SEBA / SMEBA / NCERT CLASS 9 ENGLISH SOLUTIONS(BEEHIVE) : CH - A LEGEND OF NORTHLAND
By Phoebe Cary
SEBA / SMEBA / NCERT CLASS 9 ENGLISH SOLUTIONS
Page No: 67
I.
1.
Which country
or countries do you think
“the Northland” refers
to?
Ans: “The Northland” could refer to any extremely cold country in the
Earth's north polar
region, such as Greenland, the
northern regions of Russia, Canada, Norway etc.
2.
What did Saint
Peter ask the old lady
for? What was the lady’s reaction?
Ans: Saint Peter asked
the old lady
for one of her baked
cakes to satisfy
his hunger. The lady tried
to bake a small cake
for the saint.
3.
How did he punish
her?
Ans:
He punished the lady by changing her into a woodpecker that
built “as birds do” and gathered scanty food by boring in the “hard,
dry wood” all day
long.
4.
How does the woodpecker get her food?
Ans:
The woodpecker gets her food
by boring holes
into trees.
5.
Do you think
that the old lady would
have been so ungenerous if she
had known
who Saint Peter
really was? What
would she have
done then?
Ans: No, the old lady would
not have been
so ungenerous if she had known who Saint Peter really
was. Instead, she would have
tried to please
him with her cakes for
the fulfilment of her greedy
desires.
6.
Is this
a true story?
Which part of this poem
do you feel
is the most important?
Ans:
No, this not a true story; it is a legend.
I feel
that the point
in the story
where the old lady is changed into
a woodpecker is the most
important. This is because the
punishment meted out to the lady
teaches us the value of generosity and
charity.
7.
What is a legend?
Why is this poem called
a legend?
Ans:
A 'legend' is a popular story from the past which is believed by many but one cannot prove whether it is
true or not. It usually contains a message or a moral and is narrated to children.
8.
Write the story of ‘ A Legend of the Northland’ in about ten sentences.
Ans: The poet himself
says that he doesn't believe this tale to be true. This poem is called a
'legend' because it preaches generosity towards fellow beings. Once Saint Peter stopped
by an old lady's cottage because he was feeling hungry and weak after the day's
fasting. The lady was baking cakes on the hearth. Since he was weak with
fasting, he asked her for a cake
from her store of cakes.
The selfish lady tried to bake small cakes but each
time they seemed too big for her to give away. Finally, she baked one that was
as thin as a wafer. Unable to part with it too, she put it on a shelf and did
not give any cake to the Saint.
Saint Peter was very angry with her behaviour and
said she was too selfish to live as a human and have food, shelter and a fire
to keep her warm. He punished her by changing her into a woodpecker that would
have to build a nest to live in, bore for food in the trunks of trees. Her
clothes were burned and she was left with her scarlet cap on her head as she
flew out through the chimney.
Even today she still lives in the woods and is seen
by all the country school boys.
1.
1. Let’s
look at the
words at the
end of the second and
fourth lines, viz., ‘snows’
and ‘clothes’, true’
and ‘you’, ‘below’
and ‘know’. We find
that ‘snows’ rhymes
with ‘clothes’, ‘true’
rhymes with ‘you’
and ‘below’ rhymes
with ‘know’.
Answer:
The rhyming words are: 'Few' and 'through' 'Earth' and 'hearth'
'Done' and 'one' 'Lay' and 'away' 'One' and 'done'
'Flat' and 'that' Myself and 'shelf' 'Faint' and 'saint'
'Form' and 'warm' 'Food' and 'wood' 'Word' and 'bird'
'Same' and 'flame' 'Wood' and 'food'
2.
Go
to the local library or talk to older persons in your locality and find legends in your own language. Tell
the class these legends.
Answer: Echo was a nymph
who talked too much. She was very
fond of having the last
word. One day she spoke
rudely to the great Juno,
who said that for
this offence Echo
should never use her voice
again, unless to repeat
what she had just heard,
but since she was
so very fond
of last words, she might repeat the
last words of others.
This was almost
as bad as if Juno
had changed her into a parrot. Echo was very much
ashamed, and hid
herself in the forest.
Narcissus, a young
man who had
hair as
yellow as
gold
and eyes
as blue as the sky, - a very rare thing
in Greece, where
most people were very
dark, - used to hunt
in the forest where Echo
was hiding. As she was peeping out shyly from
some cave or from behind
a great tree,
Echo often saw Narcissus, and she admired
him very much.
One day Narcissus became separated from
his friends, and hearing
something rustle among
the leaves, he called out, "Who's here?"
When Narcissus saw a stranger, instead
of one of his friends
as he had expected, he looked surprised and walked quickly
away.
After this,
Echo never came out and allowed herself
to be seen again, and in time she
faded away till
she became only
a voice.
This voice was heard
for many, many
years in forests
and among mountains, particularly in caves. In their solitary walks, hunters often heard it. Sometimes it mocked the barking of their dogs;
sometimes it repeated their
own last words.
It always had a weird
and mournful sound, and
seemed to make
lonely places more
lonely still.
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