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Notes For BA English (Language) Pujab University, Lahore, Pakistan

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SHORT STORIES

1. THE KILLERS
(ERNEST HEMINGWAY)
Q: Describe the scene in Henry‟s Lunchroom on the arrival of
the Killers.
Ans.:-
Henry‟s Lunch-room was a small restaurant. It was visited regularly
by middle and lower-middle class people. At the time of the incident
the lunch- room was making preparations for dinner. The killers Al
and Max entered the lunchroom. It was almost empty at that moment.
They asked for some food that was not ready at that moment. They
were provided with the available food. They ate with their gloves on.
Their faces were different but they were dressed like twins. They were
wearing derby hats, tight over coats, silk mufflers and gloves. They
talked vulgarly.
They covered the staff with guns and started setting the scene for
murder. They gagged the staff. They declared that they had come to
kill a man named Ole Anderson. They looked quite calm and
composed because they were professionals.
The atmosphere in the lunchroom was charged with horror and
suspense. It could be sworn that a murder was in the offing.
Then, slowly the suspense began to dissolve, as the victim did not
turn up at his usual time. The killers decided to go back. They left,
and the atmosphere came back to normal. After the killers had gone
away, the proprietor sent one of the servants to Ole Anderson‟s
residence to warn him against the danger to his life.
The business in the lunchroom resumed. The shadow of terror cast by
the presence of the killers vanished with their departure.

The scene at the lunchroom during the presence of the killers is not
unusual. In the slums of all big cities scenes of violence, drunken
brawls and dacoaties are quite common. Restaurants and lunchrooms
are usual venues of such events. That is why there is no unusual
commotion or panic in the lunchroom during or after the scene.

Q: What does the story tell us about American Society?


Ans.
The story is a realistic picture of American social life at the lower level
of society. It is a movie picture. We can see the characters in action
and can hear what they say. We learn a lot from what we see and
hear. We learn that Americans are very practical and business like.
They are neither romantic nor emotional.

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They do not try to sugar coat their bad deeds. They do not waste time
in excuses and explanations. The killers in the story just announce
that they are going to kill a man. They do not bother about excuses.
They are callous like machines--- horror proof and even shame proof.
We see that crime is no longer a horror in American society. For some
people it is just business. You can hire a killer as easily as you can
engage a taxi. This is, of course, the bottom of moral decline.

American society of the present day is a purely materialistic society.


The people have lost their softer human side. They think only in terms
of money and power. Everybody lives for himself. Therefore nobody
cares for what another does. Nobody is interested in the affairs of the
man next-door. Nobody likes anybody to stand in his way. Therefore
they do not hesitate from doing away with their rivals.
This purely selfish attitude of individuals results in the collapse
of society. And American society is now on the verge of a terrible
collapse.
A Brief Note on Ole Anderson
The character of Ole Anderson has great significance in
explaining the background of this story. It is through his
reaction that Hemingway wants to convey his views about death.
He wants to show that even strong men like the boxer feel
helpless before the reality of death. The impending danger to his
life had made him deeply dejected. He had been running from
his enemies for a long time to save his life. He had now resigned
himself to his fate and had realized the futility of the escapist
attitude. That is why he did not agree to the suggestion of Nick
to go to some other place to save his life. He also considered it
useless to seek the help of the police. He was convinced that
death is unavoidable and it should be embraced calmly and
bravely when it comes. In this respect he has been compared
with Nick who felt much upset at the treatment of the terrorists
and wanted to go to some safer place. Ole Anderson stands for
the stoical acceptance of the reality of death, while Nick
symbolizes the escapist attitude to it.

2. RAPPACCINI‟S DAUGHTER
By (Nathaniel Hawthorne)
Q. Discuss the theme of the story.
Answer:
The theme of the story is man‟s inhuman lust1 for knowledge and
power. Scientists work for power through knowledge. They are

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ambitious to rule over the rulers through their power of knowledge.
They do not bother about human aspects of their work.
Prof. Rappaccini is a typical scientist. His lust for power leads him to
experimenting with poisons. The result of his work is a horrible variety
of deadly poisons. The poisonous herbs developed by him make his
garden a zone of death2. Some of the herbs are so lethal3 that even
their smell can kill a man. Breathing the poisonous air of the garden
makes the professor and his daughter immune4 to poison. No poison
can kill them. But any antidote5 can kill them because poison is the
breath of their life. So the professor‟s daughter dies the moment she
drinks a few drops of Baglioni‟s antidote. The death of the professor‟s
only daughter is the moral lesson of the story.
The old Professor learns the lesson at the cost of his only daughter ----
-a very heavy cost, no doubt.
Thus the story carries a note of warning not only against too much
love for science but also against selfishness of all kinds.
Some critics have pointed out another moral aspect of the story. They
say that it is not the professor‟s love for science but it is his love for
his daughter that leads him to his dangerous exploits6. He does not
like to be separated from his daughter by her marriage. That is why he
makes her dangerous for all other human beings. Whatever the case,
the story cuts both ways equally well.

GIOVANNI‟S CHARACTER
Young Giovanni is a voice of reason in the in human atmosphere of
the story. He is always worried about the danger created by the cruel
old professor Rappaccini. He hates the old professor‟s lust for lethal
knowledge. He knows that it is actually lust for power.
Unfortunately (or fortunately?) he falls in love with the
professor‟s daughter. But he is shocked to discover that the girl‟s
breath is poisonous. He tries to cure her and make her a normal
human being. But the well-meant attempt ends in the girl‟s death. The
cure for poison kills her because poison was her life.
Giovanni acts in love. His failure turns into Professor Rappaccini‟s
punishment for his evil designs. So we can say that Giovanni‟s
humane role brings out the moral lesson of the story. Giovanni
deserves respect and pity. He is respectable because he tries to
prevent the harm caused by the old professor‟s love and work for
science with a negative purpose. He has a positive and constructive
approach to life and love. He deserves pity for the tragic end of his love
affair. The irony of his fate is that his well-meant efforts to save the
girl (his beloved) end in her death, whereas her father‟s dangerous
experiments with poison had made her life secure against poisons.
Young Giovanni also deserves respect for his hard work as a student.

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Although he is not the central figure in the story, yet he is a lovable
character for these qualities of his character.

CHARACTER SKETCH OF BEATRICE


Rappaccini‟s Daughter is a tragic love story, and Beatrice is its
heroine. She plays an important role in explaining the theme or back
ground idea of this fantasy. She was the only daughter of Dr.
Rappaccini. God had made her the paragon of beauty and physical
grace. She was also an embodiment of innocence, sweetness and
purity. Her voice was as enchanting as the “sunshine in the south”.
Her sweetness of temperament and magical face had made her famous
in the whole town of Padua.
Beatrice is the only daughter of Prof. Rappaccini. She is young and
beautiful. Her father‟s inhuman lust for knowledge has turned her
into a poisonous human being. Her breath can kill. She hates her
father‟s science, but loves him too much to defy him.
So she becomes his agent of destruction by helping him in his work.
She looks after the garden. But her father‟s love for destruction
cannot infect her. She remains a deeply human character. She knows
her misfortune, but wishes to live a healthy normal life. She wishes to
be loved, but finds it impossible to go against her father‟s cruel will.
She dies a tragic death in trying to test the effect of Baglioni‟s cure.
Her last words reflect her true nature. She is a purely human
character in spite of the inhuman teachings of her father. Her
innocence and her sufferings make her a lovable character. So, her
death comes as a shock.

Beatrice deserves pity not only for her sudden tragic death, but also
for her love and obedience to her father. She dies by the antidote given
by her lover Giovanni, but actually she is a victim of her father‟s
thoughtless love and jealousy. She is to be pitied more for her
unhappy isolation and of her only love affair.
The character of Beatrice inspires love as well as pity. She is a lonely
girl deprived of true happiness and love. Her character has symbolic
significance. She stands for the beautiful world of nature that is being
corrupted and polluted by the science.

What is Fantasy?
Fantasy: (also spelled phantasy )

It is an Imaginative fiction dependent for effect on strangeness of


setting (such as other worlds or times) and of characters (such
as supernatural or unnatural beings). Science fiction can be
seen as a form of fantasy, but the terms are not interchangeable,

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as science fiction usually is set in the future and is based on


some aspect of science or technology, while fantasy is set in an
imaginary world and features the magic of mythical beings.

Explain the following lines


“ I would rather have been loved, not feared”, says Beatrice
before dying.
“ Believe it though my body be fed with poison, my spirit is
God‟s creature, and needs love as its daily food”

EXPLANATION:
Rappaccini‟s Daughter by Hawthorne is a fantastic Love story
that has tragic end. It emphasizes the importance of love in
human life. The writer wants to show that love is a spiritual
bond between young lovers. It is a spontaneous impulse that
makes life charming purposeful and enjoyable.
Beatrice is a love-thirsty girl because her father had kept her
secluded from human society. She readily used Professor
Baglioni‟s medicine to assure her lover that she was sincere in
her love. Before death she admitted to Giovanni that though her
body had been poisoned by her father, yet her soul was God‟s
creation that needed love for its nourishment and growth.
The story shows that love of humanity is also essential to
keep man truly humane and sensible. Dr. Rappaccini was a
loveless man who was more interested in research work than in
human beings or human welfare. He wanted to get knowledge of
power than the knowledge of service. He committed the mistake
of making his daughter dangerous and fearful for others. When
her daughter came to know the real intention of her father at the
time of her death, she told him, “I would rather have been loved,
not feared.” The story teaches the moral lesson that it is better to
make oneself lovable and useful for others than to become
authoritative and awful.
Thus Beatrice serves as the mouthpiece of Hawthorn to convey
his moral message that love makes life charming, and that it is
better to make oneself lovable and loving than to be dangerous
and awful for his fellowmen.

3. THE NEW CONSTITUTION


By (Saadat Hassan Manto)
Q. Narrate the story in your own words.
Answer:
“The New Constitution” is a story of political awareness at the
lowest level of our society. It is a powerful story that shows how the
common man looks hopefully at every promise of a change in the
political set up. The New Constitution means the Government of India

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Act, 1935, which introduced a democratic setup in India. Mangu, a
tongawala of Lahore eagerly listened to his educated fares talking
about the new constitution. They said it would ensure equality of
rights. The people of India would form their own Government under
the new constitution. They would no longer be slaves to the British
Rule. Mangu believed what he heard, so he was very happy and
hopeful. The new constitution was introduced on the first April.
Mangu hated the ruling nation. To his dismay he learnt that the
promise of the New Constitution was a false promise. The promised
change had not come.
The story also expressed the falsity of the promises made by
politicians in general and alien rulers in particular. As Mr. White, the
British Deputy Commissioner of Mayaour in Paul Scott‟s novel said,
“we were in India for what we could get out of it”. At the same time it
tries to create awareness among the people to save them from further
exploitation by their rulers in future.
Manto is famous for his excellent stories on the movement for
Pakistan. He is also one of the outstanding critics of society. In this
story he makes us realize that the Indians were no doubt against the
British rule but they were easily deceived by false promises because of
their simplicity and ignorance.

IRONY IN THE STORY


“The New Constitution” brings to light the irony of political
situation in the sub-continent under the British rule. The rulers
introduced the government of India act, 1935 with tall promises. But
those promises were never fulfilled. The New Constitution promised
self-government. But it was only a restricted self-government as it was
under complete British control. It did not bring any profitable change
for the people. They had been told that this New Constitution would
make life easy and comfortable for them. It would ensure respect for
the common man. It would give them all the rights which their rulers
enjoyed. But all these promises turned out to be false.

The New Constitution was nothing more than a new political set
up. It failed to fulfill the hopes of the common man. The story brings
out the irony of politics very effectively.

The irony is brought out suddenly when Mangu finds himself


arrested for beating a gora soldier. What he did was unfair. He should
not have lost his temper. But he was a simple honest man. His
feelings of hatred against the alien rulers got the better of his
manners. The so-called new setup had given him the courage to
avenge the insult and injury he had once suffered at the hands of a
gora. His hatred against that gora was generalized to the whole gora

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nation. In beating the gora soldier he was encouraged by the concept
of equality of rights promised by the new constitution. But he soon
learnt that the promise was false. This lesson of irony came to him as
a shock. His fond hopes about the future of his nation were shattered
by this incident.

CHARACTER-SKETCH OF MANGU
Mangu is a tongawala in Lahore. He stands for the common man of
the sub-continent. He is keenly interested in the politics of the
country. His political awareness comes from contact with educated
people who sometimes happen to travel by his Tonga. He has heard a
lot about the New Constitution, which is going to be promulgated on
first April. This new constitution promises to ensure basic human
rights for all the people in the country. Like every body else Mangu,
too, is very hopeful. He hopes that the new constitution will bring the
British rule to an end. Then no gora will be able to bully an Indian.
Mangu shares his awareness with other tongawalas on the
Tonga stand. He tells them what he hears from his fares about the
new constitution every day. This has made him quite a leader of his
community.
Like every common man in our country Mangu too is very optimistic
about the future of the nation. He hopes things will improve under the
new setup. But when the setup comes he learns that he was
mistaken. The promised change does not come with it. The alien
rulers are still the masters. Every person of their nation still enjoys
the same prestige. Mangu‟s fight with the gora soldier brings this sad
fact to light for him. We pity him for having fought with a member of
the ruling nation.
Mangu is not just a poor tongawala. He represents the Indian
nation under the British rule. His hatred for the white rulers reflects
the general hatred. It was this hatred that eventually led to the exit of
the white rulers.

(In short Ustad Mangu is a wonderful character. He is a faithful


representative of the slave nations who detest their foreign rulers but
feel helpless against their inhuman treatment. He is a man who tries
to look at the outside world in the light of his inner aspirations and
expectations. This makes him ridiculous.)

4. BREAKFAST
By (John Stienbeck)

SUBSTANCE OF THE STORY

The story is a faithful account of the writer‟s visit to a family of


cotton-pickers. He came upon this family as he was walking along a

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lonely road one morning. He saw a tent by the roadside. A woman
carrying a baby was cooking breakfast for the family. Two men, one
young and the other old, came out of the tent. They welcomed the
writer and invited him to breakfast. They looked very happy and
contented with their lot. They said they were happy because they had
got a cotton-picking job. They had been working in the cotton fields
for the past twelve days. As they sat down to breakfast they told the
writer how happy they were with their honest labour. They offered
the writer a job in the cotton fields. He was deeply impressed by the
simple, honest living and hospitality of cotton-pickers.

The sudden meeting with the simple, honest family of cotton pickers
became an everlasting sweet memory for the writer. It was a surprise
for him because he did not know that such sincere and hospitable
people existed in this society. The nice behaviour and devout faith of
these poor uneducated people impressed him. They greeted the
writer and invited him to breakfast. They told him how happy they
were because they had a job to do and enough to eat. They offered
the writer a job in the cotton fields. Before breakfast they thanked
God for His blessings and prayed to him for further blessings. The
story leaves a pleasant impression on the reader‟s mind.

Q: What does the story teach us?

The breakfast, which the writer shared with the cotton pickers,
was simple and delicious. It was delicious because it was the fruit of
honest labour. The woman was a very good cook. The breakfast
consisted of roasted meat, biscuits and coffee. Every thing was very
well cooked and enough for all.
The young man said,
“We been eating good for twelve days.”
The simple statement shows how thankful these people are for the
blessings God has bestowed on them. It reflects the poor man‟s faith
in providence ( ). This faith of the poor man is the element of
great beauty, which the writer speaks of. He is impressed by the
cheerful, contented life of the poor cotton-pickers. The breakfast with
the cotton-pickers becomes a cherished memory for him. There is a
lesson in the story for those who are not satisfied with their lot. It
teaches them to be thankful for what they have instead of grumbling
against the will of God. The simple, honest cotton-pickers are very
hospitable. They love to share their things with others. They cordially
welcome guests.

Q: The story gives us a glimpse of the free, happy and peaceful


life of cotton-pickers. Do you agree?

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Yes, the story gives us a glimpse of the free, happy and peaceful life
of cotton-pickers. These poor people live on occasional day-labour.
They have no permanent source of income. Cotton-picking is
occasional employment. Yet the cotton-pickers can manage to live
within their means. They live a simple life. They do not need much.
Their wants are few and cheap. So they do not have to run after
money.

The story also shows that the cotton-pickers are deeply religious
people. They never grumble over their hard lot. They thank God for
what they get. They are very generous and hospitable. They love to
share their things with others. They are free from the vices of the
rich. They are not selfish, greedy and dishonest. The story shows
that they enjoy true happiness and satisfaction.

These simple but generous people live an ideal life of peace and
contentment. They have no worries. They do not yearn for wealth and
comfort. They love to work for a simple honest living. They have no
ambitious plans for future. They are thankful for what they have at
present. They love to share their blessings with others. They not only
invite the writer to breakfast, but also offer to help him with a job in
the cotton fields.

From what we read in the story we can safely conclude that these are
the people who enjoy true happiness and satisfaction in this world of
woes and worries.

5. TAKE PITY

Story in outline
Take Pity is a pathetic account of a kind hearted man‟s futile efforts to
rescue a poor family from abject poverty and death. The man, Rosen,
is a coffee salesman. The poor family is a widow, Eva, and her two
daughters. Eva fails to make a living from her husband‟s shop. She
and her two daughters are starving. Rosen tries to help them in many
ways. But Eva refuses to live on charity. Rosen asks her to marry him.
But she rejects the offer. Then he sends her some money. He sends
the money through a friend who says it was repayment of a loan given
by her husband. Eva refuses to take the money. She is determined to
live an independent life. She is very willful. But Rosen knows that she
will lose her foolish war against Fate. He becomes desperate. He tries
to kill himself, leaving all his property to her. But he fails even in this
last attempt. Eva is moved. She comes to him to accept his offer of
marriage. But Rosen has had enough. He refuses to do anything for
her, although it goes against his nature to reject a request.
The story reveals some surprising secrets of human nature. It
gives us a better understanding of human psychology and emotions.

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Rosen‟s unusual softness is contrasted with Eva‟s unusual stiffness.
His frustration in his sincere attempts to help her out of her misery
makes him desperate. It moves Eva at last, and she consents to marry
him. But now it is too late. Rosen is no longer the generous self-
sacrificing man he always had been. His character is changed. This
change is more painful than Eva‟s sufferings.

EVA‟S CHARACTER

Eva is a young widow with two daughters. She is determined to


make her own living. So she rejects every offer of help from the kind-
hearted coffee salesman, Rosen. She counts on her courage. But she
fails to realize that courage alone cannot overcome fate. The truth
dawns on her too late. She feels very sorry for her refusal to accept
Rosen‟s sincere offers of help. She regrets her harsh attitude towards
the kind-hearted man. So she tries to make it up with him. But now
he is sick of her. He has already gone too far in his sincere efforts to
help her. He is frustrated. So he refuses to forgive her.
Eva‟s courage is heartless courage. She is too willful to realize
the sufferings of her poor daughters. Why should she subject them to
starvation, when she knows that she cannot make even a bare living?
Her courage is rather pride that nobody can admire. It breaks Rosen‟s
heart and changes his whole character. In the end Eva repents. She
feels sorry for her stiffness towards the sincere and kind-hearted man.
Her character too is entirely changed. Her resolution to live her own
independent life breaks down. She is moved to pity for the
brokenhearted man. She decides to accept his offer of marriage
although it is against her nature. But she repents too late. It is too
late to make amends for the harm she has done to Rosen.

A COMMENT ON ROSEN‟S BEHAVIOUR


Rosen is a coffee salesman. He is a very kind-hearted man. He
does his best to save the poor family of Axel Kalish. But Axel‟s widow
Eva is too willful. She is determined to make her own living. Rosen
knows that it is impossible. So he offers to help her. But she rejects
every offer. He even offers to marry her. But she refuses. Rosen cannot
see her and her two daughters starving to death. He becomes
desperate. He tries to kill himself, leaving all his property to the poor
family. But this last effort also fails. He is a lovable character. He goes
far out of his way to help the starving family. He is selfless and
sincere. His role is a noble role. Human society has never been devoid
of such people, but they are rare, too rare these days.
Rosen uses every trick to save the unfortunate family from starvation.
Being a businessman he knows that the shop set up by Eva‟s
deceased husband will fail. The locality does not need that shop. He

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advises Eva to move away to a better location. But the headstrong girl
refuses to take his advice. He tries to help her with food and money.
But she heartlessly refuses to accept his sincere offers. He even offers
to marry her. And finally he even tries to kill himself, leaving all his
property to Eva and her daughters. He fails even in this last desperate
attempt. It breaks his heart. Now at last Eva realizes her fault. She
feels sorry for the pains that she has caused Rosen. She tries to make
amends but now it is too late. Rosen is truly a great man although he
is neither rich nor famous. His role in the story inspires love and
respect.
6. THE HAPPY PRINCE
By Oscar Wilde

STORY IN OUTLINE
The story is an allegory. It brings out the importance of charity. We
learn that love and sacrifice can endear us to God. The prince in the
story is no living prince. He is the statue of a dead prince decorated
with gold leaves and precious stones. He is known as the Happy
Prince because there is a smile on his lips. But the smile gradually
gives way to tears. The Happy Prince cannot help crying over the
scenes of misery in the houses of the poor. He decides to help them
with his gold leaves and costly stones. The little swallow acts as his
messenger, and he gives away all his wealth. The Swallow was on his
way back to his homeland when the prince had detained him to help
the poor. He still wished to go back but now it was too late. The
intense cold killed him. Thus the little swallow lost his life in helping
the poor. His death broke the prince‟s heart. So the swallow and the
prince perished for a noble cause. But their death was not the end. It
made them immortal. That is why the angel selected the dead swallow
and the lifeless heart of the prince as the noblest things on earth. The
story teaches a very useful and very true lesson. We learn that God
loves those who love their fellow human beings.

THE LITTLE SWALLOW‟S ROLE


The little swallow plays a very important role in the story. He acts as
the agent of charity. He carries gold leaves and precious stones to the
poor people who need these things. He does the noble work of rescue
and relief. Being a migratory bird the swallow is on his way back
home. The winter is coming, and soon it will be too cold for the
swallow to live. But he is a kind-hearted swallow. He stays with the
happy prince to help the poor in the city. He knows that this noble job
will cost him his life. But he is too kind hearted to leave the noble
prince. He stays on till it is too late. The cold kills him. He dies but his
work for a noble cause makes him immortal. The angle of God carries
away his dead body as one of the most precious things on earth.

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The role played by the little swallow has a lesson for us. We learn that
even a little bird can help the poor and the needy if he gets a chance.
Why not human beings? Why not little children? They can also do a
lot of good if they try. We also learn that God loves those who do good
to others. The little bird gets an opportunity to do good. He takes pity
on the unhappy prince and consents to help him in helping the poor
and the needy. He lays down his life for this noble cause. He dies of
cold but his noble role makes his name immortal. In the same way we,
too, can become immortal by doing good deeds.

ROLE OF THE PRINCE


The Happy Prince is not a living Prince. He is the statue of a prince,
mounted on a tall column in the center of the city. It is the statue of a
dead prince with the soul of the prince in it. He is decorated with gold
leaves and precious stones. There is a smile on his lips. People call
him the Happy Prince because of this smile. He is a supernatural
character, because he can see, hear and speak. Standing on the top of
the tall column, he can see the condition of the people of the city. He
is deeply moved by the misery of the poor. When he was alive he lived
a life of comfort. He neither knew nor cared for the sufferings of the
poor people of his country. Now he regrets why he did not help them
when he was alive. He requests the little swallow to act as his
messenger. Through this messenger he gives away all his wealth. He
loses his outward beauty and gains the beauty of the heart. Then the
little swallow dies, and his heart breaks, but God treasures his broken
heart as the most beautiful thing on earth.
The Prince‟s noble role teaches us that we can get real
happiness, peace and love of God by helping the poor.

7. ARABY
STORY IN OUTLINE

Araby was a sort of bazar. The writer visited it when he was a


small schoolboy. His visit was a labour of love. He was asked by
his beloved to visit the Araby. He was too small to be a lover,
but he fell in love all the same. The girl was his friend Mangan‟s
sister. He loved her madly. Her word was more than a law for
him. So he went to Araby just because she wished him to do so.
He was late because he had to wait for his uncle to get some
money. When he reached there the bazar had almost closed.
Only a Chinaware stall was open. The boy stopped. The sales
girl asked him if he wanted to buy anything. He said, no, he did
not need anything. He had a strange feeling of frustration as he
came out. He was too young, to understand that feeling.

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The boy‟s visit to Araby was fruitless just like his childish
love affair. He undertook this visit as a sacred duty. He only
wished to please the girl without thinking of any other reward
for his pains. He also wished to buy something nice for her. But
he was too small to decide what he should buy for her. In his
confusion he could not make any choice. So he came back
frustrated. Still he was not angry with the girl who had sent
him out on this useless errand. He is rather angry at his own
adequacy.( )
THE BOY‟S LOVE

The boy‟s love for the girl was not a proper love affair between a
young man and a girl. The boy was too young for that. His love
was just childish infatuation( ); a silent adoration. He was
too timid to express his love by word or deed. He just looked at
the girl whenever he had a chance. He felt small and foolish in
her presence. Therefore he could never make his feelings known
to her. He could never tell her how much he loved her.
Sometimes he followed her along the street quietly and at a
respectful distance, without a word between them. Sometimes
he peeped at her from an upstairs window of his house, lying
flat on the floor to avoid being seen. Sometimes he broke out
into passionate expression like “O‟Love, O‟Love”, but he could
never say these words in her presence. In short his love was
just a childish, foolish, one-sided affair. It only made him
suffer, still he could not give it up.
This kind of love is quite common in the process of
growth from childhood to youth. This period of physical and
emotional growth is called puberty. During this period the
sensitive and imaginative child develops a deep attachment to
one of the young people around him or her. Some students fall
in this kind of love with their teachers. This kind of emotional
attachment is sincere but transitory in nature. it Passes off as
the child steps into youth.
THE TITLE OF THE STORY

Araby, the title of the story, is an apt choice. It applies to the


story perfectly. Actually Araby is the name of a bazar. The hero
of the story visits this bazar on the request of his beloved. He
arrives late. The bazar is closed. Only a china ware shop is
open. But the boy cannot buy anything. He forgets what he
needs. He is disappointed with his visit to the bazar. He has

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undertaken this visit only as a labour of love. but now he


realizes it was a labour lost, for it did not help him in his love
affair in any way. His fruitless visit to Araby is like his fruitless
love. it does not make him happy. His frustration at the end of
the visit reflects his unhappy experience of love. his love affair
is just like his visit to Araby.
The meaning of the title expands beyond the story. On the
larger scale we may compare the world to the bazar Araby.
Man‟s life, an everlasting search for peace and love, is like the
boy‟s visit to Araby. The boy never knew what could bring him
solid happiness and satisfaction. He keeps running after one
pleasure or another. But every pleasure results in further
search and struggle. Only by good luck a man may have what
he really needs. Thus the title of the story sums up within it the
whole story of human life, including the tragic end.

8. THE TELL TALE HEART


By Edger Allen Poe

STORY IN OUTLINE
The tell tale heart is a tale of horror. It reflects psychology of a killer.
He kills an old man just because he does not like the old man‟s
vulture-like eye. The reason is not sound enough for a murder. But
the murderer is not a mad man. He commits the murder concisely
and very methodically. He goes to the old man‟s house around
midnight with a muffled light. He pushes the bedroom door open just
a little and finds the man in his bed.
The old man wakes up. The killer waits few minutes. Then he
again peeps in and finds the old man lying awake. He looks at the old
man‟s vulture eye with disgust and bursts in. He pulls the old man off
his bed and overturns the heavy bed on him. In this way he smothers(
) the old man to death. Then he chops the dead body into pieces and
conceals the pieces under the wooden boards of the floor.
Just then three policemen enter the house. They ask questions
about a cry that was heard in the street. It came from the old man‟s
house. The killer tells them that it might have been his own cry in a
dream. He says the old man was not at home and he had left him (the
killer) to look after the house. He said he slept in the house.
Then suddenly the killer‟s fear of detection gets the better of
him, He hears the old man‟s heart beating loudly under the floor. The
fear goes on growing rapidly till the killer cries out in confession,
declaring that he has killed the old man. He is arrested and taken
away .The story ends on a note of horror.

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Q. 2. Is the killer in the story a mad man?


Answer.
The killer tells the story in all its detail. he went to the old man‟s
house around midnight. He opened the door very carefully. But his
hand slipped, and the noise awakened the old man. He sat up in his
bed. Peering into the dark. The killer waited for about an hour. But
the old man did not lie down to sleep. It seemed he was alarmed. The
killer could not bear the suspense. He darted a thin gleam of light on
the old man‟s face. It caught the vulture eye. The killer flew into a
fury. He pulled the old man down and smothered him to death under
the heavy bed. Then he chopped the body into pieces and concealed
the pieces under the wooden planks of the floor. He did all this dirty
job very quietly and neatly.
The killer does the dirty job very cautiously and methodically. A
madman could not have been so cool and cautious. So the killer
cannot be regarded as a madman. But the reason for which he kills
the old man is not sound enough for murder. A normal man cannot
commit murder for such a flimsy reason. Nobody in his senses can kill
a man just for his ugly appearance. Therefore the killer is not a
normal man in full possession of his senses.
The reason, for which the killer confesses the murder, is again
inadequate( ). It is impossible for a human heart to go on beating
after death. But the killer in this story says he clearly heard the dead
old man‟s heart beating under the floor.
On the bases of these two pieces of the killer‟s reasoning we can
say that he is not a normal human being. There is something
seriously abnormal and dangerous in his nature.

Q.3. what happens after the murder?


Answer.
By 4O‟clock the killer had disposed off the old man‟s dead-body. Just
then there came a knock on the door. He opened the door. Three
policemen entered the room. They told him that some of the
neighbours had reported a cry in that house. The killer confidently
told them that it was his own cry during sleep. He said the old man
was not at home.
The policemen searched the house, but found nothing to rouse
suspicion. The killer felt so safe that he began to chat with them.
Suddenly he was startled by the noise of the dead man‟s heart beating
under the floor. He tried to keep cool, but the noise became louder. He
thought the policemen were also hearing that noise. He got so nervous
that he confessed the murder and handed himself over to the police.

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This part of the story reveals the effect of fear on the emotions of
a weak man after committing a crime. He is afraid of exposure. The
fear keeps haunting him till he is obliged to get rid of it either by
coming out with a straight confession or by killing himself. It depends
on the nature of the man. The killer in this story takes the first
alternative. He at first tries his best to hush up the fear. He goes on
speaking loudly and quickly in order to silence the voice of fear in his
heart, and give the impression that he has nothing to hide. But the
fear is too strong, so he suddenly breaks down and comes out with an
open confession.

9. THE NECKLACE
The Substance of The Story

Mr. Loisel, a clerk, got an invitation to a party at the Ministry. His


beautiful young wife was in tears because she had no jewelry for the
great occasion. She did not like to miss this chance to show off. So
she borrowed a beautiful necklace from a rich friend, Madame
Forestier. Unfortunately she lost the necklace at the party. She had no
choice but to replace it with an identical necklace. She bought one for
36000 francs on credit, and give it to Madame Forestier. The lady took
it as her own necklace.
The poor clerk and his wife had to live in abject poverty for 10
years to repay the heavy loan. Then one day it came out that the lost
necklace was an imitation worth only 500 francs. The disclosure came
as a shock to the clerk‟s wife but it had come too late.
Like a true Maupassant story, this story also has a surprise-
ending. This was the writer‟s famous trick by which he used to expose
social or moral blunders committed by simple, honest people of this
age---- the irony of fate and the irony of situation. The trick became
widely popular. People loved to read his stories. Many of the well
known writers followed his example. In Urdu fiction Saadat Hassan
Manto was one of the most popular followers of Maupassant. Some of
the other best writers of today also follow this good tradition. In real
life, too, we often come across such sudden surprises.

Character-sketch of Matilda
Matilda is the young and beautiful wife of Mr.Loisel, a clerk in the
board of Education. She is proud of her elegant beauty. She is
unhappy with her poor lot. She thinks she is a victim of social
injustice and irony of fate. She is unhappy with her husband‟s small
house and old furniture. She feels she has been deprieved of the
comforts and luxuries which she might have enjoyed by marrying a
rich man. In short she is sick and ashamed of her present miserable
life. But all this does not mean that she does not love her husband. Of

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course she loves him deeply though much of the credit for this love
goes to the husband. He does his best to make her as happy as he can
afford. He puts up with her foolish demands, and yields to all her
stupid whims. Matilda is a simple, child like immature girl until she
finds her self face to face with the bitter consequences of her folly. The
loss of the necklace proves a turning point in the development of her
character. It makes her a careful and responsible woman. Her
grumbling over the poor lot of her husband gives way to respect and
gratitude for his tolerance and generosity.
Matilda thus plays two different roles in the story. Before the
loss of the necklace she is a thoughtless, ungrateful, proud beauty,
unhappy with the poverty of her husband. After the loss she becomes
a mature, humble and grateful wife who can gladly sacrifice every
pleasure to get her husband out of his financial misery. This change
in her character makes her a lovable character in spite of all her faults
and follies.

THE HUSBAND‟S CHARACTER


Mr. Loisel is a clerk in the board of Education. His role in the story is
a role of a noble hero. His love and sacrifice for his proud, ungrateful
wife make him a lovable character. He knows that his wife does not
respect him. Still he loves and obeys her. He does his best to make her
life comfortable. He never rebukes her for her insulting attitude. He
does not reproach her for the loss of the necklace. His behaviour after
the loss is the behaviour of an ideal partner--- a really great man. He
does not grumble. Instead he manfully besides to face the misfortune.
He almost sells himself away to pay for the loss. He works day and
night to repay the heavy loan. He goes through the worst for his
ungrateful wife. And yet he never complains, never blames her for his
misery. In short he is an ideal life partner. He is surely a character to
be loved and remembered.
Loisel is one of the few ---- very few lovers who remain lovers
even after marriage. Usually a love marriage soon leads to
disillusionment resulting in dissolution. Matilda is lucky to have Mr.
Loisel as her husband. He loves her so much that none of her foolish
pranks annoys him. He gladly faces the bitter consequences of his
foolish wife‟s acts of folly. He is a character to be admired and loved.

ONE ACT PLAYS

1. THE BEAR

REFERENCE:

These lines have been taken from the play “The Bear” written by
“Anton Chekhove”.

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CONTEXT:
The play is powerful farce. The writer has exposed the feudal
mentality through a delightful comedy. Popova, the heroine, is a
beautiful young widow. She is in deep mourning for her husband who
died seven months ago. She wants to show the world how faithful a
wife she is. She has shut herself up in her bower refuses to see
visitors. Smirnov, a middle-aged landlord, calls on her for recovery of
a loan taken by her husband. She tries to put him off. He insists to
see her. So she has to see him. He asks for his money. She tells him
to come day after tomorrow. Bitter quarrels follows. During the
quarrel Smirnov suggests that she should marry instead of wasting
her life away for her disloyal husband. Popova gives in because she
does not like to lose such a good offer.

QUESTIONS
(Q.1) Prove the play a farcical comedy portraying the
behaviour of the feudal?
Answer:
Anton Chekhove was not only a dramatist but also a great short
story writer. The present play “The Bear” is a farce, full of fun, fury
and boisterous noisy laughter. The play revolves around two main
characters and the behaviour of the characters is ridiculous, funny,
and sentimental.
Popova‟s husband has died and she has cut herself off from society.
She has closed herself in the four walls of her house and is leading a
completely secluded life when the play opens, Luka, her servant, is
seen advising her to take part in the activities of life. She announces
that since the death of her husband, life has lost all its meaning for
her. Through their conversation, we come to know that Popova‟s late
husband had not been a nice fellow. He had not treated Popova well.
Still Popova is bent upon showing the soul of the dead husband how
faithful she is. So she rebukes Luka for advising her to take full
interest in life, as it‟s a saying:
“There are women who love their husbands as blindly, as
enthusiastically and as enigmatically as nuns their
cloister.”
The writer has exposed the feudal mentality through a delightful
comedy. Smirnov, a middle aged landlord, calls on Popova for the
recovery of a loan taken by her husband. The servant, Luka, brings
the message. She refuses to admit Smirnov. But he insists on seeing
her. So she has to see him. Smirnov asks for his money. She tells him
to come day after tomorrow. Smirnov says he will not leave the house
without money. He would rather stay in the house till the day after
tomorrow. A bitter quarrel follows. During the quarrel Smirnov
suggests that she should marry instead of wasting her life away for
her cruel, disloyal husband. He presses this point home and succeeds
in persuading her to marry him. Popova gives in because she does not
like to lose such a good offer.

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The play is a delightful satire on utilitarian morality as well. Smirnov
marries Popova for her wealth and status. She too sees her own
advantage. Smirnov is not only a jovial fellow but also a landlord. It is
thus an equal bargain for both of them. Apart from this serious theme
the play is remarkable for its superb humour of dialogue and
situation. So the play is a good farce and has farcical situation.
(Q.2) Draw woman nature discussing Popova‟s character.
Answer:
Popova is a rich young widow of feudal class. She is true
representative of her class. She is foolish, frivolous and selfish. She
loves to show off even in sorrow. She wishes to be honoured as a
faithful wife. That is why she seems to take her husband‟s death
seriously. She is hypocrite because she does not love her husband so
much as she pretends. She is a very talkative lady and it is through
her continuous talk that we are able to guess that most of the time
she is telling lies and is, in fact quite unfaithful and insincere. She
says:
“I shall be true till death and show him how I can love.”
Smirnov, a friend of her husband, has come to collect his bill but she
refuses and says that she will pay the bill, the day after tomorrow.
Smirnov asks her to pay immediately. So they decide to fight a duel
with each other. But she does not know how to fire a shot, and says
to Smirnov:
“Before we fight you must know to fire. I have never held a
pistol in my hands before.”
Smirnov who is as perfect a shot as one who,
“ Can put a bullet through a coin tossed into the air as it
comes down”
Smirnov begins to tell her and on the other hand he himself declares
that he is “going to fire in the air” because “its‟ my affair”.
Meanwhile the moody Smirnov falls in love with Popova. He kneels
before her and says:
“I love you as I have never loved before! I have refused
twelve woman, nine have refused me, but I never loved one
of them as I love you.”
At first she shows hatred towards him. He gets up and quickly goes
to the door but she stops him. “No, stop … No … go away, go away
I hate you”, “yes, yes go away”. All of a sudden we see popova
lowering her eyes and they embrace each other most passionately.
Through the character of Popova, the writer has described and
shown the nature of woman. Like ladies of her class Popova is very
emotional. She flies into a rage whenever something happens against
her desire. She cannot stand defiance. Popova has no character. She
is often in conflict with herself. For instance she vows never to forget
her husband, but at the same time she admits that he was not good
husband. Popova easily falls for temptation. So she accepts

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Smirnov‟s offer readily. She is a complex character because she is
not what she seems. All in all she is a truly feudal character showing
the woman‟s nature.

CHARACTER SKETCH OF SMIRNOV

Smirnov is a middle-aged landlord. He is a very intelligent and clever


man. He knows how to make his way in the world. He knows the
psychology of a woman. That is why he is not disturbed by the hostile
attitude of popova. He knows how to handle her.

Smirnov has no respect for others. He openly condemns Popova‟s


husband. He does not mind speaking indecently about the dead man.
His conversation with Popova is not polite. He seems to have no
manners. But actually he is very clever. He wants to achieve his
object. And he knows that is the best way to achieve it. Woman likes a
bold and outspoken man. So Smirnov deals with her, as Smirnov is a
man of the world and a businessman. He is very much like the heroes
of Bernard Shaw.

The delightful humour of speech and action in the play owes its origin
to the odd speech and manners of Smirnov. Even in a furious mood,
his speech carries a note of humour, because his fury is the fury of a
foolish man. We cannot help smiling at his irritation.

Smirnov behaves like a fool but he is not really a fool. He is rather a


shrewd businessman who pretends to be a rude intruding fool. Popova
is really taken in by his trick. He knows that she will fall for it. She
pretends to be angry but in fact she likes the bold manner of Smirnov.
So we see that Smirnov succeeds in his purpose.

(2) THE BOY COMES HOME


REFERENCE:
These lines have been taken from the play “The Boy Comes
Home” written by A.A. Milne.

CONTEXT:
The play is a fateful event in the family affairs of Uncle James, a
successful businessman who believes in strict discipline. Philip,
the young nephew of Uncle James, comes home after four years
of active war services in the army. He is now a mature young
man though only 21. He gets up late against the strict orders of
his uncle to get up early. Uncle James is angry to see that Philip
has violated the strict rules of his discipline. He presses Philip to
join him in his jam business. But Philip refuses to do so, holding
that he would prefer to be an architect. His uncle refuses to give
him the money for that job. Philip takes out his revolver. Uncle

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James gives in. but suddenly Philip announces to join the


business of his uncle. It is a favourable change for the family.

QUESTIONS
Q.1 The play discusses generation gap. Is it true?
Answer:
The play may be described as a light comedy. It is witty and
amusing throughout. The characters are flesh and blood, and
true to life. We find a touch of universality in this play. We
come across such fellows and such situations, sometimes they
turn out to be tragic unfortunately. The play is about a fateful
event in the family affairs of Uncle James, a successful
businessman who believes in strict discipline.
Philips, the young nephew of Uncle James, comes home after
four years of active war services in the army. He is no longer a
shy young boy of 17. He is now a mature young man though
only 21. He behaves not as a child but as master of the house.
He gets up late against the strict orders of his uncle to get up
early. Philips asks for breakfast. The cook refuses to prepare
breakfast, because Uncle James does not allow late breakfast in
his house.
The cook says that she would rather resign than to violate the
discipline. Philip at once pays her wages and dismisses her
from service. The cook can‟t bear the loss of her job, so she
readily agrees to prepare breakfast for him.
Uncle James enters, he is angry to see that Philip has violated
the strict rules of his discipline. He presses Philip to join him in
his Jam business. But Philip refuses to do so, holding that he
would prefer to be an architect. His uncle refuses to give him
the money for that job. Philip takes out his revolver. Uncle
James is cowed down by this show of force. He agrees to give
Philip the money he needs. Then suddenly Philip announces his
consent to join the Jam business of his uncle. Thus he
succeeds in breaking down the mechanical discipline
maintained by his uncle. It is a favourable change for the
family.
The author has thus discussed the generation gap in the play.
He expresses that old generation wishes to impose its rules and
regulations on young generation. But young generation refuses
to follow such rules rather they want to lead life and to select
their career according to their own will. As we see in the play.
Uncle James tries to convince Philip to join him in his business.
He even uses force of purse for this purpose. As a result Philip

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uses force of pistol against the force of purse. James agrees to


all this demands readily and Philip,
“Picking him up by the scruff, and helping him into the
chair, says to him, “Good man, that‟s the may to talk”.
Uncle James is now ready to face the facts of life as the new
generation sees them.
(Q. 2) Compare the powers, Power of Purse and Power of
Pistol.
Answer:
Every play is based on some conflict, whether it is the conflict
going within one person or character‟s mind or between two
characters in the play or between two forces as a man and
nature or between a man and society.
So for as this short one act play “The Boy Comes Home” is
concerned, conflict appears between the uncle and the nephew
or in other words between James and Philip or between two
forces i.e. the force of money and the force of arms. When the
play opens, we see Philip the young man, who has been in the
army for four years asking the maid-servant to give him his
breakfast at 10‟O‟clock. It is his habit that is not liked by Uncle
James, who is a cold businessman, who stresses on
punctuality, civility and respect. James happens to come there,
and grows angry on hearing that Philip is having breakfast. He
says that he wanted to talk to Philip about his coming into
business. Philip says that he should wait for him in the drawing
room. James sits in an armchair and dozes off. In his dream he
warns Philip not to smoke in the house. He says that he should
understand, once for all while he remains in this house that he
must be punctual, civil and respectful. Philip tells his uncle
that he was leaving his house and taking rooms some where
else. He asks him to give him an allowance, or all the money his
father had left. James replies that he will not give him any
money before he grows twenty-five.
Uncle James says that Philip should join his business of
making Jams. Philip wants to become an architect. James says
that Philip must have learned to obey the orders and recognize
authority. Philip does not show any intention or inclination for
that business. He flatly and frankly refuses to join. But on
other hand he is not free, because his money is in the
possession of James and James threatens to use the force of
purse against Philip. Philip has also grown up and well
conscious of his worth, he takes out a revolver and displays a
bomb, telling James what harm may come, by aiming at James.
Here Philip uses the force of arms or pistol against the force of
purse and finally brings his uncle, James to his knees and
finds victory over him. His uncle is submissive and he agrees to

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join him in his Jam business, of his own accord or free will.
Uncle James is totally frightened. “Now James opens his eyes
with a start and looks round him in bewildered way. He
rubs his eyes, takes out his watch and looks at it, and then
stares round the room again. The door from the dinning
room opens and Philip comes in with a piece of toast in his
hand.”
This is the real Philip who has actually arrived to have the
proposed meeting and, thanks to the dream, Uncle James is
now a changed and molded man, ready to understand the
problems of the young man. Now the mode of the dialogue has
reversed and we hear such dialogue.
Philip: (surprised)…. Rather late I‟m afraid
James: That‟s all right (he laughs awkwardly)
Or
Philip: It‟s a bit late, isn‟t it?
James: Well, if you‟re four years behind so is everybody
else.
The writer has in fact brought home a point to the readers, i.e.
those who threaten others with force are themselves defeated
with other force. So a social and moral lesson may also be got,
that is we should not use force against innocent dependants to
exploit them, otherwise, we, ourselves may fall a prey to their
exploitation or threat, because.
“The time has always rights to do what is right”
In the play, James the bullying uncle, stiff necked arrogant and
harsh turns out to be the most submissive and humble one in
no time, but on revolver point, by no other than his nephew,
who joins him in his Jam business of his own accord or free
will. As it is a light comedy and its job is to provide delight and
instruction to the audience, It not only amuses the readers but
also restores their shattered faith in life, by giving them moral
support.
(3) SOMETHING TO TALK ABOUT
REFERENCE:
These lines have been taken from the play “Something to Talk
About” written by Eden Philpotts.

CONTEXT:
The play is a delightful comedy. This is a satire on the mentality
of aristocratic English class. Wolf a notorious burglar enters
stealthily the house of Sydney‟s to take away their rich gifts of
Christmas. The whole family comes there and enjoys the

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presence of the burglar. They are very happy and treat the wolf
like an old friend. It is the burglar who is surprised, not the
family. This turning of the tables makes the story very amusing.
Wolf puts all their presents in a bag but leaves them, when Wolf
is told about more precious gifts in a neighbouring house. The
Sydney‟s save their gifts and enjoy the presence of Wolf.

QUESTIONS

Character and Ideas of wolf


Wolf is the central figure of the play around which all events
take place. We do not know his real name. He is notorious by
the title of the Wolf. He is a great burglar of England “The
Terror of England” exclaims Lady Redchester, very rightly when
she recognizes him. He is so well known that even Lord
Redchester exclaims, “The wolf comes to our little place! Surely
not! Some imposter pretending to be the Wolf”. And when he
becomes sure about the identity of the wolf, he says, "Glad to
know you” and shakes hands with him. Wolf appears in the
library of Tudor Redchester at 3‟O clock on Christmas morning,
wearing tight-fitting suit, a cap on his head, a black mask over
his eyes. He carries an electric torch in one had and a bag in
the other hand. He lets the torch travel over the room and finds
the safe. Wolf is an expert at opening the safes. No safe is „safe‟
from him. He is well known for opening the safe within in no
time. He is fumbling with the safe, when Mr. Sydney comes into
the library. He orders him to „hands up‟. He asks Sydney if he
knows the password of this safe. He is told that only his father
knows it and it contains valuable gifts of Christmas. He is
amazed at the information, given by Mr. Sydney. Wolf has exact
information about everything, especially about the safe. He
claims himself before Lord Redchester.
“I have a thousand secrete channels of information.”
Wolf is romantic by nature. When Guy asks his
permission to call Lettice, in there, he promptly says, “I never
can say no to beauty”. He is working on the safe when she
comes to the library and utters these words:
“Oh! How brave of him! How thrilling! How do you do?
(Shakes hands). Do you think you can manage it?
(Looks at safe).”
He becomes so involved with her that she takes the
revolver from him and puts it on the mantle piece.
His dialogue tells that he must be a well-educated man.
When Bishop advises him to leave criminal life Lettice says that
he is “lost sheep in wolf clothing‟. At that he at once counters

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her by saying that, “Wolves do change their hair but not their
hearts”. He is an intelligent fellow and has good knowledge
about his own field of practice. He is very vigilant. He is always
conscious of his own interest. He is active and smart. Again and
again he warns the Sydney to be silent otherwise he would
„plug‟ them. He is a little philosopher. When Lady Redchester
talks about Charles who is “so interested in the criminal
classes”. He promptly says, “There ain‟t no criminal classes,
any more than virtuous classes. The rogues and the rulers
may both come from the gutter, or the palace. A man may
be in the House of commons today and the House of
Detention tomorrow, can‟t he?” This shows that he has deep
knowledge of human psychology and sociology. He is rather a
greedy fellow and it is because of his greed that he loses all the
Christmas gifts of the Sydney‟s. Although he has answered
before that, “a bird in hand is better than two in the bush.”
It is actually the psychologically round approach of the
Sydney‟s that they are able to win him.
(Q): Portray Sydney‟s behaviour as a family thriving for
some change.
Answer:
“Something to talk about‟ is a delightful comedy in one act by
Philpotts. The play is about a burglar and a rich family. It is a
clever and pleasant representation of the temperament of
Modern English people, who might well find nocturnal alarm a
matter of objective entertainment. The members of the family
don‟t lose wits at the arrival of the burglar. They behave so
politely, confidently, light heartedly and sincerely that it is the
burglar who is bewildered at being treated with such genuine
politeness. The comedy lies in „the tables turned‟. It is the
burglar who meets the unexpected.
The Sydney‟s are an interesting family. They represent the
modern man who loves thrilling situations. They are living an
uneventful life. They want to have a thrill so that they may
become famous in the locality. They want publicity at all costs.
Therefore they welcome the wolf in their house. They are so
hungry for adventure that they are not afraid of the wolf. They
were fed up with the dull routine of their lives and wanted
something unusual to happen in the family. People always say
that Sydney‟s are the oldest and dullest family in which nothing
but weddings and funerals take place. As it is said “Change is
the law of nature and it is the nature of man to make
changes.”
Guy even says to the burglar,

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“…….? People always say we are the oldest and dullest


family in the country. Nothing ever happens to the Sydney.
The point to note here is that change seems to be the desire of
human life. It is not a height of irony that he is welcoming a
burglar for the sake of change. Later part of the play indicates
that not only Guy alone, but also, all members of the family
have been suffering from the same disease for a long time. As
Guy says,
“ We never get into newspapers, we never even have
accidents out hunting, and no burglars, no fires; nothing
but weddings and funerals. But now all‟s changed!”
Lady Redchester calls him a new sort of “Santa Claus”. Bishop
preaches him that he should change and become God‟s sheep.
Each one is amazed to see the wolf. They are ready to assist
him in robbing the safe. The Wolf is told all details of the gifts,
which are enclosed, in the safe. For the sake of fun, he is told to
try his luck by using gas cylinder to unlock the safe. They want
to amuse themselves with the help of Wolf. When he fails to do
so; he is told the exact code No. of the safe. All gifts of
Christmas are brought out of the safe. He checks them one by
one and on requests of family members, they are given to each
of them. The necklace is given to the mother who is very happy
to wear it as it suits her; similarly each of them is happy to try
their ornaments and gifts and are thankful to their father who
has brought them for Christmas.
When the Wolf intends to take them back; they are reluctant.
They request him not to rob them of their gifts on such a sacred
day; The Wolf says to them that he has also a family to support.
The clergyman, the uncle of Sydney, plays a hideous trick on
the wolf. He shows him the house of another rich man with
much more valuable things and the details of his safety to
return after theft. Thus the tables are turned. Lord Redchester
sums up the situation in these words,
Grand Fellow! Something to talk about at last.
The confidence of Guy, the child like happiness of Lettice, the
dignified bearing of Lord Redchester, Lady Redchester‟s calling
the burglar a new sort of Santa Claus. Fatherly behaviour of
uncle Bishop and the humorous reaction of Preston baffle the
burglar and amuse the reader to a very delightful extent. Thus
is clearly shows Sydney‟s behaviour as a family driving for some
change.
(4) SMOKE SCREENS

REFERENC:

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These lines have been taken from the play “Smoke Screens”
written by Harold Brighouse.
COTEXT:
The play is a serious social comedy. Its story is a three-sided
conflict. Primrose, the young heroine is a modern girl. Her
mother, Lucy Aston, is a liberal lady divorced by her charming
husband. Susan, her aunt, is a conservative. Lucy does not like
to interfere with her daughter‟s affairs. Susan tries to warn her
against the dangers faced by Primrose. Primrose wants to marry
a foot baller, John. Her mother and Susan are astonished.
Susan leaves the house in disgust. Her mother decides to let her
marry. But she says she will keep a vigilant watch over her
daughter‟s husband through the smoke screen of her taxi0car
business. She does not like to lose her daughter. But she is quite
helpless.

QUESTIONS
(Q. 1) Everyone is behind some smoke screens having
his own to grind, discuss.
Answer:
“Smoke Screens” is a beautiful play by Brighouse. It is a serious
social comedy. Its story is a three-sided conflict. Primrose, the
young heroine, is a modern girl. Her mother Lucy Aston is a
liberal lady divorced from her charming husband. Susan her
aunt is conservative. She does not like the free social contacts
of her niece. She wants to give her a lecture but she does not
listen to her. Primrose thinks that she needs no lectures
because she can look after herself. The play is basically about a
self-made woman who has divorced her husband and
successfully established herself in society. Perhaps while busy
in her fight against life, she has not been giving proper
attention to her daughter Primrose. The play also shows the
generation gap. It also has a lesson for the parents who try to
crush the individuality of their Children and want to tailor them
according to their own liking. Lucy is living with her daughter
primrose of twenty in a well-furnished flat. She worked hard
and established a taxi cab business.
Her sister Susan comes to meet her she is a married
woman of fifty. When the curtain rises, Susan is seen in the
room. The door opens and primrose enters. She searches for
her bag, which contains her lipstick and three pounds cash.
Susan asks her that she wanted to talk to her. She says that
she has no time for her and takes her bag and goes out. She
has been somewhat harsh to her aunt.
Lucy enters and Susan talks to her about Primrose‟s
rudeness. Lucy says she might have made some mistake

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somewhere. Susan says that it was not so. She thinks that
Lucy was a splendid woman who had fought life like a heroine.
Lucy says that life is crook and fights back crooked.
Lucy could not be a domestic mother to Primrose while she was
running a business. Susan complains that primrose was a
spoiled child. Lucy says that each generation has its own
techniques. When we want our children to be like us, they want
to be left alone to be themselves. She says that she doesn‟t
know whether Primrose is a mess, or just a nice kid with a hard
modern surface.
Clarice, a friend of Primrose, enters and paints a very ugly
picture of her brother John. Both the women don‟t understand
why she was presenting such a horrible picture of her brother.
Just then Primrose enters and announces that she was
marrying John. She thinks that marriage is a jolly fine
institution. She says that Lucy had married a handsome man
but failed. Now she was marrying an ugly man out of love, not
for his physical charms.
Lucy admits that it is always a losing game to be a
mother. She is ready to see John, the future husband of her
daughter.
Lucy exclaims, “The smoke Screens.” She expresses her
determination that she will shoot John if he is not kind to
primrose. Because it is true that
“One of the most important things in life is to profit
from your losses.”
Thus Lucy remains behind the screen. Her handsome
husband had been a smoke screen of an ugly man. Ugly John
is a smoke screen of a nice man, rude and impertinent.
Primrose is a smoke screen of a yielding mother. Thus all the
important characters of the play are smoke screens. The writer
has very successfully presented the human theme in the play.
(Q. 2) Children of broken families are difficult to handle.
How?
Answer:
From this play we can gather that the children of broken
families are really difficult to handle as in this play we have
seen through the character of Primrose.
Primrose the young, beautiful and courageous heroine is
a modern girl of twenty. Her mode, manner, expression are
bright and jolly, though these are somewhat harsh and rude of
her aunt Susan, who belongs to the country side and being a
rigid, conservative believes in old traditions and moral values of

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life. Primrose likes to mix up with the people of her age. She
spends most of her time outdoors. She goes out even at the odd
time of night, to avail the opportunities of life. She wants to
enjoy herself each and every moment of life. She does not like to
poke her nose in the personal matters of other people she does
not allow others to interfere in her life. She does not feel it
necessary to remain a housewife once and for all. She is aware
of the effects of beauty that is why she tries to look attractive.
She becomes disrespectful to her aunt when she offends her.
She also tries to remove the doubts and apprehensions of her
conservative aunt about going out of the house all alone at
night. New generation must be confident of her actions.
She convinces her mother for marrying an ugly football
player Mr. John.
The ideas of Primrose show her determination and
cageyness in her decision. She knows about the unhappy
marriage of her mother. Although she misses her father but she
avoids talking about her father because she loves her mother
very much. She has no craze for money. She has love for family
life. She prefers married life to well-settled business of taxicabs.
Through her character we can also detect that the
children of broken families are often very much confident, self-
reliant and dependable because they get total freedom which
may also spoil them.
Therefore, it is really a difficult task to handle a child of a
broken family.

POETRY: A NEW ANTHOLOGY OF ENGLISH VERSE


LEISURE
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “Leisure” written by
William Davies.
Context:
This poem is a protest against the unnecessary commitment of
man with worldly affairs. We are always in a hurry and have no
leisure time to look at the beauty spread all around us. Man‟s
miserable life brings him nothing but sadness and worries.
Explanation: (Lines 1 – 4)

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In these lines the poet bewails our rushed life. The poet says that
we cannot call this life a pure life, if it is full of worries and
anxiety. We have no time to stand at a certain place and look
carefully at nature. Even we cannot spare a few moments to
stand under the branches of green trees and enjoy the beautiful
and restful shades of the trees. The common animals like sheep
and cows are better than us in enjoying life. We cannot look at
the common animals like sheep and cows grazing in the
pastures. We have committed ourselves with worldly affairs
unnecessarily and cannot enjoy nature and the natural beauty
spread all around us.
(Lines 5 – 6)
In these lines the poet tells us, when we pass through some
forest, we do not have time to stop for some moments to look at
the trees tall and short, and enjoy their natural beauty. The dark
green trees provide a soothing effect but we are always sick-
hurried and cannot enjoy at least the simple beauty. Also we
cannot look at the small animals like squirrels concealing their
food-grain in the grass for the winter. This minor scene can also
give us relief.
(Lines 7 – 8)
In these lines the poet says that human beings cannot see the
beauty that is hidden in the streams. During day time, when the
rays of the sun fall upon the clear water of the brooks, the water
reflects and shines like stars in the sky during night. Sometimes
water of streams, because of its clearness seems so beautiful
that even stones beneath the water can be observed, which look
like stars in the clear blue water. This scene also resembles the
stars shining in the sky at night.
(Lines 9 – 10) & (11 – 12)
The poet says we are so hard luck that we cannot watch a girl or
a woman who dances in the field. The feet of the dancing girl are
very attractive and bewitching but we cannot spare time to look
at these feet as how they dance. This dancing girl can also
amuse us with her performance. The poet also mourns that we
have no time to wait for the words, the mouth of the dancing girl
has to utter. As a sort of smile has appeared in her eyes but we
cannot wait for such time as the words from her eyes are
transferred to her lips. Those words can amuse us. In fact the

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poet uses personification, a poetic device to explain the natural


beauty scattered all around us. The poet personifies beauty as a
young beautiful dancing girl having a smiling face.
(Lines 13 – 14)
In these concluding lines the poet regrets to say that ours is a
poor life. In a way it cannot be life if it is full of cares and
worries. Unluckily, we have no time to stand at a place and look
carefully at nature that can refresh us. As such our life is
nothing but lamentation through and through. As human beings
we should spare some moments and look at nature and natural
beauty spread around us and enjoy life.

TARTARY
Reference:
This stanza has been taken from the poem “Tartary” by Walter
De Le Mare.
Context:
This poem is a descriptive picture of an imaginary kingdom of
Tartary. The poet considers himself the king of that state and
wants to enjoy all the delights of life. He would have a throne of
pure gold. Beautiful pets would roam about to please him.
Musicians would play on instruments at the time of his meals.
His rich land would be full of honey, fruits, beautiful gardens
and attractive valleys. In fact, this poem is a journey into the
realm of imagination.
EXPLANATION
Stanza 1
In these lines the poet presents the picture of an imaginary
kingdom “Tartary”. He considers himself the king of this empire.
He says if he were the king of Tartary, he would be its sole king.
There should be no one else to share this kingdom. His bed
would be made of ivory, a precious material. His throne would be
made of pure gold. There would not be any mixture of base metal
in it. He would have a spacious court in which peacocks would
move here and there very proudly. His forests would be full of
wild animals like tigers and lions. They would freely stroll in the
forests as its real owners. His kingdom would have pools full of
different kinds of fish. They would swim aslant. They would be

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very happy and freer than any other object. The tiny fins of these
fish would be sloppy towards the sunlight and would shine
proudly and happily.
Stanza 2
In this stanza the poet further imagines himself as the king of
Tartary and mentions his mealtime. He says that if he were the
king of Tartary, bugles would call him to meals every day. This
would become a ceremonial event. There would be great
trumpeters that would produce heavy and noisy sounds. In the
evening there would be lamps of different kinds. The light
emitted by these lamps would be as yellow as pure honey. Some
of the lights would be as red as pure and bitter wine. And during
his meal and even in the evening, the players would play upon
harp, pipe and many other musical devices. All these musical
instruments would create sweet and beautiful music.
Stanza 3
In this stanza the poet says something about himself. He says
that if he were the king of Tartary, he would wear dress of pure
pearls. The pearls would be of white and gold colour. There
would also be green beads among them. All these pearls would
be mixed and would be a thick as grains of seeds. Further the
poet wishes that he would wear his dress, his small sword before
the waning of the morning star. This would mean that he would
prepare himself very early in the morning. His carriage would be
drawn by seven specific horses known as zebras. And these
horses would draw his carriage through the deep and dark
shades and clearings of Tartary.
Stanza 4
In these lines the poet says if he were the king of the imaginary
kingdom, Tartary, he would be the sole owner of its silvery pale
rivers. Water of these rivers would be very clear and tasty. He
would be king of its fruits of all types. Hills of the land of Tartary
would be his. The gorges bushes, tall trees and the entire valley
would be under his command and control. He would enjoy all
the natural objects. The bright stars shining in the sky and the
perfumed morning air would also please him. The shivering lakes
of Tartary would be like the quiet and motionless oceans. There
would be beautiful juicy trees of different kinds of fruits. These
would attract birds and would delight him as well as the birds in

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the beautiful red valleys, red because of fruits and colourful


flowers. This imaginary kingdom would please the poet all the
time. All the beautiful natural objects mentioned by the poet
shows his deep love for nature.

NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS


By Elizabeth Sewell
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “New Year
Resolutions”, written by Elizabeth Sewell.
Context:
This poem is about the New Year resolutions and promises.
Another year has lapsed. On the start of the new year, the
poetess takes stock of herself very realistically. She tries to make
this world a better place by making new pledges. Her
untraditional resolution is to face and lie with reality.
EXPLANATION
Lines: 1 – 3
In these lines the poetess describes her mental state and the way
she would drink to purify her soul. She says that she will drink
wine at night secretly. She will have long draughts during night
and will purge herself from all kinds of evils. This will assist her
in helping other people because her own mind and spirit will be
free from all types of evils. “Long draughts of Quiet” also
suggests that she will keep quiet most of time. This will be the
best means for the purification of her soul and it will help her in
leading beneficial and successful life. She says; she will talk less
and hear more and mould her life into betterment.
Lines 4 – 6
In the given lines Elizabeth says, she will remember herself twice
daily, in the evening and in the morning. She will take into
consideration what her aim of creation is. She will try to
understand the purpose of life in general. Perhaps she means
that she should recognize herself, which will help her in
recognizing God and leading life for benefit of others.
Lines 7 – 9

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These are concluding lines of the poem. Here, the poetess says
she will accept reality. While, sleeping at night, she will consider
the bitter reality of life. During the new year she will make some
promises and pledges. She will sleep on thin, less-fleshy arms of
reality. Accepting reality and facts is always a difficult thing, but
she will accept it bravely. She will feel relieved and satisfied,
when she comes to know that she has spent her life for the
benefit of others. The image of bony arms is a hard reality. Even
then she will get delight and feel comforted when she has
fulfilled her promises and resolutions, she has made on the start
of the new year.

WOMAN WORK
By Maya Angelou
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “Woman Work”
written by Maya Angelou.
Context:
The poetess feels extremely bored and tired after attending to her
house-hold affairs. She feels that only the natural phenomena
can exercise healthy influence on her. The natural objects can
save her from unbearable boredom and can raise her spirits. A
house-hold woman remains awfully busy with the domestic
chores. Even then, she can enjoy nature through her
imagination. It is an indirect praise of the woman‟s greatness. In
general, the poem is an escape from the drudgery of the
mechanical routine and taking shelter in ideal life.
EXPLANATION
Stanza 1 = Lines 1 – 4
In these lines the poetess gives vent to her feelings for her dull
and busy life. She is tired of the routine work of a working
woman. She says she has to look after children at home. Also
she has to repair clothes of the members of her family. She has
to clean the floor of her house and has to collect edibles from the
shop for her family. After that she has to cook those things
which she has brought from shop.
Stanza 2

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These lines are a continuation of her domestic chores. She has


mentioned some of the chores in the previous stanza and of
some talks here. She says that she has to cook chicken for the
family. Also she has to dry the baby after bathing it. After that
she has to prepare meal for her guests. She has to remove
unwanted plants from her garden. She has to press the clothes
of her children and other members of her family. She has to
dress her little children and also has to cut bamboos. She has to
clean the whole house. All these chores are quite tough and
require courage and for bearance on the part of a domestic
woman.
Stanza 3
In these lines the poetess wants to enjoy the natural objects. She
has got tired of the domestic work and wants to go close to
nature. She says that the sun light should shine on her, rain
should fall on her. The dewdrops should gently fall upon her. All
these things can cool her brow. All these natural objects can give
her satisfaction and peace.
Stanza 4
These lines are an expression of her escapism from the busy life
of a working woman. The domestic woman remains awfully busy
and dreams of an ideal life. In these lines she asks storm to blow
her from the busy world across the sky with its stormy wind. As
such she will be able to get relief from the hurly burly of life. She
asks the storm to take her to an imaginary world for rest. Only
imagination can give her, peace, solace and satisfaction,
otherwise physically it is not possible to run away from this
world. Shelley in “Ode to the West Wind” says, oh, lift me as a
wave, a leaf, a cloud! I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!
Stanza 5
This stanza is also an expression of taking relief and refuge with
natural objects. She asks the snow-flakes to fall gently on her
body and completely cover it up and make it all white. When she
will be completely under the charm and burden of the white
snow, she will get solace. She further asks snow to touch and
give her cold icy kisses, so that she may be able to have rest that
night. Actually the natural objects can please a person and give
company for some time.
Stanza 5

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In these lines the poetess addresses all the natural objects to


help her in giving relief from the busy life of a working woman.
She wants to lose herself among the natural objects. That is why
she asks the sun, rain, the curving sky, the mountains, the
ocean, the leaf and the stone to give her relief. Actually she
wants to get relief and joy from all these things and wants to run
away from dark and dull life at home. That is why she asks the
moon to glow, the shining stars to give her shelter with them.
She calls all these things her own because she wants some
leisure and satisfaction in these natural things. Nature can give
delight to her and can transport her to peace and tranquility.

THE REBEL
By D.J. Enright
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “The Rebel” written
by D.J. Enright.
Context:
This poem deals with the attitude of a social rebel. Actually a
rebellion is a manner to look different from others. Such a social
rebel is neither dangerous nor vicious. He does not make the
other people‟s lives miserable. He just wants to look different.
Young dissatisfied people may behave like this. But the society
should not have social rebels.
EXPLANATION
Lines 1 - 2
In these lines the poet expresses the attitude of a social rebel.
When every body keeps short and uniform hair, the rebel
knowingly grows his hair long. This, he does for the fact that he
wants to look different from others.
Lines 3 – 4
In these lines the poet says that the rebel goes against the
custom and tradition of the society. When the rest of the society
grows long hair, the rebel cuts his hair short. This he does just
to have a difference from others.
Lines 5 – 6

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In these lines the poet expresses the thought when every


member of the society talks during a lesion or meeting, the rebel
keeps silent because he wants to be prominent.
Lines 7 – 8
In these lines the poet says when no-body talks during the lesion
or meeting, the rebel creates disturbance by talking loudly just
to look distinct.
Lines 9 – 10
These lines show a different position of a rebel. When every
person of the society wears simple and uniform clothes, the rebel
uses strange and odd clothes. He wants to look distinguished
from others.
Lines 11 – 12
In these lines the poet says when all other members of the
society use queer and strange clothes, the rebel dresses himself
very seriously and soberly.
Lines 13 – 14
In these lines the poet expresses his idea of a rebel. If some
people love dogs as pet animals, the rebel talks about the
usefulness of cats. He prefers cats to dogs.
Lines 15 – 16
If a rebel is in company of those people who love cats, he prefers
dogs to cats. He wants to look different at all costs.
Lines 17 – 18
The poet says if people require the sunlight and praise the sun
the rebel is against them. He says that the sun is not required
and there is need for rain.
Lines 19 – 20
When everybody of the society welcomes and requires rain, the
rebel says something about the sun. He feels sorry for the
absence of the sun. According to him, there is need for the
sunlight.
Lines 21 – 22

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When every members of the society goes to some gathering and


attends the meeting, the rebel stays at home and keeps himself
busy by reading a book indoors.
Lines 23 – 24
When everybody of the society stays at home and reads a book,
the rebel tries to find some crowd of the people and wants to
attend to them.
Lines 25 – 26
When every person asks for something, the rebel rejects the
same with thanks because he is a person quite different from
others.
Lines 27 – 28
When everybody of the society does not like and does not receive
anything and says thanks, for that, the rebel, on purpose,
requires that thing and asks for it.
Lines 29 – 30
In these lines the poet concludes that it is very good that we
have social rebels in the society. But naturally, it is not good to
become a social rebel. The poet further suggests that if we
already have the social rebels, we should tolerate them. Without
them life will become monotonous and dull.

PATRIOT INTO TRAITOR


Robert Browning

Reference:
This is stanza has been taken from the poem “Patriot into
Traitor” written by Robert Browning.
Context:
This poem is a criticism of politics and people‟s opinion. When a
leader comes into power, people call him a patriot. When he is
dethroned, the same leader is considered a traitor. This is the
tragedy of modern politics. The leader in this poem fell a victim
to the same state of affairs. When he came into power, people
showered flowers at him as a patriot. But after a year, they
declared him a traitor, when he was no more in power. They took

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him to the gallows. But Browning has ended his poem not on a
tragic, rather on a next world optimistic note.
EXPLANATION
Stanza 1
In these lines the poet says through the mouth of a political
leader, when for the first time, only one year ago, on that very
day, he came to power, the people gave him a very warm
welcome. There were roses mixed with myrtle flowers which
people spread on his way through and through. The house-tops
were crowded with people and they were moving and swinging
like mad people. Also they were so happy as if they were mad.
The minarets and domes of churches were shining with light.
These churches were decorated with colourful flags. All this was
on that very day when the politician came into power and it took
place only one year ago.
Stanza 2
When the people were given him a warm welcome they rang bells
and raised slogans. These different voices mingled with one
another and produced a sort of music. The air became misty and
heavy because of the noisy slogans and the ringing bells. The
slogans of the crowd were so heavy and loud that the adjacent
walls of the road-side houses trembled with various cries and
noise of the crowd. These people were welcoming him so happily
that if he had told them that mere noise and slogans did not
please him. And that they should give him the sun, that is there
in the sky far away from them , they would have replied, that
was executed (done and what else they could do for him „the
leader‟).
Stanza 3
In these lines the leader regretfully says that the people did not
help him, instead, it was he who leaped at the sun and made
impossible, possible for them. He brought the sun down and
handed it over to his dear friends (country men). He made them
realize that every impossible could be made possible for sincere
friends. As such he made every effort and did not leave any thing
undone for them. Had he left anything undone, nobody else
would have done that for them. But he further says with great
sorrow that today when only one year has lapsed and that he is
no more in chair, his reward can be seen. It can also be seen
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what he is reaping as a reward of his deeds. He has been


branded as a traitor by the people of his nation.
Stanza 4
In these lines the poet mourns that nobody can be seen on the
housetops to welcome him now. It is quite opposite to the scene
when he was received by them. Now there are only a few people,
who are rather paralyzed and are standing at the windows. Now
they are watching a different sight. This sight is a sort of ridicule
and everybody agrees to it. Obviously, the sight is horrible
because the leader is now being taken to the slaughter-house, or
it can be better said, the leader thinks, that he is being taken to
the gallows to be hanged there. It is all the reward of his good
deeds. His deeds have been converted into wicked deeds and
people are now punishing him for his supposed misdeeds.
Stanza 5
In these lines the poet also mopes over his sad condition. He
says that the people are carrying him to the gallows in the rain.
They unnecessarily, have tied his hands behind his back with a
tight rope. When they are taking him to the slaughter-house, the
rope cuts his both hands at wrists. The culprit (the leader) feels
that his fore-head is bleeding. This is because everybody in his
right sense is throwing stones at him. Everybody feels that he
has done nothing for his countrymen. Every person has turned
against him and the achievements of his past one year have been
changed to misdeeds. This means they have forgotten his service
to them and they are now punishing him for his good work for
them.
Stanza 6
In the given lines the poet, through the mouth of the deposed
leader says that he was brought honourably to the chair and
with great pomp and show but now he is being taken very
insultingly to the gallows. He says sometimes great heroes fall
from their climax and die. Such has not happened to him. Had
he died in the peak of his power, he would have been happy.
Further the leader ridiculously says that heroes can not expect
reward from God in the next world because they get their reward
in this world. In his case people have not done him justice. They
have killed him. He says after death he will go to his Lord
Creator where God Might question him about his deeds he had

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done for the people. He would reply that he had done his best for
them but they rewarded him with shame. Now he will ask God
for a reward because God is just and He would give him the best
reward in the other world for his service to his people. He would
be safe with God in the world here after.

THE HUNTSMAN
Edward Lawbury

Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “The Huntsman”
written by Edward Lawbury.
Context:
This poem tells a Kenyan folk-lore. It tells that some-times a
hunter becomes hunted himself. Kagwa went hunting and found
a talking skull. He came to the king and informed him to the
fact. The king ordered to know the reality. When it was found not
so, Kagwa was killed. Strange enough it was that after his
murder the skull spoke. The story tells us that irresponsible
talking can bring destruction. The elements of suspense and
irony create a shocking impact.
EXPLANATION
Stanza 1
In these lines the poet says that Kagwa, a famous hunter,
hunted lions and tigers through forests and bushes. He used his
spear for hunting. One day, while hunting, he found the skull of
a man in the forest. The skull was talking. Kagwa asked the
talking skull, how it had come there. The skull opened its mouth
and replied that talking had brought it there.
Stanza 2
In this stanza the poet says that after getting the skull, Kagwa
went home hurriedly. He appeared before the court of the king
and talked about the skull Kagwa told the king that he had
found a skull which was talking. On hearing these words the
king was surprised so much. He thought that no dead skull ever
talked. After that the king said slowly to himself that he had
never heard of or seen a skull that talked. He said, since his
birth from his mother he had never heard of such a thing.

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Stanza 3
In these lines the poet says, when Kagwa told about the talking
skull, the king called out his guards. The king ordered two of the
guards to go with Kagwa and find the talking skull. He also told
the guards if Kagwa proved a liar, and there was no such thing
as the talking skull, Kagwa msut be killed himself.
Stanza 4
In the given lines the poet says that Kagwa and two guards of
the king rode their horses to the forest. For some days they
looked for it but found nothing like a talking skull. But after
some more struggle they found a skull. Kagwa asked the skull
how he had come there. The skull remained silent. Kagwa again
earnestly requested the skull but it did not talk. And they all
were surprised.
Stanza 5
In the concluding stanza the guards ordered Kagwa to kneel
down. The guards killed him with sword and lance. When Kagwa
was put to death, the already dead skull opened its mouth and
asked the hunter, how he had come there. The dead body of
Kagwa replied, talking had brought him there. This simple story
has a meaningful moral. It teaches us that irresponsible and
worthless talking can bring destruction or death to the talker.

ONE ART
Elizabeth Bishop
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “One Art” written by
Elizabeth Bishop.
Context:
In this poem the poetess wants to teach us that the art of losing
things is necessary to lead a pleasant life. We should not bother,
whether things are lost or snatched from us. The loss of door-
keys or some other possession should be accepted as a part of
life. No loss should disturb us, we should take our defeats and
losses lightly.
Stanza 1

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Explanation:
In these lines the poetess wants to teach us an uncommon
lesson about losing things. She says that the art of losing things
is not difficult to learn. Many things are included or intend to be
lost. The loss of these things which we lose everyday, will bring
no disaster. Actually, the poetess wants to teach us the art of
acceptance and resignation.
Stanza 2
In these lines the poetess tells us that we should try to lose
something everyday and accept the confusion created by this
loss. For example, if we lose door keys, naturally, an hour is
spent in trouble. After that we will get used to the loss, or we
shall find some solution to the problem. Even then if we try to
learn the art of losing things, it is not difficult to master.
Stanza 3
The poetess says, we should try to lose things farther and faster.
This practice will habituate you to losing things and you will not
feel any trouble. Once you get used to losing things, then forget
the names of people with whom you lived and forget the place
where you did go and spent some time. Forgetting names and
places will not put you in trouble if you have mastered the art of
losing.
Stanza 4
In the given lines the poetess cites some personal examples. She
says that once she lost the watch given to her by her mother.
This watch was very dear to her but its losing did not create any
disturbance to her. After that she lost three very dear houses by
migrating from one place to another. She lost these houses one
after the other. But this did not disturb her. So the art of losing
things is not difficult to learn.
Stanza 5
In these lines, also the poetess quotes some other examples. She
says that she lost two dearest cities and more than that she left
two very dear rivers and also some property and estate that she
owned. In addition, she lost even a whole continent, when she
migrated from North America to South America. She says that
she remembers all these things but their loss is not a disaster.

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She means to say that some times even kings have to leave their
dominions but this does not bring any devastation.
Stanza 6
In these lines the poetess concludes her lesson. She says even if
we lose our very dear friends, relatives, their most joking voice,
their most loved gestures, these do not bring any destruction.
She says, perhaps she has not told a lie in this regard.
Obviously, the art of losing things is not difficult to learn,
although it looks so. But one thing is clear that losing things
does not bring any disaster. The poetess wants to teach us that
for leading peaceful life, it is necessary to accept the hard
realities of life and accept even the worst impact of our losses. It
is necessary to take our defeats and failures lightly.

THE SOLITARY REAPER


William Wordsworth
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “The Solitary Reaper”
written by Wordsworth.
Context:
In this poem the poet tells us the story of a lovely Highland Girl,
who is working in a filed and singing a song. He is deeply
impressed by her song and remembers the melody of her song
even after he has left the place. He cannot understand the
language of the song but the sad beauty of her voice goes
straight to his heart. The atmosphere of the poem and the song
of the girl as a part of the beauty of Nature leave a lasting
impression on the mind of the poet.
Lines 1 – 4
Explanation:
In these lines the poet tells us about a young girl of Scotland. He
tells us to look at the girl who is reaping grain and also singing a
sweet song. He advises the passerby to stop short and listen to
her song or pass very silently by her, so that she is not
disturbed.
Lines 5 – 8

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The poet says that the highland girl cuts and binds the grain in
sheaves. She is also singing a sad song. She is very busy in her
song as well as her work. The poet once again advises the
passerby to listen to her song. He says that the whole deep valley
is echoing with her sweet song. The whole dale is listening to her
sweet voice. We should also listen to her song and enjoy it.
Lines 9 – 12
In the given lines the poet compares the sweet voice of the girl to
that of a nightingale. Nightingale is considered a sweet-voice
bird. The poet says no nightingale has so far sung as melodious
a song as the girl sings. When some group of tired travelers
reaches a shady place, in the Arabian deserts, the nightingale
welcomes the caravan with its sweet song. It is obvious that
commonly there is no nightingale in the deserts. But if there is
some oasis, it is but natural that a nightingale is found there. So
when a tired caravan reaches any oasis or shrubby area the
nightingale welcomes it. The poet says that the voice of the
singing girl is rather sweeter than that of a nightingale.
Lines 13 – 16
These lines show a comparison between the song of the girl and
the song of the cuckoo. He says that such a sweet voice was
never heard from the cuckoo even in the spring season. The song
of cuckoo is always very sweet but the voice of the girl, who was
singing, was sweeter than the cuckoo‟s. The voice of the girl was
so sweet that it broke the silence of the seas and of the far off
islands on north-western coast of Scotland. These islands are
never disturbed by any storm but the voice of the girl intruded
into the silence of this group of islands. This was because of the
praiseworthy song of the girl which even affected the seas.
Lines 17 – 20
In these lines the poet tells us about the language of the song.
He does not understand the alien language of the song. He says
will no one tell him the meaning of the song of the girl. He says
that perhaps the girl is singing some sad song of the past. He
guesses the language and the meaning of the song. Perhaps the
girl is singing some unhappy song or singing about events that
have taken place in the past. Perhaps she is singing about
battles which have been fought in the far off past.
Lines 21 – 24

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These lines are also an expression of the un-understandable


language of the song. The poet again guesses at the theme.
Perhaps she is singing a simple song on some ordinary matter of
the present age. Perhaps she is singing simple sorrow of loss or
of some misery. May be she is singing for the lover who has jilted
her. Probably, the incident of loss or pain has taken place in the
past and it may be experienced again in future.
Lines 25 – 28
These lines also show that the poet did not know the theme of
the song. He says whatever theme she sang, irrespective of that,
it seemed that the song of the young girl would not come to an
end. The poet says that he saw the girl busy at her work and
also singing while reaping with a sickle in bent motion.
Lines 29 – 32
These are the concluding lines of the poem. The poet says that
first he listened to her song standing still and motionless. But as
he mounted up the hill of Scotland, the tune of the song was so
sweet that it struck the heart of the poet. He was sop impressed
that he carried, the melody of the song with him long after the
song was ended by the girl. Actually, the poet, being a poet of
nature, was profoundly impressed by this natural scene. He
remembered this song for its natural melodious effect.

ALL THE WORLD‟S A STAGE


William Shakespeare
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “All the World‟s a
Stage” written by William Shakespeare.
Context:
This sonnet of Shakespeare is from his famous play “As You Like
It”. This poem describes various stages of human life. Life has
been compared to a play or drama played by every man and
woman on the stage of the world. His seven stages of life are the
seven acts of a play. This shows Shakespeare‟s deep knowledge
and transience of human life.
Lines 1 – 5
Explanation:

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In these lines the poet compares this world to a stage. All men
and women are only actors and actresses on the stage of this
world. All these people have different routes to enter this stage
and also have different exits to go out. They enter this stage
when they are born and leave this stage when they die. Every
person, during his life time plays many parts. These parts are
called seven ages. These ages are actually like acts of a play.
Lines 5 – 10
The first stage of a man‟s life is his infancy. During his infancy
he cries and throws up milk and vomits when he is in the hands
of a mother or a nurse. The second stage is his boy-hood. This is
his school going period. It is the time when he complains all the
time. His face shines like the bright and fresh morning. He
carries his school bag and unwillingly goes to school at the speed
of an insect.
Lines 10 – 12
This is the third stage of man‟s life. Now he is a grown up person
and assumes the form of a lover. It is the time when he loves his
beloved ardently. He sighs like a furnace or an oven. He writes a
song in praise of his beloved‟s eye or brow. He also sings such
songs again and again as he burns in his emotions.
Lines 12 – 16
In these lines the poet shows the fourth stage of a man‟s life.
When he matures, he becomes a soldier. He takes strange oaths.
He has a beard like a tiger or a leopard. He is fierce like these
animals. During this stage of life, man is jealous of honour of
other. He is very quick-tempered and owns quarrels. Since he is
warm-blooded, he looks for temporary reputation and fame. To
achieve this temporary fame, he is even ready to go into the
mouth of a gun. He does not bother for dangers.
Lines 16 – 20
This is the fifth stage of man‟s life. Here man becomes middle
aged and mature like a judge and has a fair round belly full of
the meat of chickens. Perhaps, he has become ft because he eats
meat and fat castrated cocks in excess. It is the stage when he is
firm, serious and grim. His conversation is full of many different
proverbs of the world of the past and is also full of the examples

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from the modern age. He has beard of formal cut and as such
plays this part of life.
Lines 20 – 26
This is the sixth stage of man‟s life. In this stage man shifts from
middle age, to old age. Now he wears pantaloon with slippers on
his feet. He has become thin, weak and lean. He wears now
spectacles on his nose because of his weak eye-sight. He has
also a purse by his side in which he keeps money and tobacco.
He uses long socks which he has saved during his youth. Now
these socks are very loose to his lean leg and look strange. His
big loud manly voice has turned into the shrill voice of a child.
Since, some of his teeth have fallen, whenever he tries to speak.
Its seems as if he were playing upon a pipe or as if he were
whistling.
Lines 27 – 29
This is the last stage of man‟s life. In this stage he changes from
his old age to the oldest one. This is a strange stage of life. In
this period all the life which has been previously full of strange
events, comes to an end. Man becomes child once again. This is
like his second childhood. In this stage he is childish as well as
childlike. At this stage he forgets almost everything. His memory
becomes very weak. He loses teeth, eye-sight and taste. He is
without everything. This is the stage in which he completes the
drama of his life and leaves the stage of this world for the next.

DEPARTURE AND ARRIVAL


By T.S. Eliot
REFERENCE:
These lines have been taken from the poem Departure and
Arrival written by T. S. Eliot.

CONTEXT:
The poet in this poem says that man should keep in view his
departure right at his arrival in the world. He should determine
objects of his life and work for them. Man should leave a better
world before his departure to the next world. As sons of the
twentieth century we should set good examples for the coming
generation, so that we may be remembered forever. We must
struggle to make the future better, before we start for our

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destination. The poem shows Eliot‟s faith in idealism and


optimism.

EXPLANATION
STANZA: 1
In these lines the poet has compared life to a sea. He says that
while standing upon the shore of the sea of life, we delay for a
few moments and ponder over the situation for sometime,
doubtfully. This we do for what we know about the previous life
of our forefathers. After that we take heart and cheerfully sail
across the harbour by crossing its limits. Then we have no guide
map to show us of the dangers of rocks that lie below water.
Even then, we start our journey very courageously. The sea of
life is full of dangers and threats but we start our life even if we
do not know about them.

STANZA: 2
In the given lines the poet says that although the path of life is
slow, troublesome and zigzag, although it is full of countless
fears, yet it appears to the hopeful eye of our young generation,
very colourful. It is like a street, on both sides of which hawthorn
flowers and roses have grown and the street is red and beautiful.
We hope it may be so. But it never happens that life is always
colourful. Would that we might know about the future life, but
we cannot predict the nature of our future life. We do not have
certain knowledge of the future years.

STANZA: 3
Many great duties devolve upon the 20th century. These duties
are even more important than those granted to the previous age.
These duties call upon us to be more responsible, because no
body knows what has been written in our fate. So no body knows
what we can give to the future life in terms of good and great
deeds. No body knows whether, we will overcome the pains and
miseries of our future life. Also no body knows whether 20 th
century will create heroes greater and better than those of the
olden times (19th century). But we hope that the future years will
bring us better conditions and heroes.
STANZA: 4
In the given lines the poet assures that if they (people of
twentieth century) have to make the 20th century greater than
the past ones, its inhabitants will have to work hard with eager

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and willing hearts to help make its destiny shining. They should
work hard for the better future of their own century and see that
this century achieves proud estate and then, this century should
bequeath its best estate to the future centuries.
STANZA: 5
The 20th century should produce a legacy of advantages and
benefits and bestow it upon the coming century. So that the
sons of this century are counted among those who have been
trying and labouring hard for good of their century till their
death. And that the people of the coming century may not ask
any other question than to know that people of 20th century have
helped making their future glorious. And they have raised their
flag and of the coming century, to height.
STANZA: 6
In these lines the poet says that some time in future years when
the people of 20th century have gone grey and have become old,
by then, they will desire to see that place again which they have
left behind. They will like to see what-ever changes they have
brought or whatever has been done for the betterment of the
coming century by them shall be recommended. This makes no
difference even if people of 20th century live no more and have
gone to the unknown places (have died) they will like not to be
forgotten in any age because of their good deeds for the future
generation.

12. A POISON TREE


By William Blake
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “A Poison Tree”
written by William Blake.
Context:
In this poem the poet says that hatred is like a poisonous tree. If
anger and scorn are not expressed, they keep on growing. The
poet expressed his anger to his friend, it disappeared. He did not
express his anger to his enemy it grew into a poisonous tree.,
The poisonous tree killed his enemy No doubt, hatred which is
the outcome of lack of trust can harm, a rival but cultivating
hatred in itself is not an admirable thing. The use of the Word
“Apple” is reminiscent of the Garden of Eden and the idea of
temptation.
Explanation

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Stanza: 1
In these lines the poet says that once he got angry with his
friend. He expressed his anger to his friend and it came to an
end. In the same way, he became angry with his enemy but he
did not disclose his anger to him. As a result, anger of the poet
went on increasing. This is but natural if a person gives vent to
his emotions, he feels relaxed. If he does not disclose his anger
or other emotions, they keep on growing which is not a good
sign.
Stanza: 2
The poet says when he did not disclose his anger to his enemy; it
went on increasing and become a plant. He developed a sort of
fear. He Watered his plant with fright twice daily, i.e., in the
morning‟ and in the evening. This water came from his eyes in
the, form of tears out of anger and guiles. Both water and sun
are necessary for the growth of tree. Water and sun helped him
in growing his tree of wrath.
Stanza: 3
In these lines the poet tells u that as a result of his taking care of
the tree it grew day and night very rapidly. One day it brought an
attractive fruit in the form of an apple. His enemy observed that
the fruit was shining and beautiful. He wanted to have it
cunningly.
Stanza: 4
In the given lines, the poet expresses the out-come of the efforts
made by him. He says since his enemy wanted to pluck the fruit
of the tree cultivated by him, he entered his garden very secretly.
It was night time and darkness had covered the poles or the
whole universe. The enemy touched the apple and died at the
spot in making efforts to pluck the fruit because it was
poisonous from inside. In the morning the poet was very glad
when he found that his enemy lying dead straight, under the
tree, He was very cunningly deceived by his trick. The gist of the
poem is that developing anger and hatred in itself are dangerous
and harmful. One may injure one‟s opponents by one‟s anger
and scorn but developing them is not admirable.

13. BECAUSE I COULD NOT STOP FOR DEATH


By Emily Dickinson
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “Because I Could Not
Stop for Death” written by Emily Dickinson.

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Context:
In this poem the p talks I death grid the gentle nature of its
approach. She describes our existence in this world from cradle
to the grave. To her, it is a journey from life to death. Actually
dying to the poetess is the end of death and a start of eternal life.
The poetess travels with death and finally they reach a mound of
earth which is, in fact the grave. The grave is an entrance to the
life after death and immortality.
EXPLANATION
Stanza: 1
In these lines the poetess says that she was so busy that she
could not wait for death to accompany him. Death was so kind
that he stopped and waited for her. The vehicle of death carried
only two persons-the poetess and death. Also there was
immortality which was not visible. Their carriage was carrying
them towards eternity. The suggestion is that death is always
present with human beings but it is not visible. When death kills
a person he goes to eternity and cannot return from there. Death
has killed her and now she goes to eternity.
Stanza: 2
The poetess says that death and she herself drove very slowly
the vehicle of life. Death was not in a hurry. She deferred all her
chores. She even put away her hard work and her spare time for
the decency of death. Both the poetess and death carried on
their journey in the same carriage, towards immortality.
Stanza: 3
In these lines the poetess says that she and death passed by the
school where children were contesting at the recess time in a
circle. They also passed by the ripe corn which was waiting to be
reaped. The ripened gram had covered many plains of field.
During their journey they also saw the setting sun while passing
by it. The children at school, the ripe corn and the setting sun
may be her childhood, youth and old age.
Stanza: 4
In this stanza the poetess says that it was rather the sun which,
while going down passed by them. Then, after the sunset, night
prevailed. The dew-drops began to fall gently. These drops
brought light, cold and shivering. She arrived because she was
wearing very decent dress. The dress consisted of her feminine
scarf and thin gauzed clothes.
Stanza: 5

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In these lines the poetess tells that they continued their journey
for quite some time. At last they stopped at a house which was
merely a swelling of the ground. It was the grave. The roof of the
house was hardly visible because its cornice was so low that it
was at level with the ground or in the ground. In this stanza the
suggestion is that man continues his life, passes by many
events, good or bad and finally reaches the grave. The grave is
very low and it seems as if it were a bulging of the ground.
Stanza: 6
After stopping at the grave, the poetess says that there is a
feeling that many centuries elapse in the grave but all this time
seems to be even shorter than a day. The poetess further says
that at the very outset of their journey she had guessed that the
horses of their carriage were carrying them towards eternity. The
whole poem is full of the thought that with man‟s arrival at this
world, death also journeys with him. Man performs many task
and acts in various stages of life. Right from his infancy, school-
life maturity and old age, he passes and finally reaches the
grave, an eternal destination. It is here that eternity, or his
never-ending life, or life from time to timelessness starts.

14. LIGHTS OUT


By Edward Thomas
Reference:
These lines have been taken from the poem “Lights Out” written
by Edward Thomas.
Context:
In this poem the poet has compared “sleep” to an immeasurable
forest. It is so deep that all paths leading to it come to an end
there. All the lights are put out and man cannot find his way. He
is lost there. Sleep is the greatest blessing. It overpowers every
one. No one can i away from it. After the day‟s long, hectic
activities, everyone has to reach this forest. The implicit idea is
perhaps of death.
EXPLANATION
Stanza: 1
In these lines the poet has compared sleep to a deep and thick
forest. He says he has reached the initial, stage of sleep. It is like
an immeasurable deep and thick forest where all human-beings
have to lose their way. No matter, if they lead a straight or a
zigzag path. They hey, at last to come to the edge of sleep sooner
or later because there is no alternative. Everybody, whoever, he

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is has to sleep. Sleep is a great blessing, without which man


cannot pull on with in life. The suggestion in this stanza is „that
man has to die sooner or later and has to reach the borders of
death after completing the journey of life.
Stanza: 2
This stanza gives an expression to the thought that all the roads
that remain busy right from the appearance of day, till the
arrival of night, people moving on such roads, have to reach the
edge of deep forest (sleep or death). All the travellers (human-
beings) suddenly blur because of the overpowering of sleep (or
death) and soon they sink in (or die). They are fast asleep
because of the day‟s long work journey of life).
Stanza: 3
In this stanza the poet says that when sleep overpowers a person
he forgets everything. His love, disappointment and desire and
ambition etc. all come to an end. Every kind of joy and all
troubles no matter, how sweet the joy is, or how bitter the
troubles are, come to an end.‟ In sleep, man forgets everything
even if it is sweeter than the noblest thing/task.
Stanza: 4
In the give lines the poet further explain the state of sleep. He
says sleep dominates a person he forgets even -the most
beautiful face, from which in normal conditions, he would not
turn away his eye. He also forgets the most interesting book
when sleep overpowers him. The poet further says that he enters
sleep which is necessary and because of necessity he has to
enter the field of sleep alone and has also to wake-up alone. The
poet does- not know how this whole process takes place.
Stanza: 5
In this concluding stanza again the poet compares sleep to tall
trees. He says when he is in the grip of sleep, he feels as if the
tall trees were rising more and more, spreading their shade. In
the same way the undergrowth or the greenery of the tall trees
becomes hazy and cloudy. The shade of the tall trees presses
him to go into deep sleep. Layer above layer of sleep comes upon
him silently unless he is fully under the influence of sleep. He is
forced to obey and hear what the sleep commands him. When he
is fully dominated by sleep, he loses his way and becomes
unaware of himself. Slumber is tantamount to death. He who is
in sleep is unaware of himself and all the worldly things as he
would be in death.

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----------------------------------
SUMMARIES
LEISURE
The poem starts with a question about the life, which is full of
worries and cares and has deprived the modern man of leisure
to enjoy the beauty and charms of nature. The poet depicts that
we are absorbed so much in the problems of the world that we
have no time to stand and see the beauties of this world. We are
so busy in our daily routine that we have no time to watch what
nature has got to show us. It seems that cattle are better than
we are as they have the leisure to stand under the branches of
trees and enjoy the blessings of nature. Similarly we pass
through jungle like a blind man who does not see the beautiful
creatures of the wood. We have no time to stand and watch the
habits of the little squirrel that is hiding the nuts in the grass
for the rainy season. We have no eyes for the beauties of
nature. The streams appear so beautiful in daylight, the rays of
the sunshine like stars in the water and remind us of a starry
night. So with the help of beautiful simile, the poet compares
the shining water of the stream to a starlet night but also we
have not got the time to appreciate its beauty because we are
busy in our own petty problems. Then the poet personifies
beauty as living being and regrets that in our rushed life we
have no time to appreciate the joys that “Beauty” can give us,
as Keats also points out.
“A thing of beauty is a joy for ever”.
But we have no eyes to see this superb blessing of God. Beauty
has feet and it dances well. Beauty is an abstract quality but
the poet personifies it and in this way makes it a living thing
that can move, dance and smile. She smiles with her eyes and
that smile slowly conquers her whole face but we cannot relish
that delight, as we have no spare time. As Thomas fuller says,
“The poor is not he who hath not much but
he who craves much.”
So the poet comes to the conclusion that we are spending a dull
life. Our life is full of tension and worries. This life is not worth
living in only because of our busy routine. The so-called

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mechanical revolution has made man a machine also. He works


like a computer and acts like robot. Time has become very
precious for him. He thinks about time in terms of money, so
he cannot waste time for himself. Our busy life has taken us
away from the beauties of nature. Wordsworth presents the
same idea when he says,
“The world is too much with us
late and soon. Getting and spending,
We lay waste our powers.
Little we see in nature that is ours”
The poet feels that life must be relished in a leisurely manner.
The repetition of the line “We have no time to stand and stare.”
emphasizes the poet‟s basic idea.

TARTARY
(By Walter De La Mare)
The poet, Walter De La Mare, imagines himself, in this poem as
the “Lord of Tartary”. Tartary is a land of dream, beauty and
fertility. It is replete with unheard and unseen delights. He
desires to have a bed made of ivory, throne made of beaten
gold, court full of dancing peacocks, forests full of roaming
tigers and pools teemed with great fishes. He imagines himself
wearing a robe clustered with pearls of gold
of green and white colour, holding a curved sword in his hand
and riding a chariot driven by seven Zebras. He is fond of music
and enjoys harp, flute and mandolin. He also desires to derive
pleasure from the natural beauty and charming objects of
Tartary as S.T.Coleridge puts it in own way,
“Where Alph, The Sacred river, ran
Through caverns, measureless to man
And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills
Where blossomed many an incense-beaming tree.
The poet expresses his hidden wish. He wishes to be an
absolute master of Tartary, a far-off land given the lineaments
of a romantic land, beautiful, rich, fertile and full of delights.
Then, he would lead a luxurious life. Hid bed would be made of

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solid gold. Beautiful peacocks would decorate his court and his
royal jungles would be full of fierce roaming tigers. His beautiful
ponds would be full of pretty fish whose fins would shine in the
light of the sun and thus make the whole court colourful and
delighting. The poet wishes to enjoy a life full of colour, pomp
and show if he were the Lord of Tartary. Then his life would be
changed altogether. His guards would blow bugle whenever the
royal meal would be served. So his court would be full of the
sounds of bugles and trumpets all the time. During the evening
time, the beauty of the court would be enhanced and it would
be illuminated with yellow and red light. Then like the courts of
the great kings, the music and dance would be presented in his
honour.
All kinds of musical instruments would be played to
produce sweet and melodious tunes. If he were the king, he
would wear the royal dress decorated with different colours of
beads and pearls. His robe would be full of white, golden and
green coloured gems. Early in the morning before the waning of
the morning star, he would put on his royal dress adorned with
a curved sword. Seven Zebras would
drive his carriage and thus he would inspect his royal estate
passing through the green patches of his dark forests, as
Coleridge says:
“And here were forests ancient as the hills, Enfolding
Sunny spots of greenery.”
He would be the owner of all the fruits of Tartary land and all
the rivers shining in the light of sun would be his. He would be
the master of the hills, valleys, forests and roves. Thus shining
stars and the sweet smelling air, the winding lakes and the
birds that are singing in the citron trees, all would be his
subject. So he would be able to enjoy all these things fully.
Through wood and dale the sacred river ran,
Then reached the caverns measureless to man,
And sank in tumult to a lifeless ocean.

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NEWYEAR RESOLUTIONS
In this poem, the poetess, Elizabeth Sewell, has made an
extraordinary resolution to make herself a better woman by
facing and living with reality in the start of the New Year. New
Year is generally understood as starting of a new chapter of
one‟s life. People make resolution by taking stock of their lives
and resolving to be better ones.
Socrates, the great Greek philosopher, is reported to have said
that unexamined life is not worthy of living and it is almost a
tradition with the sensible and reasonable people to take stock
of their life and to resolve to be better people, at the start of the
new year. So, the poetess has decided to live with reality in the
New Year. Reality is not always comfortable but pinching and
disturbing. The use of the image “bony arms” points to this fact.
But the poetess is resolute and will draw comfort fulfilling her
resolution. The phrase „draining of long draughts‟ is linked with
drinking wine but the poetess intends to drink calmness and
thinks it necessary for cleansing herself. It is quite natural and
true
that in loneliness and quiet one can examine one‟s life honestly.
It is a self-criticism. Life examined critically purifies one for
better future life.

Explanation:
It is a short and interesting poem written by Elizabeth Sewell.
The arrival of New Year is usually celebrated with great fervour
and enthusiasm. It is a tradition to make some promises in the
light of which one wants to spend one‟s New Year. Usually
people pledge to become better human beings in the New Year.
The poetess makes an extraordinary resolution at the beginning
of the New Year. She says that in order to purify her soul, she
will remain quiet. She will drink long sips of quietness. It is a
beautiful simile as if quietness is a medicine that can make her
clean physically and spiritually from impurities. Quietness
seems to purify her because when a person is quiet and is not
taking active part in the problems of the world, he gets time to
have an insight into his own soul. He can then see his own
impurities and drawbacks and can get rid of them. The poetess
also wants to do this. She will face the reality. She will not have

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any high opinion about herself in future. She will not lead a
conceited life and have no superiority complex about herself.
From now on, she will speak the truth to herself. She will not
misjudge her own personality. In order to fulfill this goal. She
will remind herself about her own reality twice during a day.
Her assessment about herself will be true and real. During the
night also, she will not forget the reality. Nodoubt, it is a time
when one forgets bitter realities of this world and is lost in the
imaginary world of dreams. But she pledges that she will not
lose her contact with reality though it is hard like the bony
arms yet she will prefer it because she has made her pledge and
only the fulfillment of her promise will make her happy.
It is very hard thing to face the reality and specially the reality
about our own self. Our ego and our conceited self stop us from
seeing our weakness. Without facing these
realities, we are unable to improve ourselves. So the resolution
to see the reality is the first step towards reformation.

WOMANWORK

Explanation of Main Idea


Maya Angelou, the poetess, has described the domestic routine
of a housewife. The routine is mechanical, i.e. caring for the
children, mending clothes, mapping floor, buying and cooking
food and pressing clothes etc. It is in fact drudgery. No leisure
is available to a woman. Even then she is dreaming of ideal life.
She longs for rain, sunshine and snowfall. It gives woman
strength to sustenance. She wishes to be one with Nature and
loves to be a part of the mountain, oceans, leaf and stone, star
shine, moon glow. She likes to participate in nature around her.
She is tired of her daily mechanical routine and requests the
storm to rescue her as follows:
Storm, blow me from here
With your fiercest wind
Let me float across the sky
Till I can rest again

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The poetess, Maya Angelou has success fully described the


disgust of the house woman for the dullness of life of drudgery
and her longing for ideal life and union with nature around her.
Critical Appreciation
In this poem, Maya Angelou, an American poetess, tells us
about the routine work of a woman. She is busy in daily chores.
She attends the children and looks after them. She also mends
the old cloths. She cleans the floor and also does all the
shopping for the house. She has to cook food for the whole
family. She looks after the young baby when it is wet and cries.
Sometimes, she invites guests at her house and she has to
serve them. She also cuts the cane for different household
works such as making chair. Then, she cleans the whole house.
All this daily work just makes her life dull and bored. She may
not remain creative and productive. In the house of such busy
work she spares some time to enjoy the beauties of nature. She
invites the sun to warm her and asks rain to fall on her
forehead and make her clam and cool again. She asks the
storm that with the help of its violent winds, it should take her
to the skies where she can float and fly lightly and forget all her
worries and troubles, where she can forget about the drudgery
of this mechanical life and have some rest and relaxation. It is,
in fact, a universal truth.
She asks the snow to cover her with its soft flakes. It seems
that snow is kissing her and its touch is very cold and icy. So
she addresses the things of nature, shining sun, falling rain,
round and high sky, lofty mountains, vast oceans, green leaves,
shining stars, glowing moon and even the humblest stones of
this universe. She thinks that these are the only things she
possesses because only they give her comfort during her work.
She enjoys them all instead of her dull and boring work.
As Ted Hughes says:
The convenience of the high trees,
The air‟s buoyancy and the sun‟s ray
All an advantage to me;
The monotonous work of the house gives her no pleasure. She is
constantly under pressure that she has to do so many things.
She is taken for granted by all the members of family. She is

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neither paid nor appreciated. But, all this boring and dull work
has made her a machine. Her senses are not yet dull. She still
has got her imaginative power and can enjoy the dream of an
ideal life. All these natural things give her power and strength to
do her work. The beauty of the natural objects recharges her and
pacifies the creative side of her mind.

The Rebel
(By D.J. Enright)
Main Idea:
In this poem, the poet, D.J. Enright, describes the likes,
dislikes and actions of a rebel as contrasted with a sensible and
sane man. The attitude of a rebel is contradictory and non-
conforming. In it lies the very characteristics and psychology of
the rebel. The rebel is a troubled individual. His deviations from
the normal are indicative, of his mental approach towards life
and society. He grows long hair while all others have short and
vice versa. Similarly he dislikes talk during the lesson, prefers
fantastic clothes to uniform. He loves cats while others love
dogs. He enjoys reading a look in seclusion in contrast to others
while they go to meeting. In short, the rebel negates the normal
in every respect and walk of life. The poet has not employed the
technical terms yet he has successfully identified the rebel from
his deviant behaviour. Although at the end of the poem he says:
It is very good that we have rebels
You may not find it very good to be one.
Critical Appreciation:
The poet tells us about the attitude of people who revolt against
society. It is indeed a mockery. The poet has used a mocking
style in the poem. The poet expresses that such people are
against everything. They want to help their individuality. They
are against conventions and creeds. In fact they are fed up with
the monotonous society. So they try to introduce some changes
through their attitude and appearance.
When there is a fashion to have short hair, the rebellious
person will not follow it and he will have long hair so that the
people know that he is not one of them. But when on the other

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hand as the fashion to keep long hair comes, he will quickly cut
his hair short in order to maintain his individuality.
In every field of life, his behaviour is same. In classroom
when boys and girls are given permission to speak and ask
questions, the rebel will remain silent but when the others are
silent and listening to the lectures attentively, his complex of
self excitation forces him to speak and thus make himself
prominent. In this way, he also disturbs the whole class but he
is happy that he has kept his identity.
He also displays his odd behaviour in the way he dresses
himself. When the people wear the similar dress to look decent,
sober and alike he wears unique and colourful clothes for the
sake of exhibitionism and when there is fashion or trend to
wear colourful and gaudy clothes, he will wear dull and decent
clothes to distinguish himself.
In the same way while talking to people, he displays his
strange trends and tastes. If the people are praising dogs, he
will appreciate casts. While talking to cat lovers he will speak in
favour of dogs. This shows that he does not care about the
emotions and feelings of people. He does not want to be friendly
with them. His only goal and motive is to distinguish himself
from others and in order to achieve that goal, he can go to any
extent.
In every walk of life he shows his eccentric attitude. If
people are praising the sun and want to have warm weather, he
will speak in favour of rain and cold weather. But if people are
happy on a rainy day, he will feel sorry and regret the absence
of the sun. When there is a social gathering, the rebel does not
want to take part in it and prefers to stay at home and read
some books. But when nobody is going out, the Rebel goes out
and wants to have meeting with people who are enjoying their
stay at home. The Rebel agrees when all other people are saying
“NO”. His answer is in the negative, when all the people show
affirmation. So he is different from common people in all
respects. He keeps his identity due to his eccentric behaviour.
His style of living is quite different from that of ordinary people.
Still, the poet appreciates him and says that it is good to
have rebellious people among us. They save the society from
dullness and uniformity. His attitude towards the rebel is

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sympathetic and lively. He does not condemn him, rather he


takes delight in the strange activities and contradictory attitude
of the rebel. Although, it is good to have rebels among us but
surely we don‟t want to become one because the life is surely
very difficult for them. In fact they make their own life
miserable trying to become unique and different. They face the
harsh criticism of people and are disliked by the general public.
Although all the variety and diversity in the society is because
of them. This is the main tragedy of the rebel that he is not
considered a normal person.

Patriot into Traitor


Dramatic Monologue:

A poem written in the form of a speech of an individual


character; it compresses into a single vivid scene a narrative
sense of the speaker's history and psychological insight into his
character.

It is a poem in which one character speaks, while there are other


characters present on the scene.

There is a difference between a soliloquy and a dramatic


monologue, in soliloquy a speaker is alone (it can be called a
lengthy aside.)

It is dramatic because it is full of dramatic irony.

Patriot into Traitor as a Dramatic Monologue:

Browning through this dramatic monologue has captured the


mood of disillusionment and frustration of a leader who was
considered a hero yesterday, but due to an unfortunate political
upheaval, branded as a traitor. His tragic downfall is pitiable.
And now condemned by the people, he hopefully waits for the
judgement of God to redeem him.

There are sudden and catastrophic changes shown in the rise


and fall of the leader. The reader becomes surprisingly aware of
the sudden and catastrophic rise and fall of the hero which has
taken with in the lapse of one year.

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Summary
In this dramatic monologue, Robert Browning describes the rise
and fall of a political leader. Not only the rise but also the fall is
sudden and quick. The poem has a special relevance to the
political conditions prevailing in the third world countries today.

The poet says that in the early part of the life of a political leader,
success appears to be on his side. People loved him and adorned
his way with petals of roses mixed with other flowers. They
welcomed him from the house-tops with flags and it was only a
year ago. The bells rang for him and there were crowd and cries
everywhere(even in churches). The leader said that if he uttered
to the people that he disliked the mere noises and the sun might
be brought also from the sky on earth, the people would say
what the next order to comply with. Instead he himself jumped
at the sun to bring it on the earth for the people. He remained
unsuccessful because no human being could achieve like that.
But he, the leader was not given the reward. He could get
nothing except being branded as traitor.

Now an year has lapsed. There is nobody on the house-tops to


welcome him. The leader is walking while it is raining. A tight
rope is cutting his both wrists. His forehead is bleeding. People
who greeted him with open arms just an year ago, are now,
pelting stones on him and condemning him for his misdeeds.

The fallen leader concludes that his entrance into the political
life was a success. But his end is by no means praiseworthy. He
says that he has paid what he owned to the people. Now, he will
be rewarded by God in the life hereafter.

The poet wants to make it clear that in third world countries


democracy and democratic traditions are not still deep rooted.
Democratic tolerance is not present. Therefore the political
leaders have to meet such circumstances. The poem contains a
lesson for the people of third world countries. It is the lesson of
steadfastness and tolerance in social as well as political life.

Dramatic irony, political satire exact and realistic expression and


optimistic end have made the poem a remarkable piece of poetic
art.

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The Huntsman
The narrative poem “The Huntsman” is based on a Kenyan folk-
lore. The poet “Edward Lawbury” advises us through the story of
a Kenyan hunter, Kagwa who himself becomes the prey to fate,
to avoid the unnecessary talk.

Kagwa was a hunter of lions and he used to hunt through bush


and forest with his spear. One day he found a human skull and
asked it how it had come there in the forest. The skull opened its
mouth and replied that the habit of talking had brought it there.
He hurriedly went to the king‟s court and told the king about
this miraculous discovery. The king expressed his doubts about
the truth of the tale.

Instead of granting Kagwa a prize, the king called out his guards
and ordered two of them to accompany Kagwa and search for the
talking skull. The king further ordered them to kill Kagwa if such
a strange skull was not found there.

Kagwa and two guards rode through the jungle for many days
and nights but they could find nothing. At last, they found a
skull, Kagwa asked it how it had come there. But the skull did
not answer. Kagwa began to implore. But the skull remained
silent.

Upon this the guards ordered Kagwa to kneel down and they
killed him in compliance with the kings orders. After it the skull
opened its mouth and asked Kagwa, how he had come there. The
dead Kagwa answered that talking brought him there. In this
way the story of Kagwa proved the old maxim, “Think before you
speak”. No doubt useless and irresponsible talk bring disaster
for the talkative one.

The poem is a sad example of sick humour. After going through


it we experience mixed feelings of humour and regret at the same
time. Funny and unfunny aspects of life blended with the
elements of suspense and irony create a shocking impact.

The poem also describes the attitude of dictators and can be


called a political satire. As it is shown that the dictators never

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like common people‟s talk. They do not believe in anything


without certifying it in their own way.

Narrative style, end stopped lines, monosyllabic words and


proper stanzac form provide this free verse an impressive out
look. The poet is successful in drawing our attention to the tragic
fact of life.

One Art
Plain and straightforward but ironic poem “ One Art” is related
with philosophy as well as religion. The poetess “Elizabeth
Bishop “ teaches us the great value of resignation and
contentment. She is of the view that the true art of losing helps
us in developing a spirit of acceptance and resignation. The art
of losing , in fact, means to live life, hoping for the best, and to
be ready to face and accept the worst.

The poetess says that it is not difficult to have a mastery over the
art of losing something because many things have their existence
only to be lost and their loss has no serious consequences. She
advises to face difficulties and fluster of losing minor things like
door keys and to bear our sufferings with patience. She asks to
lose something daily to be perfect in this art.

We can learn this great art by practice. Practice of forgetting the


names of people and places may help one to learn this art
without any harm. She gives her own example that she has lost
her mother‟s watch, three houses, some property and even her
homeland but it is not a disaster.

She says that she can even lose someone very dear to her and
can prove that this art is very easy to master.

Infact, the poetess advocates that to live in this world


successfully, one must have patience and courage to bear losses.
The people who are always eager to make great achievements
should also be ready to make sacrifices. Nothing can be achieved
easily. The actual reality demands that one has to suffer loss
before gaining something. So, a person who is determined to
achieve great success should not give up struggle to avoid losses.

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The poem can be discussed as a satire. Everyone must lose


something. Some one loses time and friends other loses property
and kingdom. We also lose such things but we have no enough
courage to confess it. There is also irony in this poem that to
resign to fate is very difficult art but one has to learn it to lead a
contented life. It combines the elements of satire, humour and
irony. The tragedy of death which is inevitable is not referred.
the subject is discussed in a mocking and non serious way but
the poetess is successful in conveying the message.

Proper stanza form with an additional line, repetition of master


and disaster, concrete images of common life and mocking yet
didactic style have made this poem a master piece of its own
kind.
The Solitary Reaper
The Solitary Reaper, a lyrical poem by Wordsworth, a renown
romantic poet deals with the common experience of daily life.
The poet recounts an incident of the past beautifully in verse.
This is an excellent example of the poet‟s aesthetic sense and
high artistic taste.

One day the poet saw a mountain girl who was all alone reaping
grain and singing by herself. The poet did not like the singing girl
to be disturbed by the passers by.

She was cutting and binding the grain and during the course of
her work she was singing a melancholic song. The song was
more sweet and melodious than the songs of nightingale who
used to greet the weary travelers among the Arabian Oasis and
was more thrilling than the songs of the cuckoo in the Spring
time. The whole valley was full of this musical song and her
beautiful tune was breaking the silences of the sees among the
farthest Hebrides.

The poet could not understand the theme of the song as it was in
foreign local dialect yet he tried to guess the meaning. He
guessed that the song was perhaps a complaint about old
unpleasant far-off events and battles which took place long ago.
It might be a simple matter related to the past or present.

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In the end the poet does not bother about the theme. He got
absorbed in the miraculous sight. He stood motionless and still,
listening to the sweet strain and looking the girl .

The music impressed him so much that he hears it in his


solitude even now when it is heard no more. Hence this sweet
poem proves the truth of Keats, “A thing of beauty is a joy
forever”

Tender feelings, past memories, natural beauty and loneliness


mixed with realistic and sentimental style make this narrative a
true representation of Wordsworth. The beauty of song is given a
romantic touch by hinting at the Arabian Oasis, Island of
Hebrides, Weary travelers and unknown language. Loneliness is
the main feature giving the song fairy-tale like impression. Most
probably the song would not be so impressive if it was not heard
in solitude. Monosyllabic as well as polysyllabic vocabulary,
subject matter of the song, similes of the nightingale and the
cuckoo and suitable rhyming scheme are the remarkable
features of this lyric.

All The World‟s A Stage


The great dramatist of all ages, Shakespeare presents a unique
treatment of human life in his play “As You Like It”. This
masterpiece of keen observation, All The World‟s a Stage is infact
a speech delivered by one of the characters of the above
mentioned play.
In this poem the poet compares the entire world to a stage,
where all the men and women play their particular part. During
the course of drama of life the character appear and disappear
on the stage to perform their role. There are seven stages of this
drama. Birth is entrance and death is exit.
The first period begins and helpless infant in the nurse‟s arms
vomits feebly. In the second stage a complaining school boy
appears on the stage. He goes to school unwillingly like a snail.
Then a teenager enters the stage sighing like a furnace and
singing songs for his beloved. After this, man acts as a soldier
ready to fight suddenly, seeking prompt fame even in the
cannon‟s mouth to make his mark in the history.

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In the fifth period a judge, with formal beard, fairly round belly
and severe eyes appears on the stage of the world. He knows
many proverbs and can quote a lot of modern instances.

In the sixth stage he becomes an old man, lean and weak. There
are whistles in his voice and he wears glasses on his nose. He
keeps a small bag with him and the world is so vast for his weak
body.

In the last, (seventh stage) he is on the verge of end (death). He


has lost every quality of his youth and has become a helpless
child again thus ends this eventful history(life).

These different stages hint at the fact that nothing is permanent


in this life as life is transient. Interpretation of human life is
understandable to some extent but is not agreeable fully.

Subtle and sublime rhyme scheme, blank verse, realistic


comparison straightforward treatment, fresh imagery, theatrical
vocabulary and run-on-lines here and there are its special
technical features.
-----------------------------

NOVEL: THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA


Ernest Hemingway
THEME OF THE NOVEL
(GENERAL IMPACT OF THE NOVEL)
(WHERE IN LIES REAL INTEREST IN THE NOVEL?)

“The Old Man and The Sea” is not just an entertainer or a time-killer.
It has something that goes deep down our psyche and arouses us out
of our feckless, uneventful, lethargic day-to-day living. The old man is,
infact, a sort of an “every man” who wishes to conquer the
unconquerable, the Prometheus who desires to pull himself free from

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the prison of Fate. Hemingway has caught the true spirit of
adventurism.
`The old man‟s adventure on the sea is not just an event, “one-in-a-
series” but something new, something challenging, something
impossible. He is pitted not just against a huge marlin or greedy
reckless sharks but against all the forces of nature, rather the forces
of universe that try to keep man subdued. They grudge him his
success and cheat him of his final victory.
Nevertheless he remains unbeaten to the end; his pride is unscathed
and his spirit unbent. He rightly remarks that a man may be
destroyed but not defeated. His struggle against the Marlin and his
fight against the sharks are as much objective as subjective. He is
Odysseus, Achilles, Agamemnon and Macbeth combined.
He struggles nobly against the fish and kills it successfully but
reaches the truly tragic height when he fights against the Sharks. It is
his “be all and end-all”.
He fights like Macbeth and suffers like Lear. He has the cleverness of
Odysseus and nobility and charm of Hamlet. In crucial moments, the
great tragic heroes say great things and so does Santiago: “Man is not
made for defeat. A man may be destroyed but not defeated.”
We can say that Hemingway has given us a message that a man
should live a life of struggle. He should have courage to face the
circumstances. When someone wants to prove his dignity he has to
fight against the heavy odds without any help and even without any
resources. He is to use all the available things to defend his pride.

CHARACTER SKETCH OF MANOLIN

Manolin, the boy, is the symbol of the old man‟s lost youth. It is he
who has been teaching him fishing since his early childhood. The old
man treats him like a loving father. Being issueless and widower
Santiago is attached to him as a true friend, a mentor and a lover.
Manolin too returns his passion with the same vehemence. He is
attached to the old man as a calf to its mother.
Manolin takes very good care of the old man. He helps him carry gear
to and from the shack. He listens to him avidly and showers the
sincerest praises on him. He calls him, and believes it truly, that old
man is the greatest fisherman in the world. He serves the old man
with beer and brings him sumptuous supper from time to time.

It is true that he deserts the old man under pressure from his parents
but his heart is still with him. When the old man does not return for
three days, he is exceedingly restless. He is the first person to discover
him in the shack and is so sorry for his miserable condition that he
cries his heart out. He brings him hot coffee and promises to stay with

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him forever and ever. When Santiago says, he is unlucky, Manolin
bursts: “The hell with the luck. I‟ll bring luck with me.” He is thus a
paragon of friendship, love and loyalty.

THE OLD MAN‟S LIFE IN HIS SHACK


Old man is a born fisherman and is as at home in the sea as any fish.
He has spent all his life in voyaging and fishing. However, this
amphibian lives on land as well. Normally he comes back in the
evening, carries his gear to his shack, sometime all by himself, but
mostly assisted by the boy, Manolin. His shack made of “the tough
bud-shields of the royal palm” is simply furnished. Besides, a table,
and a chair, it has a spring bed covered not with a mattress or foam
but with old newspapers. There are a couple of pictures on Biblical
themes as well as “a tinted photograph of his wife”, which remains
covered in one corner “under his clean shirt” lest he should feel lonely.

He has a fireplace “on the dirt floor to cook with charcoal” but there is
nothing in his house to be cooked. He tries to put off the boy by
pretending that he has “a pot of yellow rice,” for his supper, but the
boy knows too well that the promised “yellow rice and fish” is a dream.
Infact they go through “this fiction everyday”.

Their conversation centers on baseball and the champion of this


game. Dimagio is the favourite hero of the old man. Infact he is
competing with Dimagio all the time and turns out to be his equal in
fishing. His great feat on the sea is of course as big as any victory of
Dimagio.

DRAG OF THE GREAT FISH


The old man hooks a huge Marlin, 1500 pounds or more and 18 feet
in length. It is the biggest fish caught by any fisherman in that area so
far. The old man perceives by pressure of his thumb and finger on line
that it is a male and it is one hundred fathoms deep.

He also knows that the fish has the hook “side ways in his mouth‟ and
is rushing away with it. He lets the line slip through his fingers and
makes the two reserve coils fast with this line. He does not lunge at
the line lest it should throw the hook out. He says to the fish, “Eat it a
little more. Eat it well.” And then he strikes hard with both hands
again and again so that the points of hook firmly stuck in its flesh.

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This done, he braces himself “against the thwart”, leaning back
against the pull. The fish starts pulling the skiff steadily.

It is a long drag that lasts for about three days and two nights. All this
while the old man stands leaning against the bow with the line taut
against his back. Towards the nightfall he covers his shoulders with a
sack and slowly brings it under the line. The fish never comes up but
swims nobly at a steady speed. Once or twice it gives a lurch; the line
cuts through his right hand and once his face strikes against the
stern and he is nearly pulled overboard. However, he endures the
great pain in his back, the cuts in his hands and the bruises on his
face patiently.

HOW DOES THE OLD MAN FINALLY KILL THE FISH?

Marlin, the old man hooks, drags his skiff for a couple of nights and
two and half days. Another man in his place would have been panicky
and given up but the old man knows better. He knows that a fish
however strong and big it might be, can‟t drag the skiff forever.
Hunger and toil must take its toll. In the meantime he eats raw tuna
to keep himself strong.

At long last, the fish as he had predicted, starts circling. He now gains
line with every circle, forcing the fish to come closer with every round.
As the fish comes alongside, he pulls with all his strength, and turns
“part way over” but then it rights itself and swims away. It happens
several times. The old man says, “Fish you are going to have to die
any way. Do you have to kill me too?” he is so enamoured of the
beauty and nobility of the fish that the calls it a brother. He even goes
on to say, “Come on and kill me. I don‟t care who kills who.”

As the fish, now tired and exhausted, comes along side, he drops the
line, puts his foot on it, lifts the harpoon as high as he can and drives
it down with all his might “in to the fish‟s side just behind the great
chest fin.” He feels the iron go in and pushes “all his weight after it.”
There oozes out a cloud of blood from the fish‟s heart. It is dead. Soon
it is afloat, green, golden and silver. The greatest adventure on sea has
been accomplished although it is by no means the end of old man‟s
labour and struggle.

THE OLD MAN‟S FIGHT AGAINST THE SHARKS

The old man feels truly elated after he had killed the biggest marlin
hunted by any fisherman in that area. He is sure that even great Di

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Magio would be proud of him that day. He lashes the fish alongside
his boat and sail southwest, unaware of the blackest tragedy that
awaits him.
Hardly an hour passes when, attracted by the scent, the first shark, a
Mako, hits him. It is armed with teeth sharper than the edge of the
sword; it is the worst enemy that could be imagined on the sea. The
unconquerable man runs the harpoon into the head of the shark. He
hits it “with resolution and complete malignancy.” It turns over and
sinks in water. The old man is deeply grieved to think that his fish has
been mutilated. It seems to him “as though he himself were hit.”
This however, is the beginning not the end. The scent of the fish
spreads far and wide attracting entire shoals of sharks from the deep.
The old man is now pitted against not one but legions. He wishes “it
had been a dream” but then he reminds himself “man is not made for
defeat. A man can be destroyed but not defeated.” He kills them one
after the other, first with the harpoon, then with the oar with the knife
lashed to it, then with his club and lastly with his tiller. He gives a
brave fight and makes short work of several sharks but they are too
many: but that cannot dampen his courage. However, it does not
mean that he is a superman or a giant. He has the common
weaknesses, which become all the more prominent when he is pitted
against forces much stronger than he.
After he hooks the fish, he wishes a successful end of this adventure.
Without compromising on his skill or in any way relaxing his efforts,
he promises scores of “Hail Mary‟s and Our Fathers.” Perhaps he does
this to keep up his heart. However, his anxiety culminates into a
delirium. When the sharks hit him, he cannot help calling out
helplessly, “I‟d like to buy some luck if there‟s any place they sell it.”
He then accuses himself of violating his luck by going “too far
outside.” Nevertheless towards the end of the novel, he emerges a
living martyr, reconciled to the fortune and ready to make new start.

THE OLD MAN‟S REVERIES

The old man is alone on the sea. The boy Manolin has been taken
away from him and he has no radio to bring him baseball or music.
Quite naturally, he takes to self-communing. His deliberations
sometimes become his reveries or a vocal stream of the subconscious.
Although talking during fishing is injudicious yet he cannot help doing
so.
He talks to the bird that alights upon his line to take rest, to the hand
as it cramps. His conversation on these occasions is amusing and
witty and at the same time thought provoking. Most instructive and
penetrating are, however, his jibes (‫ )طنز‬at himself. It is here that he
takes stock of things, thrashes and analyses. He gets at the truth at

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one leap that is enlightening not only to himself but also the reader.
Some times his thinking aloud becomes so realistic a sort of vocal
current in the stream of subconscious. It is inclusive of all his
experience, his desires, his ambitions, his pride, his disappointments
and his courage. It is through these communing that we get at the
real man in him. These are most revealing in nature and perhaps the
most important part of the novel.

DiMaggio, A Great Source Of Inspiration For The Old Man.

Hemingway's novel 'The Old Man and the Sea' is a shining


example of human valour, self-reliance and endurance. Its hero,
the old man went out in the deep sea alone and succeeded in
hooking a big marlin. The marlin was too strong for him and he
could not haul it to the surface of the sea. The fish started
dragging the old man along with his boat. The old man decided
to defeat this powerful creature with his skill and experience.

The struggle with the marlin continued for two days and nights.
During this time the old man got dead tired and his hands were
badly injured. He did not think of giving up the struggle. He
decided to boost up his morale by reviving his past victories and
recalled his historic hand game competition with a Negro. Then
he tried to feel strong by remembering of his hero Joe DiMaggio,
the base-ball champion. DiMaggio was a great player and a
remarkable leader. DiMaggio always proved to be a deciding
factor for his team and brought it victories. This champion of
base-ball played neatly and skillfully in spite of the pain of a
bone spur in his heel. Moreover, the old man's admiration for
DiMaggio owed to another factor, as DiMaggio was born of a
fisherman.

By reviving his hero, the old man tried to collect his strength and
managed to endure the great pain. He prayed to be worthy of his
hero. He says to himself, "Pain does not matter to man." In
this way the old man minimized his sense of loneliness and
stimulated his falling courage.

The writer in fact wanted to show, how age and miseries of life
waste human energies and weaken the vigorous one yet cannot
dampen the courage. Thus the main theme of the novel is also

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proved by mentioning DiMaggio's importance that Man is not


made for defeat.

HERO OF THE NOVEL

Character sketch of Santiago, the old man

The hero of the novel is an old man. His name is Santiago. He is


a born fisherman. He lives in a coastal village near Havana. He
is not a common angler. He hooks big fish like Dolphin, Marlin
and Shark. He is strong and gaunt. His eyes are of sea colour.
He has no relations and lives alone. A boy, Manolin looks after
him. He fishes in Gulf Stream with the help of a small skiff. He
has simple and cheap fishing apparatus. The boy, Manolin
helps him in fetching the apparatus to and from his shack. His
shack is made of sturdy fibred guano. There is a table, a chair,
a bed covered with newspapers and an army blanket in his
shack. He has decorated the walls of his shack with the
pictures of Jesus Christ and Virgin of Cobre. His shirt as well
as the sail of his skiff is patched with floor sack. His sail is so
tattered that the writer calls it “The flag of permanent defeat”.
The people call him “salao” because of his continuous hard
luck. He has been without fish for eighty-four days. For the first
forty days the boy, Manolin was with him but then his parents
send him to another boat because they have become fed up
with his skiff that always returns empty. The boy Manolin loves
him very much and does not want to leave him but he is bound
to obey his parents. Now he tries to help the old man by serving
him with food, beer and sardines (for bait).
The old man is an ordinary sailor but the light of determination
in his eyes makes him someone special. He calls himself “A
Strange Old Man”. He is no doubt a strange old man so far as
his courage and endurance is concerned. After eighty-four
desperate days of fruitless struggle he is still ready to test his
luck and to go fishing to regain his reputation as a successful
fisherman and also to remove the slur of being Salao. Following
are some of the important aspects of his character that make
him hero of the novel and representative of the whole human
race:

 His loneliness:

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Santiago, the hero is leading a life of loneliness. He is leading


his life courageously. He has formed the habit of talking to
himself overcome his feeling of loneliness. He thought aloud
and talked to himself to console and comfort himself. He has
put the photograph of his wife under his clean shirt in the
corner because it makes him too lonely. His cry during the
heroic struggle, “I wish I had the boy. To help me and to see
this” indicates his feeling. He talks to sea, to fish and to the
bird.
The writer wants to show that need of a companion is natural.
A man can live alone but cannot avoid feeling lonely.

 His passion of love:


The old man is kind hearted and loving by nature. His
behaviour with the boy indicates his love. He even loves the
birds that could not catch any fish. He invites a bird to take
rest in his skiff. He thinks that fish are man‟s brother. He feels
sorry for the huge Marlin, as he says when he was trying to
beat the fish he says
His expertise:
The old man is not only a fisherman par excellence but also a
confident explorer of the sea. He is one of those very few people
who stand in no need of the conventional apparatus like a
compass or a wireless set for guidance. He can locate his
position in any part of the sea with the help of trade wind. When
the fish drags him into the high seas, he is not at all afraid.
Another fisherman in his place would have cut off the line and
sailed back, but he says, “Fish I will stay with you until I am
dead”. He is so daring not because of stupidity but because of
his sound knowledge and his well-placed confidence.

 His sense of humour:


The conversation between Santiago and Manolin is lighthearted
and perfectly enjoyable. His address to the bird especially his
remarks “what the birds are coming to,” his taunts and threats
to his own left hand. His promises to say, “Our Fathers and
Hail Mary‟s” as well as his remarks “consider them said” are all
very amusing. He says to the second shark, “Go and see your
friend or maybe it‟s your mother,” and he says to himself
“you talk too much old man,” are all humorous.

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 His Reveries:
The old man is alone on the sea. The boy Manolin has been
taken away from him and he has no radio to bring him baseball
or music. Quite naturally, he takes to self-communing. His
deliberations sometimes become his reveries or a vocal stream
of the subconscious. Although talking during fishing is
injudicious yet he cannot help doing so. He talks to the bird
that alights upon his line to take rest, to the hand as it cramps.
His conversation on these occasions is amusing and witty and
at the same time thought provoking.

Following are some other points about the hero:

 His struggle: His optimism: His unscathed pride:


 His symbolic significance: His sense of religion:
 His past memories: His confidence: His resolution:

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