper boy, household helps, rickshaw pullers The learner–
/ drivers and so on. 08.03.01 Listens attentively to a variety of programmes.
• use formulaic expressions / instructions such as 08.03.02 Notes specific details, facts, information from
‘Could I give you…’ ‘Shall we have a cup of tea?’ a speech, story, conversation, etc.
to develop communication skills 08.03.03 Predicts the next part of a story, argument, etc.
• participate in individual activities such as
08.03.04 Retells the outline of a conversation,
introducing personalities / guests during school informative speech or debate.
programmes.
08.03.05 Respects variation in language use.
• learn vocabulary associated with various
professions and use them in different situations. 08.03.06 Responds to instructions and announcements
in school and public places such as railway
• read stories / plays (from different books / station, bus-stand, market, airport, cinema
newspapers in education (NIE) / children’s section hall, malls and acts accordingly.
in magazines in English) and narrate them.
08.03.07 Participates in class / group discussion.
• locate main idea, sequence of events and co-relate
ideas, themes and issues in a variety of texts in 08.03.08 Participates in different events such as role
English and other languages. play, poetry recitation, skit, drama, debate,
speech, elocution, quiz etc. organized by
• use various sources from English and other school and other such organizations.
languages to facilitate comprehension, co-relation
and critical understanding of issues. 08.03.09 Describes things, people, situations, emotions,
etc.
• interpret quotations, sayings and proverbs
08.03.10 Demonstrates a process / activity clearly.
• interpret photographs / sketches, tables, charts,
08.03.11 Work out a problem orally.
diagrams and maps and incorporate in writing.
• think critically, compare and contrast characters / 08.03.12 Discusses / talks about the characters,
situations, plots, themes, etc. of a literary piece.
events / ideas / themes and relate them to life and
try to give opinions about issues. 08.03.13 Presents one’s thoughts, arguments in a
logical, organized manner.
• refer sources such as dictionary, thesaurus
and encyclopedia for meaning in context and 08.03.14 Uses persuative language to convince others.
understanding texts. 08.03.15 Endorse/oppose a particular point of view.
• use grammar in context such as active and passive 08.03.16 Uses quotations, idioms, proverbs appropriately.
voice, reported speech, tenses, parts of speech, etc.
08.03.17 Introduces guests in English, interviews
• notice punctuation marks in a variety of texts and people by asking questions based on the work
appropriately use in editing his / her own writing. they do.
08.03.18 Engages in conversations in English with 08.03.44 Writes emails, messages, notice, formal
people from different professions using letters, descriptions / narratives, personal
appropriate vocabulary. diary, report, biographical experiences etc.
08.03.19 Speaks about events in the class / school 08.03.45 Understands the organization of graphic
environment and outside the surroundings. presentations and uses them appropriately.
08.03.20 Understands the storyline in a narration / 08.03.46 Remembers and recalls necessary
play, etc. information (and the way it is organized)
with the help of personal notes.
08.03.21 Predicts the next part in a conversation /
story /narration, etc. 08.03.47 Revises (increasingly larger) chunks of
information mentally.
08.03.22 Understands the connection between
the major and minor points in a piece of 08.03.48 Translates different types of informative
writing. texts from the mother tongue into English
08.03.23 Reads carefully to understand a new concept and from English into the mother tongue.
/idea. 08.03.49 Translates literary pieces from the mother
08.03.24 Reads so as to compare / contrast bits of tongue into English and from English into
information. the mother tongue.
08.03.25 Understands the writer’s intention. 08.03.50 Uses digital dictionaries / standard
dictionaries, thesaurus, encyclopedia
08.03.26 Understands / empathises with other points
available on the internet for reference.
of view.
08.03.27 Understands and appreciates use of literary 08.03.51 Prepares graphics, word-art, graphs,
devices, figures of speech, etc. pictograms, etc. on the computer.
08.03.28 Verifies information using various sources / 08.03.52 Knows how to compile, edit and uses the
references. information or details available on the
internet and not just ‘copy-paste’ them.
08.03.29 Learn new words, expressions and enriches
his / her vocabulary through reading. 08.03.53 Takes care not to use copyright material
without proper permission and / or
08.03.30 Identifies verbosity, lack of organization,
acknowledgement.
and other defects in written communication.
08.03.31 Reads excerpts, dialogues, poems, 08.03.54 Prepares a presentation with the help of a
commentaries of sports and games, news, computer.
debates on TV, radio and expresses opinions 08.03.55 Participates in language games and activities
about them. for language learning.
08.03.32 Reads textual / non-textual materials in
English. Language Study
08.03.33 Identifies details, characters, main idea and Be aware of the following concepts to understand how
sequence of ideas and events while reading. language is used.
08.03.34 Reads, compares, contrasts, thinks critically The Alphabet :
and relates ideas to life.  Phonetic symbols
08.03.35 Reads a variety of texts for pleasure. For Parts of Speech :
example, adventure stories, science fiction,  Finite verbs and Infinitives, Gerund, Participles,Time,
non-fiction articles, narratives, travelogues, Tense and Aspects, Degrees of Comparison, Pronoun and
biographies etc. (Extensive reading.) its types
Sentence Structure :
08.03.36 Fill forms correctly.
 Phrase and Clause
08.03.37 Voices his / her doubts, problems, etc. clearly  Coordination and Subordination (Simple, Compound and
but politely in writing. Complex Sentences)
08.03.38 Explains a concept / an idea in short.  Transformation
 Negative Constructions
08.03.39 Compares and contrasts bits of information,
etc.  Joining Sentences
 Reported Speech
08.03.40 Attempts using different styles and Vocabulary and Word building :
techniques of writing and literary devices to  Minor processes of word - building
make his / her writing more effective.  Reduplicatives, Clipping,Blending, Acronym
08.03.41 Prepares a write up after seeking information Punctuation :
in print, online, noticeboard, newspaper etc.  Quotation marks, Apostrophe, Use of Capitals
08.03.42 Writes a coherent and meaningful Speech :
paragraph through the process of drafting,  Syllables, Stress, Intonation
revising, editing and finalizing. Figures of Speech :
08.03.43 Writes short paragraphs coherently in English.  Personification, Hyperbole, Apostrophe, Idioms
Contents

1.1 A Time To Believe 1


1.2 Dick Whittington and his Cat 5
1.3 The Pilgrim 12
1.4 Revathi’s Musical Plants 16

2.1 Vocation 26
2.2 Nature Created Man and Woman as Equals 30
2.3 The Worm 36
2.4 Three Visions for India 39
2.5 The Happy Prince 45

3.1 The Plate of Gold 56


3.2 The Kite Festival 61
3.3 The Last Leaf 66
3.4 Leisure 73

4.1 The Vet 76


4.2 Revolutionary Steps In Surgery 80
4.3 The Bees 87
4.4 Ramanujan 91
4.5 A Battle to Baffle 98
1.1 A Time To Believe

1. Think, choose and fill up the labels with what a ‘sunrise’ symbolizes.
(jewellery / art / hope / birth / anger / new opportunities / good manners / inspiration
/ new achievements / happiness / misery / bright moments / new aims / money / new
surprises)

2. An acrostic is a poem or a write-up in which the first letter of each line forms a
word, when it is read vertically.
For example, Faithful
Reliable
Inspiring
Encouraging
Noble
Dedicated
With your benchmate / group, complete the acrostic of BELIEVE and FAITH.
(Please note that the words / phrases should be more or less related to the topic. You can
use a thesaurus.)
Be certain of F
E A
L I
I T
E H
V
Generally a thesaurus is a reference book that lists words
E grouped together according to similarity of meaning.
(Containing synonyms and sometimes antonyms)

1
1.1 A Time to Believe

‘‘To believe is to know that


everyday is a new beginning.
Is to trust that miracles happen,
and dreams really do come true.
What should one
know and trust every To believe is to see angels
day?
dancing among the clouds.
stardust : having a To know the wonder of a stardust sky
magical quality
and the wisdom of the man in the moon.
What are the two
super - natural To believe is to know the value of a nurturing heart,
references in the 2nd The innocence of a child’s eyes
stanza?
and the beauty of an aging hand,
nurturing : providing
nourishment, care for it is through their teachings, we learn to love.
and protection
To believe is to find the strength
aging : growing old
and courage that lies within us,
What two qualities
are needed to recover, When it is time to pick up
after a shocking the pieces and begin again.
event?

pick up the pieces :


To believe is to know
return to normal after we are never alone,
a shock or disaster
That life is a gift
and this is our time to cherish it.
cherish : hold
To believe is to know
something as very
dear and of great that wonderful surprises are just
value
waiting to happen,
And all our hopes and dreams are within reach.
within reach : If only we believe.’’
possible to achieve - B J Morbitzer

What kind of attitude


does the poet advise
everybody to have?

2
1. (A) Rearrange the letters to make meaningful words, occuring in the poem.
(1) clearmis
(2) sowmid
(3) gearuoc
(4) rissupser
(5) tabyue
(6) madres
(7) laveu
(8) downre

(B) Write words from the poem that describe the following.
(1) sky
(2) heart
(3) hand
(4) beginning
(5) surprises

2. Say WHY. . . . .

(a) the sky has a magical quality.

(b) even an aging hand has beauty.

(c) we should believe that we are strong and courageous.

3. Make a list of any six things that the poet wants us to accept as true.
(a)
(b)
(c)
3
(d)
(e)
(f)

4. Find from the poem, positive qualities to fill up the web.

Positive Qualities

5. Read the lines below.


(A) ‘To believe is to see angels dancing among the clouds’.
The above line contain a human characteristic ‘dancing’ given to something
non - human, ‘angels’. The Figure of Speech used in the line is called
‘Personification’.
(B) ‘To believe is to know that
Everyday is a new beginning’.
(C) To believe is to know .......... life is a gift
Lines in poetry, such as the above, state a general truth and can be used as sayings or
quotes etc. They contain the Figure of Speech called Epigram.
Epigram closely resembles a proverb.

l Find from the poem three other examples of Epigram.


(1)
(2)
(3)

6. Divide the class into 5 groups. Each group can prepare a decorative chart / poster
using an epigrammatic lines from the poem. You may use calligraphy / painting /
or Paint programme on a computer. (With permission, put up these charts in your
school.)

4
1.2 Dick Whittington and his Cat

1. Discuss the following in groups and write the answers.


(a) Name the world famous personalities, who reached great heights despite of
humble circumstances.

(b) Guess the types of hardships they must have faced in their childhood and youth.
(i) (ii)
(iii) (iv)
(c) What strong qualities possessed by them, could have helped them achieve success
and fame, all over?
(i) (ii)
(iii) (iv)
(d) How do stories / biographies of such famous people help youngsters?
(i) (ii)
(iii) (iv)

2. Syllable : A syllable is a unit of pronunciation that has one vowel sound and may
or may not have consonant sounds before / after it.
Examples of words having : One syllable : a, I, see, at, on, man, with, thread
Two syllables : mother, seated, giraffe, parrot, active,
happy
Three syllables : happiness, wonderful, animal,
surprising, adventure, ignorance.
More than three syllables : consequently, encouragement,
responsibility, identifying, encyclopedia

Write the names of any 5 of your classmates and list how many syllables each
name has.

5
Dick Whittington and his Cat

There was once a poor boy called Dick Whittington


who lived in a small village in the south of England.
He had no proper home, for both his parents had died
and he was unkindly treated by many of the villagers.
One day, Dick overheard someone say that the streets
of London were paved with gold and he decided that
What innocent belief he would go there at once and pick his fortune up
made Dick decide to in gold pieces from the streets, for he thought people
go to London? might treat him more kindly, if he were rich.
So young Dick set out to walk to London. He had
not gone far when a man in a cart stopped and asked
him if he was running away from home. “I have no
home,” Dick answered. “I am on my way to London
to find my fortune.”
“I’m going to London myself,” said the carter.
“Jump up here beside me and we will journey together.”
They arrived in London just before nightfall and
the carter left Dick and made his way to an inn. Poor
dismay : great Dick stood alone and looked around him in dismay.
disappointment Where was all that fine gold ? All he could see were
dirty streets and lots of unfriendly people. He had
nowhere to sleep and in the end he spent the night in
alley : a narrow the corner of an alley where he hoped he would come
passage between or to no harm.
behind buildings The next morning Dick woke up cold, miserable
and very hungry. He wandered around begging for
What hardships did food, but again and again people shouted at him, “Go
he face on arriving
away you lazy fellow! Be off with you,” and aimed
in London?
angry blows at his head. At last he collapsed in the
street and lay there, too weak to look further for food.
By chance, Dick had fallen in front of a house
belonging to a rich merchant called Mr Fitzwarren.
The cook was trying to drive Dick away, when Mr
Fitzwarren returned home from inspecting his ships. He
stopped and said to Dick, “Why don’t you work if you
need food ?”
“I would work,’’ said Dick, “but I know nobody
who will give me anything to do.”

6
“Take him into the kitchen,” Mr Fitzwarren ordered
the cook. “Feed him first and then find some work for
him.”
How did Mr
So Dick was given a home and a living. He had a Fitzwarren favour
small corner of the attic to sleep in and his job was to Dick?
help the cook with all the pots and pans in the kitchen. attic : a very small
Dick’s life should have been much better than before, room inside a
but he still had two difficulties to face. pointed roof
The first was that the attic he slept in was overrun
What difficulties did
by rats and mice. At night they scampered all over Dick have to face
him and kept him awake. After a time he solved this at Mr Fitzwarrens
problem by saving the few pennies he was paid, and house?
buying himself a cat. In no time at all, the cat chased scampered : ran
away all the rats and mice, and Dick was able to here and there
sleep peacefully.
The other difficulty, which was not so easy to How did the cat
overcome, was the cook’s bad temper. She shouted and prove to be very
useful?
screamed all day, and would scold Dick and hit him
with a wooden spoon, even when he was working as
overcome : succeed
hard as he could.
in dealing with a
One night Dick decided he could stand it no more. problem
Early the next morning before the cook was up, he set
out with his cat to seek his fortune elsewhere. The two
of them walked as far as Holloway, on their way out
of London, then Dick sat down on a stone to rest. It
was the first of November, All Saint’s Day, and the
church bells were ringing. As Dick sat and listened it
seemed they were ringing out a message for him :
Turn again Whittington,
Thou worthy citizen,
Lord Mayor of London.
“Lord Mayor of London ?” said Dick. “I should like
to be Lord Mayor and ride in a fine coach. I can put
up with a few scoldings from the cook if that is what
put up with :
is in store for me.” So Dick and his cat retraced their tolerate
steps to Mr Fitzwarren’s house. Luckily they were able
to slip back before they had been missed. What inspired Dick
Now Mr Fitzwarren used to send ships far across to return back to
Mr Fitzwarren’s
the sea to trade with other countries. He would load
home?
a ship with goods for the captain and ship’s crew to
sell in faraway places and then they would bring back
goods that could be sold at home.
7
One day he called his household together. “I am
sending a ship to the African coast to trade,” he said.
“Would any of you like to send something of yours
on it ? You can then share in the profits if the voyage
is successful.” Everyone produced something except for
Dick, who had nothing to offer. “Have you nothing
of your own, Dick ?” asked Mr Fitzwarren kindly, and
Dick replied, “Only my cat.”
“Then let your cat go on the ship,” said Mr
Fitzwarren. His daughter, Alice, said, “Dick loves his
cat. Let me put something in for him.” But her father
said, “No, it must be his, not something belonging to
someone else.”

Why was the So Dick fetched his cat and said goodbye to it
Captain of the ship sadly. The captain of the ship was delighted, for the
so overjoyed? cat was an excellent mouser and so he had no trouble
with rats and mice on his voyage.

mouser : an animal After some months the ship arrived at a place on


that catches mice the African coast, Barbary, where people called the
Moors lived. The captain sent a message to the king
to say he had fine goods for sale and he was invited
What happened when to the palace to show them. While he was talking to
food was brought in, the king and queen some dishes of food were brought
at the palace? in, but almost immediately rats and mice ran up and
before the captain’s eyes, ate all the food. The captain
was astonished and asked if this was what normally
happened.
“Alas, yes !” came the reply. “The country is
plague : (here) a suffering from a plague of rats and mice and we
thing that causes cannot get rid of them.”
great trouble
“I think I may have the answer on my ship,” said
the captain, and he sent a message asking for Dick’s
cat to be brought to the palace. More food was laid
out and the rats and mice appeared as before. The cat
immediately pounced, killing at least a dozen before
they scattered. Everyone was delighted and the queen
asked, “What do you call this animal ?”
“Puss is the name she answers to,” said the captain
Why was the queen and when the queen called, “Puss, puss,” the cat went
afraid of the cat? over to her and purred. The queen was a little alarmed
at first, as she had seen how fiercely the cat had
8
attacked the rats and mice, but the captain told her
not to be anxious. “Puss is very friendly with people,”
he said, “and would soon rid your kingdom of rats
and mice.”
“I would give great wealth to own this animal,”
said the queen.
So the captain began bargaining and it was agreed
that the king would buy the whole cargo from Mr
Fitzwarren’s ship to pay a fine price for it and for How much did the
the cat alone the king paid ten times the sum again. king pay for the
When the ship came back to the Port of London, cat?
the captain showed Mr Fitzwarren the gold and jewels
he had brought from Barbary and told him the story
of the cat, the merchant sent for Dick. “From now on,
Dick” he said, “we should all call you Mr Whittington,
for you are a rich man.’’ Mr Fitzwarren then paid him
all the money the captain had received for the cat.
From this time on Dick worked with Mr Fitzwarren
and became a successful merchant himself. He married
Mr Fitzwarren’s daughter Alice and three times he
was elected Lord Mayor of London. He was also in
time knighted by the king and became Sir Richard knighted : given a
Whittington. He was not only famous, but he was highly honoured title
popular too, for he always helped the poor with his
money. Sometimes when he was old, he would tell his What changes had
grandchildren the story of his cat, and how the bells the cat brought to
of London had called him back when he was only a Dick’s life?
poor boy :
Turn again Whittington,
Thou worthy citizen,
Lord Mayor of London.

1. (A) Arrange the following set of words in the alphabetical order in your notebook.
ship, small, successful, scoldings, stone, saving, someone, stood, streets, still,
screamed, sat, seemed, saint, share.

(B) Remove the Affixes (Prefix and Suffix) and write the Root-word.
(1) successful (2) immediately
(3) retrace (4) mouser

9
(5) unfriendly (6) fallen
(7) unkind (8) wooden
(9) luckily (10) belonging

2. (A) Find from the story one word for the following.
(a) a small room just below a sloping roof
(b) a very narrow passage between buildings
(c) the highest - ranking officer in the Municipality of a city/town
(d) the highest ranking official who commands a ship
(e) any animal that catches mice
(f) a low constant sound made by cats

(B) Make sentences of your own using the following expressions.


(1) overcome :

(2) put up with :

(3) bargain :

3. Rearrange the following events as they occur in the story. Put the correct number in
the boxes.
(a) Mr Fitzwarren provided shelter to Dick.
(b) A carter gave Dick a lift to London.
(c) A cat sailed to the African coast.
(d) The captain sold the cat for a very high amount of money.

(e) Dick left his village on foot, to go to London.

(f) Dick became rich, and later, the Mayor of London.

(g) Dick was homeless, helpless, cold and hungry.

(h) Dick bought a cat to get rid of the mice.

(i) The rats and mice ate up all the dinner, laid for the king and queen.

4. Think and answer.


(a) What decision taken by Dick changed his fortune?
(b) What message does this story bring out for youngsters?

10
5. (A) Break the words below into syllables as shown in the first one.
(a) belonging : be - long - ing (f) morning :
(b) unfriendly : (g) citizen :
(c) anything : (h) message :
(d) difficulty : (i) mayor :
(e) captain : (j) elected :

(B) Degrees of Comparison of Adjectives.


Read the sentences.
(i) Yatin is strong.
(ii) Amit is stronger than Yatin.
(iii) Pravin is the strongest of all.
In sentence (i) the Adjective ‘strong’ is in its simple form. It is called
Positive Degree.
In sentence (ii) the Adjective ‘stronger’ refers to a higher degree, when
there is a comparison of two nouns. It is called Comparative Degree. (-er is
added to the basic Adjective)
In sentence (iii) the adjective ‘strongest’ refers to the highest degree of
comparison of one with more than two nouns. It is called Superlative
Degree. (-est is added to the basic Adjective)
Complete the table of degrees of comparison.

Positive Comparative Superlative


(1) great
(2) famous
(3) easier
(4) worse
(5) poorest
(6) laziest
(7) little
(8) worthier
(9) popular

6. Select any one of the famous personalities mentioned in ‘Warming up 1’ on page


no. 5. From the library or internet find out their success story. Write it in your own
words in about 20 to 30 lines of your notebook.
Give your write-up a suitable title.

11
1.3 The Pilgrim

1. Make groups and discuss the following :

(a) What fatal dangers / problems did mankind face centuries ago, but are no
longer a threat today?

(b) Name a few scientists / explorers /social reformers / inventors / discoverers,


who spent most of their lives to find solutions to some major problems /
setbacks, that mankind faced.

(c) Did they themselves suffer from those problems / setbacks?

(d) What inspired them to spend the best part of their lives to research and
share their findings?

2. Read and understand the following poetic devices.

(A) If two or more words in the same line convey the same meaning, the Figure of
Speech in that line is called Tautology.
For example : It brought joy and cheer.
They groaned with aches and pains.

(B) Poets often change the proper grammatical order of words in the line of a
poem, in order to make the lines rhyme or to emphasize upon something. The
Figure of Speech in such lines is called ‘Inversion’ or ‘Anastrophe.’
For example : Up came the sun. Down the hill, it flowed.

(C) When a question is asked in order to create a dramatic effect and not to
get an answer, in a line of the poem, the Figure of Speech used is called
Interrogation / Rhetorical Questions :
For example : What is this life, if full of care?
When can their glory fade?

12
The Pilgrim

A pilgrim, going a lone high way

Came at evening, cold and gray


chasm : ravine, a
To a chasm, deep and vast and wide. very deep, steep
gap in the earth’s
The old man crossed in the twilight dim. surface
What did the pilgrim
The chasm held no fear for him. do, although he had
already crossed the
But he paused when he reached the other side chasm?

And built a bridge to span the tide. span the tide : go


across the tide
“Old man,” said a fellow pilgrim near,
What puzzled the
“Why waste your time in building here? fellow pilgrim?

Your journey ends with the close of the day

You never again will pass this way.

You have crossed the chasm deep and wide


ye : (archaic) you
Why build ye here at even tide ?” even tide : late
evening

13
The pilgrim raised his old gray head,

“My friend in the path I’ve come,” he said,


What could be the
third pilgrim? “There followeth after me today

A fair haired youth, who must pass this way.

The chasm which held no fears for me

pitfall : trap To the fair haired youth, may a pitfall be.

He, too, must cross in the twilight dim.

My friend, I am building this bridge for him.”


- Anonymous

1. Pick out words from the poem to fill in the web diagram. They should be related to
the theme in the web.

Time
Travel around
sunset

2. The entire poem is metaphorical (Implied comparison).


Match the words in Column A with what they imply in Column B.
A B
(1) pilgrim (a) threat to life

(2) journey (b) trap

(3) evening or close of day (c) life

(4) chasm, deep and wide (d) death

(5) building a bridge (e) old age

(6) pitfall (f) a dutiful man

(7) close of day (g) solving the problem / getting rid of threat
to life
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)
14
3. (A) Read the poem and write 3 qualities of each of the following.

The old pilgrim The fellow - pilgrim

The young pilgrim

(B) Answer in your own words.

(a) Why did the old man have no need to build the bridge, across the chasm ?

(b) What explanation did he give to the fellow- pilgrim for his thoughtful deed ?

(c) What message does the poem convey to all of us ?

4. (A) Note the rhyming words in the first stanza.


way - gray / wide-side- tide / dim -him.
Poet has used a deliberate pattern of lines that rhyme with other lines in the poem or
the stanza. This pattern can be identified by giving the rhyming pairs of words the
same letter of the alphabet.
For example: 1st stanza of this poem has the pattern AABCCBB
So, AABCCBB is called the Rhyme Scheme of the 1st stanza of the poem
‘The Pilgrim’.
(B) Now write the Rhyme Scheme of the 2nd stanza ............. and 3rd stanza .............
Remember that a line in the 2nd or 3rd stanza may rhyme with lines in 1st stanza,
too. You may use the same letter of the alphabet as used in the 1st stanza.

(C) Find two lines that contain Inversion.

1.

2.

l Pick out one line each that contains the following Figures of Speech.
(a) Tautology :
(b) Personification :
(c) Interrogation :

5. Imagine that you are the fellow - pilgrim and you wish to share your
experience of the incident in the poem. Write a short article about it
for a magazine / journal. Also convey what change it has brought in
your life.
15
1.4 Revathi’s Musical Plants

1. Discuss in groups and share your answers with the class.


l Can you name the famous musician in Emperor Akbar’s court, who could
perform miracles, when he sang different Ragas?
l What miracles could he perform with his music?

l What impact does music have on human beings?

l Do you think music can have an impact on animals, birds and even plants?

2. Affirmative and Negative sentences


Read the sentences below and spot the difference in their framing :
1. (a) I could not complete the work.
(b) I failed to complete the work.
2. (a) There is no sense in what you say .
(b) There is hardly any sense in what you say.
3. (a) He said he wouldn’t go.
(b) He refused to go.
You will observe that sentences marked (a) and (b) convey the same
meaning. But in all sentences marked (a) there are negative words (no, not,
wouldn’t) where as the ones marked (b) do not have them.
Negative words are those that convey a negative meaning.
For example : never, no, neither, nor, not, cannot, don’t, isn’t, nothing etc.
If a sentence contains Negative words, it is called a NEGATIVE SENTENCE.
If a sentence does not contain any Negative word, it is called Affirmative
sentence.
Say whether the following sentences are Affirmative or Negative ones.
(1) We must avoid hurting others.
(2) She didn’t offer me, any help.
(3) Never give up hopes.
(4) You must keep away from bad company.
(5) There is nothing in the bag.
(6) Entry is prohibited, without permission.
Note : While interchanging Negative and Affirmative sentence, the meaning
and tense must not change.
You must use Negative words in the sentence, while transforming from
Affirmative to Negative.
You may use words like hardly / fail to / refuse / reject / avoid / prohibit /
without / ban etc., while changing Negative sentences to Affirmative.

16
Revathi’s Musical Plants

Revathi was a student of music. She was happy playing


on her violin whenever she was free. There was a small
open courtyard in front of her house, with a small cement
bench. She would sit on the bench and practise on her violin.
balsam : a plant,
There were a few potted plants in the courtyard. While usually with pink or
playing on the violin one day, she noted a pot of balsam white flowers, grown
plants near the wall. The plants were not looking normal. in gardens
They had pale green leaves and their growth was stunted. stunted : slow down
She remembered she had learnt in the lower classes that or stop growth
plants need light for normal growth. She shifted the pot to
the centre of the courtyard where there was ample sunlight. Why did Revathi
While shifting the pot, an idea struck Revathi. Why change the pot’s
location?
not participate in the ‘Best plant’ contest which was to
be held in her colony a few weeks later! Then and there
she decided to participate. Thus making up her mind,
she watered the plants and sat down on the bench and Name the favourite
started playing her violin. She was very fond of the raga raga of Revathi.
‘Mohanam’. She played the raga for some time and then
went in for her studies.
Everyday, Revathi would sit on the bench and
watch her potted plants. They were growing well and
looking healthier than the other plants in the far end of
the courtyard. One day as she was playing, she noticed a
movement in her potted plants. They were slowly moving
their stems, bending slightly towards her. She wondered
why they were moving as there was no breeze. It struck struck her as odd :
her as odd. to seem very strange
The next evening too she played on her violin as
usual and watched the potted plants with care. After some
What strange thing
time, like the previous day, there was a definite movement did Revathi notice
in her plants. They all bent towards her. This astonished about the potted
plant?
and surprised her. That day also, there was no breeze.
Revathi sat on the bench and played a different tune,
How did Revathi
one with a quick rhythm. She suddenly saw all plants turn confirm her new
away from her as though they did not like what she was discovery?

17
playing. Then she started playing her favourite tune again
and the plants slowly straightened themselves and bent
towards her. Her surmise became a certainty. Her plants
surmise : suppose
something is true loved to hear her favourite tune.
She kept the knowledge a secret. She did not tell
anyone, not even her mother. There were only a few days
left for the prize distribution. To her great surprise, Revathi
found her potted plants not only taller and healthier than
other balsam plants, but that they had started flowering a
few days earlier than the other plants. The flowers were big
and brightly coloured and one of the plants had an unusual
mauve : of a pale kind of flower. The flowers were mauve with white stripes.
purple colour
That evening she knew, she would definitely get the prize
for the best plants. She went to bed, dreaming of her plants
and the new type of flowers. The next day was the all -
important day. She got up in the morning and went straight
to the courtyard to see her plants. Revathi blinked for a few
minutes, for there was neither the pot nor the plants. She
looked to see if someone had moved the pot. She searched
all over. She asked her mother. Her mother said she knew
nothing either about the pot or the plants. Some of the
neighbours had been to their house the previous afternoon
and had remarked at the beautiful flowers and the healthy
- looking plants in the pot. But later, she had been busy
inside the house and had been not to the courtyard.
knew no bounds : Revathi’s grief knew no bounds. She went around
have no limits
asking every one of her neighbours but no one had been
anywhere near the pot of plants. She could not lodge a
complaint for a pot of plants. She felt as though everything
was lost. She did not mind, not getting the prize but she
really missed her plants. She had grown very fond of them.
They were her friends, who enjoyed her music.
That evening, all her friends were going to the prize
What shock did distribution ceremony. She did not want to attend. But her
Revathi receive on friends forced her to. After reaching the place, she went to
the prize distribution the benches where the potted plants were displayed. Revathi
day?
was shocked. There was her pot of plants on a bench, with
the name of a distant neighbour of hers as the competitor
written on a small piece of cardboard and placed in the
18
soil. She knew it was her pot of plants. She went to the
organisers of the show and told them about it.
The organisers were not convinced. They said,
‘‘How can you prove that the plants are yours? The lady How did Revathi
plan to convince the
who submitted them is a regular participant. How can we organisers that the
doubt her?’’ plants were hers?
Revathi wondered how to convince them. She sat
there for a few minutes looking at the plants. The sight of
the plants bending towards her while she played her violin Why did the organisers
flashed across her mind. She told the organisers that she refuse to believe that
Revathi’s plants were
could prove the plants were hers. She ran home. When she music lovers?
returned a few minutes later with her violin in, they started
laughing.
But their ridicule did not deter her from her mission. ridicule : make fun
She told them, ‘‘I know my plants and I share a secret with of
deter : discourage
them. My plants are music - lovers like me and you could
mission : an
see how they respond when I play to them.’’ important task
They all laughed louder saying that they had never undertaken
heard of plants enjoying music. They asked her, ‘‘Do plants
have ears like us to enjoy your music?’’ No one believed
her.
She felt very dejected but was determined to win dejected : sad
her plants back. She sat near her plants with her violin disappointed
and slowly started playing her favourite raga. Engrossed
in her music, Revathi even forget her plants for a time,
but the others could not.
With wonder in their
eyes, they watched the
plants. Straight at first,
they bent slightly. As
she played on and on,
their stems bent towards
Revathi as though stunned : astonished
and amazed
they wanted to touch
her, in their happiness.
The organisers were
stunned. They had
watched a new

19
phenomenon of plants responding to music and Revathi
had become a great discoverer.
phenomenon : an
occurence or a They all applauded her and said they were convinced
wonder that the plants were hers.
applauded : show They pulled her neighbour up for cheating them and
praise by clapping
she accepted, after a long argument, that she had stolen
pulled up : to tell Revathi’s plants. She said while walking past Revathi’s
someone they have house she had spotted the plants and had removed the pot in
done something wrong
the night to her house and submitted it later for the contest.
Why had no one As she was a regular participant, no one doubted her.
suspected that the The authorities decided that Revathi’s plants deserved
neighbour had stolen
the plants? the first prize as they were the best - looking and healthy.
Revathi carried home the prize proudly with her pot of
What is the happy
end?
plants.

1. Read the story and complete the following.


(a) At first, Revathi’s plants did not look normal and healthy because,

(b) When Revathi played her favourite raga, the plants began to move because,

(c) Revathi’s grief knew no bounds because,

(d) Revathi was confident of proving her ownership of her pot of plants because,

(e) Revathi won the prize for the ‘Best plant’ because,

2. Answer in your own words.


(a) What did Revathi discover about her balsam plants?
(b) Why did she decide to keep her new knowledge ‘a secret’?
(c) How did the plants respond when Revathi played her favourite tune?
(d) How did the plants react to the fast rhythmic music?
(e) How did Revathi prove to the organisers of the competition, that the plants truly
belonged to her?
(f) What helped Revathi to claim her plants - her belief in magic or the belief in her
convictions? Explain your choice.
20
3. (A) A word chain consists of words of a certain category that begin with the letter,
that the previous word has ended with.
Complete the word chain adding Four Nouns from the text.
Music - courtyard - d ............... , .............. , ............... , ............... .

(B) Add the appropriate Prefix to make the following words oppposite in meaning.
l continue l possible l certain
l definite l believe l important
l place l known l regular

(C) Use the following expressions to make sentences of your own.


l make up one’s mind l flash across one’s mind
l struck as odd l to surmise
l knew no bounds l not to deter

4. Imagine there is a ‘Best Plant’ Competition in the locality / colony where


you live. Frame a Notice about the same, in the form of an attractive poster.
Cover the following points.
(1) Name of the organisation. (2) Name of the Contest.
(3) Day, Date, Venue. (4) Who can participate.
(5) Prizes. (6) Contact details for further enquiry.

5. Types of sentences
Study the following sentences.
Set (A) l Revathi was a student of music.
l The flowers were big and brightly coloured; indeed.
l They were requested to believe her.

All the above sentences are statements or assertions, and called Assertive or Declarative
sentences.
Set (B) l Wasn’t Revathi a student of music?
l How can we doubt her?
l Do plants have ears?
The above sentences in Set (B) are Questions. They are called Interrogative sentences.
Set (C) l Please believe me.
l Let us watch the fun.
l Sit straight.
l Excuse me.

21
In Set (C) the sentences are either requests, appeals, commands, suggestions etc. Such
sentences are called Imperative Sentences.
Set (D) l How big and bright the flowers were !
l What a surprise !
l Ah, what beautiful music that is !
Set (D) has sentences that express strong feelings. They are called Exclamatory
Sentences.
State the kinds of the following sentences.
(1) How happily she played the violin!
(2) They all bent towards her.
(3) Don’t play that quick tune.
(4) She kept the knowledge a secret.
(5) How can plants enjoy music?
(6) How proudly did Revathi carry home her prize!
(7) What could have taken my plants?
(8) The organisers were not convinced.

6. Make the following Negative using the negative words given.


(1) There were a few potted plants in the courtyard. (not many)
(2) They looked healthier than the other plants. (not as healthy as)
(3) She refused to share her secret. (would not)
(4) She went around asking everyone about her plants. (No one / did not)

7. Make the following Affirmative using the words given.


(1) There was no breeze. (hardly)
(2) Their ridicule did not deter her. (failed to)
(3) Her mother knew nothing about it. (denied)
(4) She did not give up. (refuse to)

8. Imagine that Revathi’s father is abroad on business and she wishes to convey the
news of her prize - winning plants. Draft an email for the above subject.

(Use an email format.)

22
WORD PLAY

ANAGRAMS
An anagram is a play on words created by rearranging the letters of the
original words to make a new word or phrase. Anagrams can be fun and witty.
We can often find examples of anagrams in everyday life.
For example : state - taste, dusty - study, save - vase, thing - night, etc.
Group Activity : Divide the class in four groups. The first group finds out
anagrams of 3 letters, the second group finds out anagrams of 4 letters, the third
and fourth groups find out anagrams of 4 and 5 letters respectively, in the given
time. The group which collects maximum anagrams in given time will be the
winner.
Individual Activity : Make anagrams of the following words. Remember that
an anagram contains exactly the same letters, no more no less only, in a different
order.
• ten • dairy • glean • former • auctioned • listen • allergy • funeral • teacher • dormitory

MOTHER TONGUE OR OTHER TONGUE?


There are some words in English which sound like words in your mother tongue. But,
if you consider the meaning and use, you realize that they are different words altogether.
For example :

Words Meaning in English Meaning in Marathi Meaning in Hindi


Rose a flower daily everyday
Sun / Son a star / a male heir festival year
Piece / peace a bit / calm a feather grind
calm peaceful work work

Activity : Now complete the following table.

Words Meaning in English Meaning in Marathi


Boat a finger
daughter in law
Rope a strong cord
Lake Pond
name a name of person, place or thing
more much
case container
Find more such English words which would be meaningful in your mother tongue, too.

23
Riddles

Group Activity : The teacher divides the class into four groups. The teacher asks
the groups to read the riddles and choose the correct answer for each one. The group
that finishes correctly first is the winner.

• What comes down but never goes up ?


• What has hands but cannot clap?
• Everyone has it and no one can lose it. What is it?
• What has an eye but cannot see?
• I have teeth but I cannot bite. Who am I?
• What starts with P and ends with E and has more than 1000 letters?
• Where does Friday come before Thursday?
• We see it once in a year, twice in a week and never in a day. What is it?

• What can travel around the world while it remains in a corner?


(a date / a comb / the letter ‘E’ clock / your name / a bottle / a stamp / in a dictionary /
rain / a shadow / post office / needle)
Collect / make up your own riddles in a group and present before in the class.

2. Word Building.
(a) Reduplication : The root / stem of a word is repeated exactly the same or
with a slight change.
For example, tweet-tweet, pitter-patter, chit-chat, bang-bang, riff-raff.
(b) Blending : Parts of two or more words combine to form a new one.
For example : l breakfast + lunch = brunch
l smoke + fog = smog
l motor + hotel = motel
(c) Clipping : Reducing a word to one of its syllables or a part of it.
For example: l Mathematics - Maths
l Advertisement - Ad
l Laboratory - Lab
(d) Acronym : Words formed from the first letter of each of the words
involved.
For example: l radar, scuba, Unicef, Nasa
l BBC, CID, USA, ATM, VIP
l DOB, KYC, PM, GN, TY etc.
In your notebook, write five examples of each of the above types of word-building
devices. (You may take the help of a Dictionary / Internet.)

24
(A) Grow a Sentence :
• Frame a meaningful sentence in English. It should be short and simple.
For example : ‘Yesterday , I bought a story book’.
• Write it down on a card.
• Next day try to expand the same sentence.
For example : Yestreday, I bought a story book written by Leo Tolstoy.
• On the third day, expand the previous sentence even more.
For example : Yesterday, I bought a story book written by Leo Tolstoy, who is a
famous Russian writer.
• Keep this up, till you can.
• Make sure there is connectivity and proper meaning to your final output.
• Confirm if your final sentence is appropriate, from your teacher.

(B) A Proverb a day

• Choose a Proverb every day.


• Try to understand its meaning and implied meaning if any.
• Write the proverb in a separate book and explain its meaning (in a different font).
For example : A stitch in time saves nine.
(Bad habits or weaknesses should be controlled / corrected in time before they
become a habit.)
• Now write a new proverb each day till you have a good collection of at least 25 to 30
proverbs along with their meaning in simple words.
• You may share and discuss with your teacher / parents / classmates.

(C) Expressions!
Using a similar pattern, as for proverbs think of a situation and what expression comes
out spontaneously in spoken English.
For example : Situation - shock
Expression - Oh no !
Situation - Joy
Expression - Wow! How lovely !

25
2.1 Vocation

(1) Pick out words that refer to ‘means of living’ and fill them in
the Web.
(profession / recreation / occupation / job / pastime / employment / hobby
/career / entertainment / mission / trade / buisness /sports /retirement /
placement)

Means of Living Vocation

(2) Using a good dictionary, find the shades of difference in the following :
‘Profession’ refers to
‘Vocation’ refers to
‘Business’ refers to
‘Occupation’ refers to

(3) When a word is formed from a sound associated with it, it is called an
Onomatopoetic Word.
For example : bang, tap, tinkle, crash, whistle etc.
If an Onomatopoetic word occurs in the lines of a poem, the Figure of
Speech in that line is Onomatopoeia.
Write down eight to ten Onomatopoetic words on your own.

26
Vocation

When the gong sounds ten in the morning and gong : a flat metal
I walk to school by our lane, bell rung to draw
people’s attention
Every day I meet the hawker crying, ‘‘Bangles,
crystal bangles!’’
There is nothing to hurry him on, there is no
road he must take, no place he must go to, no
time when he must come home.
I wish I were a hawker, spending my day in
the road, crying, ‘‘Bangles, crystal bangles!’’
When at four in the afternoon I come back from
the school,
I can see through the gate that house the
gardener digging the ground. What does the
He does what he likes with his spade, he soils hawker advertise
his clothes with dust, nobody takes him to aloud?
takes someone to
task, if he gets baked in the sun or gets wet.
task : scolds and
I wish I were a gardener digging away at the corrects
garden with nobody to stop me from digging.
Just as it gets dark in the evening and my
mother sends me to bed,

I can see through my open window the


one-eyed-giant :
watchman walking up and down reference to a
The lane is dark and lonely, and the street character from Greek
lamp stands like a giant with one red eye Mythology (Homer’s
in its head. Odyssey)
The watchman swings his lantern and walks Who is scolded if he
with his shadow at his side, and never once gets dirty?
goes to bed in his life. What accompanies
the watchman?
I wish I were a watchman walking the street all night,
chasing the
chasing the shadows with my lantern. shadows : following
- Rabindranath Tagore an imaginary goal/
target

27
1. Which of the following words / phrases match in meaning to the underlined ones?
(a) deserted (b) exposed to heat
(c) dirties the clothings (d) no particular route
(e) following imaginary goals (f) scolds and corrects
(i) nobody takes him to task
(ii) if he gets baked in the sun
(iii) chasing the shadows with my lantern
(iv) The lane is dark and lonely
(v) he soils his clothes with dust
(vi) There is no road he must take
2. Read the poem and fill in the table.

Time of the Location Poet’s Activity Hawker’s Gardener’s Watchman’s


day Activities Activities Activities
Morning
Afternoon

Night

3. Think and answer in your own words.


(a) What could be the age group of the speaker in the poem?
(b) What is the difference between a hawker and a shopkeeper?
(c) How do parents react when they see children soil their clothes in dust
and heat?
(d) Why is the street light compared to a one-red-eyed-giant?
(e) What exactly does the speaker in the poem crave for?
(f) Does the poet really wish to become a hawker/gardener/watchman? Justify
your response.
4. Say why the speaker of the poem wishes to be a -
(a) hawker (b) gardener (c) watchman.

5. Pick out lines that contain Alliteration, Simile, Repetition, Onomatopoeia.


6. Some poets do not use uniformity in rhyming words, nor a steady rhythm. Such
poems with no uniformity in rhyme, rhythm, length of lines or stanzas are called
Free Verse. Walt Whitman, Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, Rabindranath Tagore are
some famous poets who have composed poems in Free Verse.

28
A quick glance at the poem ‘Vocation’ reveals that the style used by Tagore is
Free Verse.
Now turn the pages of your textbook and see if you can find other poems in
Free Verse.

7. What vocation / profession / business would you like to take up in future?


Prepare a fact file for the same using the following points.
(i) Name of the vocation / profession / business
(ii) Educational qualifications required
(iii) Work profile / description
(iv) Opportunities for advancement
(v) Your personal skills / talents for the choice
8. Read and understand the following poem ‘Paper Boats’ and write its
paraphrase in your own simple language. (You may take the help of dictionary
or internet.) The first line is done for you.
(Day after day, one after another, I sail paper boats on the stream of flowing water.)

Paper Boats
Day by day I float my paper boats, one by one on the running
stream.
In big black letters I write my name on them and the name of the
village where I live.
I hope that someone in some strange land will find them and know
who I am.
I load my little boats with shiuli flower from our garden, and hope
that these blooms of the dawn will be carried safely to land in the
night.
I launch my paper boats and look up into the sky and see the
little clouds setting their white bulging sails.
I know not what playmate of mine in the sky sends them down
the air to race with my boats !
When night comes I bury my face in my arms and dream that my
paper boats float on and on under the midnight stars.
The fairies of sleep are sailing in them, and the lading is their
baskets full of dreams.

(Note :‘lading’ means cargo loaded in a ship.)

29
2.2 Nature Created Man and Woman as Equals

(A) Study the pictures below and note down the differences.
Differences

Differences

(B) Now write what you observe in the following two pictures.

(C) Which pictures reflect gender equality? Write their numbers.



(D) Write down any two Slogans on ‘Gender Equality’.


(1)
(2)

30
Nature Created
Man and Woman as Equals

The house and its surroundings are a sight of peace


in the early morning of April. It nestles by the side nestles : is close to
of a small stream of crystal-clear water. The stream
tumbles down the green mountains only two miles or so
away. There is a stretch of hundreds of acres of fertile
land rolling with yellow mustard flowers, between the rolling : extending
mountain range and the house. A garden is in front in long gentle slopes
of the house. Trees of many kinds bearing flowers of
various hues and fruits grow on all sides of the house.
The courtyard smells of jasmine which blooms in
bunches of white pearls. The fragrance mingles with fragrance : pleasant
the thin smoke that rises from sweet smelling incense smell
sticks. The burning incense sticks are glowing at the
Make a list of the
altar of God in the middle of the courtyard.
beautiful natural
Ashangbi is in her reading - room and is busy surroundings of the
writing an article. She is a middle - aged mother of three house.
children and a journalist and woman’s rights activist.
Lanthoi, her youngest daughter, enters the room. She What help did
is an intelligent girl. Today she looks thoughtful and Lanthoi need from
she takes a seat by her mother’s side. At the sight of her mother?
her child, Ashangbi lovingly asks, “Have you finished symposium : a
your study, my dear ?” “Yes, mother, I finished it last meeting at which
night. Today being Sunday, I want to do something experts have
interesting.” Lanthoi says and waits for her mother’s discussion on a
response. “Tell me what you want to do,” Ashangbi particular subject
asks her quite amused. “Mother, tomorrow I’m going
presses on :
to represent the Siroi Lily House as a speaker in a
persuades some one
symposium at our school. The topic is ‘God Created to do something
Men and Women As Equals’. Will you spare some
What did Lanthoi’s
time to have a discussion with me ?” Lanthoi presses
father work as?
on her mother.
Lanthoi has just had a discussion with her father discriminate : treat
on the topic. Tomba, her father, is a husband supportive one person or group
of the activities of his wife and a loving father. He is better or worse than
a lawyer and a social worker, who advocates the cause another, in an unfair
of women. He is always proud of his wife, the two way
daughters and the son. In times of need, he extends In what way did
his helping hand to his wife and children and to the Tomba contribute
society at large. He does not discriminate between a towards Ashangbi’s
man’s work and a woman’s work anywhere. He shares success?

31
equally with his wife in doing the household chores like
cleaning, washing, cooking and feeding the children. Had
he not shared in these activities in the way he does,
his wife would not have been a successful professional.
He wholeheartedly believes in equality irrespective of
gender : fact of class, religion and gender. In his discussion with his
being male or female daughter, he laments over the great injustice done on
laments : expresses women in the society, telling her, “My dear child, the
grief and sorrow world is still full of inequalities. We have to find a
way to bring equality between men and women”.
Her father’s words are still ringing in the ears of
Lanthoi. And she tells her mother of what her father
has told her.
How did mother
explain Lanthoi’s Appreciative of her husband for his views,
topic for her speech Ashangbi says, “Your father is right. In no society do
at school? women enjoy the same opportunities enjoyed by men.
It is because of your father that I feel no difference
or inequality at home. But, outside our home, I have
subjugated : seen that women have been subjugated in many ways.
controlled and It is against the will of God. God has sent men and
dominated over women to our Earth to share the joys and sorrows
of life equally, to share His blessings and to enjoy
the bounty of Nature equally. This is what your topic
means”.
Ashangbi knows well that men and women are
equal. Women, who are half of the human race, are
as important as men. She writes and talks about such
topics. Her daughter, though a child, also understands
well that her mother is not a person of lesser quality
than her father. She says, “Our home is full of love
How is the role of with you, mother.”
a mother honoured The mother beams with joy at the words of her
and praised? daughter. As a matter of fact, mother is the fountain
of love in a family. This bond of love is beyond
glorified : praised
comparison with anything else in the world. It is
pioneer : a person because of this that motherhood has been glorified
who is among the and women accept the challenges in life to become a
first to take up a mother.
cause especially in a Showing deep affection, Ashangbi continues,
new region. “Pioneer women testify to the equality of women with
men. Actually, life is not possible without both women
testify : provide and men”.
proof / evidence
Lanthoi has been fascinated by the stories of
pioneer women. Her grandmother had narrated many
32
stories of the brave queens like Linthoingambi and
Kuranganayani, who were as brave as kings. There
were also many brave women among the common
people. These women, as her grandmother narrated,
were makers of home, family, society and the nation. civilizing : educating
They were civilizing influences. At the same time,
they were also adventurers who claimed their shares
in free land, ploughed and raised crops with their own What are the
hands and drove cattle. Modern women have become achievements of
mountaineers, naturalists, astronauts, scientists, soldiers modern women?
and political leaders. This proves that there is nothing
a woman cannot do and also that women and men throw light on : to
were created as equals. give information or
Then she asks her mother further, “Mother, you’ve explanation
thrown light on the equality of men and women and
legal : related to
also have emphasized that the world is still an unequal
law
world. Then, what I would like to know is if there are
potential : the
moral, social and legal provisions to enable women
qualities that
to express their physical and mental potential and to
exist and can be
set themselves free from suppression”. Amazed at the
developed
curiosity of her daughter, Ashangbi adds :
“There are many. Under the aegis of the United under the aegis :
Nations, there is a declaration for a new world of with the protection
equality. It has the following dimensions : or support of
(a) equal access to basic social services including (a particular
health and education. organization or
person)
(b) equal participation in political and economic
dimensions : aspects
decision - making.
(c) equal reward for equal work, and
(d) elimination of discrimination and violence against elimination : getting
women.” rid of
Then the mother concluded, “My dear daughter, we What social justice
can affirm along with the United Nations that men and does the aegis of
women are equals.” the United Nations
guarantee?
Lanthoi understands what her mother means
and what the topic of the symposium means. Thus, What vision meets
confident of success, the next day, after thanking her her eye, when
mother, the girl of twelve happily rushes out of the Lanthoi rushes
room in the bright morning sun. The blue sky meets outdoors?
the range of the eastern mountains. The small girl is
always fascinated by the small trail which winds up What does that
the distant purple mountain. vision symbolize?

33
1. (A) Find from the lesson words / phrases that mean the following.
(a) colours
(b) a person who writes for newspapers/magazines
(c) make a difference between
(d) cry over
(e) explain in detail
(f) abilities and qualities
(g) same availability
(h) a person who brings about a social/political change

(B) Pick out five Compound words from the lesson.




2. Answer in your own words.

(a) Read and write down 5 points which prove that Tomba, (Lanthoi’s father) firmly
believes in gender equality.

(b) In what ways is Ashangbi different from other women of her community?

(c) What are the provisions in the Declaration of the United Nations, to ensure equality
of men and women?

3. Who said to whom and when / why?

When /
Who said? To whom?
why?
......the world is full of inequalities.

I want to do something interesting.

It is against the will of God.

Our home is full of love.......

...... we can affirm along with United


Nations that men and women are equal.

34
4. We have studied in previous classes that Pronouns are words used instead of Nouns.
We also know about Personal Pronouns like I, you, he, she, my, your, his, her, they etc.
There are other words also which are used in place of nouns.
(i) This, that, these, those point to some noun.
For example : ‘This is a kingfisher.’ ‘Those are herons.’ Such Pronouns are called
Demonstrative Pronouns.
(ii) Some pronouns not only replace nouns, but also connect two sentences.
For example : ‘Biology is a science. It studies living organisms.’
Biology is a science which / that studies living organisms.
Some other such pronouns are who, whose, whom etc.
They are called Relative Pronouns.
(iii) Some pronouns are used to ask questions.
For example : What is your name?
Which is your coat?
Who is your coach?
The underlined words are Interrogative Pronouns.
Underline the Pronouns in the following sentences and name their types.
(1) What do you want to do?
(2) It is because of your father that I feel no inequality.
(3) This is what your topic means.
(4) She is fascinated by the small trail, which winds up the mountain.

5. Read the following lines. Imagine it is the beginning of an instance you have
experienced. Complete the incident using your imagination. Give it a positive ending.
I had often noticed that in my neighbour’s family, the son was greatly pampered, but the
daughter was treated unfairly. I could not bear this. So one day I decided to .......................
................
Continue the write-up, with your own ideas, in about 12 - 15 lines.

6. Project :
From your school library or internet collect quotations / slogans promoting gender
equality. Make decorative posters with pictures of outstanding women or sketches or
illustrations of your choice. With permission, put up the posters in your school surroundings.

35
2.3 The Worm

(1) ‘Worms play a very important role in maintaining ecological balance. They are
friends of farmers.’
Form groups and discuss the significance of worms in the above two roles.

(2) Think and write down how the following creatures can be useful :
(a) Dragon fly :
(b) Spider :
(c) Ants :
(d) Honeybees :
(e) Earthworms :

(3) Little creatures in nature can also be your teachers.


Think and write what we can learn from the following.
(a) Bees :
(b) Ants :
(c) Spiders :
(d) Caterpillars :

(4) Breeding worms to use them to convert organic waste into fertilizer is called
Vermiculture or vermicomposting.
Find out more about Vermiculture and how you can carry out the same in your
garden / backyard, to fertilize your plants at home.

36
The Worm

Turn, turn thy hasty foot aside, hasty : hurried and


careless
Nor crush that helpless worm ! scornful : filled with
The frame thy scornful looks deride hate
deride : express
Requir’d a God to form. hatred
Why should we take
The common Lord of all that move, care even of small
worms?
From whom thy being flow’d,
thy being : your life,
A portion of His boundless love existence
On that poor worm bestow’d. bestow’d : given as
a gift
The sun, the moon, the stars He made
To all His Creatures free :
What other
And spreads o’er earth the grassy blade, creations of God are
mentioned?
For worms as well as thee.

Let them enjoy their little day,


lowly : humble,
Their lowly bliss received;
simple
O do not lightly take away
bliss : joy, pleasure
The life thou canst not give !
Explain the thought
in the last two lines
- Thomas Gisborne in simple words.

1. Read the poem aloud and you will find some old outdated words that we do not use in
everyday language now.
However, some writers / poets use them to impart an old-fashioned flavour to suit the
background of their write-up. Such words are called Archaic words.
Give the modern words for the archaic words from the poem.
thy
being
37
bestow’d
thee
thou
cans’t
Read any poem / sonnet by William Shakespeare. Pick out archaic words and guess
what they mean.

2. The poet uses a device where he directly addresses someone absent or abstarct. Such a
device is the Figure of Speech called ‘Apostrophe’.
For example : Turn, turn, thy, hasty, foot aside.
l Pick out any two other lines from the poem that contain an Apostrophe.

3. Think and answer in your own words in your notebook.


(a) Why does the poet appeal to us, to respect the life of worm?
(b) Why do you think God created worms? What is their ecological importance?
(c) ‘Live and let live’ is a famous proverb. Which lines from the poem support this
proverb?
(d) Does the poem urge us to protect only worms?
What is the general message conveyed through this poem?
4. Find from the library or internet other poems composed on tiny living creatures.
Try to understand the message in each of them.

5. ‘Even small things in nature play a big role. So protect nature!’


Frame some solgans based on the above topic.
Draft a short speech on the above topic, which you could give at your school
assembly.
Use the following steps while drafting.
Greeting Salutation Self - introduction
Introduction of the topic Body of the Speech Conclusion
Expression of gratitude to audience

6. Paraphrase the poem in your own simple language. Write it down in your notebook.
7. Frame a pointwise Analysis of the poem ‘The worm’. Use the following points.
(a) Poem and poet :
(b) Theme :
(c) Tone :
(d) Structure and stanzas :
(e) Rhyme and Rhythm :
(f) Language and Imagery :
(g) Figures of Speech :
38
2.4 Three Visions for India

1. Read the Preamble of the Constitution of India given in your textbook. Pick
out words that refer to the following.
(i) Brotherhood
(ii) Freedom
(iii) Earnestly and seriously
(iv) Fair and impartial treatment
(v) Having supreme authority
(vi) Unity and oneness
(vii) A promise made to oneself

2. Finite and Non- finite Verbs.


Verbs are Action words. They can be Finite or Non-finite.
Read the sentences below, focusing on the verbs.
(a) I play football.
(b) He plays football.
(c) They play football.
(d) Manish plays football.
We notice that the verb ‘play’ as we change the person (First / Second /
Third) or Number (Singular / Plural) of the Subject.
When the use of a verb is limited by the Person or Number of the Noun /
Pronoun in the Subject, we call it a Finite Verb.
l Now read the sentences below.
(a) I like to play football.
(b) He likes to play football.
(c) They like playing football.
(d) Manish likes to play football.
In the sentences above the verb ‘to play’ or ‘playing’ do not change or take
‘-s’ or ‘-es’ after them, even when we change the Person or Number of the
Subject.
to + verb / verb + ing / verb + en / ed / having + verb + en / ed are not limited
by their Subject. Such verbs are called Non-finite Verbs.

39
Three Visions for India

What helped Dr
Kalam fix the three Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, the
visions for India? father of India’s integrated guided
missile program, states three visions
vision : a dream, for India based on the achievements
an ideal. and progress that he has witnessed
in the history of the nation and
during his own career, as a missile
standing up to :
scientist. Dr Kalam’s three visions
being brave and
for India are FREEDOM, DEVELOPMENT, and
facing challenges
STANDING UP. The focus of his presentation is on
potential : capacity, developing India to its fullest potential, while standing
ability up to the rest of the world with fully validated self-
respect for the achievements that have been obtained
validated : confirmed in the modern times.
with proof If we are not free, no one will respect us.
I have three visions for India. In 3,000 years of our
history, people from all over the world have come and
took over : took the invaded us, captured our land and conquered our minds.
authority of From Alexander onwards the Greeks, the Portuguese,
the British, the French, the Dutch - all of them came
and looted us and took over what was ours. Yet we
nurture : develop have not done this to any other nation. We have not
conquered anyone. We have not grabbed their land,
their culture and their history, nor tried to force our
How should we
way of life on them. Why ? Because we respect the
freedom of others.
handle our freedom?
That is why my first vision for India is FREEDOM.
I believe that India had its first vision of freedom in
1857, when we started the War of Independence. It is
this freedom that we must protect and nurture and
build on. If we are not free, no one will respect us.
My second vision for India is DEVELOPMENT.
For 50 years, we have been a developing nation. It is
time to see ourselves as a developed nation. We are
among the top five nations of the world in terms of
Gross Domestic Product (GDP); we have 10 per cent
growth rate in most areas.
globally recognized : Our poverty levels are falling and our achievements
noticed and accepted are being globally recognized today. Yet we lack the
all over the world self-confidence to see ourselves as a developed nation -
40
self-reliant and self - assured. Isn’t this right ?
India must stand up to the world
I have a third vision, that India must STAND UP self-reliant :
to the world or no one will respect us. Only strength self-dependant
respects strength. We must be strong not only as a What are the
military power, but also as an economic power - both characteristics of a
must go hand - in - hand. developed nation?
Why are we in India so embarassed to recognize What are the
our own strength, our achievements ? We are such a drawbacks of us
great nation. We have so many amazing success stories, Indians?
but we refuse to acknowledge them. Why ? We are the
second largest producer of wheat in the world. We are remote sensing
the second largest producer of rice. We are the first in satellites : manmade
milk production. We are number one in remote sensing satellites launched
satellites. Look at Dr Sudarshan, he has transferred into space for
the tribal village into a self - sustaining, self - driving communication,
unit. There are millions of such achievements, but our weather forecast etc.
media is obsessed only with bad news and failures and
self-sustaining :
distasters.
providing for one’s
Do we not realise that self - respect comes with needs
self - reliance?
I was in Tel Aviv once and I was reading the What is the
Israeli newspaper. It was the day after a lot of attacks prerequisite of
and bombardments and deaths had taken place. The self-respect?
Hamas had struck. But the front page of the newspaper
had the picture of a Jewish gentleman who in five years self-driving :
had transformed his desert land into an orchid farm controlling oneself
and granary. It was this inspiring picture that everyone
woke up to. The gory details of killings, bombardments gory : involving
and deaths were inside the newspaper, buried among bloodshed and
other news. Isn’t it possible in our country ? violence
I want to live in a developed India
What foreign stuff
Another question : Why are we, as a nation, so
are we Indians crazy
obsessed with foreign things ? We want foreign TVs,
about?
we want foreign shirts, we want foreign technology.
Why this obsession with everything imported ? Do we
not realise that self - respect comes with self - reliance ?
What is the dream
I was in Hyderabad giving this lecture, when a 14 of the 14 year old
year old girl asked me for my autograph. I asked her girl in Hyderabad?
what her goal in life is. She replied, “I want to live
in a developed India.” proclaim : declare
For her, you and I will have to build this developed confidently to all
India you must proclaim!
41
1. Complete Dr APJ Abdul Kalam’s profile with information picked from the
lesson.
PROFILE - Dr APJ Abdul Kalam
(a) Title :
(b) Profession :
(c) Branch of science :
(d) Important position in Government held :
(e) His three visions for India :

2. Using a dictionary / internet note down the main differences between :


(a) a developing nation and a developed nation

(b) self-reliant and self-assured

(c) our strengths and our achievements

(d) farm and granary

(e) a remote-sensing satellite and a natural satellite

3. Find evidence from the lesson and write in your own words.
(a) Indians respect the freedom of others.

(b) It is time to see ourselves as a developed nation.

(c) We Indians are obsessed with foreign things.

(d) In Israel the media have a positive outlook and self-respect.

(e) India has many amazing success stories.

42
4. Pick out some sentences from the lesson that convey a general truth.
(i) If we are not free, no one will respect us.
(ii)

5. Find out from the internet the poem ‘Song of Youth’ by Dr APJ Abdul Kalam.
(A) Copy it down in your notebook and write its theme in your own words.

(B) Using information from your school library or the Internet, prepare a
Profile of any great Indian Scientist. (Refer to Activity 1 for points.)

6. Say whether each of the verbs, underlined below, are Finite or Non-finite.

(a) We lack the confidence to see ourselves as a developed nations.


(b) We stand first in producing milk.
(c) I want to live in a developed India.
(d) We prefer buying imported things.
(e) Indians never try to force their way of life on others.
(f) Having invaded India, they captured our land.

7. Phrases and Clauses

l Study the underlined groups of words.


(i) (a) He wore a shirt made of cotton.

(b) He wore a shirt which was made of cotton.

(ii) (a) Are you sure of your innocence?

(b) Are you sure that you are innocent?

(iii) (a) This is the exact reason for his failure.

(b) This is exactly why he has failed.

(iv) (a) Pay careful attention to my words.

(b) Pay careful attention to what I say.

(v) (a) After finishing his work, he went home.

(b) He finished his work and he went home.

You will notice that all underlined groups of words in sentences marked (a) merely
refer to a concept or expression. They do not contain a Subject or a Main or Principal
Verb. Such a group of words or unit of a sentence is called a PHRASE.

43
Each of the underlined groups of words in sentences marked (b) convey a thought /
concept and have a Subject and a Principal or Main Verb.
This unit / part of a sentence is called a CLAUSE.

• Say whether the underlined parts of the following sentences are Phrases or
Clauses.

(i) People from all over the world have invaded us.
(ii) I believe that India had its first vision of freedom in 1857.
(iii) It is this freedom that we must respect.
(iv) We are a great nation.
(v) I want to live in a developed India.
(vi) We have so many amazing success stories but we refuse to acknowledge
them.
(vii) We have 10 percent growth rate in most areas.

• Replace the underlined Phrases with Clauses.

(a) Do you know his place of birth?


(b) In his absence, the thieves looted his house.
(c) I am a citizen of India. I am a citizen .

44
2.5 The Happy Prince

1. There are different types of short stories. Use a dictionary / internet and
find out what each of the following types refers to.
(a) fable :
(b) anecdote :
(c) fairy tale :
(d) parable :
(e) tragedy :
(f) humorous story :
(g) detective story :
(h) myth :
2. Have you heard of birds that fly from one part of the world to another in
small or large flocks?
They are called Migratory birds.
Discuss and write down two reasons why they migrate and return.

3. Speech or dialogues can be reported in two ways - Direct and Indirect.


When the exact words of the speaker are reported we call it Direct
Speech. When the exact words of the speaker are not reported, but just
its contents we call it Indirect Speech.
Direct Speech : Amar said, ‘‘I shall come to meet you, tomorrow, Sanket.’’
Indirect Speech : Amar told Sanket that he would go to meet him, the
next day.

Note down the changes you observe in the Indirect Speech.


(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)

45
The Happy Prince

The statue of the Happy Prince stood high above


the city. It was covered with gold, its eyes were bright
Why did people blue jewels, and a red jewel hung from its waist.
admire the statue? Everyone thought that it was very beautiful.
‘Why aren’t you like the Happy Prince?’ mothers
said to their little boys when they cried.
Sad men looked at the statue and said, ‘I am glad
that someone in the world is happy.’
One night a little Swallow flew alone over the city.
His friends had gone away but he had stayed behind
for six weeks, ‘Where can I stay tonight?’ he thought.
Then he saw the statue. ‘I will stay there,’ he thought.
‘It is high up, so there is plenty of fresh air.’
He landed between the feet of the Happy Prince. ‘I
have a golden bedroom!’ he thought. But as he put his
head under his wing, a large drop of water fell on him.
He looked up ‘That, is very strange!’ he thought.
There is not a cloud in the sky, but it is raining!’
Then another drop fell. ‘I cannot stay on a statue
that does not keep me dry,’ he thought. ‘I must find
another place.’ And he decided to fly away. But as he
opened his wings, a third drop fell. He looked up and
saw - Ah! What did he see?
The eyes of the Happy Prince were full of tears.
Tears rolled down his golden face. The face was very
What were the drops beautiful in the moonlight, and the Swallow felt sorry
that fell on the for him.
swallow?
‘Who are you?’ asked the bird.
‘I am the Happy Prince.’
‘Then why are you crying? I am wet with your
tears.’
‘When I was alive,’ said the prince, ‘I had a heart
like every other man. But I did not know what tears
When did the Happy were. I lived in a palace where there was no sadness.
Prince realize about In the daytime I played with my friends in a beautiful
his suffering people? garden, and in the evening I danced. There was a high
wall round the garden. But I did not know what lay
on the other side. So I was called the Happy Prince. I
was pleased with my little world. Now I am dead, and
46
they have put me up here. I can see all the unhappiness
of my city. My heart now is made of a cheap metal.
But even that poor heart can feel, and so I cry.’
What was the first
‘Oh,’ said the Swallow to himself, ‘he is not only
gift from the Happy
gold on the outside.’
Prince?
‘Far away from here,’ said the Happy Prince in
a low voice, ‘there is a poor house in a little street.
Through an open window, I can see a woman at a
table. Her face is very thin and she has rough, red
hands. She is making a dress for one of the queen’s
ladies, for a dance in the palace. Her little boy is lying
on a bed in the corner of the room. He is very ill. He Why was the mother
is crying because she can only give him water from the forced to ignore her
river. Little bird, will you take my red jewel to her? I ailing son?
cannot move from here.’
‘My friends are waiting for me in Egypt,’ said the
Swallow.
‘Little bird, little bird,’ said the prince, ‘Please
stay! The boy is crying and his mother is so unhappy.’
The Happy Prince looked very sad, and the little
Swallow was sorry for him. ‘It is very cold here,’ he
said ‘but I will stay with you for one night. Tomorrow
I will take the jewel.’
‘Thank you, little bird,’ said the prince.
So, the Swallow took the great red jewel from the
prince’s waist and flew away with it over the roofs of
the town. He passed the palace and heard the sound
of dancing.
The bird passed over the river and flew and flew.
At last he came to the poor little house and looked
inside. The boy was lying on the bed. The mother was
asleep; she was so tired. He flew in and put the great
red jewel on the table. Then he flew round the bed,
moving the air around the boy’s face with his wings.
‘Oh,’ said the boy, my face does not feel so hot.
I think I am getting better.’ And he fell asleep.
Why had the
Then the Swallow flew back to the Happy Prince.
Swallow felt warm?
‘It is strange,’ the Swallow said. ‘It is very cold, but
I feel quite warm.’
‘That is because you have done a good thing,’ said
the prince. The little Swallow fell asleep.
When day came, the Swallow flew down to the
river for a bath. A clever man saw him. ‘That is very
47
unusual!’ he said. ‘That kind of bird, here in winter!
I must write that down!’
‘I will go to Egypt tonight,’ thought the Swallow.
What surprised the
When the moon came up, he flew back to the
clever man?
Happy Prince. ‘Can I do anything for you in Egypt?’
he said.
‘Little bird, little bird,’ said the prince, ‘please will
you stay with me for one more night?’
‘My friends are waiting for me,’ answered the bird.
‘Far away across the city’, said the prince, ‘I can
Why was the writer see a young writer in a little room at the top of a
unable to complete house. He is sitting at a table that is covered with
his story? papers. At his side there are some dead flowers. He
is trying to finish a story. But he is very cold and he
cannot write. There is no fire in the room, and he is
weak and hungry.’
‘I will wait with you for one more night,’ said the
Swallow kindly. ‘What shall I take to him?’
‘Take him one of my eyes,’ said the prince. ‘They
are made of beautiful blue stones. ‘The young man can
sell it and buy wood and food. He can finish his story.’
‘Take out your eye, dear prince?’ said the Swallow.
‘I cannot do that!’ And he began to cry.
‘Do it!’ said the prince.
So the Swallow took out the prince’s eye and flew
away to the young man’s room. It was easy to get in
What did the writer because there was a hole in the roof. The young man
conclude when he was sitting with his head in his hands, so he did not
saw the blue jewel? hear the bird’s wings. When he looked up, a beautiful
blue jewel was lying on the dead flowers.
‘Someone likes my stories!’ he cried happily. ‘This
is a gift from someone who has read my books, now
I can finish writing this story!’
On the next day the Swallow flew down to the
river. He watched the seamen working on the ships.
‘I am going to Egypt!’ he cried, but no one listened
to him.
When the moon came up, he flew back to the
Happy Prince. ‘I have come to say goodbye to you,’
he said.
‘Little bird, little bird,’ said the prince, ‘please will
you stay with me for one more night?’
48
‘It is winter,’ answered the Swallow.’ The snow
will soon come. In Egypt the sun is warm and the
trees are green. Dear prince, I must leave you; but I
will never forget you.’ Why did the swallow
‘A little girl is standing there in the square below. wish to go to Egypt?
She is selling eggs. Her eggs have fallen on the ground
and they are broken. She has no money to take home.
Her father will hit her. Take out my other eye and
give it to her.’
‘I will stay with you for one more night,’ said the Why did the swallow
Swallow, ‘but I cannot take out your other eye. You refuse to take off the
will not be able to see!’ other eye?
‘Do it!’ said the prince.
So the Swallow took out the prince’s other eye
and flew down with it. He flew to the girl and put
the jewel in her hand.
‘This is a beautiful piece of glass!’ cried the little
girl. She ran home, laughing.
Then the Swallow flew back to the prince. ‘You
cannot see now,’ he said,’ so I will stay with you.’
‘No,’ said the poor prince,’ ‘you must go to Egypt.’
‘I will stay with you,’ repeated the Swallow, and
he slept at the prince’s feet.
The next day he stayed with the prince. He told
the prince stories about the strange lands that he knew.
‘Dear little bird,’ said the prince, ‘you are telling
me about strange and wonderful things, but the suffering
of men and women is stranger than anything. Fly over
my city, little bird. Tell me what you see there.’ What sufferings did
So the swallow flew over the great city. He saw the Swallow discover
the poor people sitting at the gate. He flew into the and report to the
dark streets and saw the white faces of hungry children Happy Prince?
with sad eyes. Under a bridge, two little boys were
lying close together to keep warm. ‘We are so hungry!’
they said. ‘You cannot lie there!’ shouted a guard.
Then the Swallow flew back and told the prince.
‘I am covered with fine gold,’ said the prince.
‘Take it off, piece by piece, and give it to my poor
people.’
The Swallow pulled off the gold, until the Happy
Prince looked grey and ugly. The Swallow took the gold
to the poor, and the children’s faces became brighter.

49
‘We have bread now!’ they cried.
Then the snow came. Ice followed the snow, and
hung down from the roofs of the houses. Everyone
wore thick coats.
The little Swallow became colder. He did not leave
the prince, because he loved him very much. But he
was dying.
‘Goodbye, dear prince!’ he said.
‘I am glad that you are going to Egypt,’ said the
prince. ‘You have stayed too long.
‘I am not going to Egypt,’ said the Swallow. ‘I am
In what state did the
going to the House of God’. It fell down dead at his
important man in the
feet. Then there was a strange sound inside the statue.
city find the statue?
CRACK — the metal heart broke into two pieces.
Early next morning, an important man in the city
was walking below with two of his friends. He looked
up at the statue.’ The Happy Prince does not look very
bright!’ he said. ‘The red stone has disappeared, his
eyes are not there, and he is not golden. He looks like
a beggar.’
‘Yes he does!’ said the man’s friends.
‘Here is a dead Swallow at his feet!’ said the
officer. ‘We must make an order that birds cannot die
here.’
What do you think,
was the part of They pulled down the statue of the Happy Prince
statue which did not and put it in the fire. A stream of bright metal ran out.
melt? ‘This is strange ! said the workmen. ‘This broken
piece in the middle of the statue has stayed hard. We
must throw it away.’ So they threw it away with the
dead bird.
God said to his servants, ‘Bring me the two best
Why did the servants things in the city.’ They brought Him the broken heart
of God take the and the dead bird.
broken heart and the
‘Yes, you have brought the right things,’ God said.
dead bird to God?
‘This little Swallow will sing for ever in my garden,
and the Happy Prince will stand in my city of gold.’
- Oscar Wilde

50
1. Say whether these sentences are true or false and correct the false ones.
(a) The writer of the story is William Blake.
(b) Everyone admired the statue of the Happy Prince.
(c) The mother was working, when the Swallow brought the yellow jewel.
(d) The two best things the servants brought to God were gold and jewel stones.

2. Find from the story the Homophones of the following words


(Words that sound, the same, but differ in spellings and meanings.)
(a) weak (b) their
(c) blew (d) sea
(e) read (f) waste
(g) know (h) knot
(i) threw (j) right

3. Answer the given questions in your own words.


(a) Where was the Happy Prince’s statue located?
(b) Why did the swallow decide to stay under the statue of the Happy Prince
at night?
(c) Why was the Prince sad?
(d) What was the first task given to the Swallow?
(e) To whom did the Prince gift the two gemstones of his eyes?
(f) What decision did the Swallow finally make? Was it a wise one? Comment.
(g) Why did the Swallow finally decide not to leave the Prince ?
(h) What message do you get from this story?
4. Infinitives, Participles, Gerunds
(a) Infinitives
In the sentences ‘I have to study’ and ‘ I must study’, ‘study’ is in the infinitive
form, because it does not take -s, -es or -ed after it even if the number or person
of the Subject changes.
Infinitives are generally preceded by ‘to’ or sometimes by a modal auxiliary.

51
(b) Participles
In the sentences ‘She dived into the swimming pool’ and ‘The writing table is
in a mess’ ‘Swimming’ and ‘writing’ are in the verb + ing form and function as
Adjectives. These are Present Participles.
In the sentences, ‘The police recovered the stolen jewels’ and ‘He bandaged his
bruised arm’, stolen and bruised are in the verb + en / ed form and function as
Adjectives.
(c) Gerunds
In the sentences, ‘I love swimming’ and ‘Reading is a good habit’, the verb +
ing form fuction as Nouns (as the Subject or Object). These are called Verbal Nouns
or Gerunds.
• Say whether the underlined are Infinitives / Participles (Present or Past) /
Gerunds.
(1) I wish to go to Egypt.
(2) They liked his written stories.
(3) He is trying to finish a story.
(4) Suffering is stranger than anything.
(5) The dying swallow fell at his feet.
(6) He began to cry.
(7) He watched the working seamen.

5. Write the following dialogues from the story in the Indirect Speech.
(a) ‘Who are you?’ asked the bird. ‘I am the Happy Prince.’
‘Then why are you crying? I am wet with your tears.’
(b) The Happy Prince looked very sad, and the little Swallow was sorry for
him. ‘It is very cold here,’ he said ‘but I will stay with you for one
night. Tomorrow I will take the jewel.’
‘Thank you, little bird,’ said the prince.
(c) ‘Little bird, little bird,’ said the prince, ‘please will you stay with me
for one more night?’
‘My friends are waiting for me,’ answered the bird.
(d) Under a bridge, two little boys were lying close together to keep warm.
‘We are so hungry!’ they said. ‘You cannot lie there!’ shouted a guard.
(e) ‘Goodbye, dear prince!’ he said.
‘I am glad that you are going to Egypt,’ said the prince. ‘You have
stayed too long.‘I am not going to Egypt,’ said the Swallow. ‘I am
going to the House of God’
52
6. Divide the story into parts. Make 4 groups in your class. Each group should
take one of the 4 parts to convert the story into a play and enact your part.

7. If you could change the end of the story i.e. after the Swallow refused to fly to
Egypt, how would you change it? Summarise your idea in 10 to 12 lines.

8. Think of one of your favourite stories. Fill in the following facts about the story.
• Name of the story :
• Type of story :
• Setting (time and place) :
• Important characters :
• Theme / Plot :
• Conflict / Dilemma :
• Solution :
• End :

53
WORD PLAY
WORD LADDER
(1) Word Ladder is a word game.
• Players can get a starting word and an ending word.
• Starting and ending words must be of the same length.
• Players can change one letter at a time, attempting to move from the
starting word to the ending word.
•Each intermediate step must be a valid word and no proper nouns allowed !
See the following word chain -
(1) HARD to EASY :hard-hare-care-cart-cast-east-easy
(2) Taking a pig to a sty.
Pig - wig - wag - way - say - sty
Work in pairs and try to build a ladder.
• COLD to HEAT • CAT to DOG
• MAN to APE • TEA to POT

WORD CHAIN
(2) Word chain : Word chain is a word game that begins with the letter that the
previous word ended with.
Activity : Arrange the participants in a circle and explain the rules of the
game, any variations and the theme of the word chain.
For example :
Theme : (1) Types of fruit (Noun)
(2) Adjectives
(3) Verbs
(4) in general
Now prepare a word chain beginning with the given theme and words.
Theme - School
(1) Teacher
(2) Verbs
(3) Sports and games
TONGUE TWISTER
(3) Tongue Twister : Tongue Twister is a sequence of words or sounds, typically
of an alternative kind, that are difficult to pronounce
quickly and correctly.
For Example : • Peter piper picked a pack of pickled peper.
• Saina leads, Sayali needs.
• A big black bear sat on a big black rug.
Activity : Use the internet and find out minimum 5 tongue twisters and present
them in the class.

54
(A) Build a Word Pyramid

Starting with one / two letter-words make word pyramids as shown below,
adding one letter at a time for each step. Add as many steps as possible to your
pyramid.
You may use a dictionary, if needed.
Make sure the words are meaningful and are not Proper Nouns.

US I
USE IN
MUSE WIN
AMUSE TWIN
TWINE
(B) Express With a Difference!
A fixed group of words, whose meaning is quite different from that of
individual words used in it are called Idioms.

For example : • to throw light on ( means to explain clearly in detail)


• within a stone’s throw away (at a short distance)
• a child’s play (very easy)
Make a collection of such Idioms that you come across in story books,
magazines and other reading material.
Use a good dictionary to find their meanings.
Write them down in a special book or diary. You can refer to it when you do
creative writing, to make it impressive.
Also try to use them in your conversation.

(C) Better Your Work!

• Find words which sound the same, but have different spellings and meanings:
For example : write and right
They are called Homophones.
• Find words which have the same spelling, but can have different pronunciations.
For example : read / can be pronounced as reed or as red.
These are called Heteronyms.
• Find words that spell the same, sound the same but have different meanings
in different contexts.
For example : light can mean ‘not heavy’. It can also mean ‘brightness
which makes things visible’.
Such words are called Homographs.

55
3.1 The Plate of Gold

1. Stories can be told even in the form of poetry. Such poems are called Narrative
poems. Narrative poems do not always follow rhythmic patterns of a fixed
rhyme scheme. Such poems are written in a style called ‘Free Verse.’
Recall and name some narrative poems you have done / read earlier.

2. Read the poem below and fill in the gaps, choosing appropriate pairs of rhyming
words, to make them meaningful.

Little things
Little drops of water,
Little grains of
Make the mighty ocean
And the pleasant .

Thus the little minutes,


Humble though they ,
Make the mighty ages
Of .

Little deeds of kindness,


Little words of
Make this earth an Eden,
Like the heaven a

(love - above / sand-land / be - eternity)


• What important message does the above poem convey?

56
The Plate of Gold

One day there fell in great Benares’ temple-court Who could claim the
A wondrous plate of gold, whereon these words were writ; plate of gold?
To him who loveth best, a gift from Heaven.’
loveth best : (here)
There at
one who loves God
The priests made proclamation: ‘At the midday hour, most
Each day, let those assemble who for virtue deem proclamation : a
their right to Heaven’s gift the best; and we will hear the public statement
deeds of mercy done, and so adjudge.’ deem : consider,
regard
The news
adjudge : consider
ran swift as light, and soon from every quarter came
and declare
nobles and munshis, hermits, scholars, holy men,
quarter : (here)
and all renowned for gracious or for splendid deeds, corner
Meanwhile the priests in solemn council sat and heard
renowned :
what each had done to merit best the gift of Heaven. well-known
So for a year the claimants came and went.
solemn : serious
At last, claimants : those who
after a patient weighing of the worth of all, state the right to get
something
the priests bestowed the plate of gold on one who seemed,
bestowed : presented
the largest lover of the race - whose whole estate,
as a gift
within the year had been parted among the poor.
To whom did the
This man, all trembling with his joy, advanced to take priests gift the plate
the golden plate when lo ! at his finger’s first touch of gold?
it changed to basest lead ! All stood aghast; but when parted : distributed
the hapless claimant dropt it clanging on the floor, What magical
occurance shocked
Heaven’s guerdon was again transformed to shining
the people?
gold.
aghast : shocked and
So far another twelve month sat he priests and judged. horrified
Thrice they awarded - trice did Heaven refuse the gift. hapless : unfortunate
Meanwhile a host of poor, maimed beggars in the street guerdon : reward
lay all about the temple gate, in hope to move maimed :
permanently
that love whereby each claimant hoped to win the gift
damaged, crippled

57
and well for them it was (if gold be charity),
For every pilgrim to the temple gate praised God,
that love might thus approve itself before the test,
Why had many
and so coins rained freely in the outstretched hands;
beggars collected
outside the temple? but none of those who gave, so much as turned to look
into the poor sad eyes of them that begged.

Why did the


pilgrims, to the
temple, shower coins
to the beggars?

What did they fail to


do? And now
The second year had almost passed, but still the plate
of gold , by whomsoever touched was turned to lead.
At length there came a simple peasant - not aware
of that strange contest for the gift of God-to pay
a vow within the temple. As he passed along
shrivelled : dried up the line of shrivelled beggars, all his soul was moved
and wrinkled within him to sweet pity, and the tears welled up
and trembled in his eyes.
Now by the temple gate
shunned : avoided
and rejected there lay a poor, sore creature, blind, and shunned by all;
but when the peasant came, and saw the sightless face
What did the poor and trembling, maimed hands he could not pass, but knelt,
peasant offer the and took both palms in his, and softly said: ‘O thou,
blind beggar? my brother! bear thy troubles bravely. God is good.’
Then he arose and walked straightway across the court,
wrangled : argued and entered where they wrangled of their deeds of love
angrily before the priests.

58
A while he listened sadly then
had turned away but something moved the priest who held
the plate of gold to beckon to the peasant. So beckon : call
he came, not understanding and obeyed, and stretched
his hand and took the sacred vessel. Lo ! it shone
with thrice its former lustre, and amazed them all!
lustre : shine
‘Son’, cried the priest, ‘rejoice, the gift of God is thine.
Thou lovest best!’ And all made answers, ‘It is well.’
Why had God
And, one by one, departed. But the peasant knelt
chosen the simple
and prayed, bowing his head above the golden plate; peasant as the most
while o’er his soul, like morning, streamed the love of deserving of the
God. plate of gold?
- James Henry Leigh Hunt

1. Pick out words from the poem to complete the sentences meaningfully.

(a) Stephen Hawking was a . (famous) Astrophysicist.

(b) The Government made a (announcement) about their new


taxation policy.

(c) Everyone stood (horrified) when the terrible accident took place.

(d) She (bargained) with the hawker to reduce the price.

(e) Handicapped people should never be . (ignored and avoided)

2. Make a list of archaic words from the poem and give their modern equivalents.

59
3. Rearrange the following in the proper order and insert them into a flow chart as per
the poem.

(a) The plate turned to lead, when it was gifted to false-hearted claimants.

(b) Many claimants donated their wealth to receive the plate of gold.

(c) For almost two years, no claimants received the plate of gold.

(d) A plate of gold fell in a temple from Heaven.

(e) The peasant offered comfort and courage to a blind miserable beggar, whom all had
ignored.

(f) The priests announced that the one who loved God most of all, would receive the gift
from Heaven.

(g) When the priest gave the plate of gold to that peasant, it shone with thrice its lustre.

(h) A simple peasant, who had nothing to offer, came to that temple.

4. Which two sayings about God are conveyed through the poem ‘The Plate of Gold’?

(a) God helps those, who help themselves.

(b) God loves those, who love their fellow beings.

(c) God loves those, who give away their wealth, to please Him.

(d) Service to mankind is service to God.

5. ‘But the peasant bowed and prayed to God ...........’ What could he have prayed for ?

6. Imagine that you are the peasant. Compose a short prayer to God, after having
received the plate of gold. Write it using stylish handwriting.

7. Read other poems by Leigh Hunt, especially ‘Abou Ben Adhem’.


Compare the messages in that poem with those in ‘The Plate of Gold’. What do you
observe ?

60
3.2 The Kite Festival

1. Cut out the wrong kites.

Nouns
festival celebration tradition competition

Verbs
festivity celebrate trade compete

Adjectives festive celebrity traditional compere

2. Name the festival that you enjoy the most of all. Fill in the facts about that
festival.
(a) Name of the festival :
(b) When it is celebrated :
(c) Why it is celebrated :
(d) How it is celebrated :
(e) Special cuisine :
(f) Other special features :

61
The Kite Festival

harassed : troubled, Years ago, the harassed mother would often say
stressed out to her restless son, who needed to be kept busy during
his holidays, “Why don’t you go fly a kite ?” And the
little boy would happily pick up his kite and run out
into the field.
That, of course, was in the past when the only kites
available were made of kite paper and thin wooden
come a long way : frames. Kite - flying has come a long way since then
progressed, developed with the invention of motorised and even fibreglass
kites to compete with the old - fashioned kites. Today,
kite - flyers can be found in different parts of the world,
How did the kites of carrying different types of kites - waiting for the right
the past differ from winds !
the modern ones?
Kite - flying has a long history. There are many
Greek, Indian and other mythological stories which tell
us about human beings wanting to or trying to fly.
Over a period of time, this desire of humans and
their imagination probably led to the invention of kites.
And it is likely that the box - kites, designed more than
a hundred years ago, later inspired others to create
power - driven aeroplanes.
In India, however, the tradition of kite - flying has
not changed. Be it during the coming of Spring which
is celebrated as Basant or during the festival of Makar
When is kite-flying at Sankranti, people of all ages go out into the open to try
its peak in India?
their luck with their kites. In towns and cities, where
open spaces are difficult to find, terraces and rooftops
are often used for this traditional sport.
How do they
In Gujarat, Makar Sankranti is kite - flying day.
celebrate the
Traditionally celebrated on January 13 or 14, it is
kite-flying festival in
a holiday when people meet outdoors, ‘to cut’ each
Gujarat?
other’s kites.
coincides : occurs at This day also coincides with the festival of
the same time Uttarayan, when the sun is said to begin its journey
to the northern hemisphere. The people of Gujarat
celebrate Uttarayan with a lot of enthusiasm and all
business comes to a grinding halt for a couple of days.
It is also a celebration to mark the end of winter.
The kite - flying begins at dawn and continues
without a pause throughout the day. People of all ages
62
gather on terraces or rooftops. Friends, neighbours, even
total strangers compete with one another and cries of
triumph rend the air when someone cuts the line of
a rival ! rend : tear
A wonderful variety of kites is seen and the fussy
buyer can choose what he wants. The more serious fussy : very choosy
players prepare special lines for their kites. There is
music in the air and traditional delicacies are specially
prepared for the day. delicacies : fine,
Held on the same day, the bigger event, however, special food items
is the International Kite Festival, at Ahmedabad.
Why is the
Organised by the Gujarat State Tourism Corporation, kite-festival at
it is held either at the Sardar Patel Stadium or the Ahmedabad so
Police Stadium. special?
This popular festival attracts international
kite - flyers, who demonstrate their skills in flying
exotic kites and local champions as well. Little Indian
paper - kites compete with those from Japan, USA, UK exotic : belonging to
and other countries. Excited spectators watch in awe far-away lands
as marvellous shapes such as eagles and snakes soar awe : wonder,
into the skies. amazement
One of the highlights of this festival is the Patang
or Kite Bazar, in the heart of Ahmedabad, which is What does a visit to
open twenty - four hours a day, for a whole week. A the Patang Bazar
visit to this bazar in the middle of the night is enough prove?
to prove that the entire city is obsessed with kites.
People crowd the streets and buy their stocks, haggling obsessed : totally
through the night. occupied with one
Skilled craftsmen demonstrate age - old kite - making aspect
skills and how to prepare the special thread used for haggling : bargaining
kite - flying. Mixtures of glue and ground glass cover How is the special
the lines, which are dried and rolled onto reels known thread for kite-flying
as ‘firkees’. These lines are so sharp that, carelessly prepared?
used, they can cut a finger !
The excitement does not end with nightfall. Now, it
is time for illuminated box - kites, often strung on one illuminated : lighted
line, to be launched into the sky. Called tukals, they up
add a grand beauty to the dark sky and compete with What are ‘tukals’?
the brilliance of the stars.

63
1. Give the Antonyms and Synonyms of the words below, choosing from those given.

Synonyms Antonyms
lustre, rise, victory, competitor, partner, dullness, start,
old - fashioned, joyfully, sorrowfully, drop, modern,
foreign, pause native, defeat

Words Synonyms Antonyms

happily

traditional

halt

triumph

exotic

rival

soar

brilliance

2. Say whether the following statements are true or false.


(a) Fibreglass kites led to creating power - driven aeroplanes.
(b) In Gujarat, the kite - festival is celebrated to welcome the Spring.
(c) ‘Uttarayana’ starts from Makar Sankranti onwards.
(d) Kite - flying in Gujarat, is a competive sport - cum - festival.
(e) The kite - bazar in Ahmedabad, is open day and night for a week.
(f) The special thread for kite - flying is sharpened by adding sugar and glass pieces.

3. Using points from the lesson, give the details of the following in a short paragraph
for each topic.
(a) Different types of kites.
(b) International Kite Festival at Ahmedabad.
(c) The kite bazar of Ahmedabad.

64
4. You have just returned after your first experience of the kite - festival in Gujarat /
Ahmedabad. You were thrilled with the festivities.
l Write a short report about the kite - festival for your local newspaper. Give an attractive
headline, a dateline and an account of the kite - festive. Write the report in third person
with more use of Passive voice.
l You have a friend who lives abroad. Write a letter to your friend describing how you
enjoyed the kite-festival.

5. (A) Verb forms show both, Tense (Present, Past, Future) and Aspect (Progressive, Perfect,
Perfect Progressive)

Progressive (Continuous) : be + verb - ing


Present Progressive : He is playing.
Past Progressive : He was playing.
Future Progressive : He will be playing.

Perfect : have / has / had verb - en / ed


Present Perefct : They have played.
Past Perefct : They had played.
Future Perfect : They will have played.

Perfect Progressive : have/has/had + been + verb - ing


Present Perfect Progressive : We have been playing.
Past Perfect Progressive : We had been playing.
Future Perfect Progressive : We shall have been playing.

(B) Underline the verb forms in the following sentences and state their Tense and
Aspect.
(i) They are waiting for the right winds.
(ii) People were haggling over the price of kites.
(iii) Vendors had been selling kites all through the week.
(iv) Skilled craftsmen had demonstrated age - old skills.
(v) State Tourism Corporation will be organising the International Kite Festival.
(vi) Kite - flyers have demonstrated their skills with exotic kites.

65
3.3 The Last Leaf

1. Suppose you suffer from a long - term illness (one or two weeks), what should you
do and what should you avoid? Fill up the table of Dos and Don’ts.

Dos Don’ts

(1) Go to a doctor for diagnosis (1) Do not


(2) (2) Do not avoid medication on time.
(3) Take a suitable diet (3) Avoid
(4) (4) Avoid physical stress and exertion.
(5) Rest in a properly ventilated (5) Do not
room.
(6) Have cheerful thoughts, courage, (6) Do not lose and
positive attitude.

2. You already know that Homophones are pairs of words that sound the same but
differ in spellings and meanings.
For example : sum and some
There are some words that even have the same spelling and pronunciations, but have
different meanings in different situations or contexts.
For example : bat (a bird) and bat (sports / games equipment)
Such words are called Homographs.
l Make pairs of sentences of your own to point out the different meanings of the
following Homographs.
(1) fine :
(2) wave :
(3) bear :
(4) rose :
(5) lead :
(6) match :
(7) second :
(8) object :

66
The Last Leaf

In the poorer parts of New York, there was a colony


where many struggling artists lived. Among them were What dreadful illness
Sue and Johnsy. They had come to New York from different did Johnsy suffer
from?
parts of the United States. When they met, they found that
they shared the same interest, and they became friends.
They shared a flat and set up a joint ‘studio’ trying to earn
a living through art.
Johnsy was small, thin and not very strong. After
spending a few months in New York, she became ill with
pneumonia. In those days, it was not easy to cure pneumonia
patients. Though Sue looked after her well, Johnsy, showed
no signs of improvement.
One day, the doctor told Sue that Johnsy had one
chance in ten. “And that chance is for her to want to live,” What did the doctor
tell Sue about
he said. “Your little lady has made up her mind that she’s
Johnsy?
not going to get well.” He told Sue that medicines alone did
not help if the patient did not wish to live.
That day, Johnsy just lay in bed without making any
sound or movement, First, Sue thought that she had fallen
asleep but then she noticed that Johnsy was looking out of
the window and was counting something again and again ivy vine : a strong
in a very low voice - almost a whisper. creeper with green
Sue, too looked out of the window, but there was leaves and yellow
berries
nothing to see - only an old, old ivy vine, gnarled and
decayed at the roots, climbed half way up the brick wall. gnarled : (here)
The cold breath of autumn had taken away most of the twisted
leaves. Only the skeleton branches were left, clinging to
the bricks.
Describe the ivy vine
“What is it, dear ?” outside the window.
asked Sue.
“Six,” said Johnsy.
“They are falling faster
now . Three days ago, there
were almost a hundred.

67
It made my head ache to count them. But now it’s easy.
There goes another one. There are only five left now.”
“Five what, dear ?”
What false belief did “Leaves. On the ivy vine. When the last one falls, I
Johnsy have about must go, too. I’ve known that for three days. Didn’t the
the ivy vine? doctor tell you?’’
“Oh, I never heard of such nonsense,” said Sue. “What
have old ivy leaves to do with your getting well ? And you
used to love that vine so ! Don’t be silly. The doctor said
that you had excellent chances of getting well. Take some
broth : a hot soup
broth now, and let me get back to my work.”
But Johnsy just kept looking out of the window. “There
goes another. No, I don’t want any broth. That leaves just
four. I want to see the last one fall before it gets dark. Then
I’ll go, too.”
“Johnsy,” said Sue, “will you promise me to keep your
eyes closed and not look out of the window until I am done
working? I must hand those drawings in tomorrow. I need
the light. Otherwise I would have closed the window. I
don’t want you to keep looking at those silly ivy leaves.”
“Tell me as soon as you have finished,” said Johnsy,
closing her eyes, “because I want to see the last one fall.”
“Try to sleep,” said Sue. “I must call Behrman up to
be my model for the old man that I’m drawing. I’ll not be
gone a minute.”
Old Behrman was a painter who lived on the ground
floor, but he was a failure in art. For forty years he had
Who was Behrman? wielded the brush but had not made any money. He had
Why did Sue call been always about to paint a masterpiece, but had never
him to their flat? yet begun it. For several years, he had only made a few
wielded the brush paintings. He earned a little by serving as a model to the
: painted with a young artists in the colony, who could not affored other
flourish models. He always talked of his coming masterpiece.
masterpiece : a most Sue told Behrman about Johnsy’s fancy. Old
valuable, outstanding Behrman was shocked that anyone could have such idiotic
work of art ‘imaginings’. “What!” he cried. “Are there people in the
fancy : imagination world foolish enough to die because of leaves dropping off
68
from a vine ? I have not heard of such a thing. Why did you
allow this thought to enter her brain?”
“She is very ill and weak,” said Sue. “The fever has
made her mind full of fancies.”
“This place is not good for Miss Johnsy. Some day I’ll
What did Behrman
paint a masterpiece and we shall all go away. Yes !” said
promise to do some
Behrman. day?
Johnsy was sleeping when the two went upstairs. Sue
showed Behrman the ivy vine that Johnsy saw through the
window. They looked at each other for a moment without
speaking, and then began their work. Outside a cold rain
was falling continuously, mingled with snow. Sue closed
the window.
Next morning, when Sue woke up, she found that
Johnsy was staring at the closed window again with dull, mingled : mixed
wide-open eyes.
“Open the window ; I want to see,” she ordered. Sue
obeyed.
But, lo ! even after the rain and the fierce wind that
blew throughout the night, there yet stood against the brick What happened that
wall one ivy leaf. It was the last on the vine. Still dark night and what did
the two friends see
green near its stem, but with its edges tinted with yellow,
when the window
it hung bravely from a branch some twenty feet above the was open?
ground.
“It is the last one”, said Johnsy. “I thought it would tinted : slightly
surely fall during the night. I heard the wind. It will fall coloured
today and I shall die at the same time.”
Johnsy was preparing herself for the last journey that
one makes alone.The feeling was very strong within her.
The ties of Sue’s friendship and other things on earth
became loose one by one. What did Johnsy
The day wore away but even through the twilight, they declare when she
could see the lone ivy leaf clinging to its stem against the saw the last ivy leaf?
wall. At night, again the wind raged and the rain poured.
Next day, when it was light enough, Johnsy asked Sue twilight : soon after
to open the window. sunset but before it
is dark
The ivy leaf was still there.
69
Johnsy lay for a long time looking at it. Then she called
Sue. “Sue dear,” she said, “I’ve been a bad girl. Something
has made a last leaf stay there to show me how wicked I
was. It is a sin to want to die.”

What change came


over Johnsy the next
day? Why?

After that she was ready to take the broth and milk that
Sue brought her. She wanted to sit up in bed . ‘‘Someday I
hope to paint the Bay of Naples.’’
Mr Behrman downstairs was now ill with pneumonia.
What happened to
Mr. Behrman? The sweeper had found him lying helpless in his room in
very wet clothes and shoes. He also found some scattered
brushes and a palette with green and yellow colours mixed
on it. Two days later, Mr. Behrman died in a hospital.
The last ivy leaf was still there on the wall. It never
fluttered : irregular fluttered or moved when the wind blew. It was Behrman’s
shaking movement masterpiece. He had painted it there that night when the last
Who had saved leaf had fallen.
Johnsy’s life and - Adapted from ‘The Last Leaf’ by O. Henry
how?

1. Read the story and choose the appropriate meanings.


(a) Struggling artists
(i) artists fighting with one another
(ii) artists trying hard to earn a living
(iii) artists painting war scenes
(b) Skeleton branches
(i) bones branching out from joints

70
(ii) leafy branches
(iii) bare branches
(c) Wielded the brush
(i) painted skillfully
(ii) broke the brush
(iii) joined the broken brush
(d) Palette
(i) the tip of the brush
(ii) a board used by artists to mix colours
(iii) a fancy dinner plate
(e) Masterpiece
(i) a master who promotes peace
(ii) the very first creation of an artist
(iii) an exceptionally beautiful work of art

2. Make pairs of sentences to show the difference between the meanings of the following
Homographs from the story.

(a) interest

(b) well

(c) left

(d) just

(e) mind

3. State the facts about the story.


l Main characters :
l Problem :
l Attempts made to solve it :
l Climax / Turning point :
l Problem solved :
l End :

71
4. Say whether the following statements are right or wrong.
(a) Sue and Johnsy were very close friends.
(b) Sue was a rich girl.
(c) Johnsy was hopeful that she will live.
(d) Behrman was a hard - hearted person.
(e) The last leaf fell off during the rain.
(f) Johnsy realised that her thinking was wrong.
(g) Behrman did not know anything about the last leaf on the ivy.

5. Correct the following statements.


(a) Sue and Johnsy were good neighbours.
(b) Johnsy was eager to recover from her illness.
(c) Sue ignored Johnsy completely.
(d) Behrman was a very heartless person.
(e) The real ivy leaf did not fall off at all.
(f) The last leaf was a real leaf that survived.

6. Read the descriptions of the following from the story and describe any one of them
using your own words.

l The ivy vine l Behrman l The last leaf that Johnsy saw

7. You have learnt that a Clause is a group of words that has a Subject and a Verb, and
is a part of a larger sentence.
In the sentence, ‘We returned home, when school was over’ there are two clauses.
(i) ‘We returned home and (ii) ‘When school was over’.
The first one makes complete sense, so it is called Main / Principal Clause. The
second one is not complete by itself. It depends on the Main Clause to convey proper
sense. So it is called Dependant or Subordinate Clause. ‘When’ is the joining word, and
it is called a Subordinator.
l In the following sentences, point out the Main Clause and Subordinate Clause. Encircle
the Subordinator.
(a) There was a colony, where many struggling artists lived.
(b) Though Sue looked after her well, Johnsy showed no signs of improvement.
(c) Sue thought that she had fallen asleep.
(d) Old Behrman was a painter, who lived on the ground floor.
(e) Johnsy was sleeping, when the two went upstairs.
(f) I want to see the last one before it falls.

8. Compose an imaginary dialogue between Sue and Johnsy, when they


realise about what Behrman had done for Johnsy.

72
3.4 Leisure

1. Discuss in groups and share with one another.


(1) The daily routine of your mother and father on working days
(2) How your family relaxes on weekends
(3) When you go for a picnic, what and how do you enjoy?
(4) Do you spend time admiring and thinking over the beauties of nature ? Elaborate
your response.

2. When a poet / writer attempts to describe something in words, so that it appeals to


our five senses (sight, smell, hearing, touch, taste) he / she has used a device called
Imagery.
For example : ‘a host of golden daffodils’.
‘to a chasm, deep and vast and wide’.
Go through other poems in your textbook or other books and find out lines that
contain Imagery. Write them down along with the name of the poem and line / stanza
number.

3. Prepare an Acrostic from the word ‘Leisure’. The words should be related to what
one likes to do in free time.
L
E
I
S
U
Reading stories
E

73
Leisure

care : (here) worries, What is this life if, full of care,


stress
We have no time to stand and stare ?

boughs : branches of No time to stand beneath the boughs


a tree And stare as long as sheep or cows ?
What does the poet
No time to see, when woods we pass
want us to stare at
and gain from it? Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass ?

No time to see, in broad daylight,


Streams full of stars, like skies at night ?

beauty : a beautiful No time to turn at Beauty’s glance,


young girl And watch her feet, how they can dance ?

No time to wait till her mouth can


Enlist the beautiful
Enrich that smile her eyes began ?
things in nature that
we overlook.
A poor life this if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.

- William Henry Davis

1. Say Where . . . . . . .
(a) do the cows and sheep stand?
(b) do squirrels store their food?
(c) do stars shine in the daytime?
(d) does Beauty’s smile begin?

2. Think and answer in your own words.


(a) What could have inspired the poet to compose this poem? Do you think it relates to
our present day life? Defend your choice.
(b) Which line proves that in our busy lives we do not even have a fraction of a second to
enjoy nature’s beauty?

74
(c) ‘Beauty’ in stanza 5 to 6 can refer to a beautiful maiden as well as nature itself.
Explain when and how nature ‘dances’ and also ‘smiles’.
(d) Why does the poet call our life ‘poor’?

3. You have learnt that when a human attribute is given to anything that is not a
human being or it is spoken of as a person, the Figure of Speech used is called
‘Personification’.

(a) Pick out two examples of Personification from the poem.

(b) Pick out from the poem, two examples of each of the following Figures of Speech.
(1) Alliteration (2) Simile (3) Metaphor

(c) The poet opens his poem with a question. Is the question asked to receive some
answer? No. It is a question used to emphasize and stress upon the fact that
modern man has no time to enrich his life from nature.
Such a device used by poets falls under the Figure of Speech called ‘Interrogation’
or ‘Rhetorial Question’. Refer to the poem ‘The Pilgrim’ and find examples of
Interrogation.

4. Say where the images from nature given in the poem exist.
AIR / LAND / WATER
(a) beneath the boughs
(b) squirrel hide nuts in grass
(c) streams in daytime
(d) stars / skies at night

5. Make a paraphrase of the poem ‘Leisure’ in your own simple words. Write it down in
your notebook.

75
4.1 The Vet

(1) Where do we find all types of wild animals in urban areas?


(2) Do you have a pet?
(3) How do we help animals and birds?
(4) How do we realise that animals are not feeling well?
(5) Who gives medicine / treatment to sick animals and birds?

1. Doctor who do special advanced study of specific parts of the body


have special terms.
In your group try to match the specialist doctors with who / what they
treat.

Specialists Who/What they treat

1. Dentist a. bone

2. Cardiologist b. brain/with spine

3. Opthalamalogist c. small kids

4. Orthopedic d. teeth

5. Pediatrician e. animals / birds

6. Neurologist f. eye

7. Veterinarian g. heart

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)


2. Discuss in your group and write down the most important reason, why
Pediatrician and Veterinarians have, a tougher job to diagnose their
patients’ illnesses.

76
The Vet

vet : short form of


veterinarian - a
doctor for animals
and birds.
competent : having
To be a successful and competent vet, very good knowledge
and ability
Needs knowledge exceedingly wide,
For each of the patients he’s likely to get Why is it so
difficult to be a
Possesses a diiferent inside. successful vet?
He must know why the cat is refusing her milk, exceedingly : very
Why the dog is not eating his bone, much
Why the coat of the horse is not shining
a different inside :
like silk, different types of
Why the parrot does nothing but groan; size of organs inside
the body
Why the ducks and the chickens are failing
groan: a sound
to lay, of pain
Why so faint the canary bird sings, What is wrong with
And if he is called to the zoo, he must say ducks and chickens?
An incredible number of things. incredible :
unbelievable
If the lion’s caught a cold,
centipede : a small,
If the zebra’s getting old, long thin creature
If the centipede has trouble with his feet, with many legs
If the hippo’s feeling ill, bison : American
If the bison’s got a chill, buffalo
If the Arctic fox is suffering from heat, What opposite health
problems do the lion
If some virulent disease and the Arctic fox
Has attacked the chimpanzees, suffer from?
If the tortoise hasn’t stirred for several years, virulent : caused by
If the bear’s too full of buns, virus
If the cobra eats her sons, stirred : moved
If the panther has a wife who chews his ears;
a tiff : a quarrel
If giraffes have had a tiff
Why have the giraffes
And their necks are feeling stiff
got stiff necks?

77
If hyenas will not laugh at keepers’ jokes,
If the monkey’s pinched his tail,
keepers’ : zoo If the rhino’s looking pale,
keeper
Why does the poet If the elephant eats paper-bags and chokes,
call the vet If the camel-hurts his hump,
‘omniscient’? If the kangaroo won’t jump,
cannibal : one who If the crocodile turns cannibal and bites,
eats human flesh They run away and get
omniscient : one That omniscient, the vet
who knows all and
everything
And expect him to put everything to rights.

Profoundly : Profoundly I pity the vet, who must learn


greatly, deeply Such a very great deal for his pay;
My son, I advise you most strongly to earn
What is the poet’s Your living an easier way.
advice to you?
Don’t attempt to attend the zoological crowd;
Do you think he
means it? a far more advisable plan
Is to call yourself ‘Doctor’, and so be allowed
To treat the illnesses of man.
- Guy Boas

1. What is the Rhyme scheme of stanzas 1 to 3 and the last two stanzas?
How does it differ in the remaining stanzas 4 to 7?

2. Write any five illnesses of the animals in the poem, that you find most
amusing / laughable.
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)

78
3. (A) Out of all names of birds and animals given in the poem, pick out 4
names that are similar in English as well as in Hindi / Marathi or your
Mother tongue.

(B) Write four reasons why animals in a zoo suffer more than those who
live free in the wild.
(i)

(ii)

(iii)

(iv)

4. Think deeply and write. Is the poet really discouraging the youth from becoming
vets? Explain your response.

5. Find out from a vet or from a website, what precaution a vet has to take,
when he / she is called to treat wild, dangerous animals?
Make point-wise notes of the same.

6. Select any four zoo - animals mentioned in the poem. Imagine they are able
to talk in English. Compose a dialogue among the four animals discussing their
discomfort and illnesses.

79
4.2 Revolutionary Steps In Surgery

1. Discuss in your class.


(1) Do you like to study science?
(2) What are the advantages of learning science?
(3) Are robots truly useful to human beings? Why? Why not?
(4) How can we take help of robots in our daily life?
(5) Name some gadgets and appliances that we use in day-to-day life?
2. Imagine that one of your family members / friends / classmates has recently
undergone a surgery. You were curious and wanted to learn about his/her
experience.
Match the questions you asked with their answers.
1. What health problem did you a. I was given a bath and I wore a
suffer from? surgical gown.

2. Whom did you inform about it b. I was given an injection of anaesthesia.


first?

3. What type of doctor did you c. I consulted an orthopedic surgeon.


consult?

4 How did he / she find out that d. I was relieved and happy that the
you needed a surgery? operation was over.

5. What preparation was done e. I had fractured my ankle while playing


before the surgery? hockey.

6. What did you feel when you f. No, I did not feel anything. I was fast
were taken to the operation asleep.
theatre?
7. What was the first step before g. I recovered and I could walk normally
the actual surgery? after 3 weeks.

8. Did you feel any pain during the h. Our school hockey coach.
surgery?
9. What did you feel when you i. The doctor took an X-ray of my ankle,
opened your eyes after the and he found a fracture in my ankle.
operation?
10. How soon did you recover? j. I was very nervous.

80
3. We have learnt that sentences may have two, three or more sets of subject
+ predicate, joined by a conjunction. Each set of subject and predicate
that is a part of a larger sentence is called clause.
Separate the clauses in the following sentences and write the conjunction.
(1) The thief stole the money and he ran away.
Clause (1)
Clause (2)
Conjunction :
(2) She told me that she was a doctor.
Clause (1)
Clause (2)
Conjunction :
(3) He ran fast but he did not win the race.
Clause (1)
Clause (2)
Conjunction :
(4) The traveller arrived at the station after the train had left.
Clause (1)
Clause (2)
Conjunction :
4. Coordination
Observe the clauses in the following sentences.
(1) He is intelligent and he is hardworking.
(2) Asit was tired but he could not rest.
(3) You can go for a walk or you can exercise at home.
(4) Seema has recovered from fever, so she can attend school.
Each of the above sentences have clauses which do not depend on each other for
complete sense. They are called Independant or Co-ordinate clauses. They are joined
by conjunctions like and, but, or, so. Such conjunctions are called Co-ordinators.
Other Co-ordinators are : l as well as / not only...... but also
l yet / still / however / nevertheless
l or / nor / else / either..... or / neither ..... nor
l so / therefore / thus / hence / for
l From the sentences given in Activity 2 pick out two sentences having
Co-ordinate Clauses. Point out the Co-ordinators.

81
Revolutionary Steps in Surgery

revolutionary : Surgery dates back to, as early as 600 BC.


causing a total ‘Sushruta Samhita’ is one of the oldest works in the
dramatic change world dealing with surgery. It indicates that Sushruta
was probably the first surgeon to perform surgical
bloodletting :
operations (plastic surgery). Later, some ancient surgeons
draining out blood
performed tooth extraction and bloodletting.
Major surgery could not develop for centuries
Why did doctors
begin to use because of lack of knowledge and technology. The
anaesthesia? doctors had to cut open the part of the body that was
not healthy, remove it or set right that part. This would
anaesthetics : involve a lot of pain to the patient. General anaesthetics
substances / gases
that make one feel like ether or chloroform developed only from mid -
no pain nineteenth century making painless surgical operations
possible and successful.
Modern techniques are used nowadays for anaesthesia.
benumbs : makes
numb so that one General anaesthesia benumbs the whole body, and it
does not feel is used for surgery of any region of the body. For local
any pain anaesthesia, local anaesthetics are injected into the
surgical spot or an area near nerves.
cardiac : relating to Over the years now, revolutionary steps have been
the heart taken in different types of complicated surgery and these
have made such operations successful.
Why had cardiac Let us start with Cardiac surgery. Today, if you
surgery not developed? need to have a heart surgery, you can choose from
many fine doctors. However, before 1893 this type of
essential : necessary surgery was unknown. Doctors did not have modern
medical tools and procedures, essential for heart surgery.
sedatives : substances In those days heart patients were treated with sedatives
that make someone and they usually did not survive. Then in 1893 Daniel
sleepy
Hale Williams, a young African American surgeon,
attempted a new medical technique in order to save a
patient’s life.
What had the A patient, James Cornish, was suffering from a
patient, James very serious knife wound. The knife had cut an artery
Cornish suffered less than an inch from his heart and punctured the
from? pericardium (the sack around the heart). Dr Williams
with six staff doctors, performed a complicated and
daring operation. Dr Williams became the first surgeon
to save his patient by successfully repairing the human
heart.
82
Now many more advanced techniques are used to
in this speciality, to deal with heart complications. Open
heart surgery, which can help to repair heart defects, What kind of
cardiac surgery is
heart valves or even replace them, is also performed done nowadays?
successfully. With proper measures, patients can recover valves : devices for
from cardiac surgery faster than they did before. allowing flow in one
Neurosurgery is another recent speciality to have direction only
received recognition since the early 1900s. It is concerned Neurosurgery :
with the treatment of disorders of the nervous system. surgical specialization
that treats diseases
Neurosurgeons operate on the brain, the spine or and disorders of the
nerves. They can treat patients of all ages, from the brain and spinal
new-born to the elderly, who have suffered a stroke. cord
Harvey Cushing (1869-1939) is considered to be disorders : (here)
health defects
the father of modern neurological surgery. In the early
Who do
part of the 20th Century, he developed basic techniques neurosurgeons
and instruments for operating on the brain as a distinct operate upon and on
surgical speciality. Cushing dramatically reduced the what body parts?
mortality rate for neurosurgery from 90% to less than dramatically :
10%. By the time of his retirement in 1937, he had suddenly and
successfully
successfully removed more than 2000 tumours.
mortality : death
The main reason that mortality rates had been so rate, especially on a
high before, was blood loss. Among Cushing’s significant large scale
achievements are the methods he developed to stem tumour : abnormal,
this blood loss by inventing a clip called ‘silver clip’ extra growth
or ‘Cushing clip’. stem : control
Thus neurosurgery is one the most cutting edges cutting edges : latest
in the world of surgery and medicine. development
Robotic Surgery:
What is Robotic Surgery? surgery carried by
Robotic surgery is a type of minimally invasive minimum surgical
surgery. ‘‘Minimally invasive’’ means that instead of instruments
operating on patients through large incisions, use is incisions : surgical
made of miniaturized surgical instruments, that fit cut made in skin or
flesh
through a series of quarter-inch incisions. When miniaturized : made
performing surgery with the Da Vinci, - the world’s very small in size
most advanced surgical robot - these miniaturized mounted : set up
instruments are mounted on three separate robotic arms, precision : accuracy
allowing the surgeon maximum range of motion and magnified : enlarged
precision. The Da Vinci’s fourth arm contains a
What is Da Vinci?
magnified high-definition 3-D camera that guides the a console : a
surgeon during the procedure. combination of
The surgeon controls these instruments and the display, input devices
camera from a console, located in the operating room. and control
mechanism used for
Placing his fingers into the master controls, he is able controlling a robot
83
to operate all four arms of the Da Vinci. While looking
through a stereoscopic high definition monitor, the robot
literally places the surgeon inside the patient. This gives
him a better, more detailed 3-D view of the operating
site, than the surgeon’s eye can provide. Every movement
replicated : made an he makes with the master controls is replicated
exact copy of accurately by the robot. When necessary, the surgeon
can even change the scale of the robot’s movement. If
he selects a three-to-one scale, the tip of the robot's
arms will move just one inch for every three inches,
that surgeon’s hand moves.
What are the Utilizing this advanced technology our surgeons are
advantages of Robotic able to perform a growing number of complex surgical
Surgery?
procedures. Since these procedures can now be performed
through very small incisions, our patients experience a
number of benefits compared to the open surgery of
the past.

1. Read the lesson and name the following.


(a) First surgeon to perform operations
(b) Anaesthetics used from mid 19th century
(c) First successful Cardiac Surgeon
(d) A sack around the heart
(e) Father of modern neurosurgery
(f) World’s most advanced surgical robot

2. Match the terms in ‘A’ with their explanation in ‘B’.


‘A’ ‘B’
(1) tooth- extraction (a) a cut made for surgery
(2) cardiac (b) having length, breadth and depth
(3) sedative (c) plastic surgery
(4) tumour (d) related to the heart
(5) incision (e) a control unit for a robotic surgery
(6) a console (f) removing a decayed tooth
(7) 3-D (g) substance that makes a person sleep
(8) cushing clip (h) an extra growth in the body
(i) a device to stop blood loss in neurosurgery
(1) (2) (3) (4)
(5) (6) (7) (8)
84
3. Fill in the web with words related to ‘Surgery’.

Major

Surgery

4. Write 3 to 4 lines about each of the following in your own words.


(a) ‘Sushruta Samhita’

(b) First Cardiac Surgery

(c) First Neurosurgeon

(d) The Robotic Surgery

5. (A) Fill in the gap in the table of Degrees of Comparison.

Positive Comparative Superlative

(1) oldest

(2) healthier

(3) near

(4) finer

(5) earliest

(6) small

(7) faster

(8) high

85
(B) Adjectives which have more than two syllables (long words) take ‘more’
and ‘most’ before them to form Comparative and Superlative degrees.
For example : successful - Positive Degree
more successful - Comparative Degree
most successful - Superlative Degree
l Give the Comparative and Superlative forms of -

Positive Comparative Superlative


(1) ancient
(2) special
(3) significant
(4) advanced
(5) accurate

6. Join the sentences using appropriate Co-ordinators. (but, or, so, and)
(a) There was lack of technology. Major surgery could not develop for centuries.
(b) Cardiac Surgery was tried in the past. Patients did not survive.
(c) He places his fingers into the master controls. He operates all four arms of
the Da vinci.
(d) Open heart surgery can help to repair heart valves. It can also replce them.
(e) Heart patients were treated with sedatives. They did not survive.
(f) These procedures can be performed through very small incisions. Our patients
experience a number of benefits.

7. Write in your notebook an imaginary telephonic conversation between you and


your family - doctor’s secretary, asking for an appointment to consult the doctor
for a health problem you are suffering from. Begin with ..........
Secretary : Good morning ! This is XYZ Clinic.
How can I help you?
Myself : Good morning ! I am

(Now continue......)

86
4.3 The Bees

1. Match the professions with the field of work.

Profession Field of work

(1) Chief Minister (a) Business

(2) Magistrate (b) Transport

(3) Soldier (c) Construction

(4) Trader (d) Administration

(5) Builder (e) Education

(6) Driver (f) Defence

(7) Teacher (g) Law

2. Living creatures, birds, animals, insects, etc. are often used in as - as


comparisons, because of some special characteristics they hold.

Fill in the gaps, choosing words from the brackets to make appropriate
comparisons.

(tall / quiet / humble / merry / busy / slippery / fast / sly / slow / big)

(1) as as a lark (6) as as a mouse

(2) as as a snail (7) as as an eel

(3) as as a giraffe (8) as as a fox

(4) as as a bee (9) as as a worm

(5) as as an elephant (10) as as a deer

87
The Bees

What do honey bees So work the honey- bees, creatures that by a rule in
teach us? nature teach
sorts : of different The art of order to a peopled kingdom,
activities
They have a king and officers of sorts;
magistrates : a
civil officer who Where some, like magistrates, correct at home;
administers law Others, like merchants, venture trade abroad;
venture : (here) take Others, like soldiers, armed in their stings;
up a new project
involving a risk Make boot upon the summer’s velvet buds;
make boot upon : Which pillage they with merry march bring home
begin to collect
around To the tent royal of their emperor ;
pillage : loot Who, busied in his magesty, surveys,
Where does the The singing masons building roofs of gold,
emperor - bee sit
and what does he The civil citizens kneading up the honey,
do?
The poor mechanic porters crowding in
busied : be very
engrossed Their heavy burdens at his narrowgate,
The sad eyed Justice, with his surly hum,
kneading : to mix
uniformly Delivering over to executors pale
The lazy yawning drone
What do roofs of gold
refer to? - William Shakespeare
surly : bad tempered

delivering : handling
over
executors : a person
who carries out a
death sentence
drone : a male bee

88
1. Honey-bees live an organised life like human beings. Discuss what work the following
honey-bees do, as per the poem. Write it down in your own words, in your notebook.

(a) King / Emperor bee (e) Mason bees

(b) Magistrate bees (f) Civilian bees

(c) Merchant bees (g) Porter bees

(d) Soldier bees (h) Judge bee

2. Complete the following choosing the appropriate option.

(a) Human beings can learn from honey bees .........

(i) How too make food (ii) how to live joyfully

(iii) how to lead an organised nation

(b) The soldier-bees carry home .............

(i) the velvet buds (ii) nector, looted from flowers

(iii) their weapons

(c) The emperor-bee supervises the building of ............

(i) the bee hive (ii) bridges (iii) a tower

(d) The ................ bees make honey from nectar

(i) officers (ii) civilian citizens (iii) magistrates

(e) The drone is given a death sentence because he ........

(i) attacked the emperor (ii) killed other bees

(iii) does not do any work

3. (A) Complete the phrases using words from the poem.

(i) ......... march (iv) ......... porters

(ii) ......... tent (v) ....... burdens

(iii) ..... masons (vi) .......... executors

89
(B) (i) Find any two Alliterative lines.
(ii) Pick out the line that contains an Onomatopoetic word.

(C) Pick out three lines that create an image in your mind of bees, busy at work.

4. (A) Refer to a good dictionary which carries phonetic transcriptions printed next to
words. The words below are familiar to you. Copy their phonetic transcription
from the dictionary and say it aloud as you write. (You may take your teacher’s
help, if needed)
(1) work ........ (4) home ........ (7) porters ........
(2) bees ........ (5) mason .......
(3) boot ........ (6) citizen ...........
Stress - Stress is the extra force we use when pronouncing a syllable in a word.
For example : In the word ‘King-dom’ the syllable ‘king’ is stressed.
In the word re-li-gion the second syllable is stressed.
Stress upon a syllable can be shown with short vertical line above the syllable
that is stressed.
For example : com-pu-ter / fa-ther / en-cou-rage

(B) Say the following words aloud and put the stress mark on the stressed syllables.
crea-tures bur-den
me-cha-nic e-xe-cu-tor
de-li-ve-ring ma-gis-trate

5. Project
Gather information about the following insects. Draw their images or get pictures.
On one sheet each, fix the image / picture and below it write the information. Compile
these pages and make a file of ‘Insects - our friends’.
Insects : Bee / Praying mantis / Butterfly
Beetle / Wasp / Dragon-fly

90
4.4 Ramanujan

1. Discuss orally in your class.


In what subjects is knowledge of mathematics used, at school level and college /
university level. Name them.
Did you know maths is used in music and poetry also? Can you tell how?

2. Use the letters in the word MATHEMATICIAN to make 4 letter / 5 letter and 6
or more letter words, within a time limit fixed by your teacher.

3. Sentences can be classified into three types - Simple, Complex and Compound.

l A Simple Sentence is one that has only one Subject and one Predicate.
It has only one Finite verb.

For example : She went home.

In the morning, near my school I saw a snake.

l A Complex Sentence consists of one Main Clause and one or more


Dependant or Subordinate Clauses.
For example : She went home, after school was over.
The boys found the book which had been lost.

l A Compound Sentence consists of two or more Independant or


Co-ordinate Clauses. They are joined by Co-ordinators.
For example : and, but, so, or, for etc.
(a) He finished his work and he left his office.
(b) He is poor but he is honest.

l From the lesson 4.2 pick out one example of each of the following.

Simple Sentence :

Complex Sentence :

Compound Sentence :

91
Ramanujan

One morning early in 1913, Hardy found, among


the letters on his breakfast table, a large untidy envelope
decorated with Indian stamps. When he opened it, he
found sheets of paper by no means clean, on which, in
a non - English script, were line after line of symbols.
Hardy glanced at them without enthusiasm.
He felt, more than anything, bored. He glanced
at the letter, written in halting English, signed by an
unknown Indian, asking him to give an opinion of these
mathematical discoveries. The script appeared to consist
What did the of theorems, most of them, wild or fantastic looking,
manuscript contain? one or two already well - known, laid out as though
Godfrey Hardold Hardy they were original. There were no proofs of any kinds.
(FRS) 1877 - 1947 an Hardy was not only bored, but also irritated. It seemed
English Mathematician like a curious kind of fraud. He put the manuscript
aside and went on with his day’s routine.
manuscript : a hand
written document After lunch he loped off for a game of real tennis
in the university court. (If it had been summer, he
loped off : moved
would have walked down to Fenner’s to watch cricket.)
along with long easy
In the late afternoon, he strolled back to his rooms.
steps
That particular day, though, while the timetable wasn’t
Why could Hardy not
altered, internally things were not going according to
enjoy his game?
plan. At the back of his mind, getting in the way of his
altered : changed
complete pleasure in his game, the Indian manuscript
nagged away. Wild theorems. Theorems such as he had
nagged away :
annoyed by puzzling
never seen before, nor imagined. A fraud of genius ? A
question was forming itself with epigrammatic clarity :
epigrammatic : short
and witty expression
is a fraud of genius more probable than an unknown
mathematician of genius ? Clearly the answer was no.
clarity : clearness
Back in his rooms in Trinity, he had another look at
the script. He sent word to Littlewood (probably by
J.E. Littlewood messenger, certainly not by telephone, for which, like
: An English all mechanical contrivances including fountain pens, he
Mathematician had a deep distrust) that they must have a discussion
contrivances : after hall.
appliances, gadgets Before midnight they knew, and knew for certain.
after hall : after The writer of these manuscripts was a man of genius.
dinner in the dining That was as much as they could judge, that night. It
hall was only later that Hardy decided that Ramanujan was,
in terms of natural mathematical genius, in the class

92
of Gauss and Euler : but that he could not expect,
because of the defects of his education and because
he had come on the scene too late in the line of
What did the
mathematical history, to make contribution on the same two English
scale. Mathematicians
The following day Hardy went into action. realise by midnight?
Ramanujan must be brought to England, Hardy decided. Gauss : German
Money was not a major problem. Trinity had usually mathematician
been good at supporting unorthodox talent (the college
Euler : Swiss
had been the same for Kapitsa a few years later). Once
Mathematician
Hardy was determined, no human agency could have
stopped Ramanujan, but they needed certain amount of What were the
help from a superhuman one. two drawbacks in
Ramanujan turned out to be a poor clerk in Madras Ramanjun’s carrer?
(Chennai), living with his wife on twenty pounds a year. Kapitsa : Soviet
He was usually strict about his religious observances, physicist and Nobel
with a mother who was even stricter. It seemed Laureate
impossible that he could break the ban and cross the What superstition did
water. Fortunately his mother had the highest respect for Ramanujan’s mother
the goddess of Namakkal. One morning Ramanujan’s believe in?
mother made a startling announcement. She had a
dream the previous night, in which she saw her son cross the water :
travel across the sea
seated in a big hall among a group of Europeans and / ocean
the goddess of Namakkal had commanded her not to
stand in the way of her son fulfilling his life’s purpose. Namakkal : district
This, say Ramanujan’s Indian biographers, was a very in Tamilnadu
agreeable surprise to all concerned. startling : surprising
In 1914, Ramanujan arrived in England. So far as What suprised
Hardy could detect (though in this respect I should not everone, one
trust his insight far) Ramanujan, despite the difficulties morning?
of breaking the caste laws, did not believe much in insight : deep
theological doctrine, except for a vague pantheistic understanding
benelolence, any more than Hardy did himself. But he theological doctrine
did certainly believe in ritual. When Trinity put him : set of beliefs about
up in college within four years he became a fellow. God and religion
There was no ‘‘Alan St. Aubyn” self - indulgence for pantheistic
him at all. Hardy used to find him ritually changed benelolence : born
into his pyjamas, cooking vegetables rather miserably out of many Gods
in a frying pan in his own room.
Alan St. Aubyn :
Their association was strangely touching one. Hardy Fellow of Trinity
did not forget that he was in the presence of a genius, self - indulgence :
but genius that was, even in mathematics, almost doing something for
untrained. Ramanujan had not been able to enter Madras ones own pleasure
(Chennai) University because he could not matriculate and satisfaction

93
in English. According to Hardy’s report, he was always
amiable and good - natured, but no doubt he sometimes
found Hardy’s conversation outside mathematics more
amiable : pleasant than a little baffling. He seems to have listened with
and friendly
a patient smile on his good, friendly, homely face.
baffling : strange Even inside mathematics they had to come to terms
and difficult
with the difference in their education. Ramanujan was
to come to terms
self - taught : he knew nothing of the modern rigour,
with : to accept
gradually
in a sense he didn’t know what a proof was. In an
rigour : harsh, uncharacteristically sentimental moment, Hardy once
difficult condition or wrote that if he had been better educated, he would
concepts have been less ‘Ramanujan’. Coming back to his ironic
sentimental : full of senses, Hardy later corrected himself and said that the
emotions statement was nonsense. If Ramanujan had been better
ironic : opposite of educated, he would have been even more wonderful
what is expressed than he was. In fact, Hardy was obliged to teach him
What did Hardy have some formal mathematics as though Ramanujan had
to teach Ramanujan? been a scholarship candidate at Winchester. Hardy said
that this was the most singular experience of his life .
Why does he call What did modern mathematics look like to someone
it an unusual
experience? who had the deepest insight, but who had literally
never heard of most of it ?
It is good to remember that England gave
Ramanujan such honours as were possible. The Royal
a Fellow : an award, Society elected him a Fellow at the age of thirty (which,
title and honour even for a mathematician, is very young). Trinity also
given by the Royal
elected him a Fellow in the same year. He was the
Society (England)
first Indian to be given either of these distinctions. He
was amiably grateful. But he soon became ill.
Hardy used to visit him, as he lay dying in hospital
at Putney. It was on one of those visits that there
happened the incident of the taxi - cab number. Hardy
had gone out to Putney by taxi as usual, his chosen
mehod of conveyance. He went into the room where
conveyance : (here) Ramanujan was lying. Hardy, always clumsy about
a vehicle introducing a conversation, said, probably without a
Can you work out greeting and certainly as his first remark : “The number
the sum of cubes in of my taxi cab was 1729. It seemed to me rather a dull
two different ways number.” To which Ramanujan replied : “No, Hardy !
which equals 1729? It is a very interesting number : It is the smallest
number expressible as the sum of two cubes in two
What is exceptional
different ways”.
about the number
1729? It was difficult, in war - time, to move Ramanujan
to a kinder climate. He died of tuberculosis, back in
94
Madras (Chennai), two years after the war. As Hardy
wrote in the Apology, his roll - call of mathematicians
: ‘Galois died at twenty - one. Abel at twenty - seven,
Ramanujan at thirty - three, Riemann at forty. I do not the war : World
War I (1914-18)
know an instance of a major mathematical advance
initiated by a man past fifty’. Galois : French
mathematician
Abel : Norwegian
Riemann : German Name all the famous mathematician
mathematician mathematicians
initiated : started mentioned in this
write-up.

1. (A) Use the following words / phrases to make sentences of your own.
l enthusiasm l to lope off l fraud l clarity
l amiable l to come l to terms with l conveyance

(B) The following words can be used as Nouns as well as Verbs.

(visit / honour / report / watch / form / surprise)

Make pairs of sentences of your own, using them as a Noun in one and as a Verb
in the other.

For example : (i) She gave a smile - Noun.

(ii) Babies smile when they see their mother - Verb.

2. Say WHY. . . . . .

(a) Ramanujan’s letter bored and irritated Hardy, at first.

(b) Hardy invited Littlewood for a discussion.

(c) Mother agreed to send Ramanujan to England.

(d) Hardy and Ramanujan could not talk freely with each other.

(e) Ramanujan had to be hospitalized.

(f) Ramanujan found the number 1729 very interesting.

3. Read the text and enlist the achievements and honours of Ramanujan, received in
England.
95
4. Voice - Active and Passive
The form of a verb shows whether the doer of an action is in the Subject (Active voice)
or the Subject has an action done to it (Passive voice).
For example : The thief stole the jewels. (Active voice).
The jewels were stolen by the thief. (Passive voice)

Note : While changing from Active to Passive voice, the verb form includes be + past
participle.
In a sentence, when the doer of an action is significant, we use Active voice. In Passive
voice the doer of an action may not be mentioned.
For example : The thief was caught. (by the police)

(A) Underline the verbs in the following sentences and state whether the sentences
are in Active or Passive voice.

(a) England gave Ramanujan great honours.

(b) A large untidy envelope was decorated with Indian stamps.

(c) The timetable was not altered.

(d) She saw her son in a big hall.

(e) Hardy corrected his statement.

(f) Ramanujan was brought to England.

(B) Change the voice in the following sentences.

(a) Hardy taught Ramanujan.

(b) He knew nothing of the modern rigour.

(c) Sheets of paper were found in it, by Hardy.

(d) Hardy was bored by that manuscript.

(e) Trinity supported unorthodox talent.

(f) He could not break the ban.

5. Identify whether the following are Simple, Complex and Compound sentences.

(a) When he opened it, he found sheets of paper.


(b) He glanced at a letter.
(c) Hardy was not only bored but he was also irritated.

96
(d) Ramanujan turned out to be a poor clerk.
(e) If Ramanujan had been better educated, he would have been even more
wonderful than he was.
(f) Ramanujan was self-taught : he knew nothing of the modern rigour.

6. Interview Question.

A brilliant student from your school has won a Mathematics Quiz at the
National Level.
Frame questions to interview him / her when the school felicitates him / her. Follow the
steps given below.

(1) Greeting

(2) Introduction of the interviewee and achievements.

(3) 2 or 3 questions about growing years.

(4) 4 to 6 questions about the achievements.

(5) 2 or 3 questions about future plans and prospects.

(6) Expression of thanks and good wishes.

7. Summary

l Read the first three paragraphs on Page 92. (From......... ‘One morning ..............
upto ............ a discussion after hall)

l Re-read the same noting down only important points.

l Rewrite the important points in your own simple language, in you notebook.

l Make certain that your summary is less than half the length of the original passage.

97
4.5 A Battle to Baffle

1. Form suitable groups and discuss the following.


You have heard / read stories of Akbar and Birbal, Tenali Raman, Mulla Nasruddin.
Recollect and write down the names of those stories.
Pick out those aspects of a story that you find a common in all their stories.
(1) Humour (2) Supernatural events
(3) Wisdom (4) Suspense
(5) Magic (6) Beauty of Nature
(7) Wit (8) Play upon words
(9) Sadend (10) Violence

2. Read the different types of sentences in Reported Speech and note the differences
in the Direct and Indirect forms.
1. (a) Direct : The old man said, ‘‘What is the time?
(b) Indirect : The old man asked what the time was.
2. (a) Direct : Mother said to her, “Are you hungry now?
(b) Indirect : Mother asked her if she was hungry, then.
3. (a) Direct : Teacher said, ‘‘Be quiet students.’’
(b) Indirect : Teacher ordered the students to be quiet.
4. (a) Direct : Mother said, ‘‘ How pretty she looks!’’
(b) Indirect : Mother exclaimed with delight that she looked very pretty.
You will observe that -
(1) The Reporting Verb changes according to the type of sentence in the
speech.
(2) Change of Tense
(3) Change of word order in the sentence.

3. Use a dictionary and find the differences in the following terms related to
‘Drama’.
(1) A Play (2) One-act Play (3) Skit (4) Mime
(5) Farce (6) Opera (7) Tragedy (8) Comedy

98
A Battle to Baffle

A Skit
Characters :
Tenali Raman : a witty poet - jester in the court of Emperor
Krishnadevaraya.
Krishnadevaraya : Emperor of Vijayanagar Empire (1509-
1529)
Pundit Shahane : A highly learned visiting scholar
Mantriji : The Chief Minister
8 to 10 other courtiers / ministers / scholars.
Scene
The Court room of Krishnadevaraya
(The Emperor is seated on his throne Courtiers / scholars /
ministers are seated in two rows facing one another and discussing
softly.)

Mantriji : (Standing up and bowing) Your Royal Highness,


I have some urgent news to convey. May I
have your kind permission to announce it?
Emperor : Yes Mantriji, you may.
Mantriji :Maharaj, a very great scholarly Pundit -
Pundit Shahane - has arrived here. He has
mastered all our scriptures and has won great
scriptures : sacred
renown all over India.
writings
Emperor : He must be a truly brilliant Pundit.
renown : fame
Mantriji :Very true, Maharaj! What’s more, Pundit
Shahane has come here to challenge all the
Pundits in our Kingdom. He is visiting our What announcement
court tomorrow. unnerved the
(All Courtiers, Pundits etc. begin to show Courtiers and
nervousness and appear restless.) Pundits?
Emperor :Hmm! Challenge the knowledge of our
Pundits? I’m not sure.
(Looking at the court.)
Who all among you can take up this daring
test of defiance? Come forth. defiance : (here) a
(All put their heads down in silence.) bold challenge
Emperor : (annoyed) : Not one of you can face the Pundit?
I am ashamed of all of you. I shall debar
you from my court. I have never felt more
disgusted. Hmmph! In fact, I shall sentence
you all to.....
99
First Scholar : Excuse me, Maharaj! I have a
suggestion. I humbly seek your
permission to voice it.
to voice : to say Emperor : (still annoyed) What is it? It had better be
something loudly a good one or you shall be the first one
to be exiled from Vijayanagar.
exiled : sent away
First Scholar : Thank you, Your Majesty! I am
from the native
country confident. Let us send for Tenali Raman.
He will certainly find a solution to this
What suggestion was predicament.
proposed by the first
Second Scholar : (Standing up) That’s an excellent idea.
scholar?
Let us call Tenali Raman. He shall
predicament : a certainly pull us out of this tight corner.
difficult, unpleasant Emperor : Summon, Tenali Raman at once.
situation
(A guard leaves and fetches Tenali
tight corner : a
Raman.)
difficult situation
(Enter - Tenali Raman bowing to the
Emperor.)
Tenali Raman : (bowing) I am at your service, Your
Highness. Your wish is my command.
Emperor : Tomorrow, Pundit Shahane, a most well
- read, well - known scholar is coming to
diffident : not
our court to challenge our Pundits. All of
confident
them here are diffident of taking him up.
They have recommended you to outwit
the challenger. Will you accept it?
outwit : prove to be
Tenali Raman : Most certainly, Your Majesty. Let me
cleverer than
assure you that I shall not let you down.
But I have a small request. When Pundit
What was the Shahane arrives tomorrow, all must
condition put forth accept me and honour me as the Chief
by Tenali Raman? Pundit, for one day.
(All agree and nod their heads.)
Mantriji : We certainly will. And I shall see to it
that you are brought in with honours.
Emperor : Court dismissed!
(All exit after the emperor does.)
(Next Day - Courtiers, etc are seated.
Emperor’s arrival is announced. As per
protocol : an official protocol all stand up and bow as the
procedure. Emperor procedes and takes up his place.)
Emperor : Be seated!

100
(All sit)
Mantriji : With your benign permission, you Roy-
al Highness, may I call the great Pundit
Shahane and Pundit Tenali Raman? benign : kind and
Emperor : Yes, let them be brought forth at once. gentle
(Guards hurry out. Enters Pundit Shahane,
escorted by two soldiers.)
Mantriji : Your Highness, this is Pundit Shahane -
the most revered and honoured master revered : respected
scholar of our ancient scriptures. The
Pride of India. How did Mantriji
(Pundit Shahane gives a slight bow introduce Pundit
to the Emperor. Emperor nods in Shahane?
acknowledgement and gestures him to be
seated.) acknowledgement :
acceptance
Mantriji : And now may I announce the greatest
of great scholars in Vijayanagar, the
Chief Pundit Tenali Raman.
(Tenali Raman enters, carried on a
palanquin. Gets off, bows to the Emperor,
then to Pundit Shahane. palanquin : an
ancient box like
Two Pundits follow carrying a huge bundle
structure to transport
in silken cloth. They place it next to Tenali
Raman.) one person and
carried by four to six
Emperor : All of you, be seated, let the Pundits
people with the help
begin the debate. of two long poles
Tenali Raman : (Placing his hand on the bundle next to him
and twisting his moustache with the other) How did Tenali
Let us begin by discussing the merits of Raman make his
‘tila- kashta - mahisha - bandhana’ entry to Emperor’s
Pundit Shahane : (Taken a back) Wh..........wh...... What court?
was that? Taken a back :
Tenali Raman : (loudly) Let us debate on the virtues of shocked
the scripture ‘tila . . . . kashta - mahisha What scripture did
- bandhana’ Tenali Raman wish
Pundit Shahane : (Stands up, wondering. Moves forward, to debate upon?
talks to himself.)
I have read thousands of scholarly
works in Sanskrit. But I’ve never even
heard of . . . . . . . . . . . what was that
name tila. . . . . . . . . bandhana . . . . . .
something like that. How can I discuss
its merits?

101
(Pundit Shahane walks up and down in
deep thought. The onlookers give sly
smiles. Finally Pundit Shahane throws up
Why was Pundit his hands.)
Shahane defeated? Pundit Shahane : I give up! A thousand apologies, Your
Highness. I have not read the scripture
concede : admit, that Tenali Raman mentions. I concede
confess defeat. Tenali Raman is the greatest of
all scholars.
(Bows and exits)
(Emperor looking at Tenali Raman)
Emperor : I am proud of you and grateful for
saving the reputation and honour of our
great empire. Let me reward you.
Tenali Raman : (Smiling and bowing) Your words of
praise are my greatest reward, your
Highness.
Emperor : But tell me Raman, to what great work
did you refer?
coarse : rough (Tenali Raman opens the bundle and
removes a bundle of sticks tied with a thick
What explanation coarse rope.)
did Tenali Raman Tenali Raman : Maharaj, ‘til’ is sesame ‘Kashta’ is a
give about the stick, so ‘tilakashta’ refers to the sticks
name of the strange or stems of sesame plants, that you
scripture? see in my hands. (Pointing to the rope)
This is a rope used to tie up buffaloes.
‘Mahisha’ means a buffalo, ‘bandhana’
is the rope used to tie up something.
So this is the ‘tila-kashta- mahisha-
How did the bandhana.’
emperor and
Emperor : (laughing loudly) So the Pundit got scared
courtiers react?
when he heard such a complicated
name.
(Laughs again. Everyone joins in the
laughter.)
(Curtain)

102
1. Read the following words and use them in sentences of your own.
Renown, defiance, exiled, predicament, diffident, benign

2. Read the following phrases and use them in the sentences of your own in proper
form.
l To voice something l a tight corner
l to outwit l to concede defeat

3. Pick out dialogues of Tenali Raman which prove that he had the following qualities.
(a) Wit and wisdom (b) Self-confidence
(c) Politeness (d) Humility

4. Answer the following questions in short.


(a) What was Pundit Shahane’s claim as a scholar?
(b) Why did Pundit Shahane visit Vijaynagar?
(c) What do you learn about Pundits of Vijaynagar?
(d) What punishment did the emperor threaten the Pundits with?
(e) Why was Tenali Raman summoned to the court?
(f) On what condition did Tenali Raman agree to take up the challenge?
(g) Why was Tenali Raman taken to the court in a palanquin?
(h) How did Tenali Raman outwit Pundit Shahane?
(i) What did the bundle in silken cloth contain?
(j) Explain the significance of the title.

5. Fill in the elements that you find in the drama script of ‘A Battle to Baffle.’
Characters :
l Background Scene :
l Crisis :
l Steps taken to resolve the crisis :
l Climax :
l The end :
6. Do as directed. (Make sure you do not change the meaning and tense of the sentence).
(a) Tenali Raman proved to be wittier than Pundit Shahane.(Rewrite using ‘as witty as.’)
(b) Pundit Shahane has come here. He wishes to challenge all the Pundits in our Kingdom.
(Combine the two sentences using ‘so’. Now combine the same sentence using
‘because.’)

103
(c) How can I discuss its merits? ( Make it Assertive.)
(d) I have not read that scripture. ( Rewrite using ‘unaware.’)
(e) Your words of praise are my greatest reward. (Begin the sentence with ‘No other .......)
(f) I am proud of you. ( Rewrite using the noun form of the underlined word).
(g) The Emperor said, “ But tell me Raman, to what great work did you refer?”
(Convert into Indirect Speech).
(h) Tenali Raman was a poet scholar and jester in Vijaynagar in Krishnadevarayas
court. (Punctuate)
(i) Mantriji said Maharaj Pundit Shahanes visit to our court is an open challenge.
(Punctuate)

7. A past student of your school has cleared his UPSC examination and being an IAS
officer has been appointed as a Collector of your district. Write a formal letter to
invite him to your school to share the story of his success, at a special function.

8. Understand the quotation and expand it in a paragraph format.


‘Pride goes on horseback, but returns on foot’.

104

You might also like