BACK HOME -POETRY QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Read the poem below and then answer the questions. (20mks)
BACK HOME And one day I went back home: Back home to the old homestead With a ring of old huts Surrounding a wide compound: Swept clean for children to play And yell and laugh and cry. I walked briskly, thinking of home Smoke rising from the huts Filtered through the thatched roofs: Dripping wet after a shower of rain; Moist ground in the compound, Grandpa sitting on his stool and sipping from his gourd; Birds singing in the mango tree: And then finally I reached home: The air heavy with silence Huts, down in dry heaps of dilapidation Shoots of scorched elephant grass: Growing piously in the compound: A carpet of mango leaves Falling on the mound of earth Under which was buried but the tip Yes, only the tip of grandpa’s walking staff Could be seen peeping from under the earth: Pointing down to where the owner lay; The lasting indication Of his inability to talk again Except by echoes of silence Telling me I went back too late: Jwani Mwaikusa. QUESTIONS
(a) Describe the setting in this poem. (2 marks)
(b) Who is the persona in the poem? (2 marks) (c) Where is grandpa? Give reasons for your answer. (2 marks) (d) What is the effect of the alliteration in line 17? (2 marks) (e) Giving two examples, show the effect of contrast as used by the poet. (4 marks) (f) Identify and illustrate the two different moods prevailing in this poem. (4 marks) (g) Explain the meaning of the following lines as used in the poem. (4 marks) (i) ‘A carpet of mango leaves Falling on the mound of earth” (ii) ‘Of his inability to talk again Except by echoes of silence” MARKING SCHEME
(a) The setting is in a rural area√ 1 — the persona talks of huts/homestead. √ 1
(b) The persona is a grandson / granddaughter / grandchildl — talks of grandpa. √ 1 (c) Grandpa is dead√1 because we are told that the walking staff was buried under a mound of earth and it pointed to where the owner lay. √ 1 The staff peeped from under the earth where the owner lay. √ 1 (d) The alliteration is - huts/heaps- down/dry/dilapidation or /h/and /d/.√ 1 The alliteration creates mood/rhythm/suspense. √ 1 (e) The first three stanzas contrast with the last three. (i) The memory of children “playing and yelling laughing and crying” is contrasted with “The air heavy with silence”. The effect of this is to create a sense of foreboding/fear. Showing or warns that something is amiss/wrong. √2 (ii) “A wide compound swept clean for children to play” is contrasted with “shoots of scorched elephant grass growing piously in the compound/”a carpet of mango leaves”. Their effect is an indication of neglect or that something is wrong. √2 (iii) “Smoke rising from the huts” is contrasted with “Huts down in dry heaps of dilapidation”. This warns of a disaster/danger. √2 (iv) “Grandpa sitting on his stool” is contrasted with “Grandpa lying under the earth” i.e. dead. This contrast creates atmosphere/mood. √2 Generally each contrast has the effect of changing mood. (2 marks each x = 4 marks) (f) The first mood is foundin the 1st stanza. It is nostalgic. √ l The persona describes the home with fond memories e.g. children, yelling, laughing and crying or “birds singing in the mango tree”. √l The second mood is found in the 4” stanza. It is sad/solemn. √l With the death of grandpa the homestead has collapsed. √l (g) Lines (i) “A carpet of mango leaves falling on the mound of earth”, means a great number of leaves falling on the grave. √2 (ii) “Of his inability to talk again except by echoes of silence”. This emphasises that grandpa is dead and that the persona will never hear him talk again. √2 Follow AtikaSchool.Org on our Social ChannelsThis gives you an opportunity to get our latest uodates, changes and firsthand information
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.Don't give up, Keep Searching for more |
Categories
All
Archives
August 2022
|