COMPREHENSION
A comprehension exercise consists of a passage,
upon which questions are set to test the student's ability to understand the
content of the given text and to infer information and meanings from it.
Here are
a few hints:-
Read the
passage fairly quickly to get the general idea.
Read
again, a little slowly, so as to know the details.
Study the questions thoroughly. Turn to the relevant portions of the
passage, read them again, and then rewrite them in your own words, neatly and
precisely
Use
complete sentences.
If you are asked to give the meaning of any words or phrases, you should
express the idea as clearly as possible in your own words. Certain words
require the kind of definition that is given in a dictionary. Take care to
frame the definition in conformity with the part of speech.
SPECIMEN
Read the
passage below and then answer the questions which follow it.
1
It has been part of Nelson's prayer that the British fleet might be
distinguished by humanity in the victory which he expected. Setting an example
himself, he twice gave orders to cease firing upon the Redoubtable, supposing
that she had struck because her great guns were silent; for as she carried no
flag, there was no means of mstantly ascertaining the fact. From this ship,
which he had thus twice spared, he received his death. A ball fired from her
mizzen-top which, in the then situation of the two vessels
was not more than fifteen yards from that part of
the deck where he was standing, struck the epaulette on his left shoulder about
a quarter after one, just in the heat of action. He fell upon his face on the
spot which was covered with his poor secretary's blood. Hardy who was a few
steps from him turning round, saw three men raising him up. “They have done for
me at last Hardy !” said he. “I hope not !” cried
Hardy. “Yes,” he replied; “my backbone is shot through !” Yet even now
not for a moment losing his presence of mind, he observed as they were carrying
him down the ladder, that the tiller-ropes which had been shot away, were not
yet replaced and ordered that new ones should be roped immediately. Then that
he might not be seen by the crew, he took out his handkerchief and covered his
face and his stars. Had he but concealed these badges of honour from the enemy,
England perhaps would not have had cause to receive with sorrow the news of the
battle of Trafalgar. The cockpit was crowded with wounded and dying men; over
whose bodies he was with some difficulty conveyed, and laid upon a pallet in
the midshipmen's berth. It was soon perceived, upon examination, that the wound
was mortal. This, however, was concealed from all, except Captain Hardy, the
chaplain, and the medical attendants. He himself being certain, from the
sensation in his back, and the gush of blood he felt momently within his
breast, that no human care could avail him, insisted that the surgeon should
leave him and attend to those to whom he might be useful.
Questions
What is
meant by 'supposing that she had struck’?
How can
Nelson be said to have been partly responsible for his own death?
What do
you understand by the 'mizzen-top' ?
Why did
Nelson insist that the surgeon should leave him and attend to others?
What
qualities in Nelson's character are revealed by this passage?
Answers
'Supposing that she had struck means 'thinking that the men in the ship
had surrendered'.
Nelson ordered his men two times to cease firing on the Redoubtable.
From the same ship a ball was fired at him and brought about his death. He was
thus partly responsible for his death.
The
'mizzen-top' is the platform round the lower part of the mast nearest the
stern.
Nelson was certain that it would be impossible to save his life. He,
there fore, insisted that the surgeon should leave him and attend to others.
His
patriotism, his humanity and his powers of endurance are revealed by this
passage.
Exercise
Read the
passages carefully and answer briefly the questions appended below:-
People talk of memorials to him in statues of bronze or marble or
pillars and thus they mock him and belie his message. What tribute shall we pay
to him that he would have appreciated ? He has shown us the way to live and the
way to die and if we have not understood that lesson, it would be better that
we raised no memorial to him, forthe only
fit memorial is to follow reverently in the path he showed us and to do
our duty in life and in death.
He was a Hindu and an Indian, the greatest in many generations, and he
was proud of being a Hindu and an Indian, to-him India was dear, because she
had represented throughout the age's certain immutable truths. But though he
was intensely religious and came to be called the Father of the Nation which he
had liberated, yet no narrow religious or national bonds confined his spirit.
And so he became the great internationalist, believing in the essential unity
of man, the underlying unity of all religions, and he needs of humanity, and more
specially devoting himself to the service of the poor, the distressed and the
oppressed millions everywhere.
His death brought more tributes than have been paid at the passing of
any other human being in history. Perhaps what would have pleased him best was
the spontaneous tributes that came from the people of Pakistan. On the morrow
of the tragedy, all of us forgot for a while the bitterness that had crept in,
the estrangement and conflict of these past months and Gandhiji stood out as
the beloved champion and leader of the people of India, of india as it was
before partition cut up this living nation.
What was his great power over the mind and heart of man due to ? Even we
realize, that his dominating passion was truth. That truth led him to proclaim
without ceasing that good ends can never be attained by evil methods, that the
end itself is distorted if the method pursued is bad. That truth led him to
confess publicly whenever he thought he had made a mistake - Himalayan errors
he called some of his own mistakes. That truth led him to fight evil and
untruth wherever he found them, regardless of the consequences. That truth made
the service of the poor and the dispossessed the passion of his life, for where
there is inequality and discrimination and suppression there is injustice and
evil and untruth. And thus he became the beloved of all those who have suffered
from social and political evils, and the great representative of humanity as it
should be. Because of that truth in him wherever he sat became a temple and
where he trod was hallowed ground.
-Jawaharlal
Nehru
Questions
About
whom is the passage written?
Why does Nehru make the difference about being a "Hindu" and
an "Indian"? Is there any difference really?
What
great lesson did this great man show us for life?
Mention
some of the virtues of "the great internationalist."
Nehru seems to suggest that his hero was "the beloved champion and
leader of the people of India" only before the partition of Pakistan and
India.' Do you agree with that? Explain.
What did
"truth" mean to this great man ?
Give the meaning of the following : memorials, immutable; essential,
estrangement, spontaneous, discrimination, dominating, Himalayan.
2
The Voice had to be listened to, not only on account of its form but for
the matter which it delivered. It gave a message to the country that it needed
greatly. It brought to the common people a realization of their duty to concern
themselves with their affairs. The common, people were made to take an interest
in the manner in which they were governed in the taxes they paid in the return
they got from those taxes. This interest in public affairs - politics as you
may call it - was to be the concern no longer of the highly educated few but of
the many - the poor, the propertyless, the workingmen in town and country.
Politics was not to be the concern of a small aristocracy of intellect property of the masses. And with the change in the subjects of politics
that Voice bought about also a change in the objects of polities'. Till then
politics had busied itself mainly with the machinery of Government towards
making its personnel more and more native, with proposals for a better
distribution of political power, with protests against the sins of omission and
of commission of the administration. This Voice switched politics on to concern
for the needs of the common people. The improvement of the lot of the poor was
to be the main concern of politics and the politician. The improvement,
especially of the lives of the people of the neglected villages, was to be
Placed before Governments and political organizations as the goal of all
political en deavour. The raising of the standard of living of the people of
the villages, the finding of subsidiary occupations which would give the
agricultural poor work for their enforced leisure during the off season and an
addition to (heir exiguous income, the improvement of the housing of the poor,
the sanitation, of the villages – these were to be the object-
tives to
be kept in view. In the towns, the slums and cheries were to receive especial
attention. There was especially a class of the poor for which that
compassionate Voice pleaded and protested. This was for the so-called depressed
class, the outcastes of Hindu society. The denial of elementary human rights to
this class of people it considered the greatest blot on Hindu society and
history. It raised itself in passionate protest against the age-old wrongs of
this class and forced those that listened to it to endeavour to remove the most
outrageous of them like untouchability. It caused a revolution in Hindu
religious practice by having Hindu temples thrown open to these people. It made
the care of them a religious duty of the Hindus by re-naming them Harijans.
-Mr. Ruthnasami
Questions
Why had
people to listen to "The Voice" of Mahatma Gandhi?
Why had
people to take an interest in politics?
What was
the change brought about in the objects of politics?
What
improvements were made for the common man?
Explain:-
Sins of
omission and of commission of the administration.
No longer
the monopoly of the classes, but the property of the masses.
3
The next ingredient is a very remarkable one: Good Temper. “Love is not
easily provoked”. Nothing could be more striking than to find this here. We are
inclined to look upon bad temper as a very harmless weakness. We speak of it as
a mere infirmity of nature, a family failing, a matter of temperament, not a
thing to take into very serious account in estimating a man's character. And
yet here, right in the heart of this analysis of love, it finds a place; and
the Bible again and again returns to condemn it as one of the most destructive
elements in human nature. The peculiarity of ill temper is that it is the vice
of the virtuous. It is often the one blot on an otherwise noble character. You
know men who are all but perfect, and women who would be entirely perfect, but
for an easily ruffled quick-tempered or "touchy" disposition. This
compatibility of ill temper with high moral character is one of the strangest
and saddest problems of ethics. The truth is there are two great classes of
sins-sins of the Body, and sins of Disposition. The Prodigal son may be taken
as a type of the first, the Elder Brother of the second. Now society has no
doubt whatever as to which of these is the worse. Its brand falls, without a
challenge, upon the Prodigal. But are we right? We have no balance to weigh one
another's sins, and coarser and finer are but human words; but faults in the
higher nature may be less venial than those in the lower, and to the eye of Him
who is Love, a sin against Love may seem a hundred times more base. No form of
vice, not worldliness, not greed of gold, not drunkenness itself does more to
un-christianise society than evil temper. For embittering life, for breaking up
communities, for destroying the most sacred relationships, for devastating
homes, for withering up men and women, for taking the bloom off childhood; in
short for sheer gratuitous misery-producing power, this influence stands alone.
Jealousy, anger, pride, uncharity, cruelty, self-righteous-ness, touchiness,
doggedness,
sullenees - in varying proportions these are the ingredients of all ill
temper. Judge if such sins of the disposition are not worse to live in. and for
others to live with than sins of the body. There is really no place in Heaven
for a disposition like this. A man with such a mood could only make Heaven
miserable for all the people in it. -Henry Druromond
Questions
What is
the popular notion about “bad temper”?
How is
bad temper “the vice of the virtuous”?
Which
class of sins is worse, and why – since of the body, since of the disposition ?
Mention
some evils of bad temper.
Why
according to the author will there be no place in Heaven for bad tempered folk?
Find words from the passage which mean; breaking up; running;
scandalising; souring; easily or quickly offended.
4
Yes, there were giants before the Jam Sahib (the great Indian cricketer,
Kumar Shree Ranjitsinhji, better known to the world of cricket as Ranji). And
yet I think it is undeniable that as a batsman the Indian will live as the
supreme exponent of the Englishman's game. The claim does not rest simply on
his achievements although, judged by them, the claim could be sustained. His
season's average of 87 with a total of over 3,000 runs, is easily the
high-water mark of English cricket. Thrice he has totalled over 3,000 runs and
no one else has equalled that record. And is not his the astonishing
achievement of scoring two double centuries in a single match on a single day -
not against a feeble attack, but against Yorkshire, always the most resolute
and resourceful of bowling teams ?
But we do
not judge a cricketer so much by the runs he gets as by the way he gets them.
"In
literature as in finance," says Washington Irving, "much paper and
much poverty may
co-exist."
And in cricket too many runs and much dullness may be associated. If cricket
is
menaced with creeping paralysis, it is because it is losing the spirit of
joyous adventure
and
becoming a mere instrument for compiling tables of averages. There are dull,
mechanic
fellows who turn out runs with as little emotion as a machine turns out pins.
There is
no colour, no enthusiasm, no character in their play. Cricket is not an
adventure
to them;
it is a business. It was so with Shrewsbury. His technical perfection was
astonishing;
but the soul of the game was wanting in him. There was no sunshine in his
play, no
swift surprise or splendid unselfishness. And without these things without
gaiety,
daring,
and the spirit of sacrifice cricket is a dead thing. Now, the Jam Sahib has the
root
of the
matter in him. His play is as sunny as his face. He is not a miser hoarding up
runs,
but a
millionaire spending them, with a splendid yet judicious prodigality. It is as
though
his
pockets are bursting with runs that he wants to shower with his blessings upon
the
expectant
multitude. It is not difficult to believe that in his litttle kingdom Nawangar
where he
has power of life and death in his hands he is extremely popular for it is
obvious
that his
pleasure is in giving pleasure.
-A.G.
Gardiner
Questions
1. Correct
the following statistics, if necessary:-
His season's average of 87 with a total of over 3,000 runs is easily the
high-water mark of English cricket.
Thrice he
has totalled over 3,000 runs, and no one else has equaled that record.
He scored
two double centuries in a single match on a single day.
2.
"Many runs and much dullness may be .associated." Prove this.
Mention
some reasons why cricket is losing its lustre.
What
gives cricket its "character"?
How
should real cricket be played ?
Describe
in your own words the secret of the Jam Sahib's wizardry with the bat.
Make a
list of “do’s” and “don’ts” for a promising cricketer.
5
Supposing you have to make a payment of Rs. 100, you can do so in
rupee-coins; but it would be cumbersome to pay in nickel or copper coins,
because they are heavy to carry and also because it takes much time to count
them. The Government therefore permits you to make the payment in rupee-notes. What
are these rupee-notes really? They are a kind of money, right enough, although
they are made of paper instead of metal. You can use them in just the same way
that you use ordinary money. The reason why they are made of paper and used is
that they save the trouble of carrying metal coins about - of course, paper is
lighter than metal and they also save using silver and other metals when they
are scarce.
What makes these mere pieces of paper bear the value of the number of
rupees that is printed upon them? Why should a piece of paper, with “100”
printed on it be worth twenty times as much as a piece of paper with
"five" printed on it - and also worth a hundred times as much as a
silver rupee-coin? The reason is that Government guarantees that the piece of
paper is worth the amount printed on it and promises to pay that amount to
anybody who wishes to exchange this paper for the rupee-coins. Also, if you think
about it you can easily realize that crores and crores more of rupee-coins
would have to be minted, if all paper-money were abolished.
Perhaps you may ask, "Then why not have paper money only ? Why use
silver and nickel and copper at all ?" The answer is - because money must
as we have already said, be something so useful that everyone wants. Also
because the metals are the best form of money; and thirdly because it would be
impossible to print just the right amount of paper money that would keep prices
at their proper natural level. If any Government prints too much paper money,
then prices go up at once. The supply of money is increased and therefore its
value (in food, clothes, books, houses, land, tools and everything else) goes
down.
You may
think at first that it is queer to talk of having too much paper money and that
money is
so nice and useful that you cannot have too much of it. But if you think that,
I
am afraid
you are forgetting that money is only useful for what it will buy; so it is no
good at
all having more money if there are no more things to buy with it. The more
money
there is, the higher will be the prices of everything. The same thing happens
with
rupee-coins
as with paper money. But it is not likely to happen, for this reason : it is
very
easy to
print a great deal of paper money, but not at all easy to increase the amount
of
rupee-coins.
Silver has to be dug out of mines, and very difficult to get; so the amount
there is
if it keeps very steady and changes very little. In fact that is one of the
chief
reasons
why it was chosen to make coins of.
-Ernest
F. Row
Questions
Why does
the Government allow payment to be made in paper notes?
What is
more valuable, to have 100 rupee-coins in silver or a Rs. 100 note, in paper?
If metal is so cumbersome, why should we not have only paper money? Why
should we not print as much of it as possible?
What is
the real use of money?
Why
should the prices of commodities go up when there is plenty of paper money?
Why does the Government print only a certain number of paper notes, and
not as many as it likes arbitrarily?
6
You seemed at first to take no notice of your school-fellows, or rather
to set yourself against them because they were strangers to you. They knew as
little of you
as you did of them; so that this would have been the reason for their
keeping aloof, from you as well, which you would have felt as a hardship. Learn
never to conceive a
prejudice against other because you know nothing of them. It is bad
reasoning, and makes enemies of half the world. Do not think ill of them till
they behave ill to you; and then strive to avoid the faults which you see in
them. This will disarm their hostility sooner than pique or resentment or
complaint. I thought you were disposed to criticize the dress of some of the
boys as not so good as your own. Never despise any one for anything that he
cannot help - least of all, for his poverty. I would wish you to keep up
appearances yourself as a defence against the idle sneers of the world, but I
would not have you value yourself upon them. I hope you will neither be the
dupe nor victim of vulgar prejudices. Instead of saying above "Never
despise anyone for anything that he cannot help," I might have said,
"Never despise anyone at all"; for contempt implies a triumph over
and pleasure in the ill of another. It means that you are glad and congratulate
yourself on their failings or misfortunes.You have hitherto been a spoilt
child, and have been used to have your own way a good deal, both in the house
and among your playfellows, with whom you were too fond of being a leader; but
you have good nature and good sense, and will get the better of this in time.
You have now got among other boys who are your equals, or bigger and stronger
than yourself and who have something else to attend to besides humouring your
whims and fancies, and you feel this as a repulse or piece of injustice. But
the first lesson to learn is that there are other people in the world besides
yourself. The more airs of childish self-importance you. give yourself, you
will only expose yourself to be the more thwarted and laughed at. True equality
is the only true morality or wisdom. Remember always that you are but one among
others and you can hardly mistake your place in society. In your father's house
you might do as you pleased; in the world you will find competitors at every
turn. You are not born a king's son, to destroy or dictate to millions; you can
only expect to share their fate, or settle your differences amicably with them.
You already find
so al school, and I wish you to be reconciled to your situation as soon
and with as little pain as you can.
- William
Hazlitt
Questions
Can you tell who is writing to whom in this passage? What would you call
this kind of writing - a speech, a diary, a letter, a sermon?
What
reasons does the author give for not harbouring a prejudice against others?
What are some of the blessings of living with others in the same class
or the same school?
Paraphrase:-
True
equality is the only true morality or true wisdom.
To be the
dupe or victim of vulgar prejudices.
Settle
your differences amicably with them.
"Contempt implies a triumph over and pleasure in the ill of
another." Who are those who feel like this and why ?
The author says that "in the world you will find competitors at
every turn." But competition is a very good thing. Why does he seem to
warn his son about it ?
7
Unquestionably a literary life is for the most part an unhappy life;
because, if you have genius, you must suffer the penalty of genius; and, if you
have only talent, there are so many cares and worries incidental to the
circumstances of men of letters, as to make life exceedingly miserable. Besides
the pangs of composition, and the continuous disappointment which a true artist
feels at his inability to reveal himself, there is the ever-recurring
difficulty of gaining the public ear. Young writers are buoyed
up by the
hope and the belief that they have only to throw that poem at the world's feet
to
get back
in return the laurel-crown; that they have only to push that novel into print
to be
acknowledged
at once as a new light in literature. You can never convince a young author
that the
editors of magazines and the publishers of books are a practical body of men,
who are
by no means frantically anxious about placing the best literature before the
public.
Nay, that for the most part they are mere brokers, who conduct their business
on
the
hardest lines of a Profit and Loss account. But supposing your book fairly
launches,
its
perils are only beginning. You have to run the gauntlet of the critics. To a
young
author,
again, this seems to be as terrible an ordeal as passing down the files of
Sioux or
Comanche
Indians, each one of whom is thirsting for your scalp. When you are a little
older,
you will find that criticism is not much more serious than the bye-play of
clowns in
a circus,
when they beat around the ring the victim with bladders slung at the end of
long
poses. A
time comes in the life of every author when he regards critics as comical
rather
than
formidable, and goes his way unheeding. But there are sensitive souls that
yield
under the
chastisement and, perhaps after suffering much silent torture, abandon the
profession
of the pen for ever. Keats, perhaps, is the saddest example of a fine spirit
hounded
to death by savage criticism; because, whatever his biographers may aver, that
furious
attack of Clifford and Terry undoubtedly expedited his death. But no doubt
there
are
hundreds who suffer keenly hostile and unscrupulous criticism, and who have to
bear
that
suffering in silence, because it is a cardinal principle in literature that the
most
unwise
thing in the world for an author is to take public notice of criticism in the
way of
defending
himself. Silence is the only safeguard, as it is the only dignified protest
against
insult
and offence.
-P.A.
Sheehan
Questions
Why is
the Literary Life mostly an unhappy one?
What are
the ambitions of a young author?
Are
editors and publishers sympathetic to young authors?
What are
some of the ordeals awaiting the young authors from the critics?
What
attitude should an author adopt in the face of bitter critics?
Explain: Sioux Indians; abandon the profession of the pen; laurel-crown;
to run the gauntlet; hounded to death.
Write in simple English: the pangs of composition; buoyed up by the
hope; mere brokers; thirsting for your scalp.
8
Then one day there passed by that way a Pashupata ascetic. And he said
to the Brahman : "My son, what are you doing here ?" So he replied:
"Reverend Sir, I am performing penance, for the expiation of sin, on the
banks of the Ganges." Then the ascetic said:"What has this miserable
puddle to do with the Ganges," And the Brahman said :"Is this, then,
not the Ganges ?" And the ascetic laughed in his face, and said .'Truly,
old as I am, I did not think that there had been folly like this in the world.
Wretched man, who has deluded you ? The Ganges is hundreds of miles away, and
resembles this
contemptible brook no more than Mount Meru resembles an ant-hill.' Then
the Brahman said :"Reverend Sir, I am much obliged to you." And
taking his pot and staff, he went forward, till at length he came to a broad
river. And he rejoiced greatly, saying: "This must be the sacred
Ganges." So he settled on its banks and remained there for five years,
bathing every day in its waters. Then one day there came by a Kapalika, who
said to him, "Why do you remain here, wasting precious time over a river
of no account or sanctity, instead of going to the Ganges ?" But the
Brahman was amazed, and said; "And is this, then, not the Ganges ?"
Then the Kapalika replied -."This is the Ganges! Is a jackal a lion or a
Chandala a Brahman ? Sir, you are dreaming." Then the Brahman sighed
deeply. And he said, "Sir, I am enlightened by you." And he took his
pot and staff, and went forward.
But he was now very old and feeble. And long penance had weakened his
frame and exhausted his energies. And as he toiled on in the heat of the day
over the burning earth, the sun beat on his head like the thunderbolt of Indra,
and struck him with fever. Still he gathered himself together and struggled on,
growing weaker and weaker day by day, till at last he got no further, but fell
down and lay dying on the ground. But collecting all his remaining strength,
with a last desperate effort he dragged himself up a low hill in front of him.
And lo! there before him rolled the mighty stream of Ganges, with countless
numbers of pilgrims doing penance on its banks and bathing in its stream. And
in his agony he cried aloud : "O Mother Ganges ! alas ! alas ! I have
pursued you all my life and now I die here helpless in sight of you." So
his heart broke, and he never reached its shore.
-F.W.
Bain Questions
Explain the allusion to Mount Meru and the comparison between it and an
ant-hill. What was "the thunderbolt of Indra" ?
What is a
"Pashupata" ascetic, a Kapalika or a Chandala ?
What do you suppose is the intention of the author in telling this very
sad story ? Quote phrases from the text to show the pathos.
Comment
on the significance and the author's use of the following expressions:-
"This
is the Ganges ! Is a jackal a lion ---?"
"O
Mother Ganges ! alas ! alas !"
What is the purpose of the words : "Reverend Sir, I am performing
penance, for the expiation of sin .
9
One common mistake that many people have made is this: they have thought
that it would be a very good thing if everybody had exactly the same amount of
money, no matter whether they worked hard or lived quite idly. They forget that
very few people would work at all if it were not for the money their work
brings them, and that without work there would be no money. And they have
imagined that if all the money in the country were equally divided everybody
would be rich. Now that is a very great mistake, because there simply is not
enough money to make everybody rich. If it were shared equally all round every
one then would, on the basis of the calculations made in 1935, receive only
about Rs. 65 a year. Today with a rise in the price level it might be Rs. 150 a
year. That may be more than you receive now or it may be less, but would
certainly not make you really rich. It is quite true that there are in this
country a small number of very rich people; but they are so few in comparison
with the whole population that even if they were to share out all their wealth
among the rest, it would make very little difference. It is said that if you
flattened out that great French mountain Mont Blanc, the highest mountain in
Europe, and spread it over the whole of France you would only raise the level
of the land by about six inches. See if you can think out what that has to do
with the question I have been talking about.
Many people, unfortunately, seem to think also that Government can
always pay out money quite easily and in any quantity, and they forget, of else
they do not know, that the Government can only pay out money that it has
received in taxes - money that the tax-payer has had to work for.
And now here is one final mistake that I should like to warn you
against, Don't ever imagine that there is any thing to be ashamed of, or
anything undignified, to grumble about in having to work hard for your living.
If when you start work you can go into a job that suits you, so that you can
really enjoy the work itself, so much the better: I hope that is what will
happen, But if the work is not exactly the kind that you would choose, you must
try to remember that you are helping to produce the things that other people
need; you are "doing your bit" and playing your part In the work of
the world- You are like a wheel, even if it is only 5 very tiny wheel, in the
great world-
machinery of trade and industry that is always busily at work providing
for the wants of hundreds of millions of people, and you must "put your
back into it" and see to it that your particular task is always done as
well as you can possibly do it. - Ernest F. Row
Questions
Why is it
really necessary to work?
If all the money in the world were equally divided, everybody would be
very happy. Do you agree?
The author tells us about flattening Mont Blanc and the little
difference it would make in raising the level of France. What is his point in
giving us this example?
Which is
the best job in the world? Why must you embrace it lovingly?
What is
the meaning of: “put your back into it?” “doing your bit”?
Paraphrase
:"You are like a wheel…..millions of people."
10
All Great Thinkers live and move on a high plane of thought. It is only
there they can breathe freely. It is only in contact with spirits like
themselves they can live harmoniously and attain that serenity which comes from
ideal companionship. The studies of all great thinkers must range along the
highest altitudes of human thought, i cannot remember the name of any
illuminative genius who did not drink his inspiration from fountains of ancient
Greek and Hebrew writers; or such among the moderns as were pupils in ancient
thought, and, in turn, became masters in their own. I have always thought that
the strongest argument in favour of the Baconian theory was, that no man,
however indubitable his genius, could have written the plays and sonnets that
have come down to us under Shakespeare's name who had not the liberal education
of Bacon. How this habit of intercourse with the gods makes one impatient of
mere men. The magnificent ideals that have ever haunted the human mind, and
given us our highest proofs of a future immortality by reason of the
impossibility of their fulfilment here, are splintered into atoms by contact
with life's realities. Hence comes our sublime discontent. You will notice that
your first sensation after reading a great book is one of melancholy and
dissatisfaction. The ideas, sentiments, expressions, are so far beyond those of
ordinary working life that you cannot turn aside from one to the other without
an acute sensation and consciousness of the contrast. And the principles are so
lofty, so super-human that it is a positive pain, if once you become imbued
with them, to come down and mix in the squalid surroundings of ordinary
humanity. It may be spiritual or intellectual pride that is engendered on the
high plane of intellectual life. But whatever it is, it becomes inevitable. An
habitual meditation on the vast problems that underline human life, and are
knit into human destinies-thoughts of immortality, of the littleness of mere
man, of the greatness of man's soul, of the splendours of the universe that are
invisible to the ordinary traffickers in the street, as the vastness of St,
Peter's is to the spider that weaves her web in a corner of the dome-these
things do not fit men to understand the average human being, or tolerate with
patience the sordid wretchedness of the unregenerate masses. It is easy to
understand, therefore, why such thinkers fly to the
solitude of their own thoughts, or the silent
companionship of the immortals; and if they care to present their views in
prose or verse to the world, that these views take a sombre and melancholy
setting from "the pale cast of thought" in which they were engendered.
-P.A. Sheehan
Questions
On what
plane must great thinkers live and move?
Is a
liberal education necessary to produce great literature?
Why does the reading of a great book, according to the author, make one
melancholy and disappointed?
What are
the things that make it hard to understand the average human being?
11
Although religion does not inhibit the accusation of wealth, although it
does not hold up large fortunes as evil, the tenor of its teaching, by and
large, is to induce an attitude of indifference to worldly things, things which
gratify one's lower self and keep one engrossed in money-making. The student
should be made to realize that the real goods of life are spiritual, love of
things of the spirit and service of one's fellowmen, joy of an ordered
disciplined life. These are blessings money cannot buy. What is wealth before
such things of the spirit? Of all religious teachers Jesus Christ has dealt
more comprehensively than any other with the problem of wealth in all its
aspects. He may be called the greatest exponent of the science of the wealth.
With only four words "Blessed are ye poor!" he changed altogether the
values which man attached to human existence and human happiness and
acquisition and possession of wealth. Real bliss consisted, he taught, not in
riches nor in anything else which the world regarded as prosperity or felicity,
but in the joy and happiness derived from being at peace with one's fellowmen
through perfect love and fellowship and selfless service and sacrifice.
The word
"poor" on the lips of the Master had a spiritual significance - the
poor so far as they were poor in spirit, humble before God, simple,
God-fearing, teachable, faithful. It could surely not have been his intention
to hold up destitution and privation as a blessing in itself. That would have
turned life into a terrible ordeal and it would have been heartless to exhort
the poor to believe that money was not necessary for one's sustenance or the
joys and blessings of life. Even things of the spirit cannot be had without
money. Extreme poverty is as liable to lead to the stagnation and
impoverishment of the soul as excessive wealth. Not outward poverty but inward
spirit was what Jesus Christ desired and demanded. Every religion asks a man to
regard his wealth as a trust. Giving in charity for the relief of the poor and
public welfare is not merely an act of compassion, not merely d religious duty,
but also an act of social justice. All the gospels of wealth are based on the
fundamental concept that none can claim an absolute or inherent right to
property. Everyone holds it in trust from God to promote the good of mankind.
AU rights to private property are subject to this primary obligation to God and
man. - R.P. Masani
Questions
What, according to the author, is the meaning of
"indifference"? "Is it applicable to all religions?
Which are some of the real goods of spiritual living ? Is it easy to
make the student realise this?
In what sense can it be said that Jesus Christ has dealt more
comprehensively with the problem of wealth ? Did Mahatma Gandhi teach a similar
doctrine ?
What do you understand by the phrase : "poor in spirit" ? In
that case, would it be more perfect to give-away all your belongings and
property and live like a pauper ?
Describe some of the drawbacks of poverty and show how money is
absolutely necessary in life. Write a short paragraph developing the idea
contained in the following: "Every religion asks a man to regard his
wealth as a trust."
Bernard
Shaw has said that poverty is a crime. Do you agree ?
12
The third great defect of our civilization is that it does not know what
to do with its knowledge. Science has given us powers fit for the gods, yet we
use them like small
children. For example, we do not know how to manage our machines.
Machines were made to be man's servants; yet he has grown so dependent on them
that they are in a far way to become his masters. Already most men spend most
of their lives looking after and waiting upon machines. An the machines are
very stern masters. They must be fed with coal, and given petrol to drink, and
oil to wash with, and they must be kept at the right temperature. And if they
do not get their meals when they expect them, they row sulky and refuse to
work, or burst with rage, and blow up, and spread ruin and destruction all
round them. So we have to wait upon them very attentively and do all that we
can to keep them in a good temper. Already we find it difficult either to work
or play without the machines, and a time may come when they will rule us
altogether, just as we rule the animals.
And this
brings me to the point at which I asked, "What do we do with all the time
which
the
machines have saved for us, and die new energy they have given us ?" On
the whole,
it must
be admitted, we do very little. For the most part we use our time and energy to
make more
and better machines; but more and better machines will only give us still
more time
and still more energy, and what are we to do with them ? The answer, I think,
is that
we should try to become mere civilized. For the machine themselves, arid the
power
which the machines have given us, are not civilization but aids to
civilization. But
you will
remember that we agreed at the beginning that being civilized meant making and
liking
beautiful things, thinking freely, and living rightly and maintaining justice
equally
between
man and man. Man has a better chance today to do these things than he ever had
before;
he has more time, more energy, less to fear and less to fight against. If he
will
give his
time and energy which his machines have won for him to making more beautiful
things,
to finding out more and more about the universe, to removing the causes of
quarrels
between nations, to discovering how to prevent poverty, then I think our
civilization
would undoubtedly be the greater, as it would be the most lasting that there
has ever
been.
- C.E.M.
Joad
Questions
Instead of making machines our servants the author says they have become
our masters. In what sense has this come about ?
The use of machines has brought us more leisure and more energy. But the
author says that this has been a curse rather than a blessing. Why ?
What
exactly is the meaning of "civilization" ? Do you agree with the
author's views ?
"Making more beautiful things" What does this expression mean
? Make a list of die beautiful things that you would like to make and how you
would make them.
Mention some plans you may have to prevent poverty in the world. Who
would receive your most particular attention, and why ?
The author uses phrases like, "fed with coal"; "given
petrol to drink"; "oil to wash"; "kept at the right
temperature" What machines would require these things ?
13
The other
day we heard someone smilingly refer to poets as dreamers. Now, it is accurate
to refer to poets as dreamers, but it is not discerning to infer, as this
person did, that the dreams of poets have no practical value beyond the realm
of literary diversion, The truth is that poets are just as practical as people
who build bridges or look into microscopes; and just as close to reality and
truth, Where they differ from the logician and the scientist is in the temporal
sense alone; they are ahead of their time, whereas logicians and scientists are
abreast of their time. We must not be so superficial that we fail to discern
the practicableness of dreams. Dreams are the sunrise streamers heralding a new
day of scientific progress, another forward surge. Every forward step man takes
in any field of life, is first taken along the dreamy paths of imagination.
Robert Fulton did not discover his steamboat with full steam up, straining at a
hawser at some Hudson River dock; first he dreamed the steamboat, he and other
dreamers, and then scientific wisdom converted a picture in the mind into a reality
of steel and wood. The automobile was not dug out of the ground like a nugget
of gold; first men dreamed the automobile and afterward, long afterward, the
practical-minded engineers caught up with what had been created by winging
fantasy. He who looks deeply and with a seeing eye into the poetry of yesterday
finds there all the cold scientific magic of today and much which we shall not
enjoy until some tomorrow. If the poet does not dream so clearly that
blueprints of this vision can immediately be drawn and the practical
conversions immediately effected, he must not for that reason be smiled upon as
merely the mental host for a sort of harmless madness. For the poet, like the
engineer, is a specialist. His being, tuned to the life of tomorrow, cannot be
turned simultaneously to the life of today. To the scientist he says,
"Here, I give you a flash of the future." The wise scientist thanks
him, and takes that flash of the future and makes it over into a fibre of
today. - Glen Falls
Questions
Are poets
dreamers? In what sense?
Is a poet
a practical man? In what way?
Are
dreams, according to the author, useful to the world? Why?
What was
Fulton's achievement?
If the
poet did not dream, what would happen?
In what
way is the poet a specialist?
14
This
romantic life in Kashmir was drawing to its end after three glorious months.
Miss Joan was leaving a week earlier than Mrs. Rhodes, and about two days
before she left I took her alone to the hotel for dinner. We walked to the
hotel in perfect silence, a silence so heavy that I could hardly breathe. The
hotel seemed to be far away and yet not far enough. That night, as I served her
at table the temptation to touch her was overpowering, and I had almost
forgotten myself when I dropped her coffee cup, which made me pull myself
together and realize my position and my caste. On the way home there was a
bridge over the canal to be crossed. She stopped on the bridge without a word,
so I stopped beside her looking on to the calm water of the canal shining between
the gigantic chenar trees. In the distance a gramophone was playing and the
music floated over the water. We stood for a long time without saying a word to
each other. I think the parting was disturbing her. There was something which
she could not have explained and which she was trying to express. It might have
been just a fancy of her own, or it may have been the subconscious knowledge of
the secret, consuming passion of her attendant that was affecting her on this
calm and beautiful night as we tarried on the bridge. It seemed to me that we
stood there for ages, as if neither of us dare break the magic spell of night
and music. Our houseboat was only a few yards from the bridge, and the
Goodnight was the only word that passed between us as we parted - everything
then went into the darkness.
The Mail
lorry came up to the bridge to take her away from the romantic city of Srinagar
and away
from me. -After she had taken her seat I put awoollen rug over her knees to
keep her
warm on the journey, and she handed me a ten-rupee note as a parting gift and
sweetly
said Good-bye. I watched her wave her hand till the lorry was out of sight.
Then I
realized
what I had lost, and lost for ever.
- Hazari
Questions
What was the matter with the attendant as he walked with Miss Joan to
the hotel? Why did they not talk to each other?
After reading the passage can you give reasons to show what caste the
attendant belonged to?
The author mentions the chenar trees of Kashmir. Give a brief but
graphic description of these trees.
"I think the parting was disturbing her." Was it the romantic
atmosphere of the surroundings, the thought of having to leave Kashmir, the
kindness of her attendant, or thoughts of home that were the cause of the
disturbance?
Why does the author call Srinagar a romantic city? Give the meaning of
"romantic." Show how it may apply to Srinagar.
Why did
Miss Joan give the attendant a ten-rupee note? Do friends do such things?
15
Long years ago we made a tryst with destiny, and now the time comes when
we shall redeem our pledge, not wholly or in full measure, but very
substantially. At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India
will awake to life and freedom. A moment comes, which comes but rarely in
history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends, and when
the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance. It is fitting that at
this solemn moment we take the pledge of dedication to the service of India and
her people and to the still larger cause of humanity.
At the dawn of history India started on her unending quest, and
trackless centuries are filled with her striving and the grandeur of her
success and her failures. Through good and ill fortune alike she has never lost
sight of that quest or forgotten the ideals which gave her strength. We end
today a period of ill fortune and India discovers herself again. The
achievement we celebrate today is but a step, an opening of opportunity, to the
greater triumphs and achievements that await us. Are we brave enough and wise
enough to grasp this opportunity and accept the challenge of the future?
Freedom
and power bring responsibility. That responsibility rests upon this Assembly, a
sovereign
body representing the sovereign people of India. Before the birth of freedom
we have
endured all the pains of labour and our hearts are heavy with the memory of
this
sorrow.
Some of those pains continue even now. Neverthless, the past is over and it is
the
future
that beckons to us now. That future is not one of ease or resting but of
incessant
striving
so that we may fulfil the pledges we have so often taken and the one we shall
take
today. The service of India means the service of the millions who suffer. It
means
the
ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity. The
ambition
of the greatest man of our generation has been to wipe every tear from every
eye. That
may be beyond us, but as long as there are tears and suffering, so long our
work
will not
be over.
-Jawaharlal
Nehru
Questions
Express in your own words: (a) we made a tryst with destiny; (b) at the
stroke of the midnight hour; (,-) when the world sleeps; (d) when we step out
from the old to the new;
(e) we take the pledge of dedication; if) at the dawn of history; (g)
India discovers herself again; (h) with the memory of sorrow.
In what
does the “Service of India” consists, according to the author?
what are
the ideals which India has never forgotten?
Mention
some of the responsibilities of freedom and power.
This speech is concerned with the living as well as the dead. In what
way does Nehru appeal to his listeners? What motive urges Nehru to rouse the
India of today to action?
Quote the
line that has a direct reference to Mahatma Gandhi.
16
The Artist co-operates with God in making increasingly larger numbers of
people see the beauty of the world which these people could never see for
themselves, The world is, of course, God's artistic masterpiece; but it is the
artist who lends people eyes to see it with. Browning's Fra Lippo has the last
word on the subject:-For, don't you mark, we're made so that we love
First when we see them painted, things we have passed Perhaps a hundred
times nor cared to see?
In this
sense, Oscar Wilde's paradox is perfectly true : that Nature imitates Art; for
the majority of men see in Nature what Art has taught them to see in Nature.
The fogs of London, said Wilde, were the invention of Whistler. To love beauty
therefore becomes to the artist, as an artist, his first duty. To love beauty,
that is, to see it for himself first, and then to communicate it to others; for
love implies at once vision and reproduction. It must be the first article in
an artist's creed, as an artist, that beauty is the best interpreter of God to
man; that; when he has got hold of beauty, he has got hold of the surest key to
the knowledge of God. Keats has said that Beauty is Truth. Now, this is not
true. But to us here, Beauty is, as Plato said, the splendour of Truth. The
artist, as an artist, must be content with the splendour and, through this
splendour strive to convey the truth. Tie has no business with truth as such as
the philosopher, for instance, has. He has no concern with conduct as such, as
the moralist, for instance, has. It is not his function to exhort men to good
works, or to prove things; but merely to exhibitthen. Plato thought a picture,
for instance, was just a copy of an object - a copy of the idea. It was
Aristotle, Plato's pupil, who pointed out that, though a picture was in one
sense certainly a copy and therefore something less than the object, in another
sense it was something more than the object. It was, briefly, the idea of the
object made visible to the eye. Art, therefore, does not consist merely in line
and colour, sound and image; but primarily in ideas. Beauty may not be useful.
Beauty may not improve our minds. But beauty must please. Indeed, such is the
inherent delightfulness of beauty that, by its magic touch, not only the ugly
becomes pleasureable, but even sorrow becomes a joy. That is the explanation of
the pleasure we feel in tragedy. What would shock us in actual life gives us
pleasure in a tragedy. For tragedy makes experience significant; and by making
it significant, it makes it beautiful; and by making it beautiful, it makes it
pleasant. And yet, it does not aim at pleasing; it only aims at exhibiting.
Pleasure is not its aim; it is its effect. - Armando Menezes.
Questions
What does
the artist do for most of us?
Why does
the artist “lend” his eyes to people?
Explain:
"Nature imitates Art."
What is
the artist's first duty? Why?
What is
the surest key to the knowledge of God? Why?
What is
the artist's real function?
In what
does Art primarily consist?
When does
sorrow becomes a joy?
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number 16
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