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Friday, 3 February 2017

THE STORY OF MY LIFE

HELLEN KELLER:THE STORY OF MY LIFE IMPORTANT QUESTION AND ANSWERS

09:49:00
Q1.Write a character sketch of Helen Keller.
Ans. Helen Keller was born on June 27, 1880 in Tuscumbia in Alabama She belonged to a family with long, chequered history. She was a lively, curious and assertive child. She felt at ease in the rose-bower of her house. Unfortunately, an illness rendered her blind and de af when she was nineteen months old. But that did not diminish her viour and zest for life. She evolved her own signs to communicate with others. She learnt ma ny small things like folding and putting away the clean clothes coming from the laundry, greeting the guests, playing with Martha, a little coloured girl, and he r pet dog Belle. When Miss Sullivan came to her life, everything cha nged for her. She was amazingly quick to follow whatever she taught her. She learnt individual words, and sentences, and learnt to read. Through Miss Sullivan she devel oped love for nature. She began to love every object and creature in the world of nature. She had natural love and affection for her parents and the highest of regard s for her teacher and lifelong companion Miss Sullivan. In spite of disabilities, Helen Keller never showed timidity. She was a daring and adventurous girl. She was gifted with exceptional s ense of small and touch. Whatever Helen learnt was through her exceptional s ense of touch. She had ability to cope up with her disabilities and to live an act ive life. 

Q2.How can you say that Helen read and studied out of doors 
Ans.Usually students read and study in their classrooms . But for Helen Keller whole nature was her classroom. Most of her learning took place out of doors. This way she learnt more about the world around her. She was clo se to the nature. Generally students read with books but Helen Keller read by u sing her sense of smell and touch. In a way, nature became her teacher, guide a nd philosopher. She learnt from nature that everything has beauty of its own. Miss Sullivan provided her practical knowledge of everything. Helen read Geography by ra ised maps in clay. She touched and felt the opening up of a plant. The study of ta dpole made her understand that for creatures their natural habitats are indispensa ble. So Helen learnt from life itself and in this learning her teacher played an exemplar y role. It was she who made her education appears like a game, a play. Helen learnt more out of doors and nature herself unfolded the book of life for her.

Q3. How did Helen respond to the entire controversy? Wh at did it help her realise? Do you think she was guilty of plagiarism as charged? 
Ans.Helen weathered her first public controversy at the age of 12, in the winter of 1892. After learning to speak Helen wrote a short story “ The Frost King”. She felt a sense of joy in the composition. She related the story to her teacher, Mr. Anagnos. She sent the story to Mr. Anagnos and he published it in one of the Perkins Institution reports. Helen was very happy. But her happiness di dn’t last for long. It was discovered that a story similar to “The Frost King” called “The Frost Fairies” by Miss Margaret T. Canby had appeared in a book called, Bi rdie and His Friends. The two stories were similar in content and it was presumed that Miss Canby’s story had been read to Helen and that her story was - plagiar ism. Helen was astonished and grieved. She was questioned and cross-questioned by a court of investigation. Although Mr. Anagnos believed her at first, he was eventually convinced that Helen had deceived him and their friendship came to an en d. When Helen realised that she had inadvertently plagiarised the story, she was de eply regretful. Earlier also Helen persisted on confusing the words mug and water. Miss Sullivan renewed her effort to make her distinguish between the words. Helen became impatient. She seized the new doll and dashed it up on the floor. After doing this, she felt delighted. The cause of her impatience was in fragments and she was happy to inflict injury on her enemy. Neither sorrow nor reg ret followed her passionate outburst. 

Q4.Write a brief character sketch of Anne Sullivan.
Ans.Miss Sullivan, Helen’s teacher arrived on March 3, 1887 and at that time Helen was six years and nine months old. Anne’s arrival broug ht life and enlightenment to Helen. She came to teach Helen and to take her from ignorance to light. Her constant support and undying encouragement made Helen Keller a success. Due to illness Helen lost her hearing and seeing faculties. It was really difficult to teach a blind and deaf person because neither he/she can hear nor can watch the speaker’s face. But Miss Sullivan worked hard and succeeded in teaching Helen. She took Helen from darkness to light, from isolation to friendship, co mpanionship, knowledge and love. Sullivan was Helen’s guide, teacher, preacher, frie nd and everything. She taught Helen the fundamental things like love, nature and life. Helen was just lifeless till her teacher had not arrived. Miss Sullivan was the embo diment of love and passion. She taught Helen how to communicate. Miss Sullivan is a true and ideal teacher. She taught each and every subject to Helen. She made He len independent. Like a mother, Miss Sullivan loved and cared Helen. She did an alm ost impossible work to teach a deaf and blind child. Helen got identity only becau se of her teacher. Miss Sullivan proved that a teacher has paramount role in a stude nt’s life. 

Q5.Helen learnt a new lesson that “Nature wages open w ar against her children and under softest touch hides treacherous claws”. How did Hel en learn that lesson? 
Ans. Benevolent aspect of nature thrilled her, but soon she learnt that nature could be ferocious also. Once she and her teacher were retur ning from a walk. The weather grew warm and humid. They stood under the cool shad e of a tree. With her teacher’s help Helen sat amidst the branches. Miss Sullivan w ent to fetch lunch and Helen was all alone. Suddenly, weather changed and a thunders torm was imminent. Helen felt paralysed and frightened and she wanted to get down from the tree. She clung to the branch with all her might as the tree swayed and st rained. The branches lashed about her. She felt as if she would fall and at tha t very moment Miss Sullivan came and helped her down. Helen had learnt a new lesson that “Nature wages open war against her children and under softest touch hides treacherous claws”. She learnt a great lesson that life is not always pleasant and o ne should be prepared for the risks and stakes also. 

Q6.Why was learning speech an extremely challenging ta sk for Helen? What motivated her to persevere in spite of repeated failures? 
Ans.Learning speech was an extremely challenging task f or Helen because she could not hear. Helen had always been capable of making noise s and would often do so. She recounts that she had been learning to talk before her illness but couldn’t do so as a result of her loss of hearing. The only word she co uld recall was ‘water’ which she pronounced as “wa - wa”. She wanted to learn to spe ak the way hearing people do. Her thoughts beat up like birds against the wind. S he moved her lips but nothing tangible happened. Even her friends discouraged her , but she did not lose heart. The story of Ragnhild Kaata motivated her to persev ere in spite of repeated failures. Helen learned about Ragnhild Kaata, a deaf and blin d girl in Norway, who had learned to talk. Miss Fuller offered to be Helen’s teacher. Helen’s strong determination and hard work overcame all the hurdle s and she achieved what she wanted. She learnt to speak because of her, her tea chers - Miss Sullivan and Miss Fuller’s - hard work. 

Q7. What makes Helen jealous of the newly born baby?            Explain her reaction to see the newly born baby in her house. 
Ans. Like any other child, Helen was possessive and mood y. The advent of Helen’s younger sister Mildred divided the attention of her mother. She could not tolerate her mother’s indulgence towards her little sister. Her little sister sat in her mother’s lap constantly, where Helen used to sit. Raw and in nocent heart of Helen could not tolerate it. She held Mildred responsible for this division of love, care and attention. This made her agitated and angry. Helen used to put her doll, Nancy in a cradle to sl eep. Once she found Mildred sleeping in the cradle of her doll, this made her f urious. Out of anger and pent up emotions, she overturned the cradle. Mildred was ab out to fall down on the floor when her mother caught her and saved her from being seriously injured. The reaction on the part of Helen is natural. Later on, she realised her mistake and with the passage of time she became friendly with her si ster. 

Q8.What was the impulse that ultimately enabled Helen to speak? How did she learn how to speak?
Ans.The impulse to speak had always been strong within Helen. She used to make noises, keeping one hand on her throat while the ot her hand felt the movements of lips. She was pleased with anything that made noise. She used to feel the motion of her mother’s lips and yearned to move her lips too to p roduce sound. She tried a lot to speak but she couldn’t do it. She was entirely depe ndent on the manual alphabet. It created a gap in her life. A sense of narrowness gr ipped her. This feeling began to agitate her violently. She persisted in using her l ips and voice. Her friends feared that this would lead her to disappointment. But Hel en persisted to speak. In 1890, Mrs. Lamson, a teacher, told her about Rag nhild Kaata, a deaf and blind girl in Norway, who had actually been taught to speak. H elen saw a beam of light and determined that she would also speak 

Q9.How did Helen learn to read? Describe Helen’s long process of learning? 
Ans. Learning to read was an important step in Helen’s e ducation. Miss Sullivan gave her slips of cardboard on which were printed words in r aised letters. Helen soon learnt that each printed word stood for an object, an act or a quality. She took slips of paper which represented, for example, “doll”, “is”, “on”, “bed” and placed each name on its object. She put her doll on the bed with the words, ‘is, on, bed’ arranged beside the doll, thus making a sentence of the words. One day she pinned the word “girl” on her pinnafore and stood in the wardrobe. On the she lf she arranged the words “is in, wardrobe”. This game delighted her. Miss Sullivan a nd Helen played it for hours at a time. From the printed slip Helen moved to the prin ted book. She took her “Reader for Beginners” and hunted for the words she knew. W hen she found them her joy knew no bound. Thus, she began to read. Helen’s education is a long process. At first Helen learnt to name every object she touched. At first she made little inquiry about a n ew thing learnt. As her knowledge of things grew, she would return again and again to the same subject to gather further information. Sometimes, a new word revived an image that some earlier experience had engraved on her mind. Once she broug ht some flowers for her teacher. Miss Sullivan spelled into her hand, “I lo ve Helen.” Helen asked “what is love?” For a long time she failed to understand wha t love really was. One day she was making many mistakes in stringing beads of diff erent sizes in symmetrical groups. For an instant she tried to think how she s hould have arranged the beads. Miss Sullivan touched her forehead and spelled, “Th ink”. In a flash she learnt that the word was the name of the that was going on in h er head. Thus, she learnt about an abstract idea. Thus, her education, a long proce ss, continued. 

Q10.Why cannot a deaf and blind person converse properly? How did Miss Sullivan help Helen to converse properly?
AnsNatural exchange of ideas is denied to the deaf chi ld. The deaf and the blind find it very difficult to acquire the facilities of convers ation. A deaf and a blind person cannot distinguish the tone of the voice or, withou t assistance, go up and down the full range of tones that give significance to words , nor can they watch the expression of the speaker’s face, and a look is often the very soul of what one says. So, the deaf child does not learn in a month, or even in two or three years, the numberless idioms and expressions used in the simplest daily i ntercourse. Helen’s teacher realised the problems of Helen and was determined to supply the kinds of stimulus she lacked. This she did by repea ting to Helen as far as possible. Miss Sullivan used to speak as well as spell the wo rds to Helen.

THREE MEN IN A BOAT ( TERM 2)

Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog)

Summary and Analysis of Chapters 11-14

Chapter 11

George and J. wake up at six the next morning, and cannot get back to sleep. George tells J. a story about how he once forgot to wind his watch before going to bed, which left him confused when he woke at three in the morning. He only realized the mistake when he arrived at work, and aroused the suspicion of several constables as he walked around London so late at night.
J. and George finally wake Harris. They had previously agreed to go for a morning swim, but are now reluctant to jump in the cold water. J. falls in and tries to trick his friends into joining him, but they refuse. J. also accidentally drops a shirt into the river, which George finds hilarious until he realizes it is actually his shirt.
Harris volunteers to make scrambled eggs, promising that they will be delicious. Of course, Harris has no idea how to make scrambled eggs, but George and J. enjoy watching him make a fool of himself in the process. Naturally, the eggs are inedible.
That morning, the men arrive at Magna Charta Island, near Runnymede. As the name suggests, Magna Charta Island is where King John signed the Magna Carta in 1215. J. speculates at length about what it would have been like to be a peasant living in Runnymede at the time of the event.

Analysis

Poetry occupied an important place in Victorian culture, and it was popular among readers of all classes. Jerome often borrows techniques from poetry for his prose. Personification is one technique he uses that is typically associated with poetry. Early in Chapter 9, Jerome personifies tow-lines at great length. “There may be,” he writes, “tow-lines that are a credit to their profession—conscientious, respectable tow-lines—tow-lines that do not imagine they are crochet-work, and try to knit themselves up into antimacassars the instant they are left to themselves” (80). The effect here is light and humorous; by using personification, Jerome engages the reader and manages to be entertaining even though he is writing at great length about a relatively simple point.
Jerome also continues to juxtapose highbrow with the low in these chapters. In addition to using different types of humor designed to appeal to readers of different levels of education, Jerome also has his characters interact with people from all walks of life. A prime example of this comes at the end of Chapter 9, when J. and his cousin are rescued by a group of “provincial ‘Arrys and ‘Arriets,” whom J. praises effusively for their kindness and earnestness (88). “‘Arry and ‘Arriets’” was a common, slightly derogatory slang term for the working-class during the Victorian period; it references the tendency of lower-class English people to drop H-sounds when speaking. Ironically, Punch Magazine would later mock Jerome for his tendency to pander to lower-class readers by referring to him as ‘Arry K. ‘Arry (“My Life” 75).
In Chapter 10, Jerome returns to the theme of wanting – and often not being able to get – the things that one does not have. He addresses this first in his comic description of the men's attempt to make dinner. As J. observes, hot water seems to take longer to boil when one most wants a cup of tea. The men comically try to work around this by talking loudly about how much they do not want tea, and J. believes the strategy actually works.
Jerome also explores this theme obliquely through the story of the knight in the woods. This story (and the digression about night that precedes it) is told in the serious, Romantic style that Jerome occasionally uses in the novel’s digressive passages. In it, the knight finds a deeper, more meaningful happiness being lost in the woods than his comrades do after weeks of feasting in the palace. Although the passage’s tone is dramatically different from the novel's more humorous sections, both address the phenomenon of wanting one does not have – be it physical comfort or emotional fulfillment.
The knight story also emphasizes the novel's common theme of the illusions men make for themselves. Where the knights in the castle are distracted by the luxury they believe defines them, the lonely night truly finds himself by stripping himself of such illusions. In this way, the story does hearken to the Romantic belief that nature could bring transcendence.
Callbacks to earlier jokes is a common technique used in comedic writing, and Jerome begins to use that technique heavily in these chapters, which are around the novel's midpoint. An example of a callback can be found early in Chapter 11, when J. explains that “the idea, overnight, had been that we should get up early in the morning . . . and revel in a long delicious swim. Somehow, now the morning had come, the notion seemed less tempting. The water looked damp and chilly: the wind felt cold” (102). This was foreshadowed in Chapter 3 when J. noted that he is always more excited about swimming when he is not immediately faced with the prospect of diving into cold water. And again, this moment touches on the theme of illusions - it is nice to make plans for ourselves, but another thing to actually carry through with those plans.
Chapter 11 concludes with a sentimental historical interlude. As the men approach Magna Charta Island, Jerome imagines what it would have been like to be a peasant when King John was forced to sign the Magna Carta in 1215. To a certain extent, this passage tips Jerome’s political hand. It is notable that despite his middle-class background (and his patronizing attitude toward ‘Arrys and ‘Arriets in the previous chapters), he identifies with the peasants rather than the bourgeoisie or the nobles. His positive description of the Magna Carta as “the great cornerstone in England’s temple of liberty” also hints at Jerome’s populist sentiments.


REPORTED SPEECH

Follow the link to learn REPORTED SPEECH

http://www.slideshare.net/ksenstar/direct-and-indirect-speech-14819435

Tuesday, 17 January 2017

The story of my life

The story of my life

CHARACTER SKETCH OF Ms. SULLIVAN

Miss Anne Mansfield Sullivan had the greatest influence on the life, character and acheivements of Helen Keller. She gave a new direction, meaning and purpose to Helen's dark life. Miss Sullivan inherited all those triats and characterisitcs that go in making a perfect teacher. She was a picture of tireless patience and unreading devotion. It was her constant encoragement, help and guidence that made Helen Keeler first deaf and blind in the world to earn a bachelor degree.It was Graham Bell who advised the parents of Helen Keller to contact the Perkins Institute for the Blind. The director, Mr. Anagnos asked a former student of Miss Anne Sullivan to become Keller's instructor. Miss Sullivan was herself a visually impaired 20 year old lady. It was he begining of a 49-year-long relationship. The relationship evolved into Miss Sullivan becoming Helen's governess and then eventul companion. Anne Sullivan arrived at Keller's house in March 1887. She immediatiely began to teach Helen to communicate by spel;ling words into her hand, begining with "d-o-l-l" for the doll. It was Miss Sullivan who unfolded and developed Helen's skills and possibilities. It was Sullivan's genius as a teacher, her sympathy and loving tact which made learning so beautiful and interesting for Helen Keller. She felt that her being was inseparable from her student. All that was the best in Helen Keller had been awakened by the loving touch touch of Miss Sullivan. Anne Sullivan stayed as a companion to Helen Keller long after she taught her. Anne Sullivan married John Macy in 1905. She remained a s a constant companion to Helen Keller till she died in 1936.


The Story of My Life reveals Annie Sullivan as the inspiration behind Helen Keller's extraordinary life. She is only partially-sighted herself, after undergoing surgery to correct her vision at a young age and herself having been educated at The Perkins Institute for The Blind, a place instrumental in Helen Keller's own development.
Anne Sullivan, Annie, is the person responsible for "the most important day I remember in all my life"  as Helen recognizes Annie's contribution throughout her life as teacher, interpreter, friend, companion and motivator. Annie never misses an opportunity to teach Helen, whether it be academically or life skills. She teaches Helen an appreciation in even the smallest detail: "in every blade of grass, and in the curves and dimples of my baby sister's hand." Annie has the capacity to help Helen connect with nature and "made me feel that 'birds and flowers and I were happy peers.'"
One of Annie Sullivan's most instrumental effects is felt when she makes Helen "Think." It is this that helps Helen make the connection between the abstract and the physical as "you feel the sweetness that it (love) pours into everything."Annie makes "every subject so real that I could not help remembering."(c So profound is the impact that Annie Sullivan has on Helen that "her being is inseparable from my own, and (that) the footsteps of my life are in hers." 

THREE MEN IN A BOAT

                                                       THREE MEN IN A BOAT
                                                       SUMMARY LESSON 11-19



Chapter 11 
begins with George telling J. a story about how he forgot to wind his watch before bed and ended up waking up at 3 in the morning. This aroused the suspicion of the police constables who found him walking around London in the wee hours of the morning. J., George and Harris went for a morning swim and later Harris, who had no idea how to make srambled eggs, tried his hand at it and failed miserably. They later arrive at Magna Carta island and J. mused about being a peasant at the time when King John signed the Magna Carta.

In Chapter 12, the men passed through Picnic Point where King Henry was known to have courted Anne Boleyn. J. spoke about the predicament of the locals who must have had a hard time giving privacy to the couple. He later added that it is indeed awkward walking in on couples who were “spooning”. They passed through the place where Earl Godwin was known to have choked after being accused of Edward the confessor’s brother’s murder. They finally came across a boy who offered them a place to stay in and they were grateful for it. After having forgotten the mustard at home, the trio settled for a can for pineapple to eat with lunch. They soon gave up after unsuccessfully trying to open the can. They passed by three old men fishing who cursed them because Harris’ poor steering disturbs the water. The friends decided to stay at an inn in Marlow that night.

In Chapter 13, the trio passed through Marlow, Bisham Alley and Medemenham where they came across an abbey where an order of prodigious monks once lived. During lunch, Montmorency got intimidated by a cat and its menacing stare. They stocked up on food in Marlow but they found it difficult to leave due to the large number of steam-launches in the water. Faced with a water shortage, the trio pondered about drinking the river water. They eventually ended up drinking some water from a nearby cottage which they thought was from the river as well. The day ended comically with Harris falling off the edge of a gulch and J and George thinking he was dead.

In Chapter 14, the men make Irish strew but they ended up over-peeling the potatoes. Montmorency caught a water rat which he thought could be added to the stew but the men declined. The stew turned out to be delicious. Startled by the tea-kettle, Montmorency attacked it. George’s dismal banjo playing was accompanied by Montmorency’s howling. This prompted the others to request him to never play again. It was mentioned that George was forced to have sold his banjo due to complaints from his landlady and the passersby. After a night out, George and J. forgot where the boat was docked. Eventually they followed Montmorency’s barks and found the boat. Harris narrated an incident where he single-handedly fought of a swarm of aggressive swans whose nest they disturbed.

In Chapter 15, the friends discussed who will tow the boat since it is the most strenuous job. They rowed the boat to Reading where J. would tow it for a while. Since J. had had some experience in rowing, he named the different types of rowing a boat as well as the common mistakes people make when they try rowing for the first time. He described punting as a type of rowing where the passenger propels the boat in the right direction pushing a long pole into the riverbed. He then warned them about the hazards of punting by recounting a story of a friend who was left clinging to the pole as the boat drifted away. He also mentioned another occasion when he and his friends heckled an amateur punter mistaking him for someone they knew. Harris added by narrating an incident where he held a person’s head under water thinking he was a friend. The chapter ends with J sharing another anecdote involving his friend Hector.
    
The men approach Reading in Chapter 16. J. mentioned that the now polluted and crowded Reading was once a popular destination for Londoners to escape the plague. They got a respite from rowing when an acquaintance with a steam-launcher helped them by towing their boat for miles. They saw the corpse of a woman floating in the water as they reached Goring. They took her to the coroner and found out that she had killed herself because she begot a child out of wedlock and her family abandoned her.

In Chapter 17, the men tried doing their laundry by washing their clothes in the river but they ended up making them even dirtier than before. They readily pay a washerwoman who charged three times the normal rate to wash their clothes since they were so dirty. Later, J. emphasized on the importance of lying about one’s fishing prowess. George and J. go to a pub in Wallingford. Three patrons tried to take credit for a large trout hanging on the wall. Each had his own story and an estimation of its weight. Their lie was exposed when George grabbed on to the trout to stop himself from tripping and ended up displacing it. It fell on the ground and shattered into pieces. It is then revealed that the fish was made of plaster of Paris.

Chapter 18, starts with J.’s discussion of the Thames without “its flower-decked locks”. He narrated another anecdote involving him and George in Hampton Court where a photographer took pictures of a steam-launch. He called out to the duo to stay away from the frame. In an attempt to keep their boat out of the frame, both fell with their feet up in the air. Their feet took up nine-tenths of the image and the annoyed owner of the steam-launcher refused to foot the bill.

In the 19th Chapter, the trio went to Oxford. Montmorency also regaled himself by fighting with the other stray dogs. J. explained the logic behind why some people who vacation on the Thames start from Oxford and move down to London. It helped their boats to move along with the current. He said that the boats in Oxford are too bad to be rented hence it is important to bring one’s own boat. He recounted when he had once mistaken an Oxford boat for an ancient artifact. The incessant rains ruined their journey back from Oxford. They pass their time by playing penny nap and listening to George playing the banjo. Though he was ridiculed for his banjo-playing skills in a previous chapter, George rendered a mournful tune of “Two lovely black eyes”. This caused the other two to be more depressed. They aborted their trip and retired into an inn in Pangbourne where they regaled the guests with their adventures and misadventures from the trip. In the end, they raised a toast their decision to abandon the trip. Montmorency barked in order to concede with the three.