Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
We sang our school fight song dozens of times – en route to Arlington National cemetery, and even on an afternoon cruise down the Potomac River. We visited the Lincoln Memorial twice, once in day – light, the second time at dusk. My classmates and I fell silent as we walked in the shadows of those 36 marble columns, one for every state in the Union that Lincoln laboured to preserve. I stood next to Frank at the base of the 19 foot seated statue. Spotlights made the white Georgian marble seem to glow. Together we read famous words from Lincoln’s speech at Gettysburg remembering the most bloody battle in the war between the status : “………….we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain – that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom………..”
As Frank motioned me into place to take my picture, I took one last look at Lincoln’s face. He seemed alive and so terribly sad.
The next morning I understand a little better why he wasn’t smiling. “Clifton,” a chaperone said, “could I see you for a moment?”
(1) When did the boys visit Lincoln Memorial?
(2) What made the Georgian marble glow?
(3) What did the words: “………. We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain – that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom …………” remind them?
(4) Do you believe in building memorials? What kind should they be, if your answer is ‘yes’? If no, give reasons why you do not believe in memorials?
Advertisements
उत्तर
(1) The boys visited Lincoln Memorial once in daylight and the second time at dusk.
(2) Spotlights made the Georgian marble glow.
(3) The words reminded them of the bloodiest battle in the War between the States.
(4) Yes, I do believe in building memorials. War memorials, statues and memorial benches should be built to remind people of the incidents they represent.
No, I do not believe in building memorials as it is an expensive affair. The taxpayer’s hard-earned money can be used for other productive purposes rather than expensive memorials.
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
Why do you think that the poet has chosen the title ‘Telephone Conversation’? If you were to suggest another title for the poem, what would it be?
Answer the following question in one sentence.
What examples of man’s progress have been given in the poem?
Who was Shalihotra?
"That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind." Neil Armstrong - Discuss
How did the third daughter use the grain?
Match the following.
| 1. | garden | very small |
| 2. | trash can | hungry and tired |
| 3. | old man | well maintained |
| 4. | hut | earthen pot |
| 5. | gruel | wasted food |
Why did Meena call the official 'Appa'? Do you think we need to be a family to care for others?
The tank in Divya’s village was almost ______.
Read the passage and colour one bag each time you read.
There lived a poor but an honest farmer in a village. He supported himself, his wife and seven children using his small piece of land.
One day while he was walking in his field, he found a bag of gold.
He took it home and showed it to his wife. His wife told him to keep some of the gold. He told his wife that honesty is the best policy. He tried to find the person who lost it. At last, he found that the owner of the bag and gave it back. The rich man took the bag and thanked him.

He got an admission to study at Stanford University ______.
