Monday, March 20, 2023

Exam-based Class 11 short questions, answers


Short Questions and answers from the textbook.

1.      Where did the children use to play?

The children used to play in the garden of the Giant.

2.      What did the giant hear when he was lying awake in bed?

When the Giant was lying awake in bed, he heard some lovely music sung by a linnet.

3.      What did the snow and the frost do to the garden?

The Snow covered up the grass with her great white cloak, and the Frost painted all the trees silver.

4.      Where did the narrator and his servant make a forcible entry?

The speaker and his servant made a forcible entry to a lately abandoned chateau in Apennines.

5.      What bad habits did Aksionov have before marriage?

Aksionov had a very bad habit of drinking alcohol and becoming riotous and involving in a fight.

6.      Why did Aksionov thought of killing himself?

Aksionov thought of killing himself as he remembered all the tortures, pains and sufferings that he had to face without committing any crime.

7.      What did the child to the scab on his knees?

The child flipped it with a finger so that it flew away and landed on the edge of the carpet.

8.      What was he afraid of while walking across the carpet?

He was afraid of the black patches of the carpet which he thought to be the serpents and the red patches of the carpet which he took as the fire.

9.      What are the five blessings for which Jonathan is grateful?

The five blessings for which Jonathan is grateful are his head, his wife’s head and the heads of three out of four children.

10.  Why do the two soldiers spend their free time on Sundays away from the barracks out in the countryside?

The two soldiers spend their free time on Sundays away from the barracks out in the countryside because it reminded them of their home in country.

11.  Who is the speaker in the poem ‘Corona Says’?

Ans: Corona is the speaker in the poem ‘corona says’?

12.  Who claim that they are superior to all?

Human beings claim that they are superior to all.

13.  To which two things does the speaker compare his love in the poem?

The speaker compares his love with a red red rose and a sweet melody.

14.  Who claim that they are superior to all?
Human being claim that they are superior to all.

15.  What does the speaker promise?
The speaker promises to his beloved that he will love her till all the seas go dry, all the rocks melt with the sun and till the last breath.

16.  Why does the poet compare the world with a stage?
The poet compare the world with a stage because as in the stage, the humans are born, perform various tasks and go away from the world.

17.  What is the first stage in human life?
The first stage in human life is the infant.

18.  What is little i doing?
Little i is peering at the golden sunset from some high window.

19.  Who is the speaker addressing in the poem 'The Gift in wartime?
The speaker is addressing her own beloved husband who has already been killed in the war in the poem.

20.  Who preserve and pass on the oral tradition?
The elders preserve and pass on the oral tradition.

21.  What happened when Steve Jobs turned 30?
When steve Jobs turned 30, he was fired from his own company.

22.  How does the writer distinguish between the peaceful age and heroic age?
The writer distinguishes peaceful age as the age before World Wars and heroic age as the age after the world Wars.

23.  According to the writer, what are the four general human needs?
According to the writer, the four general human needs are decent work, freedom, good health and  friendship.

24.  Why does Wasserkopf demand a refund of his tuition fees from the school?
Wasserkopf demands a refund of his tuition fees from the school because he considers that the school education made him good for nothing.
Long Questions

1.      Write a folktale that you have heard or read.
Once there was a woodcutter who lived with his two children. They were Hansel and Gretel. They had a stepmother who hated them. Once there was a famine. The stepmother made her husband to leave them in the forest. They left them in the forest. But luckily they could find out the way to home.
After some time, she again made him agree that the children should be left in the deepest part of the forest. They did so. This time the children could not find the way to home rather reached a home made of cake, biscuits, sweets and sugar. A witch welcomed them and trapped Hansel in a cage. She wanted to eat their meat. But gretel outwit the witch and killed her by pushing her into the burning oven. They returned back home with a lot of gold, diamond etc. They lived happily ever after.

2.      Explain the following lines:

All the World’s a stage,

And all the men and women merely players.
Ans: The given lines are extracted from the poem All the World a Stage written by William Shakespeare. The poem explains that human beings are the mere actors performing their part in the world stage. He compares the world with a stage because in a stage, different actors come and perform their part and exit the stage. Similarly, human beings are born in the world, perform various roles like infant, schoolboy, soldier etc. in their lifetime and go away from the world after their deaths. The humans are thus mere players in the world stage. Although the human beings run for material gain throughout their life, they have to go from the world empty handed. Thay are the ultimate loser in the game of life. They are the puppets in the hand of destiny not more than that. So, the given lines speaks of the main theme of the whole poem.

3.      What is the theme of the poem The Gift in Wartime?
The poem The Gift in Wartime is written by Tran Mong Tu. The poem describes the effects of the war. The poet herself has the first-hand experience of the Vietnam war. The war turned to be a shameful experience as many people felt the tragedy of war like heavy loses of life and property. So, the main theme of the poem is to draw our attention towards the negative impacts of war. In her opinion the war is never positive because it leaves its impacts in people physically, psychologically and mentally. In return for the love of the country, dedication, patriotism, the war gives us back the gifts like the death of the dearest ones, blood, medals, silver stars and the badges. Not only that war also provide tears, cold winter, smell of blood to the family. War gives the lips with no smile, the arms without tenderness and warmth, the eyes with no sight and the motionless body.
Thus, the poem wants to explain the backdrops of the war and appeals that wars should be stopped.

Job Application

Write an application for the post of an accountant in a hotel.

Bharatpur-2, Kshetrapur

25th Feb. 2023

To,

The Managing Director

Everest Hotel,

Main Road, Narayangarh

                                    Sub: An application for the post of accountant.

Dear Sir

With reference to your advertisement published on The Kathmandu Post on the 20th of Chaitra for the post of accountant, I wish to apply for the same.

I am 20 years of age. I passed my SLC in first division and have joined +2 in Balkumari Multiple Campus, Narayangarh. I completed my +2 and B.B. S. from there in 2020 A.D. Since then, I have been working as an accountant in Himalayan Hotel, Patan. Beside my experience and qualifications, I have completed diploma in computer application. I have fluency in written and spoken English. Therefore I think my experience and qualification would be useful for my performance of duty and meet requirement for the post.

I have included all my documents along with this application. You can contact the campus chief of Balkumari Multiple Campus and the manager of Himalayan Hotel if you need any information about my work and character.

If I am selected for this post, I will try my best to satisfy you and your hotel as well.

I look forward to getting a positive response from your very soon.

Yours faithfully

Bhim pd. Bhusal

Write a newspaper report about an accident on ‘12 killed in a bus accident’.

12 killed in a Bus Accident’

Kurintar, Chaitra 23 (RSS)

A day bus (Na 5 Kha 234) going to Kathmandu from Hetauda collided with a truck at Kurintar at 2:15 pm. The bus carrying about sixty passengers was in a high speed where suddenly the brakes of the bus failed and it collided with a truck that was coming from opposite side. When it collided with the truck, there was a loud sound of bursting. One of the local said, “We were having our meal when we heard a loud sound of collide nearby and hurried towards the sound. When we reached there, we found many passengers trapped and crying for help.” It is also reported that eight passengers who sat in the front seat of the bus were killed in the spot. Two passengers were killed on the way and other two were killed in the hospital while undergoing treatment. Fourteen are seriously injured and are sent to Kathmandu in an ambulance. Both the drivers are in police custody now. The further investigation is going on.

A strange dream you have dreamt in your life.

Last night I dreamed a strange but interesting dream. In my dream a snake was chasing me. I was running away from the snake. Suddenly wings grew up from my hand and I flew in the sky. I felt relieved while flying in the sky. Everybody was looking at me from the road, house and ground. Then at last I landed on the ground. There was a crowd of people looking up at me.  

Then again when I tried to fly, I could not. I check my hand and noticed that my wings were gone.  I was in total confusion. I stopped for a while and realized that everything I saw was dream. I found myself in my bed.

The review of a film you have recently seen

A few day ago I saw a Nepali film named “Buhari” which means daughter in law. film was very interesting, humorous and ironical as well. The main characters of the film were Shree Krishna Shrestha, Jala Shah, Sunil thapa, Neer Shah and so on. There was a great crowd of people in Jai Nepal Cinema Hall to watch this film. The songs of the film were popular and heart touching. No one could help laughing when Shree Krishna Shrestha and Sunil Thapa appear in saris and blouses as beautiful ladies.

The story of the film was based on the social problem deeply rooted in Nepalese society. In our society, the daughter- in –laws have to face many problems. If the daughters in law cannot bring a lot of dowry, they are insulted and humiliated in the family as well as society. In the film “Buhari” Jala Shah is not accepted as daughter in law due to her poor family background as a result she has to face many obstacles. In life when she gives birth to her son Shree Krishna Shrestha, hi father is not ready to accept her as his wife in the beginning. But at last the hero and his father realized their faults. This leads to happy reunion of the family and they live happily ever after.

Very less violence has been used in the film. The dialogues, action, music and costumes of the film are very much realistic and based on Nepali society.

Write a letter to the editor in chief of a newspaper explaining about a road problem of your locality.

Kshetrapur, Narayangarh

15th March 2022

To

The Editor in Chief

The Kathmandu Post,                     

Kathmandu, Nepal

                   

I shall feel highly grateful to you if you publish the following lines in your newspaper.

All the people of our area want waking up. Private appeals and requests have had no effects. Perhaps, little publicity will do no harm. For nearly one year, Kshetrapur to Baseni road has been almost impassable. The surface of the pitch is badly broken up by the heavy rain and over flow of heavy trucks and buses. As a result, there are large pits in the middle of the road. Both the sides of the road have been overtaken by the local people.

Moreover, there are heaps of sand, stones and bricks on both sides. That leaves very little place in the middle only that is full of pits. The vehicles have to be driven slowly and still there is a great possibility of accident. I am sure the public will bring pressure on those responsible authorities. Thus, I want to draw the attention of the concerned authority to take quick steps for repairing the road as soon as possible.

Yours faithfully

Hemanta Parajuli

 

Saturday, March 18, 2023

Class 11 opt english 2079-12-5

 

FAQ No. 1. Briefly explain the contribution of Christopher Marlowe for the development of Elizabethan drama.

Christopher Marlowe is one of the pioneer dramatists of Elizabethan drama. He contributed a lot for the development of tragedy in English literature. Bloodshed, revenge, violence, hunger for power and thirst for knowledge are the main themes of his dramas. His first tragedy ‘Tamburlaine the Great’ is in two parts. It is written in the splendid blank verse that he brought to the stage. The first part deals with the rise to power of Tamburlaine, a shepherd and a robber. In the second part, Tamburlaine is pulled to Babylon in a carriage drawn by two kings defeated with him.

In his next drama, ‘The Jew of Malta’, the governor of Malta taxes the Jews there, but a rich Jew, Barabas, refuses to pay. His money and house are taken from him and in revenge he begins a life of violence but meets with a terrible death at last.

Another play Dr. Faustus deals with the uncontrolled thirst for knowledge and power. Even he sells his soul to the devil, Mephistopheles, for 24 years of splendid life. In the end, he gets a tragic and terrible death. Christopher Marlowe also influenced other Elizabethan dramatists through his powerful blank verse and the development of characters.

FAQ No. 2. Briefly explain the contribution of William Shakespeare for the development of Elizabethan drama.

William Shakespeare was the greatest Elizabethan playwright. The main glory of Elizabethan period was its drama and especially the dramas of William Shakespeare. No other English authors has equaled his brilliant verse and characterizations. He wrote 37 dramas, many sonnets, lyrics and poems. He introduced English sonnet in literature. His dramas can be divided into three main categories; historical plays, tragedies and comedies. (Write other detail about his dramas)

 The Piece of String                                                                  

FAQ Is Hauchecome more of an ignorant or an innocent man? Why?

In my opinion, Hauchecome is more of an innocent man. He just went to Goderville without knowing that he was going to meet his misfortune there. He had just picked up the piece of string as of his habit of collecting things that may be helpful in future. He was a simple villager. He was unknown of the fact that someone was looking at him so carefully and he was his enemy. He was also ignorant in the case he was suspected even though he was not the one who stole the pocketbook. Moreover, it was his ill fate that the pocketbook was lost the same day at the same place. He was unaware of the fact that his enemy already disgraced him. Although he told that it was just a piece of string that he picked up from the floor, no one on the earth could believe that a man can just pick up a piece of string in such a crowded place. And by the time the pocketbook was returned, people in his surrounding still talked behind his back negatively.

FAQ. Who do you think should be blamed for the death of Hauchecome? He, himself or the society? Why?

For me both he and the society should be blamed for his death. He, himself should be blamed since he let the people around him affect him. He should have ignored them for he knew to himself that he was innocent. He wasn’t able to remain strong when people tried to accuse him. He should have understood that there would be many enemies in the society who would try to laugh at someone else’s sufferings. He should have tried to make other people convince from his good deeds in the society like helping others in their need, going with them and talking face to face and trying to make them clear about his habit of picking up a piece of string. Moreover when the pocketbook was returned, he should have visited each and every family in the village and told them about the truth and his innocence.

Moreover, the society should be responsible for his death as they were the reason for the weakness of Hauchecome. They kept on saying bad ideas to him which made him feebler and made him feel not to fight anymore. The society should be structured to help the innocent and punish the guilty one. Moreover, the society shouldn’t have treated him badly unless and until he was found guilty. They should have stood in favour of the weak one and make him comfortable.

How does the story mirror the problem of social injustice?

Appending to the story, Hauchecome was blamed for the crime he did not commit. People easily judged him even though they did not know the truth. Towards the end of the story, he was still not given any justice. This shows the problem of the society where injustice is not being reasonable. Some criminals are away from penalties, while innocent people are being punished and are becoming the victims. People easily believe in rumours and give accusations immediately without asking for the real story.

 The cactus summarySummary 

The Story Cactus by O. Henry is a story of a boy named Trysdale who was in love with a girl. Later on, the boy had to separate with her. The reason why Trysdale had a break up with his beloved remains in suspense till the end of the story.

At the beginning of the story he was seen drinking alone at an apartment and his friend, the girl's brother came there and asked the reason of drinking alone. Then he tells him the story how he happened to broke up with his beloved.

Trysdale, actually had told her a lie that he knows Spanish well to impress her. However, when he proposed she did not give the answer immediately to him and asked him to wait till next day.

Trysdale waited impatiently for the answer of the girl. But the next day, the girl sent him a red vessels with a cactus plant. There was a tag which he thought that was the vernacular name of the plant. There was no note at all.

His friends asked him if he knew English well. He said no. Neither he knew what was written on the vessel. Actually the word written on the vessel was VENTOMARME, which means come and take me.

Trysdale did not get what was it until the girl's brother or his friend told him about this. Just because of his white lie, he had to be apart from his love. If he had not told the lie, the girl would have sent the message in some common language. But due to his one mistake he lost her.

Even if the lie is insignificant and small it sometimes can create a big and undesirable result.

1. What had happened israel in the past? 

Trysdale had a love affair in the past which could not last longer. His girlfriend had broken up with him and had married someone else.

2. Does Chris Dale blame himself for the misfortune instead of blaming the girl?

Trysdale blames himself for the misfortune because he thinks that whatever happened,  happened because of him. He thinks that he is not worthy to get someone's love. He thinks that the girl left him because she knew that he doesn't deserve it. She could not spend her whole life with such a man. He thinks that he is an average, unworthy and undeserving man to be loved by a girl.


3. How does the coincidence of the Spanish language bring a counterproductive move in the story? discuss.

Trysdale had once told his girlfriend a lie that he knew Spanish language. Thinking that her boyfriend knew Spanish, the girl send him a cactus with a message written in Spanish language. The message actually was the acceptance of the marriage proposal made by Trysdale but Trysdale could not understand the message written in Spanish due to which he lost her.

He had told himself that her paleness was from thoughts of another then the man to whom she was about to give herself. It means that Trysdale thinks that she rejected and broke up with him because she liked someone else. She had feelings towards someone else to whom she married later.  But it was just his thought before knowing the truth that the girl had actually accepted his marriage proposal.

One and only person who is guilty in this entire incident is Trysdale.Had he not told lie to his girlfriend that he knew Spanish they would have married each other and their life would be different. Lies will always be bitter at the end no matter how sweet we made it in the beginning.

Trysdale had hidden the matter even with his close friend. The reason behind this maybe he wanted to tell him later as his girlfriend once accepts his marriage proposal.  But she broke up with him and he becomes sad. He in tragedy, may have decided to deal with his sorrow by himself. He may have thought why would he be involving anyone in his sorrow. So he didn't tell even with his close friend.

Summary of Half a Day

The story opens in an unnamed city early in the morning. The narrator, a young boy, is struggling to keep up with his father, who is walking him to school for the first time. Although his father is cheerful and reassuring, remarking that the day represents an important step forward in life, the narrator is nervous; he feels he’s being punished: “I did not believe there was really any good to be had in tearing me away from the intimacy of my home” (Paragraph 5). His anxiety only increases when he arrives at school, where he and the other children are divided into groups and welcomed by a woman who advises them to accept the school as their new home.

 

The narrator and the other students do so and find themselves enjoying their new environment; they attend classes, play games, nap, and make new friends. As time goes on, however, they realize that their new lives also involve a great deal of hard work and frustration: “And while the lady would sometimes smile, she would often scowl and scold” (Paragraph 14).

 

As sunset approaches, the narrator emerges from school expecting to find his father waiting for him as he promised. When his father doesn’t show up, he begins walking home by himself and runs into a middle-aged man who greets him familiarly. They exchange pleasantries, and the narrator continues walking, only to find that the city has changed dramatically since the morning; he’s now surrounded not by gardens, but by crowds of people, cars, and tall buildings. Increasingly alarmed and more desperate to reach home than ever, the narrator is trying to cross a busy street when a young boy approaches to help him, addressing him as “Grandpa.”


Summary of 'Boys and Girls'

The narrator of 'Boys and Girls,' a coming of age story, tells us about her life as a child on a fox farm and how she discovered that her role in this place changes once she learns to become a 'girl.'

She begins the story by announcing that her father was a fox farmer. She describes the gruesome work of skinning the foxes for pelts and notes that it disgusted her mother. The narrator, however, found the smell of blood and flesh reassuring. She and her brother, Laird, are both close to the work that her father and his hired man Henry Bailey do.

Bedtime Stories and Early Ties

While the children enjoy the outdoors, they're uneasy in their upstairs room at night, where Laird sings himself to sleep and the narrator tells herself stories. These stories combine the world that the narrator lives in with fantasies about opportunities not available in that world. For example, she saves people from a building, shoots rabid wolves, and rides into town heroically on horseback.

Both the narrator and Laird assist their father with his duties. The narrator is proud to be part of her father's world, and she prefers his reserved manner and his focus on work to her mother's ramblings about boys she used to date and dresses she used to wear.

The narrator's mother tries to find things for her to do in the house, but she finds the kitchen depressing and rushes out as soon as she can to do her father's work, which she considers more important. Her mother complains that it's like not having a girl at all, and that once Laird gets older her father will have 'real' help and she can retain her daughter in the kitchen.

 

Bloody Deeds

The narrator tells us that the foxes eat horse meat and that the family sometimes kept horses in the stables to be butchered. She tells of two such horses, Mack and Flora, that the family has when she is eleven years old. She has also become conscious of the fact that she is expected to become a 'girl' and that this is an identity that implies inferiority.

The narrator and Laird hide to watch their father and Henry shoot Mack. This seems to disturb Laird, so the narrator takes him into town to see a show. When it comes time to shoot Flora two weeks later, she realizes that she is now ashamed of her father's work and has started paying more attention to how she looks and whether or not she will be pretty.

Flora breaks away from the narrator's father as he leads her out of the stable to be killed. Flora heads for the gate on the other side of the stable, which has been left open. The men yell for her to shut it, but she opens it wider instead. Henry and her father don't see her do it, but Laird does. The men take Laird with them to chase down Flora.

Becoming Girls and Boys

Meanwhile, the narrator tells us that she has sectioned off the room she shares with Laird, and the stories she tells herself at night have changed. Now she's more concerned about what she looks like and instead of rescuing others, she's being rescued.

Gender Roles In Alice Munro’s “Boys and Girls”, the story is focused on a working class family who lives on a farm. A man’s role on the farm or in general is to work for the family and do the heavy work that a woman wouldn’t be able to do. The daughter in the story is very much inspired by the father and wishes to pursue in the activities that are being performed around the farm. The mother needs help around the house and that was the role many females took over for many centuries and generations. Throughout the existence of society gender roles are often exchanged and unfairly distributed. The point of view Alice Munro wants to establish is that women are capable of doing a fair share of the things men can do. There is a diversity among males and females both for the obvious and not so obvious reasons. The characteristics society defined as a man was someone who was strong and able to care for the land. Society defined a female as the complete opposite. “She’s just a girl” occurs in this short story twice, and yet each time it is presented it has a different meaning. The first occurrence was the comment made from a salesman. The salesman said it in admiration to the young girl, praising her for being a girl however, the second occurrence was by her father negatively belittling her at the dinner table for letting the horse out of the gate. The protagonist’s father belittles the girl in accordance to the male feeling superior and degrading the women due to the secondary objects.


Alice Munro’s “Boys and Girls” was first published as an individual story in 1964 and was also included in Munro’s 1968 collection, Dance of the Happy Shades. The story takes place at one home in rural Canada, and the narrator, a soon to be 11-year-old girl, carefully describes her father’s work as a fox farmer. The work is seasonal, but the narrator begins in the “several weeks before Christmas” when her father would begin the task of removing fox pelts from the “small, mean, and rat-like” bodies in the basement. Her mother, the narrator notes, “disliked the whole pelting operation” (Paragraph 2). The family’s “hired man,” Henry Bailey, helps the narrator’s father and teases the children.

 

At that time of year, the narrator and her younger brother, Laird, “were afraid at night.” They sleep upstairs in an unfinished room where, she imagines, “bats and skeletons” live. The children have “rules to keep [them] safe,” which define which parts of the room they can enter with or without the lights on (Paragraph 4). Both children sing themselves to sleep. Once Laird falls asleep, the narrator starts to tell herself stories that continue “from night to night.” These stories are about her, “when [she] had grown a little older; they took place in a world that was recognizably [hers], yet one that presented opportunities for courage, boldness, and self-sacrifice” (Paragraph 7).

 

Like the narrator and her brother, the foxes also live in an enclosed space. Their pen is “surrounded by a high guard fence, like a medieval town, with a gate that was padlocked at night” (Paragraph 8). All of the foxes have names, given by the narrator, her father, and Laird. The narrator’s job is to provide the foxes with water every day. But despite everyone’s familiarity with the foxes, “naming them did not make pets out of them, or anything like it” (Paragraph 10).

 

The narrator notices that, when she helps her father with the foxes, he is quiet, which is “different from [her] mother” who often told her stories (Paragraph 11). He refers to her as a “hired hand” to a visitor, which she considers a compliment. The visitor, though, remarks: “I thought it was only a girl” (Paragraph 11).

 

One night, the narrator overhears her father and mother discussing her. They meet in front of the barn, which is an “odd thing” because her mother “did not often come out of the house” (Paragraph 13). The narrator overhears her mother comfort her father, encouraging him to “wait till Laird gets a little bigger,” because then he’ll “have a real help” (Paragraph 14). Her mother longs to have help in the house; at the moment, she says how “it’s not like [she] had a girl in the family at all” (Paragraph 16).

 

The narrator recognizes that her mother loves her but is also her “enemy.” She recognizes a plot to “get [her] to stay in the house more,” though she notes that, in retrospect, “it did not occur to [her] that [her mother] could be lonely, or jealous” (Paragraph 17).

 

Things change the winter that the narrator is 11 years old. Her grandmother visits, and she begins “to hear a great deal more on the theme [her] mother had sounded when she had been talking in front of the barn” (Paragraph 21). The family’s foxes eat horsemeat from old local horses who are put down. As more farmers purchase tractors at the end of World War II, the narrator’s family has more horses to buy. That year, they purchase two, Mack and Flora, who the narrator’s father and Henry Bailey will shoot in the spring.

 

Laird and the narrator sneak into the barn to watch from the loft, and they see their father and Henry shoot the horse. The narrator notices how Laird “had drawn a long, groaning breath of surprise” after their father shoots the horse, and she hurries him out of the barn. As Laird becomes “young and obedient again,” she remembers a time, years before, when she endangered him on the top beam of the barn (Paragraph 32). She makes Laird promise not to tell that she brought him to watch the horse killing, and then she takes him into town to watch a movie.

 

Two weeks later, when she knows that they will kill Flora, she “[doesn’t] think of watching it.” She is “a little ashamed” and has “a new wariness, a sense of holding-off,” in the way she thinks about her father (Paragraph 36).

 

But when the men take Flora out of the barn, she breaks free and runs through the backyard. It is “exciting” to the narrator “to see her running, whinnying, going up on her hind legs, prancing and threatening like a horse in a Western movie” (Paragraph 38). When Flora runs to the gate, the narrator’s father and Henry Bailey shout to her to run and close the gate. But “instead of shutting the gate,” she “[opens] it as wide as [she can]” (Paragraph 41).

 

The men, including Laird, pass through the gate to catch Flora, and the narrator “[shuts] the gate” (Paragraph 42). She returns inside to her mother, knowing that they would catch Flora but also fearing what would happen, because she “had never disobeyed [her] father before.” The narrator recognizes the she is “on Flora’s side” (Paragraph 43).

 

The narrator sits upstairs on her bed, in the room which she had begun to decorate, and reflects on her and Laird’s nighttime routine. They “did not sing at night any more.” In her nighttime stories, “something different was happening,” and instead of rescuing others, “somebody would be rescuing [her]” (Paragraph 45).

 

When the men return, Laird boasts that “[they] shot old Flora” and holds up “a streak of blood” on his arm as proof (Paragraph 46). Over a meal, Laird tells the group that it was the narrator’s fault that Flora escaped. At her father’s disbelief, and “to [her] shame,” the narrator feels herself start to cry. She has no answer when he asks her why, but, “with resignation,” he dismisses her with the phrase, “she’s only a girl.” The story ends with the narrator wondering: “Maybe it was true” (Paragraph 48).

 Summary Boys and Girls 

The story is set in a rural Canadian home, and the narrator, a soon-to-be 11-year-old girl, describes her father’s work as a fox farmer with care. The work is seasonal and the narrator begins removing fox pelts from the small, mean, and rat-like bodies in the basement a few weeks before Christmas. The narrator mentions that her mother despised the whole pelting operation. Henry Bailey, the family’s hired man, assists the narrator’s father and teases the children. The narrator and her younger brother, Laird, were afraid of the dark. They sleep upstairs in an unfinished room where bats and skeletons, she imagines, live. To keep them safe, the children have rules that specify which parts of the room they can enter with or without the lights turned on. Both children fall asleep singing to themselves. When Laird falls asleep, the narrator begins telling herself stories, which she continues to tell herself night after night. These stories are about her when she was a little older, and they took place in a world that was recognizable as hers and offers opportunities for courage, boldness, and self-sacrifice.

The foxes, like the narrator and her brother, live in a small space. Their pen is encircled by a high guard fence, reminiscent of a mediaeval town, with a padlocked gate at night. The narrator, her father, and Laird give each of the foxes a name. Every day, the narrator’s job is to bring water to the foxes. Although everyone was familiar with the foxes, naming them did not turn them into pets or anything similar. When the narrator assists her father with the foxes, she notices that he is quiet, in contrast to her mother, who used to tell her stories. To a visitor, he refers to her as a hired hand, which she takes as a compliment. The narrator overhears her father and mother talking about her one night. They meet in front of the barn, which is unusual because her mother didn’t leave the house very often. The narrator overhears her mother console her father, telling him to wait until Laird is a little bigger so he can get some real help. Her mother longs to have help in the house; at the moment, she says how it’s not like she had a girl in the family at all.

Her mother loves her but is also her adversary. She recognizes a scheme to persuade her to spend more time at home, though she admits that it never occurred to her that her mother might be lonely or jealous. Things change the winter that the narrator is 11 years old. When her grandmother comes to visit, she starts to hear a lot more of the same theme that her mother had sounded when she was talking in front of the barn. The foxes in the family eat horsemeat from retired local horses. The narrator’s family has more horses to buy as more farmers buy tractors at the end of WWII. That year, they buy two, Mack and Flora, who will be shot in the park by the narrator’s father and Henry Bailey. The narrator and Laird sneak into the barn to watch from the loft, where they witness their father and Henry shooting the horse. After their father shoots the horse, the narrator notices that Laird has drawn a long, groaning breath of surprise, and she rushes him out of the barn. 

As Laird regains his youth and obedience, she recalls a time when she put him in danger on the barn’s top beam years ago. She makes Laird promise not to tell anyone that she took him to see the horse slaughter, and then she takes him to see a movie in town. She doesn’t think about watching it two weeks later when she knows they’re going to kill Flora. In the way she thinks about her father, she is a little embarrassed and has developed a new wariness, a sense of holding back. Flora, on the other hand, breaks free and runs through the backyard when the men take her out of the barn. Flora is running to the gate when the narrator’s father and Henry Bailey shout at her to hurry up and close the gate. Rather than closing the gate, she swings it open as wide as she can. The men, including Laird, pass through the gate to apprehend Flora, and the narrator closes it. She returns to her mother, knowing that they would apprehend Flora but also fearful of the consequences, as she had never disobeyed her father before. The narrator realizes she is siding with Flora.

The narrator reflects on her and Laird’s nighttime routine as she sits upstairs on her bed in the room she had begun to decorate. They stopped singing in the evenings. Something different was happening in her nighttime stories, and instead of rescuing others, she was being rescued. When the men return, Laird brags about shooting old Flora and shows a streak of blood on his arm to prove it. During a meal, Laird informs the group that Flora’s escape was due to the narrator’s fault. The narrator begins to cry, much to her father’s surprise and embarrassment. When he asks why, she doesn’t have an answer, so he dismisses her with the phrase “she’s only a girl.” Perhaps it was true, the narrator muses at the end of the story.

Boys and Girls | Analysis

In Alice Munro’s short story “Boys and Girls,” the protagonist is a young girl growing up in Canada in the mid-twentieth century. She lives on their farm with her family, which consists of her mother, father, and younger brother Laird, and her life is marked by gender roles. Munro doesn’t give the girl a name, and as a result, the protagonist is portrayed as a person without a name. She has no sense of self-identity or power. The existence of a name for the girl’s younger brother indicates that he is more important simply because he is a boy and that he is the one in charge. The protagonist of the story is torn between her “girl” life in the kitchen with her mother and her “boy” life outside the house with her father helping out on the farm.

                         

The story’s conflicts are the differing expectations of a girl and a boy, as well as the protagonist’s feelings about and struggle to find her own identity. The girl’s belief that she can contribute significantly to her father’s work is shattered when she discovers that she can’t. She realizes what society thinks of her and what it expects of her. The protagonist wishes to collaborate with her father on a project. She enjoys the attention she receives from her father while working on their fox farm. When a salesman arrives at the farm while the protagonist is raking the freshly cut grass, her father introduces her as his “new hired man,” to which the salesman replies.

Why I write

Do you think that the images that she creates in her mind help her writing. Does this apply to all writers?

The essay ‘Why I Write’ written by Joan Didion presents her experiences in writing. In this essay, she describes the way she writes by using some images in her mind. In her way writing is the act of saying, of imposing oneself upon other people and changing other’s mind. She says that she creates some mental images before she starts writing, and then she uses these images for her writing process because the concepts of her images tell her what is wrong and what is right. When she writes her novel she doesn’t use the sequence of time or character. She draws something in her mind before she starts writing. She explains that she is not inspired by ideas like she believes other writers are, but that she finds herself fascinated by seemingly trivial details and pictures that inspire her to come up with stories and scenes to explain them. Especially she has two pictures in her mind. The first is empty white space and second is something actual, a young woman with long hair waking in the casino.

I don’t think this applies to all the writers. There are some writers who might focus on the story first. They would think of the story and the details of the novel first and then start writing according to their thought. Some would focus on the characters and the conflict aroused between the characters reaching to a climax. Some writers would completely focus on their imagination and fantasy to create some literary works unlike Joan Didion. Unlike other writers, she focuses on the simple sentences filled with vivid descriptions and detail of scenery and imagery. The purpose of her essay is informative and entertaining. Didion doesn’t seem to care whether the reader thinks her style of writing as superior nor she seems to be interested in a how-to guide for up and coming writers. Her sole purpose in this essay is to get inside her own mind and explain what she finds for anyone who might be interested to know, her conclusion is that the reason she writes and the method by which she writes are one and the same.

 

 

 

Class note- class 11

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