In the chapter packing you have seen how Jerome , Harris and George mess up the packing especially of the hamper keeping their mistake in mind write some do's and don'ts for packing also give some tips for packing in 120 to 150 words
Answers
Answer:sumery of the story
The author and his friends decided to go on holiday. The author thought he was an expert in packing. He told his friends, George and Harris that he would do the packing. They at once agreed to his suggestion. George put on a pipe and sat in an easy chair. Harris put his legs on a table and lit a cigar. The author had not intended this. He was unhappy with himself for having offered to pack. He had thought that Harris and George would pack and he would boss over them. When he worked and the people around him relaxed, he was greatly irritated. At the same time, he could not sit still and see others working. He enjoyed getting up and supervising their work.
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As flavoring for the tone of the whole packing incident, J. says he's especially good at packing, and he should do it. Harris and George agree "with a readiness that had something uncanny about it," meaning J. felt something was not quite right. J. of course meant he'd supervise the packing while they packed. They of course meant he'd pack while they watched from lounging positions. J. packed all their personal belongings, from boots to toothbrushes. And it was boots and one toothbrush that he left out. After going through several unpleasant rounds of unpack, repack, unpack, repack, the job was done, with only the soap (possibly) and J.'s tobacco-pouch giving further trouble.
Harris and George thought that after J.'s display of expert packing, they'd better pack the foods and supplies. They had the "big hamper" to pack with these items. J. watched, feeling that "the thing would soon be exciting." They started by breaking a cup, then squashing tomatoes with the jam. Then they packed the pies and "smashed the pies in" with heavy things on top. They spilled salt everywhere then, in turns, stepped on the butter, tried to cram it into the water kettle, sat on the butter, hunted for the now missing butter (until George got a back view of Harris), and finally shoved it into the teapot.
" ...After George had got it off his slipper, they tried to put it in the kettle. It wouldn't go in, and what was in wouldn't come out. They did scrape it out at last, and put it down on a chair, and Harris sat on it, and it stuck to him, and they went looking for it all over the room. "I'll take my oath I put it down on that chair," said George, staring at the empty seat. "
Sitting, at the end of everything, on the lid of the packed, closed hamper, Harris said he hoped nothing "would be found broken," to which George replied that "if anything was broken it was broken." Montmorency performed up to expectations during the packing incident by assuming his cold nose was what Harris's and George's hands were reaching for; by sitting on the very item that was to be packed next; by upsetting the spoons; by putting his leg into the jam and by attacking the lemons in the hamper. Other packing incidents occur as they go along, but this is the central and first packing incident.