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Monday, 3 July 2017

CBSE Class 9 - English (Communicative) - Poem - The Solitary Reaper (Reference To Context Questions) (#cbseNotes)

Poem - The Solitary Reaper (Reference To Context Questions)

CBSE Class 9 - English (Communicative) - Poem - The Solitary Reaper (Reference To Context Questions) (#cbseNotes)

CBSE Class 9 - English (Communicative)

Poet : William Wordsworth

Read the given extracts given below and answer the questions that follow:


1. Behold her, single in the field,
Yon solitary Highland lass!
Reaping and singing by herself;
Stop here, or gently pass!


Question 1: What is meant by single in the field?

Answer: It means that the girl is working alone in the fields.


Question 2: Who is the highland lass?

Answer: The Highland lass refers to a girl from the mountainous areas of Scotland.


Question 3: What draws poets attention to the girl?

Answer: The girl's song and her melodious voice draw the poet attention.


Question 4: Why does the poet ask his listeners to 'gently pass'?

Answer: Because he thinks the passers by might disturb her and she would stop singing.


Question 5: What is reaping?

Answer: Cutting down and gathering a crop such as corn or rice




2. Alone she cuts, and binds the grain,
And sings a melancholy strain:
O listen! for the vale profound
Is overflowing with the sound. 


Question 1: What type of song she is singing?

Answer: Not a happy one as the words 'melancholy strain' suggest.


Question 2: What is the meaning of 'vale profound'?

Answer: Deep valley


Question 3: What does 'she' refer to? What is she doing?

Answer: She refers to the Highland Scottish girl and she is reaping, cutting and singing in a field.



3. No nightingale did ever chant
More welcome notes to weary bands
Of Travellers in some shady haunt.
Among Arabian Sands


Question 1: Where did the nightingale sing?

Answer: It seemed that the Nightingale sung in an oasis in the deserts of Arabia.


Question 2: Why are the Travellers weary?

Answer: The Travellers are weary because they are travelling through the hot deserts of Arabia.


Question 3: Why has the poet compared the nightingales song to that of the solitary reaper?

Answer: The song of nightingale refreshes the tired travellers because it tells that an oasis is nearby. The song of the reaper also bring pleasure and joy to the poet.


Question 4: Name the two poetic devices used by the poet in the above lines.

Answer:
Alliteration among Arabian Sands
Synecdoche among Arabian Sands. The term Arabian Sands is used to describe the Arabian desert.


Alliteration: the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words.
e.g. She sells sea-shells down by the sea-shore.

Synecdoche: a figure of speech in which a part is made to represent the whole or vice versa,
e.g. Music is my bread and butter.
Here bread represents 'money'.



4. A voice so thrilling ne'er was heard
In spring-time from the cuckoo-bird.
Breaking the silence of the seas
Among the farthest Hebrides.


Question 1: Which season is announced by the cuckoo bird?

Answer: Spring season.


Question 2: What is so thrilling?

Answer: The highland's lass voice is more thrilling than the song of the Cuckoo bird.


Question 3: Why has the poet refer to the spring time?

Answer: Season of joy and pleasure after the cold winter month


Question 4: What are the hebrides?

Answer: The hybrides islands lie to the north west of Scotland


Question 5: Name the poetic device used by the poet in Breaking The Silence of the seas?

Answer: Hyper Bole. The poet exaggerates for effect as he says that the Cuckoo bird voice breaking the silence of the ocean.



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