{"id":46281,"date":"2019-08-05T11:34:41","date_gmt":"2019-08-05T06:04:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cbselibrary.com\/?p=46281"},"modified":"2020-11-09T11:41:37","modified_gmt":"2020-11-09T06:11:37","slug":"plus-two-english-textbook-answers-unit-4-chapter-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cbselibrary.com\/plus-two-english-textbook-answers-unit-4-chapter-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Plus Two English Textbook Answers Unit 4 Chapter 2 Rice (Poem)"},"content":{"rendered":"

Kerala Plus Two English Textbook Answers Unit 4 Chapter 2 Rice (Poem)<\/h2>\n

Read And Respond (Text Book)<\/span><\/p>\n

Question 1.
\nOf all the memories of his homeland, the narrator thinks of rice\u2019 first. What does this show?
\nAnswer:
\nIt shows his extreme love for rice. He is a rice eater. For the last 4 years he has been eating chapattis. Now he is craving for rice.<\/p>\n

Question 2.
\nWhat are the memories of the narrator about the paddy cultivating season?
\nAnswer:
\nHe remembers his father in the fields below his house. He is wearing a handloom dhoti stained with yellow mud. He is excited about the water of the Varanganal canal. He also remembers his little brother carrying the tender saplings to be planted where the ploughing is done. On the dyke baskets full of seeds are kept. There is the noise of shouting as the oxen draw the plough in the field.<\/p>\n

Question 3.
\nThe narrator wants the train to move a little faster. What does this tell us about his feeling for his native village?
\nAnswer:
\nIt tells that he loves his village dearly. He has been missing it for long. He wants to reach it as quickly as possible. We see his nostalgic feelings here.<\/p>\n

Question 4.
\nWhat changes in the native village does the narrator notice on his return.
\nAnswer:
\nThere are many changes in his native village. The palm-thatched houses are gone. There are only rubber plants there. There are no rice fields any more. There is no noise of people below. No shouts of ploughing. The whole field is planted with areca nut palms. In the corner, along the canal, there are the dealwood trees which were not there before.<\/p>\n

Question 5.
\nRubber plants have taken the place of paddy. What does this imply?
\nAnswer:
\nIt implies that food crops are replaced by cash\/commercial crops. People don\u2019t any more cultivate their favourite varies of rice like athikira, modan and vellaran. Now they survive on their rations which consist of wheat.<\/p>\n

Question 6.
\n\u201cOnly fools turn to rice farming for gain.\u201d Why does the father say so?
\nAnswer:
\nThe father says so because nobody promotes the farming of rice. Rice farming was quite inconvenient and the farmer gained nothing. Rubber brings better money. The government gives rice to those who have no paddy fields.<\/p>\n

Question 7.
\nWhat does the ship of the sky represent?
\nAnswer:
\nIt represents the aeroplane, as the ship of the desert represents the camel.<\/p>\n

Question 8.
\n\u201cCan we get some husk from the Centre, too, to make toys with it?\u201d Bring out the satire in these lines.
\nAnswer:
\nThe poet had gone to North India and did a 4-year research on making toys with husk. He got a doctoral degree at the end of his research. Now he comes back to Kerala to find out that there is no more rice cultivation here and consequently no husk to make toys with. To make toys with husk, he has to get husk from the Centre! He did the research to help the State to find employment and. income. What use the State will have now with his doctorate?<\/p>\n

Think And Write<\/span><\/p>\n

Question 1.
\nWhy does the narrator feel confused as he walks home?
\nAnswer:
\nThe narrator feels confused as he walks home because things were quite different from the state he had left them before he went to North India for his research that took him 4 years. The palm-thatched houses that were in the distance had gone. All around him he sees rows of rubber plants on the ridge. They have grown twice his height. He used to see modan and vellaran there in the past. Now nothing. So he is confused.<\/p>\n

Question 2.
\nWhy does the father wear a contented look?
\nAnswer:
\nThe father wears a contented look because he is excited about the water of the Varanganal canal. He is getting enough water from the canal so that he can start his planting. He is happy with his work.<\/p>\n

Question 3.
\nWhat changes have occurred in the lifestyle of the farmers when they shifted from food crops to cash crops?
\nAnswer:
\nTheir life has become comparatively easy. They don\u2019t have to struggle in the field wearing wet and muddy clothes. They are happy that they have stopped producing food crops. It was quite inconvenient. The farmer gained nothing. Cash crops bring more money and life is better. They feel good times have come. But they have to eat wheat instead of their favourite varieties of rice.<\/p>\n

Question 4.
\nRead the lines \u201cMy father says ……….. quite inconvenient\u201d (Page 118).
\nCite other instances of satire in the poem.
\nAnswer:<\/p>\n