Efore YOU EAD
Efore YOU EAD
Efore YOU EAD
in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
Activity
In Column A are some expressions you will find in the text. Make
a guess and match each expression with an appropriate meaning
from Column B.
A B
(i) A rainbow – A great ability (almost
gathering of unimaginable) to remain
different colours unchanged by suffering (not losing
and nations hope, goodness or courage)
(ii) The seat of white – A half-secret life, like a life lived in
supremacy the fading light between sunset
(iii) Be overwhelmed and darkness
with a sense of – A sign of human feeling (goodness,
history kindness, pity, justice, etc.)
(iv) Resilience that – A beautiful coming together of
defies the various peoples, like the colours in
imagination a rainbow
(v) A glimmer of – The centre of racial superiority
humanity – Feel deeply emotional,
(vi) A twilight remembering and understanding
existence all the past events that have led 17
up to the moment
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
1. Why did such a large number of international leaders attend the inauguration?
What did it signify the triumph of?
2. What does Mandela mean when he says he is “simply the sum of all those
African patriots” who had gone before him?
3. Would you agree that the “depths of oppression” create “heights of character”?
How does Mandela illustrate this? Can you add your own examples to this
argument?
First Flight
24
I. There are nouns in the text (formation, government) which are formed from
the corresponding verbs (form, govern) by suffixing -(at)ion or ment. There
may be a change in the spelling of some verb – noun pairs: such as rebel,
rebellion; constitute, constitution.
1. Make a list of such pairs of nouns and verbs in the text.
Noun Verb
rebellion rebel
constitution constitute
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2. Read the paragraph below. Fill in the blanks with the noun forms of
the verbs in brackets.
Martin Luther King’s (contribute) to our history as an
outstanding leader began when he came to the (assist) of
Rosa Parks, a seamstress who refused to give up her seat on a bus to a
white passenger. In those days American Blacks were confined to
positions of second class citizenship by restrictive laws and customs. To
break these laws would mean (subjugate) and
(humiliate) by the police and the legal system. Beatings,
(imprison) and sometimes death awaited those who defied the System.
Martin Luther King’s tactics of protest involved non-violent
(resist) to racial injustice.
Here are some more examples of ‘the’ used with proper names. Try to
say what these sentences mean. (You may consult a dictionary if you
wish. Look at the entry for ‘the’.)
1. Mr Singh regularly invites the Amitabh Bachchans and the Shah Rukh
Khans to his parties.
2. Many people think that Madhuri Dixit is the Madhubala of our times.
3. History is not only the story of the Alexanders, the Napoleons and the
Hitlers, but of ordinary people as well.
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
A B
1. I was not unmindful of (i) had not forgotten; was aware of the fact
the fact (ii) was not careful about the fact
(iii) forgot or was not aware of the fact
2. when my comrades (i) pushed by the guards to the wall
and I were pushed to (ii) took more than our share of beatings
our limits
(iii) felt that we could not endure the
suffering any longer
3. to reassure me and (i) make me go on walking
keep me going (ii) help me continue to live in hope in this
very difficult situation
First Flight
26
In groups, discuss the issues suggested in the box below. Then prepare a
speech of about two minutes on the following topic. (First make notes for
your speech in writing.)
True liberty is freedom from poverty, deprivation and all forms of
discrimination.
I. Looking at Contrasts
Nelson Mandela’s writing is marked by balance: many sentences have two
parts in balance.
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
(i) they can be taught to love. (iv) but he who conquers that fear.
(ii) I was born free. (v) to create such heights of
(iii) but the triumph over it. character.
II. This text repeatedly contrasts the past with the present or the future. We
can use coordinated clauses to contrast two views, for emphasis or effect.
Given below are sentences carrying one part of the contrast. Find in the text
the second part of the contrast, and complete each item. Identify the words
which signal the contrast. This has been done for you in the first item.
1. For decades the Union Buildings had been the seat of white supremacy,
and now ... 27
2. Only moments before, the highest generals of the South African defence
force and police ... saluted me and pledged their loyalty. ... not so many
years before they would not have saluted
3. Although that day neither group knew the lyrics of the anthem ..., they
would soon
Nelson Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom
4. My country is rich in the minerals and gems that lie beneath its soil,
5. The Air Show was not only a display of pinpoint precision and military
force, but
6. It was this desire for the freedom of my people ... that transformed
into a bold one, that drove to become a
criminal, that turned into a man without a home.
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
this. You have the option of making your paragraph a humorous one.
(Read the short verse given below.)
When you were born you were pink
When you grew up you became white
When you are in the sun you are red
When you are sick you are yellow
When you are angry you are purple
When you are shocked you are grey
And you have the cheek to call me ‘coloured’.
Divide your class into three groups and give each group one of the following topics to
research: (i) black Americans, and their fight against discrimination, (ii) women, and
their fight for equality, (iii) the Vietnamese, and their fight for independence.
Choose a student from each group to present a short summary of each topic to
the class.
28
Homophones
Can you find the words below that are spelt
similarly, and sometimes even pronounced
similarly, but have very different meanings? Check
their pronunciation and meaning in a dictionary.
• The bandage was wound around the wound.
• The soldier decided to desert his dessert in the
desert.
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
1. Read the poem again, and work in pairs or groups to do the following tasks.
(i) Find the words that describe the movements and actions of the tiger in
the cage and in the wild. Arrange them in two columns.
(ii) Find the words that describe the two places, and arrange them in two
columns.
Now try to share ideas about how the poet uses words and images to contrast
the two situations.
2. Notice the use of a word repeated in lines such as these:
(i) On pads of velvet quiet,
In his quiet rage.
(ii) And stares with his brilliant eyes
At the brilliant stars.
First Flight
The Tiger
The tiger behind the bars of his cage growls,
The tiger behind the bars of his cage snarls,
The tiger behind the bars of his cage roars.
Then he thinks.
It would be nice not to be behind bars all
The time
Because they spoil my view
I wish I were wild, not on show.
But if I were wild, hunters might shoot me,
But if I were wild, food might poison me,
But if I were wild, water might drown me.
Then he stops thinking
And...
The tiger behind the bars of his cage growls,
The tiger behind the bars of his cage snarls,
The tiger behind the bars of his cage roars.
PETER NIBLETT
2019-20
www.ncertpdf.in
The Panther
His vision, from the constantly passing bars,
has grown so weary that it cannot hold
anything else. It seems to him there are
a thousand bars; and behind the bars, no world.
As he paces in cramped circles, over and over,
the movement of his powerful soft strides
is like a ritual dance around a centre
in which a mighty will stands paralysed.
Only at times, the curtain of the pupils
lifts, quietly. An image enters in,
rushes down through the tensed, arrested muscles,
plunges into the heart and is gone.
4. Take a point of view for or against zoos, or even consider both points of view
and write a couple of paragraphs or speak about this topic for a couple of
minutes in class.
31
2019-20