Eng HL P2 QP GR 11 Nov2017
Eng HL P2 QP GR 11 Nov2017
Eng HL P2 QP GR 11 Nov2017
za
NATIONAL
SENIOR CERTIFICATE
GRADE 11
NOVEMBER 2017
MARKS: 80
TIME: 2½ hours
*IENGHL2*
1. Please read this page carefully before you begin to answer questions.
2. Do not attempt to read the entire question paper. Consult the table of
contents on the next page and mark the numbers of the questions set on
texts you have studied this year. Thereafter, read these questions and
choose the ones you wish to answer.
6. Number the answers exactly as the questions have been numbered in the
question paper.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION A: POETRY
PRESCRIBED POETRY
ANSWER ANY TWO QUESTIONS.
QUESTION 1
Essay question 10 marks Page 5
Mid-term break
QUESTION 2
Contextual question 10 marks Page 6
We wear the mask
QUESTION 3
Contextual question 10 marks Page 7
Funeral blues
QUESTION 4
Contextual question 10 marks Page 8
Housing targets
AND
UNSEEN POETRY
COMPULSORY QUESTION
QUESTION 5
Contextual question 10 marks Page 10
ma
NOTE:
In sections B and C, answer ONE ESSAY QUESTION and ONE CONTEXTUAL
question. If you answer an essay question from SECTION B, you must answer a
contextual question from SECTION C. If you answer a contextual question from
SECTION B, you must answer an essay question from SECTION C.
SECTION B: NOVEL
SECTION C: DRAMA
CHECKLIST
Use this checklist to ensure that you have answered the correct number of
questions.
NOTE:
In SECTIONS B and C, answer ONE ESSAY and ONE CONTEXTUAL question.
SECTION A: POETRY
In a carefully planned essay, critically discuss how the poet uses the title and
imagery to convey the message of the poem. Your essay must be 200–250
words (about ONE page) in length. [10]
OR
2.1 Explain how the word ‘guile’ (line 3) supports the title. (2)
2.4 Explain how the diction in lines 10–11 creates the tone in the last stanza. (3)
[10]
OR
The stars are not wanted now: put out every one;
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun;
Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood; 15
For nothing now can ever come to any good.
3.3 What is the effect of the use of the possessive adjectives and the pronouns
in the third stanza? (3)
3.4 How is the mood created by the instructions in the last stanza? (3)
[10]
OR
4.1 What does the word ‘foundation’ (line 4) reveal about the speaker’s
hopes? (2)
4.3 Refer to lines 16–25. Comment on how the images in these lines contrast
with the rest of the poem, thus supporting the theme of the poem. (3)
4.4 Refer to the last 4 lines. How does the use of the negative form add to
the tone of the poem? (3)
[10]
AND
ma – Antjie Krog
I am so sorry ma
that I am not
what I so much want to be for you 20
5.1 How does the metaphor a barefoot poem in line 6 convey the speaker’s
attitude? (2)
5.2 Explain how words and a look can chisel (line 9) a child. (2)
5.3 Refer to stanza 2. Describe, in your own words, the speaker’s mother. (3)
5.4 Refer to the last stanza. Identify the tone by discussing the speaker’s
apology. (3)
[10]
TOTAL SECTION A: 30
SECTION B: NOVEL
OR
Read the extracts below and then answer the questions that follow.
EXTRACT A
• • • • •
So when the daughter of Umuofia was killed in Mbaino, Ikemefuna came into
Okonkwo’s household. When Okonkwo brought him home that day he called his
most senior wife and handed him over to her.
‘He belongs to the clan,’ he told her. ‘So look after him.’ 15
‘Do what you are told, woman,’ Okonkwo thundered, and stammered, ‘When did
you become one of the ndichie of Umuofia?’
And so Nwoye’s mother took Ikemefuna to her hut and asked no more questions.
As for the boy himself, he was terribly afraid. He could not understand what was 20
happening to him or what he had done. How could he know that his father had
taken a hand in killing a daughter of Umuofia? All he knew was that a few men
had arrived at their house, conversing with his father in low tones, and at the end
he had been taken out and handed over to a stranger. His mother had wept
bitterly, but he had been too surprised to weep. And so the stranger had brought 25
him, and a girl, a long, long way from home, through lonely forest paths. He did
not know who the girl was, and he never saw her again.
[Chapter 2]
7.1 Briefly relate how Okonkwo’s visible prosperity (line 1) is the result of his
upbringing and single-mindedness. (3)
7.4 Refer to lines 15–19. What do you understand about the relationship
between Okonkwo and his most senior wife (line 14)? (3)
7.5 Ikemefuna could not understand what was happening to him or what he had
done (lines 20–21). To what extent does Ikemefuna’s bewilderment reflect
the way in which Okonkwo expects his wife to accept his decision? (3)
7.6 Explain how the lonely forest paths (line 26) that Ikemefuna walks on his
way to Umuofia are an ominous sign. (3)
AND
EXTRACT B
Then they came to the tree from which Okonkwo’s body was dangling, and they
stopped dead.
‘Perhaps you men can help us bring him down and bury him,’ said Obierika. ‘We
have sent for strangers from another village to do it for us, but they may be a long
time coming.’ 5
‘It is against our custom,’ said one of the men. ‘It is an abomination for a man to
take his own life. It is an offence against the Earth, and a man who commits it will 10
not be buried by his clansmen. His body is evil, and only strangers may touch it.
That is why we ask your people to bring him down, because you are strangers.’
’Will you bury him like any other man?’ asked the District Commissioner.
‘We cannot bury him. Only strangers can. We shall pay your men to do it. When
he has been buried we will then do our duty by him. We shall make sacrifices to 15
cleanse the desecrated land.’
[Chapter 25]
7.8 Refer to EXTRACTS A and B. Account for the change in mood. Consider
the portrayal of Okonkwo’s character in the first extract and the image of his
dangling body in EXTRACT B as the basis of your answer. (4)
[25]
OR
OR
Read the extracts below and then answer the questions that follow.
EXTRACT C
The prisoner was young, maybe Tsotsi’s age, but as thin as hunger can make a
man, with those large shiny eyes that go with it. He had been beaten. There
was a trickle of blood from his nose. Tsotsi watched him, vaguely uneasy at first,
more so when the man saw him and his face lit up with recognition and he
looked quickly at the policeman and smiled suddenly with a wild hope. Butcher 5
nudged Tsotsi. ‘Okay?’ he asked.
But Tsotsi didn’t answer. He was remembering the face – but in his memory it
seemed younger and the body under the face was that of a boy, a child with
knobbly knees and empty hands. There was a memory of boys scavenging the
townships. Beyond that he had never gone. 10
When the policeman and his prisoner were abreast of them he still hadn’t
moved, or given the word to the others. They looked at him perplexed. The
smile on the prisoner’s face was going, he looked at Tsotsi, hoping very hard.
Butcher nudged him, and he might have moved then, but the prisoner looked at
him desperately as he paused and called him by a strange name. David, he 15
said. Tsotsi looked away, picked up the dice and rolled them.
‘David!’ the man called. ‘David!’ Tsotsi looked away. ‘It’s me. Petah. David
help me.’ David, he called, all the way down the street.
But Tsotsi had closed his ears. He heard it no more. He forgot it. Right there
and then. Knowing it was a voice from his past, he made himself forget. Under 20
the bewildered gaze of Butcher and Die Aap he rattled the dice and played on.
That incident, and the memories it had evoked, was the furthest Tsotsi had ever
gone back into his past.
[Chapter 3]
9.1 Mention TWO things from lines 1–3 that can be ascribed to the Apartheid
era. (3)
9.2 Given his circumstances, explain why you think Petah’s recognition of
Tsotsi could give him ‘wild hope’ (line 5). (3)
9.3 From what you know about his past, what is it that Tsotsi does not
remember clearly? (3)
9.4 … he made himself forget. (line 20) Describe how Tsotsi’s refusal to
remember his past influences his relationships with Boston and Die Aap.
Consider the rest of the novel as part of your answer. (3)
AND
EXTRACT D
‘I never knew about it. Not till yesterday. Like a long forgetting, you know.’ Tsotsi
wiped the sweat away from his forehead. Boston had been staring a long time
and said nothing. He went to the door, and let the cool air pass over his body.
He had told him everything and it had been hard. Not having to tell. That had
come easy, driven as he was by some inner compulsion to know the meaning of 5
the past three days and their strange events, a compulsion that had started with
the baby and gained momentum ever since until he no longer had a desire for
anything else except to know. He had told his stories and Boston had listened
and now he must ask his questions and Boston must answer them.
He turned back into the room, and fetching his chair sat down next to the bed. 10
‘Boston, you’ve read the books.’
‘I’ve read books.’
‘So tell me man. What does it mean?’
‘What?’
Boston closed his eyes. ‘We’re sick, Tsotsi. All of us, we’re sick.’
‘From what?’
‘From life.’
Tsotsi dropped his head and Boston felt the other man’s anguish and for a
moment it was like a stab of pain that cut through his own in which he was 20
wrapped like a baby in its swaddling clothes.
He stretched out an arm and touched Tsotsi, and waited for him to look at him,
and then into those eyes, desperate eyes, he said: ‘I don’t know, Tsotsi. I know
nothing. I am blind, and deaf and almost dumb. My words are just noises, and I
make them in my throat like an animal.’ Then he gripped Tsotsi’s arm very tightly 25
because he was suddenly seeing something clearly and it might help to say it:
‘You are different.’
[Chapter 11]
9.6 Explain how the baby (line 7) had started a ‘compulsion’ (line 5) in
Tsotsi’s mind. (3)
9.7 Explain why it is ironic that Tsotsi chooses Boston with whom to
converse. (3)
TOTAL SECTION B: 25
AND
SECTION C: DRAMA
OR
Read the extracts below and answer the questions that follow.
EXTRACT E
Enter Macbeth
[Act 1, Scene 5]
11.2 Comment on the titles Lady Macbeth uses when she greets Macbeth in
line 1. (3)
11.3 “O, never/Shall sun that morrow see! (lines 10–11). Explain the
metaphor in Lady Macbeth’s words, and how it reveals her attitude. (3)
11.4 How do Lady Macbeth’s instructions in lines 13–16 support one of the
themes from the play? (3)
11.5 By referring to the extract and from what you know about the rest of the
play, does Macbeth at this stage share his wife’s confidence? (3)
AND
EXTRACT F
Seton enters
11.7 Refer to lines 27–33. Macbeth is indirectly referring to himself here. With
close reference to these lines, describe Macbeth’s frame of mind in your
own words. (3)
OR
‘Money is power.’
OR
Read the extracts below and answer the questions that follow.
EXTRACT G
SHYLOCK Yes, to smell pork, to eat of the habitation which your prophet
the Nazarite conjured the devil into. I will buy with you, sell
with you, talk with you, walk with you, and so following; but I
will not eat with you, drink with you, nor pray with you. What 5
news on the Rialto? Who is he comes here?
Enter Antonio
SHYLOCK I had forgot, three months, (to Bassanio) you told me so.
Well then, your bond, and let me see, but hear you,
Methought you said you neither lend nor borrow
Upon advantage.
[Act 1, Scene 3]
13.2 In lines 2–7 Shylock lists a number of things he will and will not do.
Explain. (3)
13.3 What does Shylock reveal about himself in lines 9–15? (3)
13.4 From what Antonio says in lines 29–32, describe his friendship with
Bassanio. (3)
13.5 Explain why Shakespeare uses prose in lines 1–7, and then iambic
pentameter in the rest of the extract. (3)
EXTRACT H
GRATIANO I have a wife who I protest I love;
I would she were in heaven, so she could
Entreat some power to change this currish Jew.
NERISSA (aside) ‘Tis well you offer it behind her back,
The wish would make else an unquiet house. 5
SHYLOCK (aside) These be the Christian husbands! I have a daughter:
Would any of the stock of Barabas
Had been her husband, rather than a Christian!
We trifle time, I pray thee pursue sentence.
PORTIA A pound of that same merchant’s flesh is thine; 10
The court awards it, and the law doth give it.
SHYLOCK Most rightful judge!
PORTIA And you must cut this flesh from off his breast;
The law allows it, and the court awards it.
SHYLOCK Most learnèd judge! A sentence! Come, prepare! 15
PORTIA Tarry a little, there is something else:
This bond doth give thee here no jot of blood,
The words expressly are ‘a pound of flesh’.
Take then thy bond, take thou thy pound of flesh;
But in the cutting it, if thou dost shed 20
One drop of Christian blood, thy lands and goods
Are, by the laws of Venice, confiscate
Unto the state of Venice.
GRATIANO O upright judge!
Mark, Jew! O, learnèd judge!
[Act 4, Scene 1]
13.6 Explain why Nerissa’s aside in lines 4–5 would provide comic relief. (3)
13.7 Shylock refers to his daughter (line 6). Describe his relationship with her
at this stage. (3)
TOTAL SECTION C: 25
GRAND TOTAL: 80