My Hobby: Reading - Poem by Arunachalam Chandrasekharan
8th English: Unit 2: Poem: My Hobby: Reading
Author: Arunachalam Chandrasekharan
This post contains complete book-back questions and answers, solutions, and additional exercises for the poem.
1. Comprehension Questions
1. What is the hobby of the poet?
2. What does ‘ajar’ mean?
3. Can the poet fly without wings?
4. What can children do to society if they read?
5. What is the theme of the poem?
2. On the basis of your understanding of the poem, tick the most suitable option to complete the statements.
Reading...
My hobby...
Reading...
Reading...
3. Complete the table given below in order to understand the poem better.
Here is the table to be completed:
And here is the completed table:
FIGURE OF SPEECH
A ‘Figure of Speech’ is a word or a phrase which gives a separate meaning from the normal one. It means something more than it seems to mean. It is used figuratively, to give an implied meaning to the given context. It can either be used to make comparisons, or even to insist repetition or exaggeration. Figures of speech provide a dramatic effect.
A. Rhyming words
‘Rhyming words’ are two or more words which have the same sound. Words ‘rhyme’ if they have similar sounds when said aloud. ‘Rhyming words’ usually occur at the end of the lines in a poem. Rhyming words make poems or songs fun to sing.
A Tiny Little Plant
Answer the following:
1. List the rhyming words in the first three lines.
2. Which word in the poem rhymes with 'light'?
B. Rhyme Scheme:
A ‘Rhyme Scheme’ is a specific pattern used in a poem which determines which lines rhyme in the poem. Poets write poems with a rhyme scheme or a pattern. It is the arrangement of rhymes in a poem or a stanza.
Example:
The rhyme scheme of this poem can be determined by the end word in each line. The first line ends with the word ‘day’ and the second line ends with ‘way’. As both words rhyme with other, they are given the letter ‘a’. The third line ends with the word ‘air’ and the fourth line ends with ‘ hair’. These two words do not rhyme with the ending words of the first two lines. So, they are given the letter ‘b’ and so on. We get a rhyme scheme aabb ccdd for this poem.
Answer the following:
a. Identify the rhyme scheme of the given short poem.
b. Complete this poem on your own with a abab rhyme scheme.
Nine days old.
ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS
Poem Comprehension
1.
It helps me
In thought breeding.
It takes me to places
Near and far,
It keeps my rational
Doors ajar.
(a) What does the word ‘rational’ mean?
(b) Pick out the rhyming words in these lines.
(c) How does reading help the poet?
(d) Whose hobby was reading in the poem ‘My Hobby’?
(e) What does the term ‘thought breeding’ mean?
(f) How does reading take the poet near and far?
(g) What are ‘rational doors’?
2.
To cackle and cry
Without wings
It lets me fly.
(a) Why should reading teach us both to laugh and cry?
(b) How does the poet fly?
3.
If all the children could read,
In constructing a vigorous society,
Then we shall succeed.
(a) Who can build a vigorous society?
(b) How can we succeed?
(c) Pick out the alliterated words.
Short Questions and Answers.
1. How does his hobby help him ?
2. Where does the reading take him ?
3. What does reading teach him ?
Paragraph Questions with Answers.
1. What are the five ways in which reading helps us?
Reading hobby helps us to grow and cultivate many good thoughts. The content we read not only takes to nearby places but also to the remote and far areas according to what we read.
Reading habit enables to keep the doors of our mind unlocked and half open to permit intelligent and logical reasoning at the same time to prevent unwanted entry of bad and wrong things. Reading practices us to take in both happiness and sorrow in the same spirit. It teaches us to laugh loudly during happy times and to cry and let out sorrow during painful times.
Reading does not restrict or control our thoughts. Without wings it allows our thoughts to soar high and fly.
2. How can we form a ‘vigorous society’ according to the poet?
Poetic Devices in this poem.
The poet uses the following poetic devices in his poem, ‘My Hobby : Reading’.
1. Imagery
The poet weaves the advantages of reading hobby in his imagination.
a) The poet does not physically travel ‘near and far’, only his thoughts travel.
b) There is no literal door, the poet imagines his minds entrance as ‘door’,
c) The poet does not fly in the air. His thoughts, imaginations and ideas only made to ‘fly’ by his reading hobby.
2. Rhyme
This short poem has the following rhyming words:
- Lines 1-3: reading, breeding
- Lines 5-8: far, ajar
- Lines 9-12: cry, fly
- Lines 13-15: read, succeed
3. Couplet:
It is a fifteen-line poem. Each couplet after the first line presents a different thought concept.
Example: Line 2, 3 tells about thought breeding, line 4,5 speaks of ‘rational door’.
Line 6, 7 about joy and sorrow, lines 8,9 flying without wings.