Long Questions:
1 Describe the statue of the Happy Prince.
2 What made the Happy Prince sad?
3 Why did Happy Prince send the sapphire to a young writer and the match girl?
Or
1 What made Happy Prince blind? Describe it.
2 Why did Happy Prince give away all his assets? Describe it.
3 Write the character sketch of the Happy Prince.
Answers
Answer:
this answer was made by spending a lot of time
hope it helps
Explanation:
1. The Happy Prince is described as a beautiful statue. The statue was placed on the top of a tall pillar. The statue of the prince was completely covered with gold. He was a statue who gave away his precious gems for the people of his city to live happily.
2. The happy prince was sad because he saw that in city there was sadness, misery and poor people with hunger. but when the prince was in palace he was living happily and sadness was not allowed. the happy prince became sad for the people who were poor and nobody to help.
3. The Happy Prince sends sapphire to a young girl and a writer. The young writer was trying to finish a play but he couldn't because he needed money to buy firewood which would keep him warm. Therefore, the Prince sent sapphire to him so that he could sell it to the jeweller to buy firewood and finish his play.
1 What made Happy Prince blind? Describe it.
Yes the Happy Prince did become blind after giving his eyes or blue sapphires. One sapphire he gave it to a poor man who wasn't able to finish a play for the director and was too cold to write anymore.
2 Why did Happy Prince give away all his assets? Describe it.
To eradicate misery and sorrow from his city. Explanation: The Happy Prince was a very kind hearted Statue which wanted to remove all sorrow from his city. So he asked the Swallow to help him by taking away his assets and giving them to the poor of the city.
3.Write the character sketch of the Happy Prince.
The Prince is described as exceedingly beautiful with golden skin, sapphires for eyes, and a ruby on his sword-hilt. Although his external beauty impresses everyone around him, he sees that beauty as only skin-deep; his true worth lies in his compassion for his townspeople and his willingness to sacrifice for them.