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“And they have their exits and their entrances” - What do the words ‘exits’ and ‘entrances’ mean? - English

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प्रश्न

“And they have their exits and their entrances” - What do the words ‘exits’ and ‘entrances’ mean?

एका वाक्यात उत्तर

उत्तर

‘Entrances’ means life. ‘Exits means death.

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Poem (Class 12th)
  या प्रश्नात किंवा उत्तरात काही त्रुटी आहे का?
पाठ 3.2: All the World’s a Stage - Exercise [पृष्ठ ९२]

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सामाचीर कलवी English Class 12 TN Board
पाठ 3.2 All the World’s a Stage
Exercise | Q 2. b) | पृष्ठ ९२

संबंधित प्रश्‍न

What thoughts come to your mind when you think about a castle? Add your ideas to the list

moat, huge buildings, soldiers, weapons ______,______.


Why does the narrator say that the enemy was no threat at all?


Why didn’t the narrator want to tell the tale to anybody?


Why did the narrator feel helpless?


Human greed led to the mighty fall of the citadel. Explain.


Underline the alliterated word in the following line.

With our arms and provender, load on load.


Underline the alliterated word in the following line.

The wizened warder let them through.


Identify the figure of speech used in the following line.

A little wicked wicket gate.


You visit your school after several years. As you cross the banyan tree at the entrance, cheerful memories fi ll your mind. Fill the bubbles with your memories.


Fill in the blanks choosing the words from the box given and complete the summary of the poem.

The casuarina tree is tall and strong, with a creeper winding around it like a (1) ______. The tree stands like a (2) ______with a colourful scarf of flowers. Birds surround the garden and the sweet song of the birds is heard. The poet is delighted to see the casuarina tree through her (3) ______. She sees a grey monkey sitting like a (4) ______on top of the tree, the cows grazing, and the water lilies (5) ______in the pond. The poet feels that the tree is dear to her not for its (6) ______appearance but for the (7) ______memories of her happy childhood that it brings to her. She strongly believes that (8) ______communicates with human beings. The poet could communicate with the tree even when she was in a far-off land as she could hear the tree (9) ______her absence. The poet (10) ______the tree’s memory to her loved ones, who are not alive. She immortalizes the tree through her poem like the poet Wordsworth who (11) ______the yew tree of Borrowdale in verse. She expresses her wish that the tree should be remembered out of love and not just because it cannot be (12) ______.

python statue nature casement
nostalgic lamenting impressive forgotten
giant consecrates springing sanctified

What has Wordsworth sanctified in his poem?


Read the line given below and answer the question that follow.

A creeper climbs, in whose embraces bound No other tree could live.

  1. Which tree is referred to in the above lines?
  2. How does the tree survive the tight hold of the creeper?
  3. Why does Toru Dutt use the expression ‘a creeper climbs’?

Read the line given below and answer the question that follow.

“Fear, trembling Hope, and Death, the skeleton,

And Time the shadow”, and though weak the verse

That would thy beauty fain, oh, fain rehearse,

May Love defend thee from oblivion’s curse.

  1. What does the poet mean by the expression ‘May love defend thee from oblivion’s curse?’
  2. What does the expression ‘fain’ convey?
  3. What does the poet convey through the expression ‘Fear, trembling Hope’?

When does a man become a judge? How?


Read the given line and answer the question that follow.

Then a soldier,

full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard,

Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel,

Seeking the bubble reputation

Even in the cannon's mouth.

  1. What is the soldier ready to do?
  2. Explain ‘bubble reputation’.
  3. What are the distinguishing features of this stage?

What does Ulysses yearn for?


Read the set of line from the poem and answer the question that follow.

… I mete and dole

Unequal laws unto a savage race,

That hoard, and sleep, and feed, and

know not me.

  1. What does Ulysses do?
  2. Did he enjoy what he was doing? Give reasons.

Read the set of line from the poem and answer the question that follow.

Yet all experience is an arch wherethrough

Gleams that untravelled world, whose margin fades

For ever and for ever when I move

  1. What is experience compared to?
  2. How do the lines convey that the experience is endless?

Explain with reference to the context the following line.

To follow knowledge like a sinking star,

Beyond the utmost bound of human thought.


Explain with reference to the context the following line.

....you and I are old;

Old age hath yet his honour and his toil;


Explain with reference to the context the following line.

We are not now that strength which in old days Moved earth and heaven;


What happened to the people who wanted too much money?


Explain the following line with reference to the context.

Yet learning something out of every folly

hoping to repeat none of the cheap follies


Explain the following line with reference to the context.

He will be lonely enough

to have time for the work


Where was the narrator when the incident happened?


Where was Napoleon standing on the day of attack on the city of Ratisbon?


Why did the rider keep his lips compressed?


Where did the rider plant the French flag after Ratisbon was captured?


Literary Devices

Mark the rhyme scheme of the poem. The rhyme scheme for the first stanza is as follows.

With neck out-thrust, you fancy how, a
Legs wide, arms locked behind, b
As if to balance the prone brow a
Oppressive with its mind. b

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