The Value of Man Question Answer Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 12 MP Board

Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 12 The Value of Man Questions and Answers

The Value of Man Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

A. Given below are some crimes. Complete the following table. Consult a dictionary if necessary.
Answer:

Crime Criminal Verb Definition
terrorism terrorist terrorise using violence for political end.
blackmail blackmailer blackmail obtaining money by threatening to harm someone.
forgery forger forge some one who makes forged copies.
assault assaulter assault attacking someone violently.
pick­ pocketing pickpocket pickpocket a thief who steals things out of pocket, bags, esp. in a crowd.
mugging mug mug attacking a person and stealing their money.

B. Differentiate between the meanings of the given pairs or groups.
Answer:

  • Adept = expert fastes; Adopt = take to an idea or custom किसी विचार को अपना बना लेना; Adapt = make suitable अपने योग्य बनाना ।
  • Birth = process of being born जन्म; Berth = Sleeping place in a train etc. सोने की सीट।
  • Beneficial = helpful सहायता; Beneficient = helping people and doing good acts सहायता करने वाला।
  • Liar = one who tells lies झूठ बोलने वाला; Lawyer = person who practises law वकाल; Lyer = a stringed musical instrument एक तार वाला वाद्य यंत्र।
  • Loose = free, not tied up ढीला;Lose = to come to be without हानि होना, खो देना।

Comprehension

A. Choose the correct option.

Question 1.
Gbasi did not purchase a bicycle because:
(a) he thought that purchasing an ass was profitable
(b) a bicycle was costlier than an ass
(c) the villagers would appreciate the ass more
(d) he was afraid he might fall and break his Limbs.
Answer:
(d) he was afraid he might fall and break his Limbs.

Question 2.
Mohan regretted the decision of his father to buy an ass because:
(a) he had to give up his studies for tending the animal
(b) he was young and wanted a bike instead
(C) he did not want to upset Netaji as the ass grazed in his orchard
(d) he did not like to be ridiculed as the owner of an ass.
Answer:
(a) he had to give up his studies for tending the animal

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Question 3.
Who was the final witness?
(a) Netaji
(b) Kanchhcdi
(c) Masteiji
(d) The ass.
Answer:
(d) The ass

Question 4.
Ghasi round his ass tethered at:
(a) Kanchhedi’s place
(b) Netaji’s orchard
(c) Masterji’s school
(d) Mukhiya’s house.
Answer:
(a) Kanchhedi’s place

Question 5.
The panchayat was held:
(a) under a hanyan tree
(b) near an orchard
(c) at the Sarpanch’s house
(d) at the school.
Answer:
(a) under a hanyan tree

B. Fill in the blanks:

(i) The character in the play who wears spectacles is ………….. (SarpanchlMaserji)
(ii) ….. is addressed to as ‘tenderer of asses’.(Ghasi/Masterji)
(iii) The name of Netaji is ……… in the play. (Kanchhedílundisclosed)
(iv) Masterji was named as witness by …………. (Kanchhedi 1G ha si)
(v) …………. was asked to give first aid to Kanchhedi. (Marte rj i/Mukhi ya)
Answer:
(i) Sarpanch.
(ii) Masterji
(iii) undisclosed.
(iv) Kanchhedi,
(v) Mukhiya.

Language Practice

A. Change the order of words or group of words to make a correct sentence.

Question 1.
1. otherwise you, 2. work, 3. will fail, 4. hard
Answer:
Work hard otherwise you will fail.

Question 2.
1. and, 2. the sun set. 3. ii, 4. grew dark.
Answer:
The sun set and it grew dark.

Question 3.
1. the teacher, 2. the student went, 3. as well as, 4. to the police.
Answer:
The teacher as well as the student went to the police.

Question 4.
1. handed over, 2. the thief was, 3. to the police, 4. not only eaten but also.
Answer:
The thief was not only beaten but also handed over to the police.

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Question 5.
1. both smart, 2. she, 3. and honest, 4. is.
Answer:
She is both smart and honest.

Question 6.
1. missed, 2. he ran fast, 3. but, 4. the bus.
Answer:
He ran fast but missed the bus.

B. Combine the following pairs of sentences using the co-ordinating conjunctions given in the box.
otherwise, or, therefore, neither…nor, either…or, not only…but also, both…and, as well as

Question 1.
(a) Hurry up.
(b) You will miss the show.
Answer:
Hurry up or you will miss the show.

Question 2.
(a) He is ill.
(b) He cannot go to the office.
Answer:
He is ill therefore he cannot go to the office.

Question 3.
(a) I took meat.
(b) I took eggs.
Answer:
I took both meat and eggs.

Question 4.
(a) He teased her.
(b) She slapped across his face.
Answer:
He teased her therefore she slapped across his face.

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Question 5.
(a) We dropped in on you yesterday.
(b) You were not at home.
Answer:
We dropped in on you yesterday but you were not at home.

Question 6.
(a) Bagdiram works in a shop.
(b) He studies in a school.
Answer:
Bagdiram not only works in a shop but also studies in a school.

Speaking Time

Split the following words into syllables.
MP Board Class 12th English The Spectrum Workbook Solutions Chapter 12 The Value of Man img 1
Answer:

Monosyllable Bisy Habit Trisyllabic Polysyllabic
awe tem + per im + port + ant Plan + et + ar +ium
call mis + ery ob + serv + atory
awl hu + man hap + pi + ness
cow pen + cil lab + ora + tory
ca + pable mathe + mat + ics
win + dow

Reading Time

Read the following passage carefully :

Education is a sub-system of the wider social system. Although it functions autonomously, it has linkage with the economic, political, religious and other sub-systems which exert a powerful influence on the goals of the educational sub-systems.

Education can rarely free itself from social and cultural norms and has to relate itself to the needs of society. Due to globalization and modernization, our society is passing through momentous changes in its value system. Values of yesteryear have taken a backseat and materialism, corruption, dishonesty and other negative values have come to the fore.

At this junction, all formal and informal agencies of education like family, school and community should realise the explosiveness of the situation. It is rightly said values cannot be taught, they are caught. All the agencies should become role models if we want our youth to be on the right path.

Absence of a congenial and loving atmosphere and quarrel among parents are the major hurdles in this direction. In a nutshell, the family has ceased to be an institution for providing cultural, aesthetic and moral education.

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On the other hand, formal education is squeezed between memory and mechanisation. The teacher has become a businessman doing private tuition instead of institutional teaching. Race for degrees and jobs has deteriorated the situation further.

The National Policy of Education (1986) has shown concern in this regard when it says, “The growing concern over the erosion of essential values and an increasing cynicism in society has brought to focus the need for re-adjustment in the curriculum in order to make education a forceful tool for the cultivation of social and moral values.”

The whole system of education needs complete over-hauling. If at all, we the citizens are desirous of thwarting deterioration in values, teaching at all levels must emphasise on moral education and character building. Intellect without wisdom can be suicidal.

Now answer the questions given below :

Question 1.
Find out the words from the passage for the following expressions :
Answer:

  • appreciation of beauty in nature – aesthetic
  • pleasant – congenial
  • to press something firmly – squeeze
  • lack of faith in the goodness of things and people – cynicism
  • to prevent somebody from doing what he wants to do – thwart

Question 2.
What are the things education is linked with ? (2012,14)
Answer:
Education is linked with the economic, political, religious and other systems.

Question 3.
Why is our society passing through changes in its value system ?
Answer:
Due to globalization and modernization, our society is passing through momentous changes in value system.

Question 4.
What is the saying about the values ?
Answer:
The saying is values cannot be taught, they are caught.

Question 5.
What are the major obstacles in establishing human values ?
Answer:
The major obstacles are that the family has ceased to be an institution for providing cultural, aesthetic and moral education.

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Question 6.
What change do we observe in the teacher’s attitude these days ?
Answer:
The teacher has become a businessman doing private tuition instead of institutional teaching.

Question 7.
What has happened to formal education ?
Answer:
Formal education is squeezed between memory and mechanism.

Question 8.
Do you agree that the whole system of education needs complete over-hauling ? Answer in your own words.
Answer:
Yes, we agree that the whole system of education needs complete over-hauling because the essential values have been eroded and cynicism has increased in the society.

Question 9.
Give a suitable title to the passage.
Answer:
Need for Overhauling of Education System.

Writing Time

Question 1.
Write a letter to M/s Deepali Stationery Mart, New Market, Ratlam asking them to send their rates and terms of supply of stationery items.
Answer:
Office of the Principal, Govt. Higher Secondary School,
Manik Chowk, Ratlam (M. P.)
Ref. No. 73
To,
M/s Deepali Stationery Mart,
New Market,
Ratlam (M. P.)
Date : 10 Feb., 20…

Subject—Rates of Stationery Items.
Our office needs some stationery to be purchased.
Hence, I request you kindly to send us the rates and terms of supply of these articles. A list of requirements is attached here with.

Your reply must reach us within three days.

Sd.—Mohan Senger
Principal
Govt. H. S. School
Manik Chowk
Ratlam.

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Question 2.
Write a letter to the collector of your district about the lack of facilities and malfunctioning of the government hospital of your area.
Answer:
113, Main Road (Opposite Kila)
Sendhwa (M. P.)
Dt. 17 June, 20…
To,
The Collector,
Dist. Barwani Barwani (M. P.)
Sir,
I would like to draw your kind attention to the lack of facilities and malfunctioning of the government hospital, Sendhwa and request you to take suitable action so that people may be able to get medical facilities properly.

The hospital has only one doctor and two nurses. They cannot serve the patients because their number is too many. They cannot give proper attention. The X-ray department is also malfunctioning, it seldom operates properly. There is no facility for sonography. The patients have to go to private clinics and they are too expensive. The wards are not properly cleaned and dirty smell persists everywhere.
I hope you will kindly look into the matter soon.

Yours faithfully,
Rajesh Vohra

MP Board Class 12th English Solutions

The Spectrum Workbook General English Class 12th Solutions

A Father’s Letter Question Answer Class 12 English The Spectrum Chapter 3 MP Board

Class 12 English The Spectrum Chapter 3 A Father’s Letter Questions and Answers

In this article, we will share MP Board Class 12th English Solutions Chapter 3 A Father’s Letter Pdf, These solutions are solved subject experts from the latest edition books.

A Father’s Letter Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

निम्नलिखित खाली स्थानों को दिये गये Verbs से पूर्व dis-अथवा un-लगाकर भरिए–
[prove, agree, connect, veiled, load]
Answer:

  1. I almost always find that I disagree with his opinion.
  2. I am sure he is lying but it’s going to be hard to disprove his story.
  3. After a brief speech, the Queen unveiled the new statue.
  4. It took the men an hour to unload our things from the van.
  5. His phone was disconnected because he didn’t pay his last bill.

MP Board Solutions

Comprehension

निम्न प्रश्नों के उत्तर दीजिए-

Question 1.
Why does the author choose this occasion to advise his son? [2009]
लेखक अपने पुत्र को सलाह देने के लिए यह अवसर क्यों चुनता है?
Answer:
The author chooses this occasion because his son is going to settle at school. This may be his first entrance into the world.
लेखक इस अवसर को इसलिए चुनता है क्योंकि उसका पुत्र स्कूल में जा रहा है। यह दुनिया में उसका सम्भवतः प्रथम प्रवेश है।

Question 2.
What happens if we prejudge people and future events? [2009, 11, 13, 18]
क्या होता है यदि हम व्यक्तियों पर भविष्य की घटनाओं को लेकर पूर्वाग्रह से ग्रसित हो जाते हैं?
Answer:
If we prejudge people and future events, it is a bad reasoring and makes enemies of half the world. We should not think ill of them, till they behave ill of us.

यदि हम व्यक्तियों और भविष्य की घटनाओं को लेकर पूर्वाग्रह से ग्रस्त हो जाते हैं तो यह बुरी भावना है और आधी दुनिया हमारी शत्रु हो जाती है। जब तक वे हमारे साथ बुरा व्यवहार न करें, हमें भी उनके बारे में बुरा नहीं सोचना चाहिए।

Question 3.
What reasons does the father give his son for the hostile behavior of his schoolmates?
स्कूल के साथियों के खराब व्यवहार के लिए पिता अपने पुत्र को क्या कारण बताता
Answer:
The father tells his son that the schoolmates are hostile because they are strangers to him. They knew as little of him as he did of them. Till now. the son was the leader among the boys. Now the other boys are his equals.

पिता पुत्र को बताता है कि स्कूल के साथी खराब व्यवहार करते हैं क्योंकि वे अजनबी हैं। वे उसे नहीं जानते और वह उन्हें नहीं जानता। अभी तक पुत्र साथियों का नेतृत्व करता था।. अब अन्य साथी उसके बराबर वाले हैं।

Question 4.
What is the best way to disarm hostility? [2009, 11, 12, 16, 17]
शत्रुता खत्म करने का सर्वोत्तम तरीका क्या है?
Answer:
Do not think ill of others. Try to avoid the faults which you see in them. Never conceive a prejudice against others. This is the best way to disarm hostility.

दूसरों के विषय में बुरा मत सोचो। दूसरों की गलतियों से बचना सीखो। दूसरों के प्रति पूर्वाग्रह से ग्रस्त न हो। शत्रुता खत्म करने का यह सर्वोत्तम तरीका है।

Question 5.
What should we never despise anyone for?
किस बात के लिए हमें किसी से घृणा नहीं करनी चाहिए?
Answer:
We should never despise anyone for anything that he cannot help-least of all, for his poverty. In fact, we should never despise anyone at all. If we have contempt for others, it means that we are glad on the failings and misfortunes of others.

हमें कभी भी दूसरे की उस बात से घृणा नहीं करनी चाहिए जिसे वह दूर नहीं कर सकता। कम से कम उसकी गरीबी से। वास्तव में हमें किसी से घृणा नहीं करनी चाहिए। यदि हम दूसरों के प्रति घृणा भाव रखते हैं तो इसका अर्थ यह है कि हम दूसरों की असफलताओं व दुर्भाग्य पर प्रसन्न हैं।

Question 6.
What is the difference between playmates and schoolmates? [2015, 17]
खेलकूद के साथी और स्कूल के साथी में क्या अन्तर है?
Answer:
Playmates are friends who play with us. Schoolmates are friends who are with us in school.
खेल के साथी वे हैं जो हमारे साथ खेलते हैं। स्कूल के साथी वे हैं, जो हमारे साथ स्कू ल में पढ़ते हैं।

MP Board Solutions

Question 7.
What is the author’s opinion on things and people we are yet to see and know?
जिन व्यक्तियों व वस्तुओं को हमें अभी देखना व जानना है, उनके विषय में लेखक की क्या राय है?
Answer:
We should never conceive prejudice against others because we know nothing of them. We should not think ill of them. We should also not anticipate evils. We should not expect things as we wish.

हमें दूसरों के प्रति पूर्वाग्रह से ग्रसित नहीं होना चाहिए क्योंकि हम उनके विषय में कुछ नहीं जानते। हमें उनके विषय में बुरा नहीं सोचना चाहिए। हमें बुराई का पूर्वानुमान नहीं करना चाहिए। हमें ऐसा नहीं सोचना चाहिये कि सब कुछ हमारे अनुसार चलेगा।

Question 8.
What, according to the author, does contempt imply?
लेखक के अनुसार नफरत का क्या अर्थ है?
Answer:
According to the author, contempt implies a triumph over and pleasure in the ill of others. It means that you are glad and congratulate yourself on others’ failings or misfortunes.

लेखक के अनुसार दूसरे के कष्ट में विजयी व आनन्दित महसूस करना नफरत है। इसका तात्पर्य यह होता है कि आप दूसरों की असफलताओं व दुर्भाग्य में प्रसन्न होते हैं।

Question 9.
What is the difference between life at home and life at school?
घर के जीवन में व स्कूल के जीवन में क्या अन्तर होता है?
Answer:
The differences are as under
अन्तर. निम्नवत् हैं-

  1. Exposure to the school is much more than it is in the house.
    घर से ज्यादा प्रदर्शन स्कूल में मिलता है।
  2. You may do as you please at home while in school you find competitors.
    आप घर में जो चाहे कर सकते हैं जबकि स्कूल में आपको बराबर के प्रतियोगी मिलते हैं।
  3. You are dependent on your parents at home while you have to take independent decisions at school.
    घर पर आप अपने माता-पिता पर निर्भर होते हैं जबकि स्कूल में आपको स्वतन्त्र निर्णय स्वयं लेने पड़ते हैं।

Question 10.
Explain ‘True quality is the only true morality or true wisdom’. [2011, 12]
“सच्चा गुण ही सच्ची नैतिकता अथवा सच्ची बुद्धिमत्ता है’ विवेचना करें।
Answer:
It means that we should believe in qualities in life. We should not be full of pride. We should remember that there are other people in the world besides ourselves. If we are able to live with values in the world, we need no lesson. Quality gives us the power to teach others directly or indirectly. Such a life becomes a model for others

इसका तात्पर्य है कि हमें जीवन में गुणों में विश्वास करना चाहिए। हमें घमण्ड नहीं करना चाहिए। हमें याद रखना चाहिये कि दुनिया में हमारे अलावा और भी लोग हैं। यदि हम जीवन-मूल्यों के साथ जीवन निर्वाह करते हैं तो हमें किसी शिक्षा की आवश्यकता नहीं है। गुण हमें प्रत्यक्ष या अप्रत्यक्ष रूप से दूसरों को शिक्षा प्रदान करना सिखाते हैं। ऐसा जीवन दूसरों के लिए उदाहरण बन जाता है।

Q. 11.
How does school life prepare a child to face the outside world?
किस प्रकार स्कूल का जीवन बच्चे को बाहर की दुनिया का सामना करने हेतु तैयार करता है? .
Answer:
School life prepares a child to face the outside world in the following ways :

  1. A child in school faces different kinds of people.
  2. A child gets used to unavoidable situations which prepare him for the life outside.
  3. A child learns to take decisions which help him for the outer world.
  4. A child faces many competitors which help him to face life.
  5. A child loses that protection in school which he enjoys in home. This prepares him to take on the world.

स्कूल का जीवन बच्चे को बाहरी दुनिया से अग्रलिखित प्रकार से सामना करना सिखाता

  1. बच्चा स्कूल में कई प्रकार के लोगों से मिलता है।
  2. बच्चे को अपरिहार्य स्थितियों का सामना करना पड़ता है जिससे वह बाहर के जीवन के लिये तैयार होता है।
  3. बच्चा निर्णय लेना सीखता है जिससे उसे बाहरी दुनिया के लिये सहायता मिलती है।
  4. बच्चे को अनेक प्रतियोगी मिलते हैं जिनसे उसे जीवन का सामना करने में मदद मिलती है।
  5. स्कूल में बच्चा उस सुरक्षा की भावना को प्राप्त नहीं कर पाता जो उसे घर में प्राप्त है।

इससे वह दुनिया का सामना करने के लिये तैयार होता है।

MP Board Solutions

Language Practice

A. निम्न वाक्यों को ‘some or या ‘none of या ‘all’ से भरिए
Answer:

  1. All cars have wheels.
  2. None of this money is mine.
  3. Some of the people I work with are very friendly.

B. निम्न वाक्यों को पूर्ण कीजिए। a/an/one का प्रयोग करिए। नीचे दिये गये शब्दों का प्रयोग करिए
better, big, clean, different, new, old.
Answer:

  1. This cup is dirty. Can I have a clean one?
  2. I’m going to sell my car and buy a new one.
  3. That’s not a very good photograph but this is a better one.
  4. I want today’s newspaper. This is an old one.
  5. This box is too small. I need a big one.
  6. Why do we always go to the same restaurant? Let’s go to a different one.

C. ‘no’, ‘any’ or ‘none’ से वाक्य भरिए
Answer:

  1. There aren’t any pictures on the wall.
  2. The weather was cold but there was no wind.
  3. I wanted to buy some oranges but they didn’t have any in the shop.
  4. Everything was correct. There were no mistakes.
  5. How much luggage have you got? None.

D. every’ or all’ से वाक्य भरिए
Answer:

  1. Babita watches TV for about two hours every evening.
  2. The weather was nice yesterday, so we sat in the garden all afternoon.
  3. My sister likes cars. She buys a new one every year.
  4. Pintu gets up at 6:30 every morning.
  5. I saw Gita at the party. She wasn’t very friendly. She didn’t speak to me all evening.

E. निम्न वाक्यों को Some/AIV Most से भरिए। सम्भवतः आपको ‘of’ की आवश्यकता भी पड़ेगी-
Answer:

  1. All children like playing.
  2. Most of this money is yours.
  3. Most of the shops in the city centre close at 6:30.
  4. You can change your money in some banks.
  5. He’s lost some of his money.
  6. All birds can fly.
  7. I enjoyed most of the film but I didn’t like the ending.
  8. Some sports are very dangerous.
  9. We can’t find anywhere to stay. All the hotels are full.
  10. The weather was bad when we were on holiday. It rained all the time.

A Father’s Letter Summary

-William Hazlitt

प्रस्तुत अध्याय एक पिता द्वारा अपने पुत्र को लिखे गये पत्र के रूप में है। पिता द्वारा यह पत्र उस समय लिखा गया है जब उसका पुत्र स्कूल में प्रवेश ले रहा है। पिता ने अपने पुत्र को इस पत्र में अनेक शिक्षाप्रद बातें कहीं हैं। पत्र में सदैव आशावान रहने की सीख दी गयी है। जिन स्थितियों को आप बदल नहीं सकते, उन्हें सहन करने की सीख दी गयी है। यह भी शिक्षा दी गयी है कि कभी भी भविष्य को खराब मानकर नहीं चलना चाहिए। दूसरों के प्रति पूर्वाग्रह से ग्रसित नहीं होना चाहिए। उनमें निहित बुराइयों को दूर करने की कोशिश करनी चाहिए। कभी भी किसी की गरीबी का मजाक नहीं बनाना चाहिए। दूसरों के कष्ट में आनन्द नहीं उठाना चाहिए। हमें दुनिया से उतना सब प्राप्त करने की उम्मीद नहीं करनी चाहिए जो हमें अपने माता-पिता से प्राप्त होता है। सच्चा गुण ही सच्ची बुद्धिमत्ता है। जीवन की चुनौतियों व कष्टों का सामना करो वह भी बिना शिकायत के।

The Spectrum Textbook General English Class 12th Solutions

Teach Me to Listen, Lord Question Answer Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 1 MP Board

Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 1 Teach Me to Listen, Lord Questions and Answers

Teach Me to Listen, Lord Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

A. The verbs in the table describe how loudly/softly a person is speaking and also, often, indicate mood. Use a dictionary and find out what they describe or indicate.
Answer:

Verb Pitch of the voice Most likely mood
whisper soft secretive
murmur soft romantic or complaining
mumble soft disturbed
mutter soft grumble
shout high disapproval
scream high fear or pain
shriek high jovial

B. Can you underline the silent letters in the following words ?
Answer:
psychic; comb; honest; Christmas; knowledge; farm.

Comprehension

A. Choose the correct option

Question 1.
According to the poet, the persons nearest to him are :
(i) members of his family
(ii) friends
(iii) co-workers
(iv) all of them.
Answer:
(iv) all of them.

Question 2.
The poet has not mentioned people as far from him …………….
(i) hopeless
(ii) down-trodden
(iii) forgotten
(iv) anguished.
Answer:
(ii) down-trodden

MP Board Solutions

Question 3.
Conscience is the inner voice that warns us against ………..
(i) helping the poor
(ii) worshipping the God
(iii) an exploitation
(iv) a sinful deed.
Answer:
(iv) a sinful deed.

Question 4.
The poet wants us to reach to the ……….. and listen to their plea.
(i) criminals
(ii) oppressed people
(iii) good speakers
(iv) good listeners.
Answer:
(ii) oppressed people

Question 5.
The poet wants us to listen to
(i) our own voice
(ii) Our friend’s advice
(iii) God’s voice
(iv) all of them
Answer:
(iv) all of them

MP Board Solutions

B. Fill in the blanks using the correct words from those given below :”

listening, heed, a good listener, a prayer, conscience
(i) This poem is in the form of ….
(ii) The poet wants us to be …………..
(iii) …….. is a skill which is acquired through dedication and practice.
(iv) Our …….. distinguishes between what is right and what is wrong.
(v) We should ……… the voices which may not be within earshot.
Answer:
(i) a prayer
(ii) a good listener
(iii) listening
(iv) conscience
(v) heed.

Speaking Time

A. Read the following words aloud and mark the stress on the second
Answer:
MP Board Class 12th English The Spectrum Workbook Solutions Chapter 1 Teach Me to Listen, Lord img 1

B. Listen to the pronunciation of the following words and transcribe them. Say whether a particular word is a noun, an adjective, or a verb :
Answer:
MP Board Class 12th English The Spectrum Workbook Solutions Chapter 1 Teach Me to Listen, Lord img 2

Reading Time

Read the following poem carefully : – We are the Future

Not just u or
Not just he or she, but we
We work as a team.
We live by our creed, coz we believe.
That we, are the future !!
We have the power, we have the strength
We’ll finish the race, no matter the length.
We work together, a team as a whole.
Accepting every challenge, every aim and every goal.
We, are the future !!
The future’s unknown, it’s a story untold. .
It’s a movie unseen, to be made by you and me.
No matter what they tell you, our future is bright.
We’ll face every hurdle, we’ll climb up the height.
We, are the future !!
From cities and towns, here we’ve come.
Together as one, to build our nation.
Young women and men, walking hand in hand.
We stand by our creed, proud to be Indians.
We, are the future !!

– Song by : Sonia Shirsat

Now answer the questions given below :

Question 1.
‘We work as a team’. What does the poet really mean by the word ‘We’ in this line ?
Answer:
By ‘We’ the poet really means Indians.

Question 2.
What makes ‘a team’ ‘a whole’ ? (2009)
Answer:
Working together makes ‘a team’ ‘a whole’.

Question 3.
“We’ll face every hurdle”. What sort of hurdles the poet thinks about ?
Answer:
The future is unknown and uncertain. We may come across many obstructions. They are called ‘hurdles’.

MP Board Solutions

Question 4.
What will be the result if we face all the hurdles successfully ?
Answer:
If we face all hurdles successfully the result will be that we’ll climb the height.

Question 5.
Where have we come from to build our nation ?
Answer:
We have come from towns and cities to build our nation.

Question 6.
On what basis can we say that we are “proud to be Indians ?”
Answer:
The basis of saying we are ‘proud to be Indian’s is that we walk hand in hand and we stand by our creed.

Question 7.
‘We, are the future !’ What are the poet’s expectations from ‘We’ ?
Answer:
The poet’s expectations from ‘We’ are that their aim should be building our nation by co-operation. ‘We’ must work hand in hand. ‘We’ should stand by our creed and should be proud to be Indians.

Question 8.
Find out the words from the poem which mean the same as these words :
Answer:

  • a set of principles or religious beliefs – creed
  • problems or difficulties – hurdles
  • to get connected very closely – hand in hand

Question 9.
Summarise poem in about 80 words. (2009)
Answer:
The poem is a pledge of the Indians to build the nation strong and prosperous. We possess the necessary potential for it. Forgetting our differences we stand united. We will work as a team. Some people are negative thinkers. But we firmly believe that future is ours. Inspire of all obstacles we will reach the height walking hand in hand. Whether we are villagers or town dwellers we will co-operate with one another. We will overcome all problems. We are proud to be Indians.

Additional Question

Question 1.
Why do we want live in Future ?
Answer:
We live by our creed, because we believe that we are future.

Writing Time

Summarise in 60 words the ideas expressed in the poem ‘Teach me to Listen Lord’. Model your answer on ‘PIOFER’ technique.
Answer:
We should listen to those who are the nearest. They all want our attention and recognition. We should listen to the voices of the oppressed and the suffering. We should also listen to our inner voice that tells us what is right and what is wrong. Finally, we should listen to God’s voice which guides us everywhere and at all times.

MP Board Class 12th English Solutions

The Spectrum Workbook General English Class 12th Solutions

The Gita and Swadharma Question Answer Class 12 English A Voyage Chapter 19 MP Board

Class 12 English A Voyage Chapter 19 The Gita and Swadharma Questions and Answers

Students can also download MP Board 12th Model Papers to help you to revise the complete Syllabus and score more marks in your examinations.

The Gita and Swadharma Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

A. Match the word in column ‘A’ with their meaning in column ‘B’

A – B

1. ambience – a. impossible to imagine or believe
2. resolve – b. to hate
3. nectar – c. find a satisfactory solution to a problem
4. inconceivable – d. that you cannot avoid or prevent
5. abhor – e. a tendency to a particular kind of behaviour
6. inevitable – f. false belief or opinion about yourself or your situation
7. ardour – g. to criticize
8. delusion – h. very strong feelings of enthusiasm or love
9. castigates – i. sweet liquid that is produced by flowers
10. propensity – j. the character and atmosphere of a place
Answer:
1. (j), 2. (c), 3. (i), 4. (a), 5. (b), 6. (d), 7. (h), 8. (f). 9. (g), 10. (e).

B. Find antonyms of the following words from the lesson:
sweet, relish, win, ever,, plant, foolish.
Answer:

  • sweet — sinful
  • relish — abhor
  • win — rout
  • ever — never
  • plant remove
  • foolish — authentic

C. Use the following phrases in sentences of your own:
willing to, with a firm resolve, accused of, flee away, all in vain.
Answer:

  • willing to — Mother Teresa was always willing to help the destitute.
  • with a firm resolve — If you start a work with a firm resolve, you will definitely get success.
  • accused of — The man was accused of theft.
  • flee away — The police caught the man while he was trying to flee away the country.
  • all In vain — I tried to convince my friend with several arguments but all in vain.

MP Board Solutions

D. Give synonyms of the following wards:
view fear, mediate, examine, dispel.
Answer:

  • view — opinion
  • fear — terror, alarm
  • mediate — negotiate
  • examine — review, analyse
  • dispel disperse

Comprehension

A. Answer the following questions in one sentence:

Question 1.
What does Vinoba Bhave say about his heart and mind?
Answer:
Vinoba Bhave says that Gita and he transcends reason and there is little place for logic in a relationship of loving tenderness.

Question 2.
Where does he soar high and how?
Answer:
He soars high in the vast expanse of the Gita on the twin wings of faith and experimentation.

Question 3.
What does Vinoba Bhave compare the Gita with?
Answer:
Vinoba Bhave compares the Gita with the ocean of nectar.

Question 4.
Where has the Gita been set?
Answer:
The Gita has been set in the middle of great epic Mahabharata.

Question 5.
What does It look like?
Answer:
It looks like a lighthouse which illuminates the whole of the epic.

MP Board Solutions

B. Answer the following questions in about 40-60 words each:

Question 1.
In the opinion of many people what was the purpose of preaching the Cita?
Answer:
In the opinion of many people the purpose of preaching the Cita was to restore Arjuna’s manliness and persuade him to fight. In their view the Gita preaches not only Karmayoga (the philosophy of action) but also Yudhayoga (the philosophy of war).

Question 2.
What, In the opinion of Vinoba, is inconceivable?
Answer:
In the opinion of Vinoba, it is inconceivable to doubt Arjuna’s manliness and valour. The army is not braver than him. It is not out of fear that he is turning away from the battle. He is a great warrior and valour is in every drop of his blood.

Question 3.
Whom had Arjuna single-handedly routed and when?
Answer:
Arjuna was a great warrior. He had fought hundreds of battles. He had single-handedly routed Bhishma, Drona and Karna when they had invaded Virat’s Kingdom.

Question 4.
Why had war become inevitable?
Answer:
The war had become inevitable because every attempt to avoid war had failed. The Pandavas had pitched their claims at the minimum. Still the Kauravas didn’t agree. Even Krishna himself had tried to mediate in order to bury the chance of war. But all the attempts proved in vain.

Question 5.
Why did Arjuna ask Krishna to place his chariot between the two armie.?
Answer:
Arjuna had come to the battlefield to fight war. Krishna was his charioteer. But before starting the war, he asked Krishna to place his chariot between the two armies because he wanted to have a look at the people who had assembled there to fight with him.

Question 6.
What did he see then?
Answer:
When Krishna placed his chariot between the two armies Arjuna looked around and saw his kith and kin, near and dear ones arrayed on both the sides. He found four generations of his own people intent on fighting to the finish.

Question 7.
What made Arjuna lose his nerve? (M.P. Board 2016)
Answer:
Arjuna saw his kith and kin., near and dear ones arrayed on both the sides in the battlefield. This made him lose his nerve. He found it difficult to fight with his own people.

Question 8.
What Lord Krishna realize?
Answer:
Aquna felt attached with his kinsmen This attachment to the kith and kin clouded his sense of duty He began to curse war. Krishna realized that Arjuna was not voicing his own authentic conviction, his words were seemingly wise, but not really so.

Question 9.
What does the Gita nowhere deal with and why?
Answer:
The Gita nowhere deals with the opinion that Arjuna had really become a votary of non violence. Had he really become so, he would not have been satisfied until his arguments has been convincingly answered.

Question 10.
What is the purpose of the Gita?
Answer:
The purpose of the Gita is to remove the delusion that stands between us and our swadharma. Arjuna was confused about his dharma. He was gripped by a delusion about his swadharma. When Krishna criticizes him, he himself admits it. The Gita’s main task is to remove that delusion, that attachment which clouds the act of duty.

MP Board Solutions

C. Answer the following questions tn about 75 words each:

Question 1.
What is the second common opinion about the Gita, which, according to Vinoba Bhave, is not right?
Answer:
The second common opinion is that the Gita is meant to make Aijuna willing to fight by removing his inclination towards non-violence. But Vinoba Bhave rejects this opinion by giving appropriate example. If Arjuna had really become a worshipper of non-violence. he would not have come to the battlefield. But the fact was that he had come to the battlefield with a firm resolve and a sense of duty. He was a kshatriya and fighting was in his blood. He had slain innumerable warriors in many a battle. War was for him his natural and inescapable duty. But he was trying to evade it under the spell of delusion, i. e. attachment to his kinsmen.

Question 2.
What clouded his sense of duty and made him philosophise?
Answer:
Arjuna had come to the battlefield with a firm resolve and a sense of duty. He was a true fighting was in his blood. But when he looked around the battlefield, he found his kith and kin, near and dear ones arrayed on both the sides. It was not that Arjuna had no idea of what he was going to see. But the actual sight shook him from within the heart. He felt attached to his close friends and relatives. As in front of him were his own kith and kin, it stopped him. Had there been somebody else, he would have never stoped but behedded them. Seeing his family made him philosophise and clouded his sense of duty.

Question 3.
What specious argument did Arjuna put before Lord Krishna?
Answer:
It was the attachment to his kith and kin, loved ones that blurred his sense of duty. He suddenly began to evade war under the spell of delusion i.e. attachment to his friends and relatives. He philosophised so that war might not occur. He put before Krishna the specious argument that war in itself was sinful and that it would destroy the clan, eclipse dharma and bring total destruction.

Question 4.
What proved that Arjuna had not become a votary of non-violence?
Answer:
Arjuna had not really become a votary of non-violence. The intrinsic tendency to fight was still very much a part of his nature. War for him was his natural and inescapable duty. He had slain innumerable warriors in many a battle. But he was trying to evade war under the spell of delusion i.e. attachment to his close friends and relatives.

MP Board Solutions

D. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each.

Question 1.
What story of a judge does Vinoba Bhave narrate, and why?
Answer:
Vinoba Bhave narrates the story of a judge. He had awarded death sentence to hundreds of criminals. But one day his own son accused of murder, was produced before him. The guilt was proved and the time came for the judge to pronounce the sentence. But then he hesitated and started arguing that the death sentence is inhuman. It is not good to inflict such a punishment. It destroys all hopes of reforming the guilty. One commits murder in a fit of passion. The moment of blood thirsty madness then passes off. Still we take him to the gallows and hang him to death.

It is really a blot on humanity. But had his son not been there the judge would have gone sentencing people to death. This makes it clear that the judge’s arguments were born out of attachment to his son. Vinoba Bhave narrates the above story because he finds Arjuna’s condition like that of the judge. Arjuna tried to evade .war because he didn’t want to fight with his own people! Had these in front of him not been his kinsmen he would certainly have felt no qualms in severing their heads and merrily tossing them around. The arguments that he put before Krishna looked inner conviction, like that of the judge. They were all born out of attachment to his own people.

Question 2.
What does Vyasa say at the beginning of the Mahabharata, and does the Gita succeed in achieving that purpose?
Answer:
Vyasa, at the beginning of the Mahabharata says that he is lighting this lamp of history to dispel delusions from the minds of the people. The Gita succeeds in achieving its purpose which centres around the removal of delusion that stands between us and our swadharma. Arjuna was confused about his dharma.

He was gripped by a delusion about his swadharma. When Krishna criticizes him severely, he himself admits it. The main task of the Gita is to remove that delusion i.e. Arjuna’s attachment to his kith and kin. When Lord Krishna asked Arjuna at the end of the Gita if his delusion had gone then, Arjuna replied in affirmative. He said that the delusion had fled away, and he had realized what his swadharma was.

Grammar

A. Look at the structure of this sentence from the first paragraph of the lesson:

I am as if were afloat on the surface of this ocean of nectar when I am talking about the Gita and when alone, I dive deep into this ocean and rest there. There are six clauses in the above sentence:

  • I am —main clause.
  • As if were afloat on the surface of this ocean of nectar — subordinate adverbial clause, denoting manner.
  • When I am talking about the Gita — subordinate adverbial clause, denoting time.
  • And when alone — subordinate adverbial clause, denoting time.
  • I dive deep into this ocean — co-ordinate clause.
  • And rest there — co-ordinate clause.

The above sentence is a mixed sentence, comprising three sub-ordinate clauses and two co-ordinate clauses. There are many such sentences in the lesson. Analyse and classify their structure by citing them. For additional help, refer to the workbook.
Answer:
For self-attempt.

MP Board Solutions

B. Study the structure of below-mentioned sentences from the lesson:

Rewrite the sentences given below, using passive construction:

1. Somebody cleans the room every day.
2. They cancelled all the flights because of fog.
3. People don’t use this road very often.
4. Somebody accused me of stealing money.
5. How do people learn language?
6. People advised us not to go out alone.
7. They don’t like strangers in this town.
8. They are serving tea to the guests.
9. Did anyone ask any questions about me?
10. They still deny equal rights to women.
Answer:

  1. The room is cleaned everyday.
  2. All the flights were cancelled because of fog.
  3. This road is not used very often by people.
  4. I was accused of stealing money.
  5. How is language learnt by people?
  6. We were advised not to go out alone by people.
  7. Strangers are not liked in this town by them.
  8. Tea is being served by them to the guests.
  9. Were any questions asked about me?
  10. Equal rights to women are still denied by them.

C. There are sentences in the direct speech in the lesson. Convert them into indirect speech, referring to the workbook.
1. He asks Krishna with heroic ardour, “Place my chariot between the two armies, so that I can have a look at the people who have assembled here to fight with me.”
2. The Lord asked Arjuna at the end of the Gita, O Arjuna! Has your delusion gone now?
3. Arjuna replied, “Yes, Lord. The delusion has fled away. I have realized what my swadharma is”.
Answer:

  1. He asks Krishna with heroic ardour to place his chariot between the two armies, so that he can have a look at the people who have assembled there to fight with him.
  2. The Lord asked Arjuna at the end of the Gita if his delusion had gone then.
  3. Arjuna affirms that the delusion had fled a way and he had realized what his swadharma was.

Speaking Activity

A. Arrange a discussion about Arjuna’s ‘delusion’.
Answer:
Do yourself.

B. Re-collect some incidents of your life in which ‘swardharma’ was in conflict with your wishes, and narrate to your class how you resolved it.
Answer:
Do yourself.

C. Divide the class into two groups. Debate the value of swardharma taught in modern educational system as against the ancient Gurukul system of education
Answer:
Do yourself.

Writing Activity

A. Swadharma is following the call of duty, forsaking worldly attachment both material and personal. Arjuna followed it infighting the Mahabharata war. Vinoba followed it in fighting for the poor. Thinking over your role in the present political scenario, write a letter to your friend.
Answer:
Prepare the letter with the help of the hints given below:

  • All around corruption in society.
  • It is ruining our life.
  • Human values are diminishing.
  • Everyone tends to lead a corrupt life.
  • We are living behind a fractured society with immoral values.
  • It must be stopped.
  • I have decided to fight against it and lead a clean life.
  • I have made a group of volunteers to mobilise people.
  • We are working day and night.
  • The system is changing.
  • There is a hope for betterment.

B. There are several such instances as that of the vacillating judge, narrated by the author himself. Such circumstances are there in every profession. Suppose you were a doctor. An ailing poor patient wants help from you. How would you react? Frame a dialogue, highlighting your support,
Answer:
Do yourself.

MP Board Solutions

C. Expand the idea Contained in the saying. “Work is worship; duty is God,” in about 150 words.
Answer:
Life is not a bed of roses. On the contrary, it is full of dangers and difficulties, trials and temptation, and man has to carry on a constant fight against them. Any slackness in this fight will upset the entire thing and bring about untold miseries. So, it is essential that man must work and work patiently and perseveringly. The Hindu philosophy of Karmayoga reiterates the same thing. One can attain one’s goal of life only through Karma or action.

That’s why It is said that work is worship and duty is God. We must concentrate on the work assigned to us. Our involvement in work brings satisfaction and happiness in our life. Even God also helps only those who give priority to their duty There are people who spend too much time in sitting before the idols of Gods and goddesses to seek his/her blessing. They never give much importance to their work or duty. Such people must be aware of the fact that even gods/goddesses cannot help them if they shirk their responsibilities. So, if we wish to make our life highly successful, we should work ceaselessly. Work is key to success.

Think it Over

A. Have you read or heard the mythological story of Satyawadi Harishchandra’ True to his calling, he didn’t spare even his wife in exacting the toll for cremating their dead son, Rohitashwa. There are many such instances in our past as well as present. How does it motivate and insprise you?
Answer:
Such stories motivate us in various ways. We should be truthful and honest throughout our life. We should be tolerant and remain unaffected by the ups and downs of life.

B. ‘Talks on the Gita is to the Gita, what the Upanishads are to the Vedas. Such texts are called treaties. They elucidate the thoughts of the source texts. Look for the English rendering of saine of the oft-quoted verses (shiokas) of the Gita on the Internet and think over its meaning.
Answer:
Do yourself.

Things to Do

A. We have seen many famous people, such as Mahatma Gandhi, who made a mark in public life, inspired by the philosophy of the Gua. Make a list of such prominent people and prepare a biographical sketch.
Answer:
A List of such prominent people is given below:

  • Dr. Rajendra Prasad.
  • Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru.
  • Mother Teresa.
  • Swami Vivekananda.
  • Jay Prakash Narayan.
  • A.P.J Abdul Kalam.

Note: Students are suggested to add names of many more personalities and read about their lives.

B. Vinoba Bhave pioneered ‘Bhoodan movement’ in India. He established his ashram at Pawnar in Wardha district of Maharashtra. Plan a visit to the ashram, and compile the valuable information about his life and times received during that visit.
Answer:
Do yourself.

The Gita and Swadharma by Vinoba Bhave Introduction

This is an excerpt from ‘Talk! on the Gita’ The author Vmoba Bhave explains the purpose for which the Gita was preached. According to him, the Gita seeks to remove the delusion that distracts us from our duty. He perceives Swadharma as action to ail the call of duty, forsaking worldly attachment.

The Gita and Swadharma Summary in English

The Gita has been set in the Mahabharata, a great epic of the time. Its message has been unfolded in the middle of the battlefield with seven divisions of the Pandava army on one side and eleven divisions of the Kaurava army on the other.

It was Lord Krishna who preached the Gita to make Arjuna ready to fight. Arjuna was a Kshatriya and fighting was in his blood. But first he had attempted to avoid war. Even Krishna himself tried to mediate but all in vain, making the war inevitable. And finally Arjuna had come to the battlefield to perform his duty, i.e. to fight war with the Kauravas. He had made Krishna his charioteer.

Many mighty kings had surrounded him. But before starting the fight he gives a look at the people who had gathered in the battlefield and finds his near and dear ones on both the sides. Now it becomes difficult for him to fight with his own relatives. His heart is filled with deep anguish. He feels dejected. Here arises a question. Would Arjuna have felt the same pangs of pain if those standing in front of him had not been his kinsmen? Certainly not.

MP Board Solutions

It means that his attachment to his kith and kin prevents him from fighting. This attachment to the kith and kin clouds his sense of duty. He tells Krishna that one should not indulge in war. War is never good because it destroys the whole clan and brings total destruction.

Arjuna’s arguments are not baseless. But the point is that he is not voicing his own authentic conviction. His words are seemingly wise but not really so. Lord Krishna realises this and proceeds to dispel his delusion by ignoring all his (Arjuna’s) arguments. He knows very well that Arjuna is not the one who believes in non-violence. War is for him his natural and inescapable duty. But he is trying to evade it because he is under the spell of delusion. Once this delusion, is removed, he would be ready to fight with all energy.

Lord Krishna preaches the Gita to remove the delusion that stands between us and our swadharma. Arjuna is confused about his dharma.He is gripped by a delusion about his swadharma. Krishna criticizes him severely so that he may not ignore the call of duty. And at the end of the Gita Arjuna is totally disillusioned. He realizes what his swadharma is. Thus, the removal of delusion is the central message of this chapter.

The Gita and Swadharma Summary in Hindi

गीता का प्रारम्भ महाभारत, जो अपने समय का एक महान महाकाव्य है, में हुआ है। इसमें जो संदेश दिया गया है, उसका खुलासा युद्ध-भूमि के बीच में होता है जहाँ एक तरफ पांडव सेना की सात टुकड़ियाँ हैं और दूसरी ओर कौरव सेना की ग्यारह।

भगवान कृष्ण गीता का उपदेश अर्जुन को देते हैं ताकि वह युद्ध के लिए तैयार हो सके। अर्जुन क्षत्रिय था और युद्ध उसके खून में रचा-बसा था। फिर भी उसका प्रथम प्रयास था, युद्ध को टालना। यहाँ तक कृष्ण ने भी मध्यस्थता की किन्तु सब व्यर्थ साबित हुआ और बुद्ध अवश्यंभावी हो गया। और अंततः अर्जुन युद्धभूमि में आ धमका, अपना कर्त्तव्य निभाने अर्थात् कौरवों से युद्ध करने। उसने कृष्ण को अपना सारथी बनाया था। बहुत से शक्तिशाली राजा उसके इर्द-गिर्द थे। लेकिन युद्ध शुरू करने के पहले वह युद्ध-भूमि में एकत्रित सभी योद्धाओं पर एक नजर डालता है और दोनों तरफ अपने ही सगेसम्बन्धियों को पाता है। अब उसके लिए अपने ही लोगों से युद्ध करना मुश्किल लगने लगता है। उसका हृदय आहत हो जाता है। वह अत्यंत दुःखी हो जाता है।

यहाँ पर एक प्रश्न उठता है। क्या अर्जुन ऐसा ही दर्द तब भी महसूस करता जब उसके सामने खड़े लोग उसके सगे-संबंधी नहीं होते? निश्चित तौर पर नहीं। इसका मतलब यह है कि अपने सगे-संबंधियों के प्रति आसक्ति उसे युद्ध करने से रोकती है। अपने लोगों के प्रति इसी लगाव ने उसके कर्त्तव्य-बोध को धुंधला कर दिया है। वह कृष्ण से कहता है कि किसी को भी युद्ध नहीं करना चाहिए। युद्ध कभी अच्छा हो ही नहीं सकता क्योंकि यह अपने ही कुल का नाश कर देता है और सम्पूर्ण विनाश लाता है।

अर्जुन के तर्क आधारहीन नहीं हैं। लेकिन वह जो भी कह रहा है उसका संबंध उसके विश्वास से नहीं है। उसके शब्द ऊपर-ऊपर तो बुद्धिपरक प्रतीत हो रहे हैं लेकिन वास्तव में ऐसा नहीं है। भगवान कृष्ण इसे समझ जाते हैं और अर्जुन के सारे तर्को को नजरअंदाज करते हुए उसके भ्रम अर्थात् मिथ्या विश्वास को हटाने के लिए आगे बढ़ते हैं। उन्हें अच्छी तरह पता है कि अर्जुन वह कदापि नहीं है जो अहिंसा में विश्वास रखता है। युद्ध उसका स्वभाविक और अपरिहार्य कर्त्तव्य है। लेकिन वह इस कर्त्तव्य से मुख मोड़ने का प्रयास कर रहा है क्योंकि वह मिथ्या विश्वास के साये में है। एक बार उसका भ्रम दूर हो जाए तो वह पूरी ताकत से युद्ध करने को तैयार हो जाएगा।

भगवान कृष्ण इसी भ्रम को हटाने हेतु गीता का उपदेश देते हैं जो हमारे और हमारे स्वधर्म के बीच खड़ा है। अर्जुन अपने धर्म के बारे में दिग्भ्रमित है। वह अपने ही स्वधर्म के जाल में फंसा है। कृष्ण उसकी घोर निन्दा करते हैं ताकि वह कर्त्तव्य बोध से विचलित न हो। और गीता के अंत में अर्जुन का मोहभंग हो ही जाता है। उसे समझ में आ जाता है कि उसका स्वधर्म क्या है। इस प्रकार यह पाठ मिथ्या विश्वास को हटाने का संदेश देता है।

The Gita and Swadharma Word Meaning

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 19 The Gita and Swadharma img 1 MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 19 The Gita and Swadharma img 2

The Gita and Swadharma Important Pronunciations

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 19 The Gita and Swadharma img 3

The Gita and Swadharma Passages for Comprehension

Read the following passages taken from the lesson and answer the questions that follow:

It was Arjuna who quailed; not the army. Was then the army braver than Arjuna? It is just inconceivable. It was not out of fear that Arjuna was shying away from the battle. The great warrior had fought hundreds of battles. He had single handedly routed Bhishma, Drona and Karna when they had invaded Virat’s kingdom. He was, in fact, known as one who knew no defeat; a man among men. Valour was in every drop of his blood.
(Page 147)

Questions:
(i) What is inconceivable? Why does the author say so?
(ii) Whom had Arjuna routed single-handedly? Why?
(iii) How was Arjuna known as?
(iv) Find a word from the passage which means the same as ‘frightened’.
(v) Find a word from the passage which means opposite to cowardice.
Answers:
(i) Thinking army braver than Arjuna is ‘inconceivable’. The author says so because he is well aware of Arjuna’s bravery and manliness. Which he supports by giving examples.
(ii). Arjuna had single-handedly routed Bhishma, Drona and Kama because they had invaded Virat’s kingdom.
(iii) Arjuna was known as one who knew no defeat. He was a man among men. He was a brave warrior.
(iv) ‘Qualled’
(v) Valour

2. It is not that Aquna had no idea of what he was going to see. But the actual sight, as is always the case, had a devastating impact. Seeing his kinsmen on the battlefield, Arjuna lost his nerve and deep anguish assailed his heart. In the past he had slain innumerable warriors in many a battle, but he had never before felt so dejected, never had his bow Gandiva slipped from his hands, never had he trembled so, never had welled up in his eyes! Then, why was all this happening now? Was he coming to abhor violence like King Ashoka? (Page 147)

Questions:
(ï) What was the actual sight that had devastating impact on Arjuna?
(ii) What was the past history of Arjuna?
(iii) Arjuna had never before felt so dejected. Why?
(iv) Why does the author compare Arjuna with King Ashoka?
(v) Pick out a word from the above passage which means the same as ‘hate’.
Answers:
(i) Standing in the battlefield Aquna finds his kith and kin, near and dear ones arrayed on both the sides. This very sight had a devastating impact on him (Arjuna).
(ii) Arjuna’s past history is full of glaring examples of brave deeds. He had slain innumerable warriors in many a battle.
(iii) Arjuna had never before fought wars with his kith and kin. For the first time in his life he had come to the battlefield to fight with his kinsmen. It was therefore he was feeling dejected.
(iv) Like Ashoka, Arjuna too wished to turn away from violence. He displayed all the traits of Ashoka at that time. Therefore, the author makes such a comparison.
(v) ‘abhor’.

MP Board Solutions

3. But attachment to the kith and kin clouded his sense of duty and then he started philosophising. When a man with a sense of duty is caught in delusion, he cannot face his lapse from duty He tries to justify it by citing lofty principles. The same thing happened with Arjuna. He now started putting before Krishna, to convince him, the specious argument that war in itself was sinful that it would destroy the clan, eclipse
dharma and lead to moral anarchy, scarcity and devastation and bring many other disasters on the society, (Page 148)

Questions:
(i) What clouded Arjuna’s sense of duty?
(ii) Why did Arjuna start philosophising?
(iii) What argument did he put before Krishna about war?
(iv) Why did he display apathy to war?
(y) Pick out a word from the passage which means opposite ‘sufficiency’.
Answers:
(i) Seeing his close relatives standing in the battlefield Arjuna felt attached to them. He wished to turn away from fighting war. This attachment to the kith and kin clouded his sense of duty
(ii) Arjuna started philosophising because he no more wanted to fight war with his kinsmen.
(iii) He put before Krishna the argument that war in itself was sinful that it would destroy the clan, eclipse dharma and lead to total devastation.

MP Board Class 12th English Solutions

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Textbook (Fiction and Drama)

A Friend Who Came From The Sky Question Answer Class 12 English The Spectrum Chapter 2 MP Board

Class 12 English The Spectrum Chapter 2 A Friend Who Came From The Sky Questions and Answers

In this article, we will share MP Board Class 12th English Solutions Chapter 2 A Friend Who Came From The Sky Pdf, These solutions are solved subject experts from the latest edition books.

A Friend Who Came From The Sky Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

विभिन्न प्रकार के देखने के तरीकों को उनके अर्थ से मिलाइए.
Answer:
Peer – closely, finding it hard to make things out
Glance – quickly
Stare – fixedly
Observe – in a scientific kind of way
Witness – as a crime or accident occurs

MP Board Solutions

Comprehension

निम्नलिखित प्रश्नों के उत्तर दीजिए

Question 1.
What was Mini doing in the balcony? [2009, 14, 17]
मिनी बालकनी में क्या कर रही थी?
Answer:
Mini was watching the children playing in the park outside.
मिनी पार्क में खेलते हुए बच्चों को देख रही थी।

Question 2.
Why was her mother worried as Mini sat in the balcony?
मिनी के बालकनी में बैठने के दौरान उसकी माँ क्यों चिन्तित थी?
Answer:
Mini’s mother was worried because strong winds were blowing outside. Rains were about to fall. Mini’s mother did not want her to get wet.
मिनी की माँ चिन्तित थी क्योंकि बाहर तेज हवाएँ चल रही थीं। बारिश होने वाली थी। मिनी की माँ नहीं चाहती थी कि मिनी बारिश में भीग जाय।

Question 3.
What disability did she have? [2009, 16, 18]
उसके शरीर में क्या कमी थी?
Answer:
Mini was a spastic and had no control over her hands and legs since birth. She could neither walk nor button up her shirt.

मिनी शारीरिक रूप से अपंग थी और उसका जन्म से ही अपने हाथ और पैरों पर कोई नियन्त्रण नहीं था। वह न तो चल सकती थी और न अपनी शर्ट के बटन स्वयं लगा सकती थी।

Question 4.
Being spastic, what could Mini do and what could she not? [2012]
अपंग होने के कारण मिनी क्या कर सकती थी और क्या नहीं कर सकती थी?
Answer:
Being spastic, Mini could not walk, or button up her shirt. She had no control over her hands and legs since birth. But she could crawl. She had also learnt to use her hand to brush her teeth and use a spoon to eat. She could also manage her wheel chair.

अपंग होने के कारण मिनी न तो चल सकती थी और न अपने शर्ट के बटन लगा सकती थी। जन्म से ही उसका अपने हाथ व पैरों पर कोई नियन्त्रण नहीं था। किन्तु वह रेंग सकती थी। उसने हाथ से ब्रश करना व चम्मच से खाना भी सीख लिया था। वह अपनी व्हील चेयर भी चला सकती थी।

Question 5.
Why did the neighborhood children not become friendly with her? [2009]
पड़ोस के बच्चे उसके दोस्त क्यों नहीं बने?
Answer:
The neighborhood children did not become friendly with her because she could not walk or play. She could move only in a wheel chair.

पड़ोस के बच्चे उसके दोस्त इसलिये नहीं बने, क्योंकि वह न तो चल सकती थी और न खेल सकती थी। वह केवल व्हील चेयर में ही घूम सकती थी।

Question 6.
What was the ‘ball’ that fell in her lap? [2015]
उसकी गोद में गिरी ‘बॉल’ क्या थी?
Answer:
The thing that fell in her lap was not a ball at all, but a bird. It was sitting in her lap, all closed up in fear. It was a duck who must have lost his way in the strong current of wind that was blowing.

उसकी गोद में गिरने वाली चीज बॉल नहीं वरन् एक चिड़िया थी। वह उसकी गोद में बैठी थी, डरकर सिकुड़ी हुई। वह एक बतख थी जो हवा के तेज बहाव में अपना रास्ता भूल गयी थी।

Question 7.
What had happened to the bird? [2013]
बतख को क्या हुआ था?
Answer:
The bird was probably migrating back to his native land with his flock. He must have lost his way in the strong current of wind. Meanwhile “he had hurt himself on his wings in his efforts to rejoin his mates.

बतख अपने साथियों के साथ अपने स्थायी निवास की ओर उड़ रही थी। रास्ते में वह तेज हवा के कारण मार्ग भटक गयी। इसी बीच अपने साथियों को ढूँढ़ने के प्रयास में उसके पंखों में चोट लग गयी।

Question 8.
How did the bird react when Mini’s mother tried to pick it up?
जब मिनी की माँ ने उसे उठाना चाहा तो बतख की प्रतिक्रिया क्या थी?
Answer:
When Mini’s mother tried to pick the duck, he suddenly nipped her hand.
जब मिनी की माँ ने बतख को उठाना चाहा तो उसने माँ के हाथ को थोड़ा-सा काट लिया।

Question 9.
Why do you think the bird refused to eat anything?
आपके अनुसार बतख ने कुछ भी, खाने से इंकार क्यों कर दिया? [2009]
Answer:
The bird refused to eat anything perhaps because he was fearful. Another reason may be that he was injured and found himself in a strange place.
बतख ने कुछ भी खाने से इंकार कर दिया क्योंकि वह डरी हुई थी। दूसरा कारण यह हो सकता है कि वह घायल थी और उसने स्वयं को अजनबी स्थान पर पाया।

MP Board Solutions

Question 10.
How was the bird fed? [2014, 16]
बतख को किस प्रकार खिलाया-पिलाया गया?
Answer:
The bird was fed with some cooked rice in a bowl. It contained milk and sugar. The bird’s beak was opened and he was fed with an ink filler.

बतख को एक बर्तन में पके चावल दिये गये। इसमें चीनी व दूध था। बतख की चोंच को खोलकर उसे स्याही भरने वाले ट्यूब से खिलाया गया।

Question 11.
Why do you think Mini name the bird, ‘Mitra’?
आपके अनुसार मिनी ने बतख का नाम ‘मित्र’ क्यों रखा?
Answer:
Mini had no friend in the world due to her physical disability. She wanted to make a friend. So she found a friend in the bird and named her ‘Mitra’.

अपनी शारीरिक अपंगता के कारण मिनी का दुनिया में कोई भी मित्र नहीं था। वह एक दोस्त बनाना चाहती थी। उसे बतख में एक दोस्त दिखाई दिया और उसने उसका नाम ‘मित्र’ रख दिया।

Question 12.
What was Mini’s reaction when she found Mitra’s basket empty in the morning?
मित्र की डलिया को सुबह खाली देखकर मिनी की क्या प्रतिक्रिया थी?
Answer:
When Mini found Mitra’s basket empty in the morning, she was shocked.
जब मिनी ने सुबह मित्र की डलिया को खाली देखा तो उसे गहरा धक्का लगा।

Question 13.
Why did the neighborhood children come to Mini’s house?
पड़ोस के बच्चे मिनी के घर क्यों आये?
Answer:
The neighborhood children came to Mini’s house out of excitement for the duck. They were thrilled to see the duck.

पड़ोस के बच्चे मिनी के घर कौतूहलवश आये। वे बतख को देखकर अत्यन्त उत्साहित थे।

Question 14.
What change did the bird bring in the attitude of the neighborhood children towards Mini?
मिनी के प्रति पड़ोस के बच्चों के व्यवहार में बतख किस प्रकार का परिवर्तन ला सकी?
Answer:
The bird brought a complete change in the attitude of the neighborhood children towards Mini. They became friendly with Mini. They started feeling the agony of Mini. They took Mini down to the park. Mini never felt lonely again.

मिनी के प्रति पड़ोस के बच्चों के व्यवहार में बतख पूरी तरह परिवर्तन ले आयी। बच्चे मिनी के दोस्त बन गये। उन्होंने मिनी के दुःख को महसूस करना शुरू कर दिया। वे मिनी को पार्क में ले जाने लगे। मिनी ने फिर स्वयं को अकेला नहीं समझा।

Question 15.
What mistake did Anju make? How did she compensate?
अंजू ने क्या गलती की? उसने उसे किस प्रकार सुधारा?
Answer:
Anju called the bird as lame and told her friends that it was very hard to make her friend. But she soon realised her mistake and covered her mouth to hide it. She alongwith her friends became friendly with Mini.

अंजू ने बतख को लंगड़ा बताकर कहा कि उसे दोस्त बनाना बहुत कठिन है। किन्तु उसे शीघ्र ही अपनी गलती का अहसास हो गया और उसने हाथों से अपना मुँह बन्द कर लिया। इसके बाद वह व अन्य बच्चे मिनी के दोस्त बन गये।

Question 16.
Describe the duck’s farewell. [2009, 18]
बतख की विदाई का वर्णन कीजिए।
Answer:
After a couple of days, the time for duck’s farewell came. Mini’s father took all the children and the duck to a nearby lake. The children lifted Mitra from Mini’s lap and gently released him into the lake. He started swimming. The children stood there and watched for a long time.

कुछ दिनों पश्चात् बतख की विदाई का समय आ गया। मिनी के पिता बतख को व सभी बच्चों को पास की एक झील में ले गये। बच्चों ने बतख को मिनी की गोद से उठाया
और धीरे-धीरे झील में छोड़ दिया। बतख तैरने लगी। बच्चे वहीं देर तक खड़े-खड़े उसे देखते रहे।

Question 17.
Who do you think the story is about-Mini or the duck? Why? [2009]
आपके अनुसार कहानी किसके विषय में है—मिनी के या बतख के? क्यों?
Answer:
The story is primarily about Mini. She is physically disabled. Her comparison has been drawn with the duck. Just as the girl is disabled, the duck is also lame. Just as the girl is alone, the duck is also in a strange place. Just as the girl has no friends, the duck has also lost her friends, Just as the girl wants company, the duck also wants company. This comparison has been drawn to highlight the mental condition of the girl ‘Mini’.

कहानी मूलत: मिनी के विषय में है। वह शारीरिक रूप से अपंग है। उसकी तुलना बतख से की गयी है। जिस प्रकार लड़की अपंग है, बतख भी लंगड़ी है। जिस प्रकार लड़की अकेली है, बतख भी अनजाने स्थान पर है। जिस प्रकार लड़की के कोई दोस्त नहीं है, बतख । के दोस्त भी बिछड़ गये हैं। जिस प्रकार लड़की दोस्तों का साथ चाहती है, बतख भी साथ चाहते है। यह तुलना लड़की की मानसिक स्थिति को उजागर करने हेतु की गयी है।

Language Practice
I. निम्नलिखित रिक्त स्थानों को उचित Determiners से भरिए
Answer:

  1. I was going to Haridwar. On the way I met a European. He was a disciple of an Indian religious guru who has been living in an ashram near the Ganga for the last two years. The Europeans was going to spend some days with his guru.
  2. A gentleman came to school to see the Principal. He was made to wait outside for an hour. He didn’t object to it but due to some personal reasons, the anger could be seen in his eyes.
  3. An educated person should know how to write a clear and readable letter. Everyone has to write business letters of some sort and may have to face the problems of writing important letters.

MP Board Solutions

II. निम्नलिखित वाक्यों को पुनः लिखकर सही वाक्य बनाइये। प्रत्येक वाक्य में दिये गये
Determiners को underline करिए
Answer:

  1. An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
  2. Don’t you have any friend in the other section?
  3. Raju can write with either hand.
  4. How much ink is there in the bottle?
  5. I have already spent the few rupees I had.
  6. How many pages are there in this book?
  7. It’s a public holiday so nothing is open.
  8. Being completely deaf he can’t hear any thing.
  9. I brought a little apple juice from the market.
  10. How much experience you have got?

A Friend Who Came From The Sky Summary

– Padma Rao

प्रस्तुत अध्याय में बारह वर्ष की एक शारीरिक रूप से विकलांग बालिका मिनी के विषय में बताया गया है। अत्यन्त रोचक तरीके से अध्याय में घटित घटनाएँ हमें मिनी, उसकी माँ, अचानक उसके पास आयी एक बतख एवं पार्क में खेलते बच्चों के प्रति सहज रूप से आकर्षित करती हैं।

मिनी जन्म से अपंग है। अपने घर की बालकनी से प्रतिदिन सामने पार्क में बच्चों को खेलते हुए देखना उसकी नियमित दिनचर्या में शामिल है। एक दिन अचानक एक बतख उसकी गोद में उड़ती हुई आकर गिर पड़ती है। बतख एक पैर से लंगड़ी है। मिनी बतख को पाकर बहुत खुश हो जाती है। वह और उसकी माँ बतख की खूब सेवा करते हैं। आस-पास के बच्चे भी बतख के आने की जानकारी मिलने पर मिनी के पास आते हैं। उनमें से एक बच्चा यह कहकर दु:खी हो जाता है कि लंगड़ी होने की वजह से बतख अपने दोस्तों के साथ घूम-फिर नहीं सकती। किन्तु इस बच्चे को अपनी कही हई बात पर बेहद पश्चाताप होता है क्योंकि यह बात मिनी पर भी लागू होती है। बच्चों के लिये बतख एक खिलौना बन जाती है। मिनी और उसकी माँ की देखभाल से बतख कुछ दिनों में ठीक हो जाती है और मिनी के पापा उसे नदी में आजाद उड़ने के लिये छोड़ देते हैं। मिनी पुनः अकेली रह जाती है।

आस-पास के बच्चों को अब मिनी के अकेलेपन का अहसास होता है और वे मिनी को अपने साथ पार्क में ले जाते हैं।

The Spectrum Textbook General English Class 12th Solutions

The Rightful Inheritors of the Earth Question Answer Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 11 MP Board

Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 11 The Rightful Inheritors of the Earth Questions and Answers

The Rightful Inheritors of the Earth Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

A. Draw a line from the left hand column to the right hand column joining collective words with their appropriate nouns.
Answer:
MP Board Class 12th English The Spectrum Workbook Solutions Chapter 11 The Rightful Inheritors of the Earth img 1

B. Can you change the following objects into their smaller versions.
Answer:

  • book — book let
  • cigar — cigarette
  • isle — islet
  • leaf — leaf let

Comprehension

A. Read the story and draw connectors to join the consumers and consumables as given in the story.
Answer:

  • coconuts – bats
  • sapotas – bats
  • guavas – bats
  • mangoes – bats
  • chicks – crows and hawks
  • hens – mangooses
  • jack fruit – squirrels and crows.

MP Board Solutions

B. Fill in the blanks :

(i) Soon there were mongooses in the ………. thickets. (bamboo/coconut)
(ii) There emerged a fierce creature without hands or ……… or wings. (head/legs)
(iii) In four days, five hens, …….. squirrels, two hundred rats and a cat died. (six/twelve)
(iv) The gratified bats flew away after eating the (kemels/coconuts)
(v) In a split second, about a people surrounded us. (hundred/thousand)
Answer:
(i) bamboo
(ii) legs
(iii) twelve
(iv) kernels
(v) hundred.

Language Practice

A. Use the third form of the appropriate verb in the sentences given below.

1. Cotton is in Egypt.
2. The money was by the thief.
3. Our jewels were in a locker.
4. English is in many countries.
5. This book is by an Indian.
6. All the ice-cream was yesterday.
7. The rooms were last evening.
8. I was by a mad dog.
Answer:

  1. grown
  2. stolen
  3. kept
  4. spoken
  5. written
  6. eaten
  7. swept
  8. bitten.

B. Write questions using the passive.

Question 1.
Ask about the telephone. (when/invent)
Answer:

Question 2.
When was the telephone invented ?
Ask about glass. {how/make)
Answer:

Question 3.
How was glass made ?
Ask about Australia. (when/discover)
Answer:

Question 4.
When was Australia discovered ?
Ask about silver. (what/use for)
Answer:

Question 5.
What is silver used for ?
Ask about television. (when/invent)
Answer:
When was television invented ?

C. What do these words mean ? Use ‘it can’………….or ‘it can’t’
Answer:

  1. washable, it can be washed.
  2. unbreakable, it can’t be broken.
  3. edible, it can be eaten.
  4. unusable, it can’t be used.
  5. invisible, it can’t be seen.
  6. portable, it can be moved.

D. Rewrite these sentences instead of using ‘somebody’ or ‘they’, write a passive sentence.

Question 1.
Somebody has cleaned the room.
Answer:
The room has been cleaned.

Question 2.
They have postponed the concert.
Answer:
The concert has been postponed.

Question 3.
Somebody is using the computer at the moment.
Answer:
The computer is being used at the moment.

MP Board Solutions

Question 4.
When we got to the stadium we found that they had cancelled the game.
Answer:
When we got to the stadium we found that the game had been cancelled.

Question 5.
They are building a new ring road round the city.
Answer:
A new ring road is being built round the city.

Speaking Time

List the following words under the four columns according to the sound.
MP Board Class 12th English The Spectrum Workbook Solutions Chapter 11 The Rightful Inheritors of the Earth img 2
Answer:
MP Board Class 12th English The Spectrum Workbook Solutions Chapter 11 The Rightful Inheritors of the Earth img 3

Reading Time
Read the given passage carefully :

Nature’s bounty is boundless. If you try to list the millions of-things all around you, there will be no end to it. Everything in nature is a marvel in itself. Even the simplest things which you take for granted are not really simple. For example, you have seen colourful pretty flowers and enjoyed the sweetness of various fruits. And imagine, it is the soil that helps the plants create such riot of colours and variety of tastes !

There is scientific explanation involving genes and chromosomes— behind the evolution of every living thing. Yet the sight of a green-covered, red-fleshed watermelon or a fragrant bright rose growing makes you think. These are just a few examples of the fascinating variety that nature offers.

MP Board Solutions

There are thousands of other things in nature’s treasure trove, which are absolutely different from what you come across in your daily life. Have you ever heard of an entire range of high hills smoking fumes in the air for years together ? Or about a city in England having received frog rain’ ? Or of a reptile that can actually walk on water ?

There are many such unusual facts about your natural surroundings which, when brought to light, surprise you and trigger your curiosity to know more. For instance, even a child knows about an elephant, but how many of you know that an elephant’s trunk comprises of more than forty thousand muscles ?
Such intriguing facts make the study of nature interesting.

Now answer the questions given below :

Question 1.
Find out the words from the passage which can function as nouns and as verbs as well.
Answer:
marvel, walk, surprise, trigger.

Question 2.
How can you say that nature’s bounty is boundless ? (2010)
Or
‘Nature’s bounty is boundless’. Explain it. (2009)
Answer:
We can say that nature’s bounty is boundless because there are millions of things that nature has given to us. Nature is very generous. For millions of years it is giving millions of people food, clothing and other necessary articles. It has a great stock. Some people fear that what will . happen in future. In olden days people thought that when wood is exhausted how will we get energy. Then coal came, then gas, petrol and atomic energy. So we say that nature’s bounty is boundless.

MP Board Solutions

Question 3.
What helps plants create colours and variety of tastes ?
Answer:
The soil helps plants create colours and variety of tastes.

Question 4.
What things in nature make you think ?
Answer:
The sight of a green covered, red-fleshed watermelon or a fragrant bright rose growing makes us think.

Question 5.
What kind of fascinating varieties of nature you can think of ?
Answer:
There are a number of fascinating varieties of nature we can think of.

Question 6.
‘Treasure trove’ means valuable things that ‘are found hidden. Mention such a thing which you consider as a treasure trove.
Answer:
In some old places and buildings valuable things were buried underground. It is a treasure trove according to me.

Question 7.
What things in nature arouse your curiosity ? (2009)
Answer:
The Etna volcano Italy, the Barmuda Triangle, arouse our curiosity. These things possess great mystery and wonder. The Etna volcano is erupting for so many years and still is not ending. In the Barmuda Triangle many ships and aeroplanes were lost mysteriously. No one knows the answer. So these things arouse our curiosity.

MP Board Solutions

Question 8.
What facts make the study of nature interesting ?
Answer:
Various facts about human body as the working of the heart and knowledge that it works only 9 hours each day and rest for the rest part. Such facts make the study of nature interesting.

Question 9.
Give a suitable title to the passage.
Answer:
Nature : A Mysterious Thing.

Writing Time

Question 1.
You are a Librarian. Write a letter to a firm enquiring about some books that you urgently require for your library.
Answer:
To,
M/s Sahitya Pustak Bhandar,
Book sellers and stationers,
Hospital Road,
Bhopal (M. P.)
Subject—Enquiry about some books.
Sir,
We need some books for our library. Hence you are requested to send your price list alongwith the terms and conditions.

  • Advance Grammar and Composition by Dr. C. S. Mehta.
  • Super Physics by Dr. H. N. Miranda.
  • Chemistry for H. S. Classes by D. P. Mule.
  • Hindi Grammar & Composition by J. V. Upadhyaya.

Please send the required information at your earliest.
Yours,
K. Joshi Librarian
Model H. S. School, Ratlam

MP Board Solutions

Question 2.
Last month you bought a digital camera from Modern Electronics, Jabalpur. Now you And something wrong with it. It is not working properly. Write a letter to the dealer complaining about the problem.
Answer:
Suresh Ahirwar 181, Tal Katora Jabalpur (M. P.)
17 Oct., 20…
To,
Modem Electronics,
Sadar Market,
Jabalpur (M. P.)
Sir,
I bought a digital camera from your shop on 1st Sep., 20… Vide Cash Memo AWH/5/24/4 dated 1-9-20… The camera has a one year guarantee. But suddenly it developed technical defects. Its switch is not working properly. Flash bulb has gone out and the pictures are also not clear.Since the Camera is within the guarantee period, I request you to replace it at your own expenses.
Thanking you.
Yours faithfully
s. Ahirwar

MP Board Class 12th English Solutions

The Spectrum Workbook General English Class 12th Solutions

Teach Me to Listen, Lord Question Answer Class 12 English The Spectrum Chapter 1 MP Board

Class 12 English The Spectrum Chapter 1 Teach Me to Listen, Lord Questions and Answers

In this article, we will share MP Board Class 12th English Solutions Chapter 1 Teach Me to Listen, Lord Pdf, These solutions are solved subject experts from the latest edition books.

Teach Me to Listen, Lord Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

निम्नलिखित शब्दों में से सही शब्द चुनकर खाली स्थान भरिए
stammered, shrieked, begged, complained, threatened, boasted, confessed, urged.
Answer:

  1. It was I who broke the vase,’ he confessed.
  2. “I was the cleverest person in the class,’ the little boy boasted.
  3. Look, there is a mouse over there !’ he shrieked.
  4. I’ll stop your pocket money if you don’t behave,’ she threatened.
  5. “I d-d-d-did it,’ he stammered.
  6. ‘Please, please, help me,’ he begged.
  7. “This hotel is filthy,’ she complained.
  8. ‘Go on, Jim try harder,’ he urged.

MP Board Solutions

Comprehension

निम्नलिखित प्रश्नों के उत्तर दीजिए :

Question 1.
What message do those who are our nearest give us?
हमारे निकटतम रहने वाले लोग हमें क्या सन्देश देते हैं?
Answer:
Those who are our nearest always want us to listen to them. In fact, their message is ‘accept the person I am, listen to me.’ This message should reach us no matter what words we hear.

हमारे निकटतम लोग सदैव यह चाहते हैं कि हम उनकी बात को सुनें। उनका सन्देश होता है ‘हम जैसे भी हैं, स्वीकार करो और हमें सुनो।’ यह सन्देश हम तक पहुँचना चाहिए चाहे हम कुछ और कैसा भी सुनें।

Question 2.
Who are the people far from us? [2010, 13, 15, 16, 18]
हमसे दूर लोग कौन हैं?
Answer:
Hopeless, forgotten, unhappy and oppressed people are far from us.
निराश, उपेक्षित, दुखी और शोषित लोग हमसे दूर हैं।

Question 3.
Whom does the poet wish to trust? [2017]
कवि किस पर विश्वास करने के लिये कहता है?
Answer:
The poet wishes us to trust the inner voice of conscience as it always warns us against a sinful deed.
कवि हमें अन्तरात्मा की आवाज पर विश्वास करने के लिये कहता है क्योंकि यह हमें सदैव गलत कार्य से पूर्व चेतावनी देती है।

Question 4.
When does the poet wish to listen to the voice of God?
कवि ईश्वर की आवाज को कब सुनने के लिये कहता है?
Answer:
The poet wishes to listen to the voice of God in certainty, uncertainty, peace and unhappiness..
निश्चितता में, अनिश्चितता में, शान्ति में, अशान्ति में कवि ईश्वर की आवाज को सुनने के लिये कहता है।

Question 5.
In what order does the poet wish to listen to the voices? Do you find any significance in that? [2011]
कवि आवाजों को किस क्रम में सुनने के लिये कहता है? क्या आप उस क्रम में कोई महत्वपूर्ण बात देखते हैं?
Answer:
First of all, the poet wishes us to listen to the voice of our nearest. Then he asks us to listen to the voice of those who are oppressed and are suffering. After that he wishes to listen to the voice of conscience. In the end he wishes to listen to the voice of God. There is a significance in this order. While we should listen to the wordly voices in the beginning, we should listen to our conscience and to the voice of God later on.

सर्वप्रथम कवि हमें अपने निकटतम लोगों की बात सुनने के लिये कहता है। तत्पश्चात् वह हमें शोषित व पददलित लोगों की बात सुनने के लिये कहता है। उसके बाद वह अन्तरात्मा की आवाज और अन्त में ईश्वर की आवाज सुनने के लिये कहता है। इस क्रम में महत्वपूर्ण बात यह है कि प्रारम्भ में हमें भौतिक आवाजों को सुनना चाहिये और बाद में हमें अपनी अन्तरात्मा व ईश्वर की आवाज को सुनना चाहिए।

MP Board Solutions

Question 6.
What do you suppose the hopeless, the forgotten, the anguished want to tell us?
हमारे अनुसार निराश, उपेक्षित, शोषित लोग क्या कहना चाहते हैं?
Answer:
We suppose that the hopeless, the forgotten, the anguished want to tell us about their woes and grieves. They want to share their sorrows. They want to tell us how this world has ill-treated them.

हमारे अनुसार निराश, उपेक्षित, शोषित लोग हमसे अपना दुःख-दर्द कहना चाहते हैं। वे हमसे अपनी तकलीफ बाँटना चाहते हैं। वे हमसे यह बताना चाहते हैं कि इस दुनिया ने उनसे किस प्रकार गलत तरीके से व्यवहार किया है।

Question 7.
How could listening to one’s inner voice be helpful? [2014]
अपनी अन्तरात्मा की आवाज को सुनना किस प्रकार सहायक हो सकता है?
Answer:
Listening to one’s inner voice could be helpful as it warns us against a sinful deed. It distinguishes between what is right and what is wrong.

अन्तरात्मा की आवाज को सुनना इसलिये सहायक हो सकता है क्योंकि यह हमें गलत कार्य करने से रोकती है। यह हमें यह भी बताती है कि क्या सही है और क्या गलत है।

Question 8.
What is the overall mood of the poem? [2009]
कविता का मूल भाव क्या है?
Answer:
The overall mood of the poem is that we should develop the skill of listening which is acquired through dedication and practice. The poem tells us to be good listeners.

कविता का मूल भाव है कि हमें सुनने की कला का विकास करना चाहिये जो समर्पण व अभ्यास के द्वारा ही सम्भव हैं। कविता हमें अच्छा श्रोता बनने की शिक्षा प्रदान करती है।

Teach Me to Listen, Lord Summary

यह सामान्यतया स्वीकार किया जाता है कि सुनना एक कला है, जो समर्पण भाव व अभ्यास के द्वारा सीखी जा सकती हैं। वस्तुतः एक अच्छा व्यक्ति एक अच्छा श्रोता होता है। यह कविता प्रभु से एक प्रार्थना के रूप में है। इस प्रार्थना के द्वारा कवि प्रभु से निवेदन करता है कि वह उसे अच्छा श्रोता बनाये।

हमें सर्वप्रथम अपने निकटतम व्यक्तियों को सुनना चाहिए। कभी-कभी ऐसा भी होता है कि ये लोग अपनी बातों को जोर से नहीं कहते। फिर भी ये सभी चाहते हैं कि हमारा ध्यान उनकी तरफ अवश्य रहे। प्रस्तुत कविता हमें उन सभी की आवाज को सुनने की प्रेरणा देती है, जो शोषित हैं, पददलित हैं और अपना कष्ट हमसे कह सकने में असमर्थ हैं। हमें उनके पास जाकर उनका कष्ट सुनना चाहिए।

हमारी अन्तरात्मा हमें बुरे कार्य को करने से पूर्व हमें चेतावनी देती है। यही अन्तरात्मा हमें सही और गलत में भेद करना सिखाती है। जब हम गलत कार्य करते हैं तब हम अपनी अन्तरात्मा की आवाज को कुचल देते हैं। वास्तव में, हमें इस आवाज को सुनना चाहिए और उस पर विश्वास करना चाहिए। कविता में कवि अन्त में हमसे यह अपेक्षा करता है कि हम ईश्वर की आवाज को सुनें क्योंकि यह आवाज हमारा सदैव मार्गदर्शन करती है।

The Spectrum Textbook General English Class 12th Solutions

Invocation Question Answer Class 12 English A Voyage Chapter 1 MP Board

Class 12 English A Voyage Chapter 1 Invocation Questions and Answers

Students can also download MP Board 12th Model Papers to help you to revise the complete Syllabus and score more marks in your examinations.

Invocation Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

A. Choose the antonyms of the following words from the text:
discord, destroy, diversity, resolve, worldly, fall, known, demon.
Answer:
Words – Antonyms

  • Discord – Concord
  • Destroy – Create
  • Diversity – Unity
  • Notes – Battle
  • Worldly – Divine
  • Fall – Rise
  • Known – Stranger
  • Demon – God

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B. Compounding is a process of word formation, in which two constituent words normally are bound together to form a single word. The first member of a compound word is a modifier whereas the second member acts as an independent unit. There are two examples of compound words in the poem.

  • battle + cry ………….. battle-cry.
  • war + god ………… war-god.

Now match words from the two columns to form suitable compound words.

Column A – Column B

(i) black – (a) watch
(ii) on – (b) ways
(iii) off – (c) cry
(iv) side – (d) set
(y) watch – (e) board
(vi) mind – (f) wise
(vii) stop – (g) colour
(viii) out – (h) line
(ix) like – (i) word.
Answer:
(i) (e), (ii) (h), (iii) (g), (iv) (b), (y) (i), (vi) (J), (vis) (a), (viii) (C), (ix) (J).

Comprehension

A. Answer in one sentence each:

Question 1.
Who is the speaker in the poem?
Answer:
The poet is the speaker in the poem.

Question 2.
What does ‘concord’ mean?
Answer:
‘Concord’ means friendship and peace among people and countries.

Question 3.
Whose concord is wished for at first?
Answer:
Concord with our own people is wished for at first.

Question 4.
Who are the Asvins?
Answer:
Asvlns are the dual gods (devas) who symbolise perfect unity between the natives and the strangers.

Question 5.
What should not be fought against?
Answer:
The divine spirit within us should not be fought against.

B. Answer in about 50-60 words each:

Question 1.
Which are the two kinds of people referred to in the verse? (M.P. Board 2020)
Answer:
The verse is an invocation made to the Asvins, the twin gods. The two types of people that are referred here the first type of people are those who surround us and whom we know well. We live among them. They are our own people. The second type of people are those who are strangers who do not belong to us. We don’t know them. It means that they belong to different culture and land. They are foreigners to us. Poet wants to create unity between these two kind of people. In short, the first type refers to our countrymen while the other refers to foreign people.

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Question 2.
‘Let not the battle-cry rise amidst many slains, nor the arrows of the War-God fall with the break of the day’. What is implied by these lines?
Answer:
These lines imply that we have already.fought many battles. There are a lot of war victims. We have already lost many lives and property. The cries still haunt us. So, we should not let any more cries caused by battles. Instead we should resolve all issues peacefully.

Question 3.
In how many ways is the unity sought?
Answer:
Unity has been sought in many ways. First, we should have concord with our own people as well as with the strangers. We should unite our minds and purposes. We should not let any more battle-cry rise.

Question 4.
Why does the speaker invoke the gods-Asvins?
Answer:
Asvins are the dual gods (devas) who symbolise perfect unity of the natives and the strangers; The poet here, while making invocation for unity, invokes the gods Asvins in order to establish perfect concord and harmony between our countrymen and the foreigners.

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C. Answer in about 75 words:

Question 1.
What is the message of the verse?
Answer:
The verse ‘Invocation’ has a very sound message. In the present context the poet feels that there is a need of mutual harmony and co-existence among people. This feeling of oneness should be extended to the foreign people also. We should have cordial relations and peace among our own men and with the strangers. This is the only way that can bring peace and harmony everywhere.

Question 2.
Why does the speaker not want the battle-cry to be raised? (M.P. Board 2009,2015)
Answer:
The poet here intends to establish peace in the world. He wishes for the unity among people by having concord among ourselves and also with the aliens. He denigrates them because they are the vital causes for all ruins. People are victimised. Battles never resolve any problem but add many more, leaving a lot of unanswered questions and unending cries without end. We have already suffered a lot. Any more cry will finish us completely. Hence we should make efforts to resolve our differences by peaceful ways.

Question 3.
How does the speaker wish to achieve concord? (M.P. Board 2012)
Answer:
This poem is an invocation for the establishment of concord in world. First, we should have concord with our own people and then with the strangers. Here ‘own people’ refers to our countrymen with whom we live and share all our joys and sorrows. All the time they are with us. Then we should have a state of peace with the strangers i.e., the aliens who contribute to our global vision. We can achieve this by resolving our disputes or issues through peaceful ways because battles only ruin us and we should condemn them.

Speaking Activity

A. Divide the class into two groups and conduct a debate on the proposition, ‘United we stand, Divided we fall’.
Answer:
Do with the help of your teacher.

B. Narrate a story to the class, bringing out the moral of Unity is Strength.
Answer:
Do yourself.

Writing Activity

A. Write a short composition on the theme, ‘Our country represents unity amid diversity’.
Answer:
India is a great country. It has embraced a lot of vicissitudes. It is culturally so rich that it stands apart with its unique recognition. It is recognized as a land of diversity. Its uniqueness lies in the fact that it is a federal democratic country with so many different cultures, climates, castes, religions, and foods. We have Kashmir where the temperature goes even below zero on the one hand and on the other we have coastal regions which remain hot all the time. We equally enjoy and celebrate the festivals of Holi, Id, Christmas,etc. We have so many different dresses and manners. Still we are Indians with one national song, one national anthem, one national flag, one national symbol, one judiciary and one parliament. Hence in the truest sense our country represents unity amid diversity.

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B. Every Indian takes pride in his culture and age-old traditions. Write a letter to your American friend, highlighting the salient features of Indian civilization and culture.
Answer:
A-42/F, Shivaji Park
Gwalior, M.P.
25th July, 20xx
Dear Jack,
I am really happy to receive your letter. It gives me extreme joy to note that you wish to know about my country and visit it soon. I would like to highlight a few unique features of my country. You know that India is a land of glorious past and prosperous future. Its culture has been so rich that it has always attracted the foreigners for study and research. The world is still amazed at the unique culture of unity in diversity of India. It has been the land of Rama, Krishna, Gautama, Ram Krishna Paramhans and Vivekananda, Mahatma Gandhi and Subhash Chandra Bose. Every Indian feels proud of belonging to this country. India can’t be explained in words. Therefore, I would like to invite you to my country, so that you see it with your own eyes. So come, see and feel its beauty. It would be an exciting and new experience felt for its beauty.
Yours,
Arun

Think IT over

A. Have you read the English translation of the Sanskrit epics, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata or any other Indian literary work? Are they able to capture the essence of the original work to your satisfaction?
Answer:
Yes, I have read the English translation of some of the epics like the Mahabharata, the Gita by some great writers and scholars. They have captured the essence of the original work to my satisfaction.

B. In this age of revolution in information and communication technology, we talk of the world being a global village. Do you find any relevance of our ancient texts in sustaining the tempo of social change?
Answer:
Yes, the ancient texts are much relevant in sustaining the tempo of social change. The evidences of Aakashwani, Pushpak Viman, Predictions, etc. prove it well.

Things to Do

A. Inspired by the ‘Vedas’, Tagore composed Gitanjali in Bengali. lts translation into English exposed Tagore to the readers worldwide. For this work, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1913. look for other such Nobel Laureates from other languages.
Answer:
Some Nobel Laureates from other languages are:

  • Romain Rolland — French
  • Selma Legerlof — Swedish
  • Gunter Grass — German

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B. Prepare a list of important literary works by foreign authors, whose translations you would like to have in your personal library, citing reasons there of
Answer:
I would like to have the translations of the literary works of Jane Austen, James Joyce, Emil Zola, Anton I’ Chekov, O. Henr Hemingway, and Charles Dickens. I would like to have the works of these writers in my library because they have touching appeal. They put their impact upon our mind and their characters seem to be realistic. They depict the incidents that seem to be our own life’s stories and their characters are
common people who give us a message for life.

C. You know the books giving information about knowledge and Indian culture are called ‘the Vedas’. You also know a book containing important dates and statistical information is called an ‘almanac’. Given below are some books with the information they give us. What are these books called? Write the names on the books. (You can take the help of the Help Box.)

Help Box

(a) Psalter
(b) Lexicon
(c) Pharmacopoeia
(d) Anthology
(e) Missal
(f) Bestiary.
Answer:
1. (d), 2. (f), 3. (e), 4. (c), 5. (b), 6. (a).

Invocation by Translated from Atharva Veda Introduction

The poem inculcates the ethics of collective living through mutual love and understanding. There must be a sense of unity among all human beings. Thus, an invocation has been made to unite ah the people.

Invocation Summary in English

Invocation is an excerpt taken from Hymns from the Vedas, a book of selected translations from the Vedas by Dr. Abinash Chandra Bose. In this part, the ethics of collective living through mutual love and understanding has been propounded.

An invocation has been made to the Asvins, the twin gods for the people to be united and live with mutual co-operation, not only with their relatives and friends but also with strangers. There should be a unity between mind and purposes. We should not fight against the divine spirit within us. We should avoid wars and battles.

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Invocation Summary in Hindi

Invocation डॉ. अविनाश चन्द्र बोस द्वारा वेदों के संकलन के अनुवाद की एक पुस्तक Hymns from the Vedas का एक अंश है। इस भाग में परस्पर प्यार एवं समन्वय के साथ सामूहिक जीवन के सिद्धान्तों को प्रतिपादित किया गया है। लोगों को परस्पर प्यार एवं सहयोग के साथ न केवल अपनों (स्वजनों) बल्कि अजनबियों के साथ भी एकाकार होने के लिए गन्धर्व (द्विदेव) को उद्बोधित किया गया है। मस्तिष्क एवं उद्देश्यों में तारतम्य होना चाहिए। हमें अपने अंदर के दैविक शक्तियों से लड़ना नहीं चाहिए। हमें युद्ध एवं क्रन्दन को नकारना चाहिए।

Invocation Word Meaning

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 1 Invocation img 1

Invocation Important Pronunciation

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 1 Invocation img 2

MP Board Class 12th English Solutions

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Textbook (Fiction and Drama)

The Hill-Top Temple Question Answer Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 10 MP Board

Class 12 English The Spectrum Workbook Chapter 10 The Hill-Top Temple Questions and Answers

The Hill-Top Temple Class 12th Question Answer

Word Power

A. Can you fill up the word-fork given in the book with words synonymous with God or words that express one of his qualities.

  • The soul of all
  • Secret spirit
  • Infinite
  • Eternity
  • Vast.

B. Select one word from the given ones for the following expressions :
inexpressible, imperceptible, inexhaustible, omnipotent, eternal, immortal, omniscient, panacea.

  • Having no beginning or end to its existence—Eternal
  • Which never dies—Immortal
  • A cure for all diseases—Panacea
  • Being all powerful—Omnipotent
  • Incapable of being expressed—Inexpressible
  • Incapable of being tired out—Inexhaustible
  • Incapable of being perceived by the senses—Imperceptible
  • Knowing everything—Omniscient

Comprehension

Choose the correct option.

Question 1.
The earth’s head brilliant with Sun refers to
(i) the horizon
(ii) the hill top
(iii) the goddess
(iv) the top of a tree.
Answer:
(ii) the hill top

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Question 2.
The goddess is immobile because
(i) it is in the form of stone statue
(ii) it loves to stand in one place
(iii) it is placed very high on the hill
(iv) the doors of the temple are closed.
Answer:
(i) it is in the form of stone statue

Question 3.
The temple was built on the high hill top so that
(i) no one may reach there
(ii) no one may steal the statue
(iii) only true devotees may reach there
(iv) wild animals may not enter the temple.
Answer:
(iii) only true devotees may reach there

Question 4.
‘Some Vast’ refers to
(i) the all-pervasive spirit of God
(ii) the vast air
(iii) the oceans that surround our Earth
(iv) the dense forest that surrounded the hill.
Answer:
(i) the all-pervasive spirit of God

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Question 5.
The last four lines of the poem mean that human life is
(i) an image of the eternity
(ii) an image of God
(iii) an image of life after death
(iv) an image of life to come.
Answer:
(i) an image of the eternity

Speaking Time

Complete the weak and strong forms of the words given below, with examples.
Answer:
MP Board Class 12th English The Spectrum Workbook Solutions Chapter 10 The Hill-Top Temple img 1

Reading Time

Read the following poem carefully :

A Psalm of Life
Tell me not in mournful numbers,
‘Life is but an empty ’ dream !
For the soul is dead that slumbers,
And things are not what they seem.
Life is real life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal,
‘Dust thou art, to dust returnest ’
Was not spoken of the soul.
Not enjoyment and not sorrow
Is our destined end or was,
But to act, that each tomorrow
Finds us farther than today.
In the world’s broad field of battle,
In the bivouac of life,
Be not like dumb driven cattle.
Be a hero in the strife !
Trust no Future, howe’er pleasant,
Let the dead past bury its dead,
Act, act, in the living present,
Heart within and God o’erhead. —H. W. Longfellow

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Now answer the questions given below :

Question 1.
Match the words in column A with their meanings in column B.

‘A’ – ‘B’

1. slumber – (a) decided by fate
2. earnest – (b) a temporary camp or shelter
3. destined – (c) struggle
4. bivouac – (d) sleep
5. strife – (e) serious and real
Answer:
1. (d), 2. – (e), 3. – (a), 4. – (b), 5. – (c).

Question 2.
What, according to the poet, is the nature of life ? (2009, 12)
Ans.
According to the poet, life is a real thing. It is a serious matter. It is not
an empty dream.

Question 3.
If the death is not our life’s goal then what is the real end of life ?
Answer:
The real end of life is to act and live in the manner that everyday we must be ahead of yesterday.

Question 4.
Explain the following lines in simple English :
But to act, that each tomorrow.
Finds us farther than today.
Answer:
It means that we must make progress daily. We should find or do something new every day. We must be always learning.

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Question 5.
The poet says ‘The world is like a field of battle’. Do you agree ? Write your response in your own words.
Answer:
Yes, we do agree. Life is not a bed of roses. Man has to struggle for achievements and survival. He has to earn his food. He has to make his life meaningful.

Question 6.
What does the poet say about the Past and the Future ?
Answer:
He asks us not to trust the Future however pleasant it may look. And we must not feel regret of our past life. Forget the unpleasant experiences of the past

Question 7.
‘Act, act in the living present ’. What does the poet really mean by these words ?
Answer:
Our life should be active. A man sitting idle is like a dead person^What we can do today should not be left for tomorrow.

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Question 8.
The title of the poem is ‘A Psalm of Life’. Psalm means a devotional or inspiring song. Do you agree with the title ? Answer in about 80 words. (2009)
Or
Justify the title ‘A Psalm of Life’. (2010)
Answer:
‘A Psalm of Life’ is an inspiring song for it directs the man to live in the present and forget past and future. The poet tries to inspire by saying that the life is real and one should make use of it. We should act for now.

In this poem, H.W. Longfellow talks about our actions like the Gita. He feels the world is like a battle field and like a good soldier we should fight out and live like heroes. We should act in the present like a hero, be not . dumb animals. We are the only creatures who have the power to understand. God up is watching and we have heart within us therefore we should act and struggle for now. Hence the title is justified and we agree with it.

Writing Time

Question 1.
Your school is organizing annual function. Draft a formal invitation to be printed, you are writing on behalf of the principal. Write the name of the chief guest and the guest of honour.

Govt. Higher Secondary School,
Maheshwar (M. P.)

Coordially invites you to its annual function which is going to be celebrated on 22nd Dec. 20… to 23rd Dec. 20… as per programme listed below. Mr. Y. N. Mehta, Dy. Commissioner, Adiwasi Vikas has consented to be the chief guest and Mr. B. N. Shukla, the Principal, Govt. College, Maheshwar will be the guest of honour.

Rupesh Verma
(Gen. Secretary, Students’ Union)
On behalf of the Principal

Programme

Inauguration — 22.8.20… 9 a. m.
Literary programmes — 12 p. m.
Cultural programmes — 8 p. m.
Prize Distribution — 23.8.20… 4 p. m.

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Question 2.
Write a formal invitation letter to the students of your school to attend the career counselling programme to be held in your school on IIT-JEE and PMT.
Ans.

Guna Public School, Guna (M. P.)
Ref—Career/20/IIT-JEE/PMT

Dt. 17-8-20…

To,
Ravindra Moghe
15, M. G. Road, Gali No. 1
Guna (M. P.)
Subject—Career Counselling Programme on IIT-JEE-PMT.
Ref—Your Application dated 31.7.20…
You are hereby informed that counselling program on IIT-JEE & PMT is arranged on 20th Aug. 20… from 9 a. m. onwards. You are required to bring photo state copies of all your documents along with other details. Report yourself at the reception counter
at 8 a. m.

Venue —Guna Public School, Guna.
Assembly Hall

Organiser
IIT-JEE & PMT.
Guna Public School, Guna.

Question 3.
Write a formal reply expressing your inability to attend the career counselling programme due to some reasons.
Answer:
To,
The Organiser,
IIT-JEE-PMT.
Guna Public School,
Guna (M. P.)
Sir,
I am in receipt of your letter No. Career/IIT/JEE/PMT dated 17th Aug. 20… . Thank you for the same. As I have been suffering from viral fever for 10 days. I have become very weak. So, I am unable to attend the said counselling programme. Kindly excuse my absence.

Yours faithfully,
Ravindra Moghe,
15, M. G. Road, Gali No. 1,
Guna (M. P.)

 

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Question 4.
Write an informal reply accepting the marriage invitation of your friend’s sister.
Answer:

171, M. G. Road,
Sohagpur (M. P.)
Dt. 20th Feb. 20…

Dear Sudhir,
Namaste! I hope you are quite O. K. there. I received the invitation-card of the marriage of your sister and became very glad to know that your family was able to find a suitable life partner for your sister. Congratulations.

I will certainly attend the wedding ceremony. I will be reaching there on 18th March.
Rest on meeting.

Yours true friend
Raghu Shinde

MP Board Class 12th English Solutions

The Spectrum Workbook General English Class 12th Solutions

Swami and Friends Question Answer Class 12 English A Voyage Chapter 20 MP Board

Class 12 English A Voyage Chapter 20 Swami and Friends Questions and Answers

Students can also download MP Board 12th Model Papers to help you to revise the complete Syllabus and score more marks in your examinations.

Swami and Friends Class 12th Question Answer

1. Monday Morning

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each:

Swami And Friends Questions Answers Chapter 20 Question 1.
Why was Swaminathan apprehensive of Mondays? Which sentence in the lesson suggests that it was a five-day week in Swaminathan’s school?
Answer:
Swami hates Mondays, for it means activity, discipline/and work after the holiday he had enjoyed on Saturday and Sunday. Monday is unpleasant for him. As Swami sits on the table in his room he finds that he had a lot of homework to do and only two hours for doing it. He feels bored and tired and is in no mood of work. The sentence in the text that suggests that it was a five-day week in Swaminathan’s school”After a delicious freedom of Saturday and Sunday it was difficult to get into the Monday mood of work and discipline.”

Swami And Friends Questions Answers Pdf Question 2.
Write about the four persons who were Swami’s friends. (M.P. Board 2015)
Answer:
Swami is a boy ten years old. He is a student of Albert Mission School, First Form (A). He is quite happy at school. His happiness results from the fact that he has got four best friends, who are Somu, Marti, Shankar and Samuel, the Pea. Later on he gets another friend, Rajam. In the company of these friends he cuts jokes, plays pranks, loafs about and also sometimes, is engaged in friendly quarrels. With Mani and Rajam his relations are personal and human; while his relations with the other three Somu, Shanker, and the Pea are scholastic and impersonal.

Question 3.
Describe Mani’s personality. (M.P. Board 2009, 2011)
Answer:
Mani is one of the closest friends of Swami. He is known as “the mighty good for nothing.” He towers head and shoulders above the other boys of the class and is admired by all. He is a sort of bully and says that his strength lies in the two clubs that he has at home. He can easily break the neck of those with it who offended him. Swaminathan was proud of his friendship. While others crouched in awe, he could address him as ‘Mani’ with gusto and pat him on the back familiarly.

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Question 4.
Write about Shankar’s qualities as a student.
Answer:
Shankar is another bosom friend of Swami. He is a brilliant boy of the class. He gets marks as high as ninety per cent and can answer any question put to him. However, there were some of the boys who felt that he got such high marks by flattering the teachers and by doing work for them but Swami has no doubts about his ability and considers him to be a marvel. He could speak to the teachers in English in the open class. He knows the . names of all the rivers, mountains and countries in the world. He could repeat history in his sleep and grammar was a child’s play to him. His face was radiant with intelligence.

Question 5.
What were the similarities between Swaminathan and Samuel, the Pea?
(M.P. Board 2009)
Answer:
Swami’s another bosom friend was Samuel, the Pea. He was called the Pea as he was very small in size. There is nothing uncommon about him, for he is neither a good student nor physically remarkable. The only similarity between them was laughter. They were able to see together the same absurdities and incongruities in things. The most trivial and unnoticeable things to others would tickle them to death.

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
Describe how Swaminathan passed Monday in his school. (M.P. Board 2016)
Answer:
Swami is a student of the First Form (Section.A). It is Monday morning,and Swami hates Mondays, for it means activity, discipline and work, after his enjoyment on Saturday and Sunday. As Swami sits on the table in his ‘room’ which is merely a table in the dressing- room of his father he finds that he has a lot of home work to do, and only two hours for doing it. He feels bored and tired, and is in no mood for work.

He reaches the class on time and we are introduced to the fire-eyed teacher Vedanayagan, the class-teacher and also arithmetic teacher. Swami does not like him and we get a taste of Narayan’s verbal humour when we are told that Swami’s “criticism of the teacher’s face was that his eyes were too near each other, that there was more hair on his chin than one saw from the bench, and that he was very very bad-looking.” All the sums done by Swami are wrong, they are crossed out, the remark ‘very bad’ is given, he is very severely pinched over his left ear, and told to go back to his seat.

Then comes the History period, and the teacher is Dr Pillai. His method of teaching is interesting, but it does not conform to any known principles of education. It is followed by the scripture period and the teacher, Ebenezar, is a fanatic Christian. He constantly criticises and abuses Hindu Gods who, for him, are merely pieces of stone.

Question 2.
Describe in short the main characteristics of each of Swami’s four friends.
(M.P. Board 2015)
Answer:
Swami is not a good student but his life at school is not entirely unhappy for he has four good friends. We get detailed pen-portraits of these friends. One of them is Somu, the monitor of the class. He was set about his business, whatever it was, with absolute confidence and calmness. He was known to be chummy even with the teachers. No teacher ever put to him a question in the class. It was believed that only
the headmaster could reprimand him. Then there is Mani, the Mighty-Good For-Nothing. He towers head and shoulders above the other boys of the class and is feared and admired by all. He is a sort of bully and says that his strength lies in the two clubs he has at home, and with which he can easily break the neck of those who offend him.

The third friend is Shankar, the most brilliant boy of the class. He gets marks as high as ninety per cent and can answer any questions that are put to him. He could speak to the teachers in English in the open class. He knew the names of all the rivers, mountains, and countries in the world. He could repeat history in his sleep. Gramihar was a child’s play to him. His face was radiant with intelligence. Swami’s fourth friend is Samuel, called the Pea, because of his small size. There is nothing uncommon about him, for he is neither a good student nor physically remarkable. The only bond between them was laughter.

2. Rajam And Mani

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each:

Question 1.
Who was Rajam? Why was Mani angry with him? (M.P. Board 2011,2012)
Answer:
Rajam was a new student. He was the son of the Superintendent of Police. Swami admired Rajam and was much impressed by his carefree conduct, manners, and by his brilliance as a student. On the very first day, Rajam had impressed him by his nonchalance. He dressed very well. He was the only boy in the class who wore socks and shoes, fur cap, tie and a wonderful coat and knickers. He came to the school in a car. He was a very good student too.

It was said that he had come from some English boys school somewhere in Madras. He spoke very good English, exactly like a European. He assumed a certain non chalance to which Mani was not accustomed to. If Mani was the overlord of the class, Rajam seemed to be nothing less. And add to all this the fact that Rajam was a regular seventy-percenter, second only to Shankar. These were sure indications that Rajam was the new power in the class. Day by day as Mani looked on, it was becoming increasingly clear that a new menace had appeared in his life.” So, Mani was jealous of Rajam.

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Question 2.
What did Mani decide to do with Rajam?
Answer:
Mani didn’t like Rajam. Rajam made a good impact in class and also in school. Mani grew jealous of him. So, Mani wanted to bundle him into the river or to crack his shoulders with his club. Mani wanted to have a duel with Rajam. He was raging in anger and wanted to break his bones.

Question 3.
How did Swaminathan react when Mani told him about his intention? (M.P. Board 2009)
Answer:
When Swami came to know about Mani’s plan he warned him to be careful, for Rajam’s father was the Superintendent of Police and the police are an awful lot. However, Mani did not care for all this and was determined to put the vile upstart down.

Question 4.
‘Swaminathan broke into loud protestation.’ What were the protestations?
Answer:
Swami broke into loud protestation as Mani thought that Swami and Rajam are getting friendlier. However, this was not true Swami did not tried to talk him but Rajam came to him asking for a sharpner. Swami not only gave a cold shoulder but even asked Rajam, Mani’s enemy to get it from the shop. Swami did not liked that Mani doubted his sincerity in friendship and broke into protestation.

Question 5.
Why did Swaminathan, Mani and Rajam go to a secluded spot in the school? What course of action did they decide to do for the next day?
Answer:
As soon as the day’s work was over, Swami. Mani and Rajam went to a secluded spot to settle matters. Swami again acted as “The Cord of Communication”.

Question 6.
What did Mani think while he was sitting at the river bank with Swaminathan waiting far Rajam?
Answer:
While sitting by the side of the river Mani was squatting on the sand with Swami. They were silent. Mani was staring at the ground with a small wooden club under his arm. He was thinking to break Rajam’s head in a short while and throw his body into the river. He was also thinking what would happen if Rajam’s body was found or if he would come to take revenge as a spirit. He thought to teach him a lesson even then.

Question 7.
How did Mani and Rajam, instead of fighting, become friends?
Answer:
It was at last agreed that they would meet the next evening on the banks of the river near Nallappa’s Grove. Accordingly, Mani came to the place with his clubs and Rajam came there with his air gun. When Mani pointed out that he should not have brought the gun as it was to be a hand-to-hand fight, Rajam pointed out that he ought not to have brought his clubs.

Both the air gun and the clubs were then dispensed with, the complaints which they had against each other were re-counted and hotly denied. The upshot was that the two suddenly decided to be friends, quite against the expectations of the readers. This conclusion was much to the relief of Swami, for he admired Rajam and wanted to be friends with him. As a sign of goodwill, Rajam offered some biscuits and Mani gladly accepted them.

MP Board Solutions

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
What were the reasons of animosity between Mani and Rajam?
Answer:
Rajam was a new student to the class of Swaminathan. He was a son of the Superintendent of Police. He had been transferred from an English school of Madras. He was well dressed and well mannered. He wore shoes, socks, and tie. He came in a car. He was also well built and knew all tacts. On the first day at school he came and walked up to the last bench and sat beside Mani and felt comfortable indeed till Mani gave him a jab in the ribs, which he returned. He had impressed the whole class on the very first day. He could speak English fluently.

No other student in the class was able to compete with him in any way. By that time, Mani was the boss as there was no one to challenge his strength. Rajam became a rival of Mani. In his manner to Mani he assumed a certain non-chalance to which Mani was not accustomed to. If Mani jabbed, Rajam jabbed; if Mani clouted, he clouted; if Mani kicked, he kicked. If Mani was overlord of the class, Rajam seemed nothing less. More than that Rajam was-a brilliant student which Mani was not. So, Rajam was now the new centre of power which was not acceptable to Mani. Thus, there emerged animosity between them.

Question 2.
Despite their friendship, Swaminathan was afraid of Mani. What incident in the chapter shows this?
Answer:
Mani and Swaminathan were good friends. Swami had respect for Mani. Mani was the hero for he was well built and was able to do anything which was beyond imagination for many. He could break neck of anyone with his clubs. Swami turns angry with him when he begins rivalry with Rajam. Swami likes Rajam very much his qualities. Mani doesn’t like Rajam because he appears to be a challenge for him. Mani decides to bundle Rajam into the river or to crack his shoulders with his club. Swami warns him to be careful for his father is the Superintendent of Police. When Mani showed reluctance Swami cried in protestation which made Mani surprised:

Question 3.
How was the showdown between Mani and Rajam fixed? Who was ‘the cord of communication between them? (M.P Board 2015)
Answer:
In order to solve the animosity between Rajam and Mani, Swami sat between Mani and Rajam on one of the back benches of the class. Swami acted as the chord of communication between the two. After exchanging some units of messages, they finally came to the point to prove their might at the river near Nallappa’s grove.

Question 4.
Describe the encounter between Mani and Rajam at the river which turned their animosity into friendship.
Answer:
On the fixed day Mani came to the place with his clubs and Rajam came there with his air gun. When Mani pointed out that he should not have brought the gun as it was to be a hand to hand fight, Rajam pointed out that he ought not to have brought his clubs. Both the airgun and the clubs were then dispensed with the complaints which they had against each other which were re-counted and hotly denied.

The upshot was that the two suddenly decided to be friends quite against the expectations of the others. This conclusion was much to the relief of Swami, for he admired Rajam and wanted to be friends with him. As a sign of goodwill, Rajam offered some biscuits and Mani accepted them. The three of them became close friends and became part of each other’s inner circle.

3. Swami ‘s Grandmother

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each:

Question 1.
Where did Swaminathan’s grandmother live? What were her belongings?
Answer:
Swaminathan’s grandmother was a very old lady. She lived in a room which was an ill- ventilated passage between the front hall and dining room. Here, she lived with all her belongings. The novelist makes the readers smile with an account of her elaborate bed. It was made of, “five carpets, three bed sheets, and five pillows, a square box made of jute fibre, and a small wooden box containing copper coins, cardamoms, cloves, and areca nut”

Question 2.
What did Swaminathan tell his grandmother about Rajam?
Answer:
Swami told his grandmother that Rajam was a brilliant boy. He was the son of a Superintendent of Police. He used to secure 90 per cent of marks in arithmetics.

Question 3.
What did grandmother tell Swaminathan about his grandfather? What did grandmother do with grandfather’s medal?
Answer:
The grandmother was a garrulous lady and liked to talk about events in the distant past. When Swami told her about Rajam she began telling him about his grandfather. She told that his grandfather was a powerful magistrate and the police trembled before him and dacoits ran away in fear. He got 200 marks in the subject and a gold medal. She gave it to Swami’s aunt she melted it and made four bangles out of it. Initially the grandmother use to wear it as a pendant.

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Question 4.
Describe in your own words the story of Rajam’s bravery as told by Swaminathan to his grandmother.
Answer:
Swami narrated a story of Rajam’s bravery. He told that once when Rajam’s father was camping in a forest, Rajam was also with him. Two tigers came upon them suddenly one knocking down the father from behind and other chasing down Rajam. Rajam took shelter behind a bush and shot it dead with his gun.

Question 5.
What was Swaminathan waiting for while his father was preparing to go out? What did Swaminathan do in the meanwhile?
Answer:
One Saturday afternoon Swami was eager to go off to his friend sand impatiently, waited for the departure of his father for his office. He pretended to read but in reality watched closely every detail of his preparation to go to his office. He watched him as he tied his turban, took his watch, his snuff box, his handkerchief and his umbrella. He went out but was called in by mother to the great annoyance of Swami, who had almost stood up to go out.

She wanted some money and father returned to give it to her and then went out a second time. As soon as he was gone, Swami also began to move out. To her mother, who wished that he should obey his father and stay at home, he replied that he was going to his drawing teacher. He had called him, so he must go, otherwise he would fail in the subject.

Question 6.
How did Rajam entertain his friends at his house? (ALP. Board 2009)
Answer:
Swami and Mani together went to Rajam. A policeman tried to stop them but when they
told him that Rajam was waiting for them, he at once became very polite and friendly. They were much amazed to see the large room of Rajam with his books arranged neatly on a big table, with a time-piece. Rajam kept them waiting for a few minutes, for he had seen his father doing so, and then came to them. He showed them his almirah full of toys.

They beheld astounding things in it, miniature trains and motors, mechanical marvels, and a magic lantern with slides many large picture-books, and a hundred other things. What interested Mani most was a grim air gun that stood in a corner. Rajam gave them permission to handle anything they pleased. In a short while Swaminathan was running an engine all over the room, Mani was shooting arrow after arrow from a bow at the opposite wall. When he was tired of it, he took up the air gun and devastated the furniture around with lead balls.

MP Board Solutions

Question 7.
Do you approve of Rajam’s behaviour with the cook? Give reasons in support of your
answer. (M.P. Board 2009)
Answer:
At Rajam’s house coffee with some snacks was brought for them by the cook. Rajam tried to snub him in order to impress his friends with the power and authority he had but the cook was more than a match for him. First, he tried to argue with Rajam and then walked off with the snacks telling him to come to the kitchen if he wanted the eatables. He had to go to the kitchen and bring in the snacks and the coffee himself. In order to hide his humiliation, he told his friends that he kicked the Cook for his impertinence and at the time he was lying unconscious in the kitchen.

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
“Swaminathan had good rapport with his grandmother.” Do you agree with this statement? Give instances in support of your answer.
Answer:
Swami had good rapport with his grandmother. Swami used to feel very snug and safe in the faint atmosphere of cardamon and cloves. After the night meal, with his head on his granny’s lap, he nestled close to her. Some Of the instances of his rapport with his granny is seen when he talks.with her. Let us see how he talks :

“Oh, Granny : he cried ecstatically.” You don’t know what a great fellow Rajam is.” He told her the story of the first enmity between Rajam and Mani and the subsequent friendship.

“You know he has a real police dress”, said Swaminathan.
‘Is it? What does he want a police dress for?’ asked Granny.

Question 2.
Swaminathan was waiting impatiently for his father to go out but his exit was taking too long. Describe how his father took so long to leave the house.
Answer:
One,Saturday afternoon, Swami had a plan to visit Rajam’s house. So, he was waiting impatiently for his father’s departure. However, his father was taking time for preparing himself. He stood before mirror, winding a turban round his head. He had put on his silk coat. Swami was watching him keenly. Now only his spectacles remained and then the watch. Swami felt glad that it was the last item and after that his father would leave for the court but then, his mother came with a tumbler of water in’one hand and a plate of betel leaves and nuts in the other, father drank water and held out his hand.

Mother gave him a little are nut and half a dozen neatly rolled betel leaves. He put them all into his mouth, chewing them with great contentment. Swami read at the top of his voice the poem about a woolly sheep. His father fussed about a little for his tiny silver snuff box and took his handkerchief. He hooked his umbrella on his arm which was the last signal. for starting. Swami had almost closed the book and risen. In the meantime, mother stopped his father. He again came back. He opened his bureau, gave money to her, adjusted his turban before mirror, took a heavy pinch of snuff and wiping his nose with hanky, went out. Now Swami was relieved.

Question 3.
Describe Swaminathan and Mani’s visit to Rajam’s house.
Answer:
On a Saturday afternoon, Swami visited Rajam’s house with Mani. As Rajam was a son of the Superintendent of Police, his house was protected by security guards. The guard stopped them. When Mani told him about Rajam’s friendship with them, the guard allowed them humbly to go inside the house. Rajam kept them waiting for sometime. Swami and Mani were amazed to see the large room of Rajam. The room was well arranged with his books on a big table and a time piece.

Rajam showed them his almirah which was full of toys. They were amazed to see the miniature trains and motors, mechanical marvels and magic lantern with slides. There were many good picture books and a number of other attractive things. Rajam allowed them to play with them and enjoy. Soon Swami and Mani began playing with Rajam’s toys. Then, they were served coffee and snacks. They enjoyed the visit very much.

4. ‘What Is A Tail’

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each:

Question 1.
Why did Swaminathan go to the Infant standards? What did he find children doing there?
Answer:
As the geography teacher was absent the boys of the First A i.e., Swami’s class, were in leisure. Swami missed his friend and he was alone. He wandered along the corridor of the infant standards. He saw the infants dabbling in wet clay and trying to shape models. For Swami it was a ridiculous thing to do at school.

Question 2.
Where did Swaminathan find Shankar, Somu and others? How did they behave with him?
Answer:
Swaminathan found Shankar, Somu and other resting under a tamarind tree. This was a secluded place in the school campus. They were playing some games. Swami joined them with a low, ecstatic cry but they responded indifferently. It disappointed. Swami. They turned their faces to him with a faint smile and returned to their game. Even Somu was grim.

Question 3.
How did Swaminathan know that the boys of his class called him ‘tail’? (M.P. Board 2011,2015)
Answer:
Swami was surprised at the behaviour of his friends. He asked for his place in the game. Nobody paid attention to him. His friends were talking amongst themselves. Again and again, they were referring the word ‘tail’ like what is a tail, whether there was anyone like a tail etc. When they said that there was someone present there who was a tail,

Swaminathan could comprehend very little except that the remark contained some unpleasant references to himself. He became very hot and wanted to cry. Then he asked about that remark and it got confirmed that they were calling him tail of Rajam.

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Question 4.
Describe Swaminathan’s state of mind when Sankar, Somu and others stopped talking to him.(M.P. Board 2011)
Answer:
Swami was feeling restless when Sankar, Somu, and others stopped talking to him. He was feeling lonely. His friends were also hostile to him. It was very painful for poor Swami but he could not help it. He wanted to talk to them and crack jokes but he was helpless. He was feeling uncomfortable.

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
Describe Swaminathan’s feelings when his friends called him ‘tail’ and stopped talking to him.
Answer:
See answer of Monday Morning given in comprehension topic.

Question 2.
Imagine yourself as Swaminathan. What will you do if your friends tease you and call you, names?
Answer:
Do yourself.

5. Father’s Room

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each:

Question 1.
How did grandmother react when Swaminathan told her about Rajam’s visit? What instructions did Swami give her?
Answer:
It was Saturday and Rajam was to visit Swami in the afternoon. Swami wanted to create a good impression on his friend, who was a VIP, the son of a Superintendent of Police. He first cleaned his table and arranged his books properly. Then, he talked to his Granny. She was too old and so he wanted that she should not come in when Rajam was with him. He told her so quite frankly, even though, it must have been rather painful for her.

Question 2.
How did Swaminathan cover up his lie that the room they were sitting in was his?
Answer:
During Rajam’s visit everything went on smoothly. They were together for three hours
and talked on a number of subjects as trains, tiger-hunting, police, ghosts, their friends and their teachers. The snacks were wonderful and the coffee was really good. Only, the cook did not change his dhoti and appeared before Swarni’s hero, in the same old dhoti. Rajam, too, put some awkward questions:
‘Which is your room?’Rajam asked.

Swaminathan replied with a grave face: ‘This is my room, why?’ Rajam took time to swallow this. ‘Do you read such books?’ he asked, eyeing the big gilt- edged law books on the table. Swaminathan w:as embarrassed.

Question 3.
What provoked Swaminathan to slap the Pea? What followed thereafter?
Answer:
One day when Swami entered the class, a giggle went along the benches. Somebody had written ‘Tail’ on the blackboard in huge letters. Swami suspected that the Pea and Sankar had done it. So, he slapped them on the face. Pandemonium broke out in the class, with Sankar, the Pea and Swami rolling over and over and tearing each other’s hair, faces, and clothes. The fight stopped for a moment when the teacher entered but a moment later,they left the class, to fight it out in the fields adjoining the school.

Question 4.
Why did Mani take the boys out: of the class to a secluded place? Why could he not succeed in bringing about a reconciliation?
Answer:
Swami told his friends that the Pea and Sankar wrote ‘tail’ on the blackboard and that they called him “Rajam’s tail”. Somu sided with Sankar and Pea, and Mani stood up for Swami.  In order to settle the matter Mani took the boy to a secluded place. A fierce fight between Mani and Somu followed. Mani swung his hand and brought it down on Somu’s nape. Somu pushed it away with a heavy blow. Mani aimed a kick at Somu, which would send him rolling. Somu stepped aside and delivered one himself, which nearly bent the other.

Question 5.
Who challenged Mani’s authority? How was the fight ended? (M.P. Board 2015)
Answer:
Somu challenged Mani’s authority. The fighting between them (Mani and Somu) was so violent and deadly, that the three youngsters (Sankar, the Pea, and Swami) thought that the two would murder each other. In great panic, they rushed to the headmaster and told him that two murders were being committed in the school-field. The head master came to the spot and easily parted the two boys and thus put an end to the fight. Swami was ” much surprised at this, for he had thought that the strength possessed by Somu and Mani was not possessed by anyone else.

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
What preparations did Swaminathan make for Rajam’s visit to his house?
Answer:
On a Saturday afternoon Rajam had promised to visit Swami’s house. He was very much excited. As he had already visited Rajam’s house, he did not want to show himself inferior in any way. So, first, he was confused about the room where he would entertain his friend. He selected his father’s room. He cleaned the table and arranged his books so neatly that his father was surprised. Then he instructed his mother to prepare something nice and sweet.

He suggested not to make usual coffee but very good and hot. He asked his mother to send the coffee and tiffin through the cook. He also instructed his cook to wear a clean, white dhoti and shirt. Then he asked his mother to ask father to allow him to use his room for the Rajam’s visit. However, father agreed. Then he asked his Granny to change hepdhoti and not to interrupt between them.

MP Board Solutions

Question 2.
Narrate the incident in the class which ultimately led to the fight between Mani and Somu.
Answer:
On the Monday morning after Saturday’s visit to Rajam’s house, Swami came to school but it was not at all pleasant for him. Someone had written the word ‘tail’ on the blackboard in huge letters. Swami suspected that the Pea and Sankar had done it. So, he slapped them on the face. The very next moment Swami, Sankar, and the Pea were rolling over and over and tearing each other’s, hair, faces, and clothes. The fight stopped for a while when the teacher entered the class but a moment later, they left the class to fight it out in a field outside the school. Somu sided with Sankar and the Pea while Mani stood up for Swami. A fierce fight between Mani and Somu followed. Mani swung his hand and brought it down on Somu’s nape. Somu pushed it away with a heavy blow. They were fighting in a bold manner. It continued till the headmaster came to the spot.

6. A Friend In Need

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each:

Question 1.
How did Mani contemplate taking revenge cm Somu, Sankar and the Pea?
Answer:
Mani contemplated taking revenge on Somu, Sankar and the Pea by breaking Somu’s waist, then he will get Pea under his heel and press him to earth and finally he will hang Sankar by his neck over Sarayu from Peepul biranch.

Question 2.
What prank did Mani and Swaminathan want to play on Rajam?
Answer:
They knocked at the door of Rajam’s room and as soon as he opened the door, they pretended to be a blind kitten and a blind puppy and crawled into the room as such. As they had closed their eyes, they did not see that Somu, Sanker, and Pea were there. The blind puppy had bitten the calf muscle of Rajam whereas the blind kitten had fondled the leg of Sankar. Mani stunned from the whole event saw that Pea was enjoying the whole scene from the comer with mischievous eyes.

Question 3.
What made Mani to boil with rage? How did Rajam assuage his anger? (M.R Board 2011)
Answer:
Swami and Man were angry with Rajam, for they thought he had played a dirty trick on them but Rajam soon pacified them by praising their performance as the kitten and the puppy. He then proceeded to give them a long lecture on the value of friendship, and the infinite torture to which those who harbour ennuty are subjected in Hell. So, vivid and eloquent was he, that the boys were terrified.

Question 4.
What impressive things did Rajam tell them about friendship?
Answer:
Rajam said impressive things about friendship, quoting from his book the story of the dying old man and the faggots which proved that union was strength. A friend in need is a friend indeed. He then started giving hairraising accounts of what hell had in store for persons who fostered enmity According to Rajam it was written in the Veda that a person who fostered enmity should be locked up in a small room, after his death.

Question 5.
What, according to the Vedas, was the punishment for those who foster enmity?
Answer:
Rajam gave an eloquent lecture on those who nourish jealousy and enmity with others. He cited instances and lines from the great religious book Vedas. He said that it is written there that a person who fostered enmity should be locked up in a small room after his death. He would be made to stand, stark naked, on a pedestal of red hot iron. There were beehives all around with bees as big as lemons, If the sinner stepped down from the pedestal, he would have to put his foot on immense scorpions and centipedes that crawled about the room in hundreds

Question 6.
What made the boys end their enmity Rajam’s lecture on friendship or the prizes he offered to each of them? Support your answer with arguments.
Answer:
I think Rajam’s lecture on friendship put greener effect on each of the friends. They got afraid of the religious interference and they were not in mind to continue enmity and get punishment in the life after death. The gift offered by Rajam may have also put them in pressure.

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 wards each

Question 1.
Mani and Swaminathan wanted to play a prank on Rajam. Describe how that prank
turned upon them?
Answer:
Mare and Swaminatharj wanted to play a prank on Rajaim They reached Ra jam’s residence. The two friends jumped over the boundary wall. A servant came running towards them. He asked “why did they climb the wall? There was a discussion between them and then they told the servant that they had come to meet Rajam. They knocked at the door of Ra jam’s room and as soon as he opened the door, they pretended to be a blind kitten and a blind pUppy and crawled into the room as such. As they had closed their eyes they did not see that Somu, Sankar and the Pea were there, Indeed they touched and fond:ed their feet and when they did open their eyes they saw that they had touched the feet of Somu, Sankar, and Pea. In this way, the prank had turned upon themselves.

Question 2.
How did Rajam bring about reconciliation between his fighting friends? (M.P. Board 2010. 2011, 2022)
Answer:
Rajam was a tactful boy. He belonged to a high society. He was a brilliant student. He always wanted to be cordial and friendly with everyone. So, when Swami and Mani wanted to play prank on him and Later were exposed he was not annoyed. He knew what they had done was out of jealousy and enmity among themselves. So, he tried to give an elaborate and effective lecture on friendship and how enmity can spoil their life.

He did not mind their dirty trick: Instead, he praised their performance as e kitten and the puppy. Then, he preached them on the value of friendship and said that .Those who harbour enmity are subjected to hell. They are tortured. Later, they all realised their faults. Then Rajam offered them gifts. There was reconciliation among them.

7. A New Arrival

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each:

Question 1.
Why was Swaminathan cold and reserve to his mother when he was taken to her room? (MP Board 2015)
Answer:
Swammatban’s mother was in labour pain. She had been in bed for two days. Swami didn’t see her in kitchen. He felt uncomfortable in her absence. When he was taken to her room, he found her lying weak and pale on the bed. She called him closer to her. As Swami was not so mature, he couldn’t understand what was going on. He was cold and reserved when he came in the room.

Question 2.
How did Swaminathan describe his little brother to the Pea? (MP Board 2012)
Answer:
Swami was confused at the birth of his new baby brother. When he came to school, the next day he told his friend the Pea about it. For him the baby was funny. He said “Oh, like him. He is hardly anything. Such a funny-looking creature.” Further, he said, “this thing has wonderful pair of hands, so small and plump. you know! But I tell you, his face is awful, red, red like chilli.”

MP Board Solutions

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
Describe in your own words the activities that took place In Swaminathan’s house on the night when his new brother arrived.
Answer:
Swami’s mother was to give birth to a baby. One day, his Granny said to him that he was going to have a baby brother. That night, he was allowed to sleep on Granny’s bed. The lights kept burning all night. Whenever he opened his eyes, he was conscious of busy feet scurrying along the passage. Late at night. when he woke up he saw a lady doctor in the hail. She behaved as if the house belonged to her. She entered mother’s room.

A mingled noise was coming out of that room. Then she came out and commanded Swami’s father to do something. He went away and returned with a small bottle in his hand. He hovered about uncertainty. The hushed voices, hurry, seriousness, agitations hot water, and medicine preparations for shering in a new person were all beyond the comprehension of Swami.

8. Before The Examinations

A. Answer the following questions i about 60 words each:

Question 1.
What change did Swaminathan observe in his father’s behaviour towards him before the examination? (MP.Board 2011)
Answer:
It was the month of April, just two weeks before the annual exams. Swami’ father, quite naturally, now wanted that his son should devote more time to his studies and often rebuked him when he saw the boy wasting his time. Swami thought that his father was changing and growing more fussy and difficult every day. However, his words had some effect on his son when he warned him that if he failed, his juniors would become his classmates and his friends would become his seniors, and would no longer like to mix up with him.

Question 2.
What changes did Swaminathan find in his friend’s behaviour before the examination?
Answer:
At school, everybody seemed “to be overwhelmed by the thought of the examinations.” His friends hardly exchanged even a few words with him, they were so busy with their preparations.

Question 3.
What hints did the school clerk give to Mani? Was Mani satisfied with them?
Answer:
Somehow or the other, the boys were under the impression that the school clerk knew all about the question papers and he could help them a lot. So, one day, Main visited him with a gift of brinjals. The clerk was pleased, welcomed Mani, and talked a great deal about various matters. When he did not come to the point, Mani asked humuntly to tell him a few important questions. The clerk did not refuse but told him vaguely that it is good to prepare maps, to solve five problems every day for Maths, and as regards English, there is nothing to worry about if he has read all the lessons

Question 4.
Do you agree to what Mani did to succeed in the examination? Give reasons in support of your answer . (M.P Board 2015)
Answer:
I think what Mani did to know the questions from the school clerk was not good., When he knew that the clerk had the idea about the questions he went to meet him. He took a gift to impress him. Though the clerk did not say anything clearly, Mani thought it right and prepared accordingly It is not right for a good student, It is unjustified.

Question 5.
What Incidents did Swaminathan narrate to his grandmother? Why was she not
interested in them that day?
Answer:
Swan-ti, one day after coming back home from school, felt rather dull. His mother was not at home. Granny was not in talkative mood still, he began narrating the Incidents that happened in school that day. First, he said that a boy in first stabbed another out of enmity Next he said that the headmaster knocked his toe against the door post. He got his and his toe began bleeding heavily. He went limping about the school the whole day. He couldn’t take the Third Form and so they had to leave. Granny was not at all interested in them that day.

Question 6.
Why did Swaminathan find his brother more interesting as he grew up?
Answer:
When Swami came back home from school, he was feeling dull. He wanted to talk to his Granny who was not interested in his talks. So, he came near his baby brother’s cradle. In the beginning he was skeptical of his brother but as he grew he became more interesting for him. He was six months old now and was charming. I-le still made noises whenever he saw anybody, thrust his fists into his month, damped his round arms up to the elbow and vigorously kicked the air. He also displayed his bare red gums in a smile. Swami loved each of his activities. Swami was feeling more attached with him.

Question 7.
What thoughts crossed Swaminathan’s mind when he gazed at the maps in the atlas?
Answer:
As the time of examination was close Swami tried to concentrate on study. He sat at his table and took out his atlas. He opened the political map of Europe and sat gazing at it. It puzzled him how people managed to live in such a crooked country as Europe. He wondered what the shape of the people might be who lived in places where the outline narrowed as in a cape and how they managed to escape being strangled by the contour of their land. Then, he thought about the size and shape of the country He wondered how such foolish ideas came into their minds.

Question 8.
How did Swaminathan prepare the list of things he wanted for the examination? (MP. Board 2015)
Answer:
Swami’s examination was close now. So two days before the examination he made a list of things he needed for his exams. He wrote unruled paper-20 sheets, Nibs-6, lnk-2 bottles, clips and pins. He nibbled his pencil and re-read the list. It was disappointing. He thought it was very short. Then, he scrutinize4 it and made another one monitoring:
Unruled paper – 20 sheets
Ruled white paper – 10 sheets
Black ink — 1 bottle
Clips — 3-6-12
Pins — &-12
The list was not satisfactory even now. After pondering over it, he added ,are board pad- 01 and one rupee for additional expenses.

Question 9.
What did Swaminathafl’s father do when he saw the list?
Answer:
After preparing the list of the items for his examination, Swami wanted to show it to his father. When he approached his father, he became angry. He said that there is no need to buy anything as everything was available there. His father said that he had no clips and Swami didn’t need them. He asked what was the use of pad when there were benches in school, Then, he said that he didn’t need anything. They are useless. Swami felt awful at such a response from his father.

MP Board Solutions

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
As the examinations approach you find a change in your patents’ behaviour. What changes do you find in your parents’ behaviour as your examination approaches? Do you like them? Give reasons for your answer.
Answer:
Examination is such a time when a student’s performance is examined periodically It doesn’t matter whether it is quarterly monthly half yearly, or annual. It bears the same value not only for the students but also for the parents. Examination gives the result which can make one proud or ashamed. So. it makes the student as well as the parents more conscious.

Parents’ behaviour is usually changed during this period. They begin taking much care of their son or daughter. They sometimes become stricter in their behaviour. They want that their son/daughter to learn all the things so that he/she does not escape anything but it is not possible in a day. So, they become irritated. This strictness, only during exam period is not wise. It grows bitterness in the student and affects him/ her badly. Hence, I don’t like such a change.

Question 2.
Why did Mani go to the school clerk’s house? Do you approve of his behaviour? Give arguments in support of your answer.
Answer:
As the examination was coming nearer, the students were becoming more worried. They were totally confused but overwhelmed. In the meantime, a rumour spread that the school clerk had the secret idea about the question paper. Mani was more concerned about it. So, one day he took a neat bundle of fresh brinjals, reached the clerk’s house and laid the bundle at his feet. The clerk was pleased.

The clerk was a clever fellow. He talked all about his cat and other things but he was not coming to the point cf examination. Finally, Mani’s patience broke down and he directly asked him about the question paper. The clerk replied vaguely about all the subjects. However Mani was satisfied. He carne back and began preparing towards that direction. What Man did was absolutely improper and ill-ways for a sincere student. No one call him a good student. A student’s duty is to labour honestly Mani never paid attention to his studies but wanted to know the question using unfair means. I condemn such a boy.

Question 3.
You want some money to buy certain things for the examination and your father has not yet sent you the money. Write a letter to him, convincing him how urgently you need them for your examination..
Answer:
Shivap Colony,
Bhopal (MJ)
13th July, 20xx
My dear Father,
I am a little bit worried that my examination is coming doser. Last week I wrote you a letter giving details about my preparation. I am preparing honestly. As I have some problems in English and Maths I have contacted a teacher who teaches me one hour daily. I am improving well. By the way I would like to remind you that I need some essential items for my examination. I had made a request to you to send me one thousand rupees. I have to give 500 to my teacher and the rest, I will spend for buying some stationery and books. It Is getting late. Please send it soon so that I can use it. Waiting for your prompt reply.
Your dear son,
Anshu.

9. School Breaks-Up

A. Answer the following questions in about 60 words each

Question 1.
What were Swaminathan’s friends doing when he left the examination hail?
Answer:
Examinations were going on in school. Swaminathan came out of the examination room but he found that none of his friends had come out. They were still in the examination room. Sankar was lost to the world with his let shoulder against the wall. Ralam had become a writing machine while Mani was still gazing at the rafters scratching his chin with the pen. The Pea was leaning back in his seat revising his answers, They all came out when the final bell rang.

Question 2.
How did Swaminathaii solve the question paper? (M,P. Board 2011)
Answer:
Swami came out of the exam-hall twenty minutes before the time. Out of six questions set, he had answered the first question to his satisfaction. The second was doubtful, the third was satisfaction, the fourth was clearly wrong but the sixth answer was the best of all. It took only a minute to answer it.

Question 3.
Which two morals did Swaminathan draw from the story in the question paper? Which of them did he write in the answer book and why?
Answer:
There was a story given in the sixth question. Swami had read the question at two minutes to four thirty, started answering a minute later, and finished at four thirty, The question was to give the moral of the story. Swami had thin never thought that this story contained a moral. However later he thought that it must have had one, as the question said. Then, it took a minute to decide where the moral was: “We must never accept a gold bangle when it is offered by a tiger.” or “Love of gold bangle costs on one’s life.” He saw more logic in the latter and wrote It down.

Question 4.
Why did Swaminathan lie about the lenth of the answer of the last question about moral of the story?
Answer:
When friends of Swami came out of the examination room, they began discussing how they answered the question. At the question of moral of the story, one of them had written a full page, Rajam had written only three quarter of a page while Sankar had written a little more than half. As Swami had written only a line, he felt disclosing it would be fooling himself, so he said he also wrote about half a page.

Question 5.
What did the Headmaster ask the students to do during the vacation?
Answer:
The headmastet came and announced the closure of school for the vacation. He also hoped that the boys would not waste their time but read story-books and keep glancing through the books prescribed for their next classes to which it was hoped they would be pornoted.

Question 6.
What mischief did the boys play while returning home? Why did they do it?
Answer:
After the headmaster’s speech the assembly was dispersed. Boys began making mischief ( jubilation for the vacation, ink bottles were broken and ink was poured over one another’s head and,clothes. Mani was the leader of the jubilant team of the boys. All the Stationary items were destroyed.

Question 7.
Why did Singaram, the peon rush into the crowd of boys with a stick?
Answer:
In the midst of merry making. the boys broke more bottles of ink on the ground. Mani cried to bring the turban of Singarani the school peon to dye in the ink. As Singaram was the only man to oppose such liberty of the boys, he became a target of the boys but as he heard something about himself, he became infuriated and rushed into the crowd with a stick and dispersed the revellers.

MP Board Solutions

B. Answer the following questions in about 150 words each:

Question 1.
Write the story of The Brahmin and the Tiger” in your own words. What moral will you draw from this story?
Answer:
There was a poor Brahmin. One day he was passing along the edge of a pond. He saw a tiger who was standing on the other side of the pond. The tiger was old. He had a gold bangle in his hand. He held the Brahmin and said that as he had killed a lot of innocent creatures and now he wants to make reconciliation by offering gifts to people.

He invited the Brahmin to take the gold bangle. The Brahmin, at first, declined the offer saying that the tiger is after all a tiger. How one can change one’s nature! The Brahmin refused to believe him but the tiger assured him by swearing on the name of God. The Irahmin got tempted and believing the words of the tiger, he waded through the water. He reached the other side of the pond but before he could hold out his hand for the bangle, he was inside the tiger’s mouth. The temptation of Brabmin killed him. So, the moral of the story follows Greediness is the worst evil.

Question 2.
Describe the spirit of liberty which the students were enjoying after the examination (M.P. Board 2012)
Answer:
Examination is a period of stress and exhaustion for the students. They forget all freedom and devote all their time to studies. The parents and teachers do not allow them any extra time for any other activities other than studies but as the examination gets over, the students become excessive joyous by jubilation. Sometimes, they misuse this liberty. They destroy the school property and make fun by teasing all those who come in their way. I feel it is not good at all. Such liberty should not be allowed jubilation does not mean destruction. Such practices should be banned.

Swami and Friends Summary in English

1. Monday Morning

In this chapter, we are introduced to Swami, the central figure in the novel. He is a boy often years and a student of First Form (A), Albert Mission School, Malgudi. He is not one of the brightest students of the school. After the delicious freedom and rest of Saturday and Sunday, he does not like to go to school on Monday. On Monday mornings, he is unable to concentrate on his studies.

We are also introduced to his close friends and his teachers. Among friends he is particularly intimate with Mani, a towering well-built personality, who with clubs at home can break any body’s neck. Among his teachers, there is the Christian Ebenezar,who is always praising his religion and criticising Hindu gods. Swami objects to this and the teacher tries to wrench his left ear off. Swami complains to his father, who gives his son a letter for the Headmaster, to be delivered the next morning. However, it has no effect and things go on as us gal.

2. Rajam and Mani

This chapter introduces us to a newcomer to the class, Rajam. He Is the son of the Superintendent of Police, well-dressed, intelligent, and a good student. In the beginning, he is regarded as a rival by Mani and is challenged to a fight. Swami is fascinated by him and is friendly with him. He is much relieved when the fight does not take place and the two are reconciled. Their friendship matures, the three are constantly together, and the others are excluded from this ‘inner circle’.

3. Swami’s Grandmother

In this chapter there are three sections. In the first section, we are given a character sketch of Swami’s Granny, the way she passes her days and of her ‘room’. Swami tells her of his new friend Rajam and she narrates to him the story of Harishchandra, till he goes to sleep. In the second section we are told of Swami’s anxiety to go out and bai about with his friends. As soon as his father is gone, Swami runs away to his friends, despite the remonstrance of his mother.

The third section gives an account of the visit of Swami and Mani to Rajam’s residence. They are much Impressed by the toys which he shows them, the respect which he commands, and the way in which col fee and snacks are brought in. However, the chapter ends on a note of comedy; the discomfiture of Rajam at the hands of the cook.

4. ‘What is a Tail’?

The friends of Swami were jealous of his friendship with Rajam. So, they called him “the Tail” of Rajam and refused to play or talk with him. Swami felt most wretched, isolated and unhappy.

5. Father’s Room

This chapter may conveniently be divided into three parts. In the first part, Swami seeks the permission of his father to use his room as his own during Ra jam’s visit in the afternoon and the permission is granted. In the second part; there is an account of the visit itself. In the third part the scene shifts to the school. Some one has written Tail on the blackboard in large letters. This leads to fierce fighting, till the Headmaster arrives, separates Somu and Mani, locked in a fierce fight at the time, and restores order.

MP Board Solutions

6. A Friend in Need

The chapter tells us how Rajam caused Swami and Mani to become friends once again with the Pea, Somu, and Shankar. This was done by inviting all of them to his house, giving them a lecture on friendship, and offering them attractive gifts if they became friends once again. Rajam, indeed, served the cause of friendship, in the hour of need.

7. A New Arrival

The new arrival Is Swami’s baby brother. The atmosphere of suspense, hurry and bustle which precedes the birth has been well-brought out. Swami failed to understand the meaning of the goings-on and as to why the lady doctor was treating the home as her own, and why she was being obeyed by all concerned. Lost in thought, he fell asleep. However, he knew the next morning that he had got a baby brother.

8. Before the Examinations

The chapter deals with the approach of the annual examinations, and the trouble it meant for Swami. At home, the father made a lot of fuss and made Swami study for long hours. At school, the examination fever seemed to have possessed all his friends. There was no gossiping and loitering about. It was rumoured that the school dark knew all about the question papers and frantic efforts were made to get some hints from him.

Mani visited him with a gift of brinjals and went to the extent of asking him directly about the question papers. His answers were vague and general but Mani was fully satisfied. He told what he knew to Swami and they prepared accordingly.

9. School Breaks-up

It was the last day of the examinations, and after that the school was to be closed for the vacations. Swami came out of the examination room twenty minutes earlier and waited for others to come but none came till the bell rang and then it was all noise and jubilation. The Headmaster addressed them briefly and announced that the school would remain closed till the 19th of June and shall reopen on the 20th.

There was excitement and joy at the announcement, and then they started breaking ink-pots and destroying articles of stationer Swami participated with joy In this mad spree. The fun went on till the school peon dispersed the revellers.

Swami and Friends Summary in Hindi

1. Monday Morning

इस अध्याय में हमें उपन्यास के प्रमुख चरित्र स्वामी का परिचय दिया जाता है। वह एक दस वर्ष का अलबर्ट मिशन स्कूल, मालगुड़ी के प्रथम भाग (अ) में पढ़ने वाला लड़का है। वह स्कूल के बुद्धिमान विद्यार्थियों में से नहीं है। शनिवार और रविवार की सुखद आज़ादी और आराम के बाद सोमवार को वह स्कूल नहीं जाना चाहता है। सोमवार की सुबह – वह पढ़ाई में ध्यान केन्द्रित नहीं कर पाता। हमें उसके अभिन्न मित्रों व शिक्षकों का भी परिचय मिलता है। दोस्तो

के बीच वह मणि के अधिक निकट है। मणि एक हष्ट-पुष्ट लड़का है तथा वह किसी की भी पिटाई करने के लिए अपने घर पर एक मजबूत हुंडा रखता है। शिक्षकों में क्रिश्चन इबेनेजार है, जो हमेशा अपने धर्म की प्रशंसा करता है और हिन्दू देवताओं की आलोचना करता है। स्वामी इसका विरोध करता है और शिक्षक उसके बाएँ कान को खींचकर दंड देने की कोशिश करता है। स्वामी अपने पिता से इसकी शिकायत करता है जो उसे अगले दिन प्रधानाध्यापक को देने के लिए एक चिट्ठी लिखता है। लेकिन इसका कोई असर नहीं होता। चीजें सामान्य ढंग से चलती रहती हैं।

2. Rajam and Mani

इस अध्याय में एक नये लड़के राजम के बारे में जानकारी मिलती है। वह पुलिस अधीक्षक का बेटा है जो सुसज्जित पोशाकवाला, तेज़ और अच्छा लड़का है। शुरू में वह मणि का प्रतिद्वन्दी माना जाता है और लड़ाई के लिए आमंत्रित किया जाता है। स्वामी उससे प्रभावित होता है और उसके प्रति मित्रवत् है। उसे बहुत राहत मिलती है जब लड़ाई नहीं होती और दोनों पीछे हट जाते हैं। उनकी दोस्ती गहरी हो जाती है और तीनों हमेशा साथ रहते हैं और अन्य लोगों को इस दायरे से बाहर कर दिया जाता है।

3. Swami’s Grandmother

इस अध्याय में तीन भाग हैं। प्रथम भाग में हमें स्वामी की दादी का परिचय मिलता है कैसे वह अपने कमरे में अपना समय गुजारती है। स्वामी उससे अपने नये दोस्त राजम के बारे में बताता है और वह उसे हरिश्चन्द्र की कहानी सुनाती है जब तक वह सो न जाए। दूसरे भाग में स्वामी की बेचैनी दिखाई गई है कि कैसे वह बाहर अपने दोस्तों के साथ खेले। जैसे ही पिता जी बाहर जाते हैं वह अपनी माँ के बुदबुदाने के बावजूद भी भाग खड़ा होता है। तीसरे भाग में राजम के घर पर स्वामी और मणि का मिलना दिखाया गया है। वे लोग उसके खिलौने, उसके रौब और कॉफी और नाश्ता परोसने के तरीके से काफी प्रभावित होते हैं। अध्याय हँसी के साथ समाप्त होता है-राजम का नौकरों के साथ मज़ाक।

4. ‘What is a Tail’

स्वामी के दोस्त राजम के साथ उसकी दोस्ती से जलते हैं। इसलिए वे उसे राजम की ‘दुम’ कहकर बुलाते हैं और उसके साथ खेलने और बात करने से इनकार कर देते हैं। स्वामी काफी दयनीय, अकेला और दुःखी महसूस करता है।

5. Father’s Room

इस अध्याय को सुविधा के लिए तीन भाग में बाँटा जा सकता है। पहले भाग में स्वामी अपने पिता से इस बात की स्वीकृति माँगता है कि राजम के आने के समय वह अपने पिता के कमरे का अपने कमरे के रूप में इस्तेमाल कर सके और उसे इसकी स्वीकृति मिल जाती है। दूसरे भाग में राजम के उसके घर आने की बात है। तीसरे भाग में विद्यालय का दृश्य आता है। किसी ने ब्लैक बोर्ड पर ‘Tail’ बड़े अक्षरों में लिख दिया है। इससे भयंकर लड़ाई छिड़ जाती है और लड़ाई तब तक चलती है जबतक कि हेडमास्टर आ नहीं जाते हैं और सोमू और मणि को अलग . नहीं करते हैं, जो गुत्थम-गुत्थी में उलझे हुए हैं और शांति कायम होती है।

6. A Friend in Need

इस अध्याय में बताया गया है कि कैसे राजम स्वामी और मणि को फिर से मणि, सोमू और शंकर के साथ दोस्ती कायम कराने में मदद करता है। यह उन लोगों को अपने घर बुलाकर दोस्ती पर भाषण देने और उन्हें उपहार देने से हुआ और वे फिर से दोस्त बन गये। राजम ने वास्तव में ज़रूरत के समय दोस्ती का फर्ज़ निभाया।

7. A New Arrival

नया मेहमान स्वामी का छोटा भाई है। वातावरण रहस्य, आपा-धापी और शोरगुल से भरा है, जो जन्म से पहले हो रहा है और जन्म ठीक से हुआ। स्वामी कुछ भी समझने में असफल है कि क्या हो रहा है और महिला डॉक्टर उसके घर में इस तरह आ-जा रही है, जैसे यह उसका अपना घर हो और सभी लोग उसका आदेश मान रहे हैं। इन्हीं विचारों में खोए-खोए वह सो गया। परंतु अगले दिन सुबह उसे पता चला कि उसका एक छोटा-सा भाई आया है।

8. Before the Examination

अध्याय वार्षिक परीक्षा के नज़दीक आने की स्थिति और इससे स्वामी की परेशानी का वर्णन करता है। घर पर पिता ने काफी सख्ती की और स्वामी को देर तक पढ़ने को बाध्य किया। स्कूल में परीक्षा का बुखार सभी दोस्तों पर चढ़ गया। ज़रा भी बातचीत या मटरगश्ती नहीं थी। यह अफवाह भी फैली कि स्कूल का क्लर्क प्रश्न पत्रों के बारे में सब कुछ जानता है और चोरी-छुपे कोई सुराग जानने का प्रयास जारी हो गया। मणि उसके घर उपहार लेकर गया और सीधे-सीधे प्रश्न पत्र के बारे में पूछ डाला। उसने अस्पष्ट सामान्य-सा जवाब दिया लेकिन मणि पूरी तरह संतुष्ट था। जो वह जानता था उसने स्वामी को बताया और वे उसके अनुसार तैयारी करने लगे।

9. School Breaks-up

परीक्षा का आखरी दिन था और उसके बाद छट्टियों के लिए स्कूल बंद होने वाला था। स्वामी बीस मिनट पहले परीक्षा भवन से बाहर आ गया और दूसरे मित्रों के निकलने का इन्तज़ार करने लगा लेकिन घंटी बजने तक कोई बाहर नहीं आया और फिर शोरगुल शुरू हो गया। हेडमास्टर ने उन्हें संक्षेप में संबोधित किया और घोषणा की कि, विद्यालय 19 जून तक बंद रहेगा और 20 को खुलेगा। घोषणा से उत्तेजना और खुशी थी और फिर वे दवात तोड़ने लगे और स्टेशनरी के सामान बर्बाद करने लगे। स्वामी ने भी पागलों की तरह इसमें हिस्सा लिया। मौज-मस्ती तब तक चलती रही जब तक स्कूल के चपरासी ने मौज उड़ाते बच्चों को भेज न दिया।

MP Board Solutions

Swami and Friends Word Meaning

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 20 Swami and Friends img 1
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MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 20 Swami and Friends img 3

Swami and Friends Important Pronunciations

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Solutions Chapter 20 Swami and Friends img 4

MP Board Class 12th English Solutions

MP Board Class 12th English A Voyage Textbook (Fiction and Drama)