Saturday, November 21, 2020

Television Poem by Roald Dahl ICSE Solutions


 








Television Poem by Roald Dahl ICSE Solutions -



PASSAGE-1


i. The most important thing that the poet has learned as far as children are concerned is that they should never be allowed to watch television as it fills their minds with junk. The better solution to this problem would be not to intall the television set in thier homes at all.


ii. Television is referred as idiotic thing by the poet. The poet advices not to intall it because it hypnotises and produces dulness in the minds of those who watch it.


iii. In almost every house with television, children are staring at the television  screen without doing any productive work.
It upsets him because he cosiders television as a monster that kills children’s imgination.


iv. The figure of speech used here is Hyperbole, which uses exaggeration for emphasis  or effect. To put emphasis on the hypnotic effect of television, the poet says that previous week at someone’s palce he had seen half a dozen eyeballs rolling about on the floor.


v. Repetitions are used to emphasise that children should never be allowed to watch television as they just sit and stare at it without doing anything productive.

a). Two types of repetition:

  Is neverNEVER NEVER, Let
  Them near your television set-

They sit and stare and stare and sit

b). The rhyme scheme followed throughout the poem is aa bb cc dd




PASSAGE- 2


1. The television set keeps the children hypnotised as they watch all the junk that it telecasts.


 2. Television proves to be useful for the parents because it keeps their children still and occupied. The children then do not indulge in any kind of fights. It allows the parents to do their house hold chores peacefully.


3. It produces dullness in their mind.

It kills their imagination and thinking ability.

It hypnotises them and fills them with junk.


4. The ability to think of new ideas dimnishes when child passively engages in watching television. Watching too much television destroys children’s abilty to understand the world of fantacy. Their thinking power rusts and freezes.
Personification is the figure of speech used here. It is used to express a thing or idea as a person.
Dahl uses personifiaction in the line:
It kills their imagination dead!
He givies television the ability to kill and gives imagination ability to die at its hand.


5. Yes, Dahl seems to be critical of television because he seems to highlight only the negative effects of television on children,such as : It rots their senses, kills their imagination, clogs their mind, makes them dull, and incapable of understanding the world of fantasy. It feezes thier thinking power.




PASSAGE- 3


1. The poet here answers the parents’ query that if they take the television set away, what type of entertainment they would give to make their children occupied.

 The poet replies by asking  parents to recall how the children kept themselves entertained by reading books before television was invented.


2. The poet refers to the television as a monster that kills children’s imagination. Before television was invented,children would actively engage themselves only in reading. Books could be found everywhere – on the nursery shelves,on nursery floor,in the bedroom or by the children’s bed.


3. THEY ....USED ...TO... READ!
......................
One half of their lives was reading books!

The following lines use repetition to create a smooth flow and to put emphasis on th fact that children used to read only books before monstrous television was invented. Moreover, the emphasis on the word READ implying importance of reading books.


4. This is done to catch the readers attention and emphasise that instead of watching television ,children should engage themselves in reading as they used to do before television was invented. The use of captail letters is equivalent to shouting.

5. Once childen start reading, they get so involved in reading that there would be books everywhere. The last four lines describe such a secnario. The nursery shelves would be filled with books. Books would be scattered on the floor and by the children’s bed.




PASSAGE- 4


1. Synecdoche. It is a figure of speech in which a part is put for the whole or the whole for a part. In the poem, the expample is: The younger ones had Beatrix Potter.

 Here  the name of the author Beatrix Potter is used to represent the whole gamut of her works such as ‘The tale of Squirrel Nutkin’, ‘The Tale of Mr Tod’, and ‘The Tale of Piling Bland.’

Example of rhyming scheme is: Potter, Rotter


2. The poet remembers the time when the children used to only read books. They used to read books filled with tales of treasure islands, voyages, smugglers, pirates, ships, elephants and cannibals. It was a time when young children travelled to an all new adventurous world of animals with Mr Tod, Squirrel Nutkin, and Piglin Bland.


3. The refernece is important because it transports the readers to a time before the television was invented when children used to read.


4. The poet suggests that TV sets should be thrown out and should be replaced with bookshelves.

His suggestion does not seem to be practical as television is also a medium of education. Children can be guided to watch educational programmes and newscasts.


5. TV sets should not be thrown out of the houses. Dahl mentions only the negative aspects of television. Television has educational  benefits as it is an audio-visual medium and can help children learn by watching. However, there is a need to maitain a balance between watching television and other activities.




PASSAGE-5


1.   He gave this advice in continuation of his suggestion of throwing TV sets away. According to the poet replacing TV sets with bookshelves would be best as far as children are concerned.


2.   Children will give dirty looks to their parents when their TV sets would be replaced with bookshelves filled with books. Children would then scream and yell and fight  with their parents.


3.   The parents are advised to ‘fear not’ because their children’s tantrums would be temporary; what would be permanent is their love for books which would soon follow.


4.   Yes. Watching television for hours, makes the children dull and passive. It kills their imagination; on the other hand, reading books will help them to travel to new and exciting  worlds of ‘dragons, gypsies, queens and whales.” Dahl remembers his days, when television was not invented and children would spend their time reading; a time when nursery floor and the side of their beds were filled only with books;  a time when young children travelled to an all adventrous  world of animals with Tod, Squirrel Nutkin and Pigling Bland.


5.   To develop a habit of reading books is an important advice that the poet gives. Reading transfers one to a beautiful world of imagination and fantasy. Reading fills  one’s heart with true joy and happiness.




PASSAGE-6


1.   It refers to children’s act of starting to read books once television is uninstalled from their houses. The poet feels very excited about it as he employs an easy, delightful and cheering tone while talking about books. His excitement is reflected  through: “Oh boy, Oh boy!”


2.   Yes. Watching television for hours, makes the children dull and passive. It kills their imagination; on the other hand, reading books will help them to  travel to new and exciting  worlds of ‘dragon, gypsies, queens and whales.”


3.   He has a strong dislike for television and he describes it as nauseating, foul, unclean, monstrous and idiotic. However, he firmly believes that reading is a powerful tool for learning and considers books as lovely, wondrous, fine, fantastic


4.   Yes. Watching television for hours, makes the children dull and passive. It kills their imagination; on the other hand, reading books will help them to  travel to new and exciting  worlds of ‘dragons, gypsies, queens and whales.” Dahl remembers his days, when television was not invented and children would spend their time reading; a time when nursery floor and the side of their beds were filled only with books;  a time when young children travelled to an all adventrous  world of animals with Tod, Squirrel Nutkin and Pigling Bland.


5.   The television is a silly invention of modern science that does not have any positive effect. It is ‘nauseating’ and disgusting to watch. It is ‘foul’, morally bad and offensive. It telecasts only ‘junk’. The television screen thus is repulsive.     

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