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Snakes Generate Both Horror and Fascination. Do You Agree? Why/Why Not?

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प्रश्न

Snakes generate both horror and fascination. Do you agree? Why/Why not?

संक्षेप में उत्तर
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उत्तर

Snakes generate both horror and fascination because our reasoning often misleads us. Though snakes are creations of nature, we are afraid of them. Snakes also fascinate us but we do not understand the beauty of nature, and being human, we have the impulse to kill it even though we are astounded by its beauty. Snakes are found in different colours and different sizes. They say that nature is more powerful than human beings. But still they generate horror which is just because of small instincts of natural world

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अध्याय 11: Snake - Exercises [पृष्ठ ११९]

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सीबीएसई English Literature Reader [English] Class 10
अध्याय 11 Snake
Exercises | Q 1 | पृष्ठ ११९

संबंधित प्रश्न

For he seemed to me again like a king.
Like a king in exile, uncrowned in the underworld,
Now due to be crowned again.
And so, I missed my chance with one of the lords
Of life.
And I have something to expiate:
A pettiness.

(a) Why is the snake called a king in exile?
(b) What is the pettiness referred to in these lines?
(c) What does the word ‘underworld’ mean?


What does the poet compare the snake's drinking habits to? Why?


What is the poet’s dual attitude towards the snake?


What is the dilemma that the poet faces when he sees the snake?


Why did the poet have to wait near the water trough ? (Snake)


What were the conflicting thoughts in the poet's mind on seeing the snake?


What were the poet's thoughts after the snake had gone?


Based on your reading of the poem, answer the following question by ticking the correct option:

  • 'he lifted his head from his drinking as cattle do' - The poet wants to convey that the snake

Based on your reading of the poem, answer the following question by ticking the correct option:

  • 'Sicilian July', 'Etna smoking' and 'burning bowels of the earth' are images that convey
    that

Based on your reading of the poem, answer the following question by ticking the correct option:

  • 'I thought how paltry, how vulgar, what a mean act' -The poet is referring to

Answer the following question briefly:

In stanza 2 and 3, the poet gives a vivid description of the snake by using suggestive expressions. What picture of the snake do you form on the basis of this description?


Answer the following question briefly:

What does the poet want to convey by saying that the snake emerges from the 'burning
bowels of the earth'?


How do we know that the snake’s thirst had been satiated? Pick out the expressions that convey this.


Answer the following question briefly:

What is the difference between the snake's movement at the beginning of the poem and later when the poet strikes it with a log of wood? You may use relevant vocabulary from the poem to highlight the difference.


Answer the following question briefly:

You have already read Coleridge's poem The Ancient Mariner in which an albatross is killed by the mariner. Why does the poet make an allusion to the albatross?


A Calligram is a poem, phrase or word in which the handwriting is arranged in a way that creates a visual image. The image created by the words expresses visually what the word or words, say. In a poem, it manifests visually the theme presented by the text of the poem. Read the poem given below. Try to compose a calligram. You could pick a subject of your choice.

Snake
Snake glides
through grass
over
Pebbles
forked tongue
working
never
speaking
but its
body
whispers
listen.
Keith Bosley


Answer the following question:
In the poem "Snake", why does the poet say "I have something to expatiate."?


Read the given excerpt and answer the questions briefly.

But must I confess how I liked him,
How glad I was he had come like a guest in quiet, to drink at my water-trough
And depart peaceful, pacified, and thankless,
Into the burning bowels of this earth?
  1. What can be inferred about the speaker's attitude towards nature based on the excerpt?   (1)
  2. List the meaning of the phrase "burning bowels of this earth”.   (1)
  3. How is the snake's arrival and departure symbolic?   (1)
  4. The speaker compares the snake to the guest. Which word in the extract displays the snake’s non-guest like behaviour?   (1)

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