This blog contains discussions on poems, short stories, novels, plays, and literary essays. line-to-line explanation of the poems, dramas, Questions & Answers, etc. You will find poems, lessons, stories, dramas, questions, and answers here. English Literature Made Easy
Saturday, 10 September 2022
The Ailing Planet (2 of 5) by Nany Palkhiwala-English for Class XI-CBSE ...
Sunday, 28 August 2022
The Landscape of the Soul by Nathalie Trouveroy
The Landscape of the Soul by Nathalie Trouveroy
Questions
and Answers: Short Answer-type Qs (30-35 Words each)
Q1. What is
the Chinese view of art?
Ans. A classical Chinese landscape is not meant to reproduce
(present/copy) an actual view. He does not choose a single viewpoint. The
artist creates a path for your eyes to travel up and down, then back again, in
an easy manner.
Q2. What is
the European view on art?
Ans. . The European painter wants you to borrow his
eyes and look at a particular landscape exactly as he saw it, from a specific
angle.
Q3. Who was
Wu Daoji? Why did he make the landscape?
Ans. Wu Daozi was a famous Chinese painter. He lived
in the 8th century. the Tang Emperor Xuanzong ordered him to make a
painting to decorate a wall of his palace.
Q4. What
happened when the painter clapped?
Ans. The painter clapped his hands, and the entrance
to the cave opened. The painter entered the cave, but the entrance closed
behind him. The painting had vanished (disappeared) from the wall.
Q5. Why are
anecdotes so popular in Chinese art?
Ans. Anecdotes or stories played an important part in
China’s classical education. They helped the master to guide his disciple (pupil/student)
in the right direction. Beyond the anecdote /ˈæn.ɪk.dəʊt/
(story/tale). They are deeply revealing (expressive) of the spirit in
which art was considered.
Q6.How did Metsy
succeed in marrying his beloved, the daughter of the great painter?
Ans. A master blacksmith, Quinten Metsys, fell in love
with a painter’s daughter. The father was not ready to accept a son-in-law in
such a profession. So Quinten sneaked (entered secretly) into the painter’s
studio and painted a fly on his latest panel (board). It was so real that the
master tried to swat (hit) it away. The painter was impressed and allowed him
to marry his daughter.
Q7.What is
‘figurative painting’?
Ans. The figurative painting creates an image that is
very close to reality. It is the realistic view of the painter. The person
feels an illusion of the real object in the painting.
Q8. Why is
the viewer’s participation necessary to observe a Chinese painting?
Ans. Chinese painter does not choose a single
viewpoint. So Chinese painting requires the active participation of the
viewer. He can decide the places where he wants to travel through the painting. This
participation is both, physical and mental.
Q9. Define
Shanshui?
Ans. Shan-Shui is a traditional art of Chinese
painting, in which a brush and ink are preferred to conventional paints. In this
art form, mountains, rivers, and waterfalls also are important in this art form.
Q10. What is
Daoism?
Ans. Daoism does not believe in the separation between body
and soul. It recognises that physical actions have a spiritual effect.
Daoism accepts nature and is spontaneous in human experience.
Q11. Why is
the blank space in Chinese painting compared to Pranayam?
The Middle Void is essential. Nothing can happen
without it. The Middle Void is where their interaction takes place. This can be
compared with the yogic practice of pranayama in which we breathe in, stop the
breath, then breathe out. Meditation occurs in the suspension of breath in the
Void (empty space in the stomach). Similar is the importance of the white,
unpainted space in the Chinese landscape.
Q12. What is outsider art?
Ans. Outsider art is called raw art. This is made by people who have received no formal training in making mainstream paintings.
But they have deep insight into showing their art in paintings. Such works are
also called art brut. Examples of Art brut or raw art:
Multiple
Choice Qs/Ans.
Q1.When did
Daoji lived?
Ans. in the 8th
century.
Q2.Which
king commanded Daoji to make a landscape for his palace?
Ans. Xuunzong
Q3.Where was
the apinting hidden?
Ans. A screen
Q4.In which
thing did Wu Daoji vanish?
Ans. A cave
Q5.Whose
books contained stories/anecdotes that played an important part in China’s
classical education?
Ans. The books of Confucius and Zhuangzi
Q6.What is
Antwerp?
Ans. Antwerp is known as the City of Rubens,
Q7.Who was
Metsy?
Ans. A master-blacksmith
Q8.Who
invented the term ‘Art Brut’
Ans. Jean Dubuffet
Q9. What did
Metsy paint on his father-in-law’s painting?
Ans. A fly
Q10.What
name is often given to Western or European painting?
Ans. Figurative Art
Thursday, 25 August 2022
Father to a Son
Father to a Son
(A)
Short Answer-type Questions (About
30-40 words each)
Q1.
Explain the lines: “Yet have I killed
The seed I spent or sown it where
The land is his and none of mine?”
Ans. the father means to say
that he has sowed the seeds of his ideas into his son’s mind, but his ideas did
not cause any fruitful effect there. The son did not shape his own personality
in the frame that his father had desired.
Q2. Explain the lines:“This child is built to
my design
Yet what he loves I cannot share.
Silence surrounds us…..”
Ans. The meaning in the
above lines is very much clear. The father says that the son has a full physical
resemblance to him.
Q4. What is the reason for this kind of
relationship between the son and the father in the poem?
Ans. It is communication
gap that is responsible for such a bad type of relationship between the father
and the son. Sometimes fathers behave like a boss.
So, sons do not feel comfortable in sharing their ‘joys and sorrows’ with them.
They feel more comfortable with their mothers.
Q5. What can be estimated about the
son’s state of mind from the lines, “He speaks: I cannot understand
Myself, why anger grows from grief.
We each put out an empty hand,
Longing for something to forgive.”
Ans. From the above lines, one thing is clear the son
is confused about ‘something’. A constant struggle may be going on in his mind.
It may be about making a type of compromise that is made when one fails or
feels helpless to proceed further with the present odd situation.
It is a kind
of compromise which takes place when one is defeated. The son may have
struggled hard to make his career but may have failed in this competitive
world. Now he might be thinking to come back to his father’s house.
Q 6. Explain the lines: “We each put out an empty hand, /Longing
for something to forgive.”
Ans. In the above lines, ‘we’ stands for ‘the father’ and
‘the son’. The father says that each of them extends his empty hand forward to shake and long to
forgive each other. The question arises here as to why the adjective ‘empty’ is used in front of the noun ‘hand’.
When a person shakes hands with another
person, the hands are always empty. But if the meaning is taken at a deeper
level, the hand is never empty. It has the warmth of love. But in this case, the emotion of love is
missing at present. It has to take place in the new relationship that will
emerge out of ‘sorrow’.
(B)
Some Important Stanzas for
Comprehension
Stanza
1
“I do not understand this child
Though we have lived together now
In the same house for years.”
Q1. Who is
“I” in the above stanza?
Ans. It is
the father in the above stanza.
Q2. Why does
the “I” say that he does not understand that child?
Ans. The
father does not understand what the son wants.
Q3. Who is
the child mentioned in the stanza?
Ans. The child
is the son of the father, the narrator in this poem.
Q4. Name the
poem and its poet.
Ans. The title of the poem is Father to Son and the poet is Elizabeth Jennings
Stanza 2
“Yet have I killed
The seed I spent or sown it where
The land is his and none of mine? “
“We speak like strangers, there's no sign
Of understanding in the air. ..”
“This child is built to my design
Yet what he loves I cannot share.
Silence surrounds us…..”
Q1. For What
does the ‘seed’ stand ?
Ans. It
stands for the seed of ideas.
Q2. Why does
the father say that he has spent the seed he had sown?
Ans. He says
so because his son’s mindset is different from his own. He expected the same
ideas as he has in his mind.
Q3. Why do
they behave like strangers?
Ans. No ideas were common between them. That’s why they
speak like ‘strangers’.
Q4. What is
the reason for this kind of relationship between the son and the father in the
poem?
Ans. It is the communication gap that is responsible for such a bad type of relationship
between the father and the son. Sometimes
fathers behave like a boss. So, sons do not feel comfortable sharing their
‘joys and sorrows with them. They feel more comfortable with their mothers.
Q5. What is meant by the word ‘design’ in the poem?
Ans. Here ‘design’ means physical structure and
resemblance.
Q6. Explain
the expression: ‘what he loves I cannot share’.
Ans. When the father says that ‘what he loves I cannot
share’, he means to say that his son has different likes, dislikes, tastes and
so many other ideas.
Stanza 3
“I would have
Him prodigal, returning to
His father's house, the home he knew,
Rather than see him make and move
His world….”
Q1. Who is a
prodigal son?
Ans. ‘A prodigal son is the one who has left
his family to do something that his family did not allow him to do, and after some time, he has returned home feeling sorry for his mistake.
Q2. What
does the father want?
Ans. The
father wants that the son should return to his house unconditionally.
Q3. What does
the words ‘his father's house indicate?
Ans. The use
of the words ‘his father's house shows that the father does not want his son
not to make his claim on the house. It shows the father’s possessive nature also.
He wants his son to possess him like a thing.
Q4. Explain the line: “Rather than see him make and move/His
world.”
Ans. The father would like his son should come back
and he would not like to see him making his own house, making his own world
where he can move of his own.
The above
line “Rather than see him make and move/His world.” shows that the father does
not like that his son should become independent and develop his own world of
his own and where he could move freely. If he
returns home, he would forgive him. Thus, after forgiving him, he would shape
(develop) a new relationship out of the sad one that was there already
between them.
Stanza 4
“I would forgive him too,
Shaping from sorrow a new love.
Father and son, we both must live
On the same globe and the same land.”
Q1. What
does the father want to shape now?
Ans The
father wants to shape a new relationship out of the sad one.
Q2. What
thought has forced the father to develop a new relationship out of the old one?
Ans. The father reaches the conclusion that both the son and the father must
live together in the same house.
Q3. What
meaning does the line ‘On the same globe
and the same land’may convey?
Ans. The
same globe stands for the earth and the same land means the same
nation/country.
Stanza 5
“He speaks: I cannot understand
Myself, why anger grows from grief.
We each put out an empty hand,
Longing for something to forgive.”
Q1. Who is
‘He’ in the above lines?
Ans. “he” is
the son in the above lines.
Q2. Who
cannot understand and what?
Ans. The son
cannot understand why anger grows in him from grief.
Q3. What do each of them long?
Ans. Each of
them long for something to forgive each other.
Q4. What
could be something in the above lines?
Ans. It
could be the past behavior that they showed towards each other.