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(English Medium) ICSE Class 10 - CISCE Important Questions for English 2 (Literature in English)

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English 2 (Literature in English)
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Read the following extract from Robert Browning's poem, “The Patriot” and answer the question that follows.

Alack, it was I who leaped at he sun

To give it my loving friends to keep!

Nought man could do, have I left undone:

And you see my harvest, what I reap

This very day, now a year is run.

  1. What can you conclude of the Patriot's mood from the given lines?
    Quote the line from the given extract which tells us that the Patriot did his utmost to satisfy his people?   [3]
  2. The last line of the extract suggests that a year has gone by.
    How had the speaker been treated a year ago?   [3]
  3. How did the situation change a year later? Give details of his present state.   [3]
  4. Why were only a ‘palsied few” onlookers seated at the windows?
    ‘Where had the other townspeople gone?‘Why had they gone there?   [3]
  5. How is the speaker's faith in God revealed at the end of the poem?
    Do you think the poem ends on a note of hope or despair? Justify your answer.   [4]
Appears in 1 question paper
Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Where was Caesar put to death?

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Who asks permission to speak at Caesar’s funeral?

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

“Woe to the hand that shed this costly blood!
Over thy wounds now do I prophesy...”
These lines tell us that Antony is ______.

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Concept: Reading

When Antony says, ‘This is a slight unmeritable man/Meet to be sent on errands’, he refers to ______.

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Concept: Reading

What strategy does Cassius suggest that the conspirators follow?

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

When Cassius says, ‘My life is run his compass’, he means that ______.

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Which of the given options contains the figure of speech that appears in the following line from Leigh Hunt's poem “The Glove and the Lions’: ‘Ramped and roared the lions’:

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Which of the following is NOT an effect of Bhishma Lochan Sharma’s powerful singing in Sukumar Ray’s poem 'The Power of Music’?

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Concept: Reading

Which of the following words does H. W. Longfellow use to describe the movement of the phantoms in his poem, ‘Haunted Houses’?

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

The theme of Maya Angelou’s poem ‘When Great Trees Fall’ is ______.

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Concept: Reading

The poem, 'A Considerable Speck’, captures ______.

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In Stephen Leacock’s ‘With the Photographer’, while waiting for the photographer, the narrator spent time ______.

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Concept: Reading

In Ama Ata Aidoo’s short story, ‘The Girl Who Can’, Nana expressed her disapproval of Adjoa’s legs because ______.

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Choose the option that lists the sequence of events from Alphonse Daudet’s short story ‘The Last Lesson’ in the correct order.

  1. But, when he arrived at school, Franz was dismayed to find his classmates already seated quietly and solemnly in their places ... and shocked when M. Hamel simply urged him to take his place.
  2. Franz hurried to school that morning he was very late and dreaded being scolded by M. Hamel, the teacher.
  3. After he had settled at his desk, he noticed something really odd: the back benches of the classroom were occupied by adults from the village!
  4. He hoped to slip into the classroom unnoticed, under cover of the bustle and noise of a typical school day morning.
Appears in 1 question paper
Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Select the option that shows the correct relationship between statements (1) and (2) from William Sleator’s short story, ‘The Elevator’.

Statement 1: Terrified of the fat lady in the elevator, Martin ran down the dark stairs, fell and broke his leg.

Statement 2: Angry and disappointed that his son had behaved like a fool and a coward, Martin’s father did not talk to him on the way to the hospital.

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Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Ray Bradbury’s short story ‘The Pedestrian’, can be best described as ______.

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

Caesar: Are we all ready? What is now amiss,
That Caesar and his Senate must redress?
Metellus: Most high, most mighty, and most puissant Caesar,
Metellus Cimber throws before thy seat
A humble heart, .... [He kneels]
  1. Where are the speakers?
    What does ‘puissant’ mean?
    Explain: ‘Metellus Cimber throws before thy seat a humble heart’.  [3]
  2. At the beginning of the scene, Caesar says, ‘The Ides of March are come.’
    Why do you think Caesar said this?
    What does the Soothsayer say in response?  [3]
  3. What specific duties do the conspirators allot to Trebonius and Casca?
    Why does Cassius become nervous when Popilius Lena speaks to him as they enter?  [3]
  4. What does Artemidorus want of Caesar?
    How does Caesar respond to his plea?  [3]
  5. Shortly after this exchange, Caesar is stabbed to death by the conspirators. Whom do you sympathise with — Julius Caesar or the conspirators? Give reasons for your choice.  [4]
Appears in 1 question paper
Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

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

Brutus: I did send to you
For certain sums of gold, which you denied me;
For I can raise no money by vile means:
By heaven, I had rather coin my heart,
And drop my blood for drachmas, than to wring
From the hard hands of peasants their vile trash
By any indirection.
  1. To whom are these words addressed?
    Why is Brutus angry with this person?  [3]
  2. How does this person feel when he hears these words?
    What does he say to defend himself?  [3]
  3. Why did Brutus need ‘certain sums of gold’?
    Why was he unable to raise these sums of money?  [3]
  4. Earlier in this scene, Brutus refers to Lucius Pella.
    What had he been accused of?
    Who had supported him and how?  [3]
  5. Mention any two aspects of Brutus’ character that are revealed in the above extract.
    What do you understand about the relationship between Brutus and the person he addresses?  [4]
Appears in 1 question paper
Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading

Read the following extract from Stephen Leacock’s short story, ‘With the Photographer’ and answer the questions that follow:

“The photographer beckoned me in. I thought he seemed quieter and graver than before. I think, too, there was a certain pride in his manner.

He unfolded the proof of a large photograph, and we both looked at it in silence.

‘Is it me?’ I asked.

“Yes,” he said quietly, ‘it is you,” and we went on looking at it.”

  1. Where was the narrator?
    Why had he gone there?
    Why do you think that there was a certain pride in the photographer's manner?  [3]
  2. What does the word "proof” mean in this context?
    Why did the narrator ask, “Is it me?”?  [3]
  3. Which of the narrator's facial features had the photographer altered?  [3]
  4. What was the only part of the narrator's face that seemed original in the photograph?
    How did the photographer plan to ‘fix’ this?  [3]
  5. At the end of the story, the narrator flies into a rage.
    What makes him angry?
    How would you justify the narrator's angry outburst?  [4]
Appears in 1 question paper
Chapter: [0.03] Reading
Concept: Reading
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