English, asked by sonikanayan0925, 3 months ago

33.What could we see in the pools in the woods? *​प्लीज टेल मी आई डोंट नो

Answers

Answered by Katyyani3404
3

Answer:

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Explanation:

The poem begins with the mention of a road through the woods which was closed seventy years ago. The road was left undisturbed. For so many years, the weather and the rain have undone the road (destroyed) the road. The place was looking as it was before formation of that road. But now, no one could tell if there was even a road through the woods. It is because the road has disappeared beneath the bushes and scrub of different kinds of plants. It is hidden from the human eyes. After the road was closed, trees were planted. Those trees have grown up now, and that road has become the part of the wood itself.

But now the road (which is not seen, and which is now a part of wood itself) is full of activity and life. It is occupied by the ring-dove that broods there and the burrowing badger which rolls in it playfully.

Now, if anyone goes and visits the woods in the late summer evening, he or she will come to know that there is more to the road. The night air cools above the pools that are full of trout fish, and the otter calls out to its mate. These creatures do not fear human presence because very few people enter the woods.

One could hear the trampling of a horse’s hoof when the horse isn’t physically present. Perhaps, it is a ghost from the past when the road was used by men on horseback. One could hear the swish of skirts moving amongst dew covered grass. From these sounds, one could tell the difference that these people move in easy walk as if they perfectly knew where the road lay, even when a living person wouldn’t be able to distinguish it because it is no longer the road that was there seventy years back. The poet still feels that there is surely no road through the woods.

Questions – Answers:

1. Who can see where the old road ran?

Ans: The keeper of the woods can see where the old road ran.

2. Why is the otter not afraid of men?

Ans: The otter is not afraid of men because very few people enter the woods.

3. What are the various creatures that can be seen and heard in these woods?

Ans: Fish, otter, horse, men are the various creatures that can be seen and heard in these woods.

Explain with reference to the context:

1. ‘There was once a road through the woods’.

a) What happened to the road that once ran through the woods?

Ans: The road was closed by men seventy years ago.

b) How long ago did it exist?

Ans: It existed seventy years ago.

c) How has it disappeared?

Ans: Many bushes and plant has grown on the road as it was not used. Thus the road has disappeared in the shrubs.

2. It is under the coppice and health

And the thin anemones.

a) What is under the coppice and health?

Ans: The road is under the coppice and health.

b) Why is it hidden there?

Ans: Many bushes and plant has grown on the road as it was not used. That is why it seems that the road is hidden there.

3. You will hear the beat of horse’s feet,

And the swish of a skirt in the dew.

a) Which is the horse that is being referred here?

Ans: The horse once upon a time on which people used to roam in the woods.

b) How and when it is present in the forest?

Ans: It is not physically present in the forest. That is one of the old memories of the poet.

c) Does its presence appear natural to you?

Ans: No, the presence of the horse doesn’t appear natural to me because it is not physically present there.

4. Which lines tell you that the woods are full of life?

Ans: Following lines tell us that the woods are full of life:

- That, where the ring-dove broods,

- And the badges roll at ease,

- Where the otter whistles his mate

- On the trout-ringed pools

- You will hear the beat of the horse’s feet

- And the swish of the skirt in the dew

5. What can be heard on late summer evening? What do you think causes these sounds?

Ans: The whistles of the otter can be heard on late summer evening. The otter can be seen calling his mate. Also, the horse’s feet tapping, the swish of the skirt, can be heard. Actually there is no presence of such things, it’s just poet’s imagination.

6. ‘As though they perfectly knew’ – Who do you think ‘they’ are? Why do you think so?

Ans: The word ‘they’ refer to the people who used to visit the road once upon a time. I think so because only these people can be perfectly walk on the road because they were habitual to the road.

7. Which words tell you –

a) That a woman is walking through the woods?

Ans: the swish of the skirt

b) What lives in the pool?

Ans: trout-ringed pools

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