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Home > Lost Spring

Lost Spring

Question
CBSEENEN12019319
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Who is Saheb and where does he hail from?

Or

What was Saheb? How did he earn his living?

Or

What is Saheb looking for in the garbage dumps and where has he come from?

Or

Where did Saheb come from? What made him & his family leave their native place.

Solution
Short Answer

Saheb is a rag-picker of Seemapuri.

The writer encounters him every morning scrounging for gold in the garbage dumps in her neighbourhood. Saheb hails from Dhaka and he has migrated from Bangladesh in 1971. His house and green fields were destroyed by storm. Their poverty forced them to migrate but Saheb does not have even a faint memory of his original home.

Tips: -

V. Imp.

Some More Questions From Lost Spring Chapter

How, in your opinion, can Mukesh realise his dream?

Mention the hazards of working in the glass bangles industry.

Why should child labour be eliminated and how?

Although this text speaks of factual events an situation of misery it transforms these situations with an almost poetical prose into a literary experience. How does it do so? Here are some literary devices:

• Hyperbole is a way of speaking or writing that makes something sound better or more exciting than it really is. For example: Garbage to them is gold.

• Metaphor as you may know, compares two things or ideas that are not very similar. A metaphor describes a thing in terms of a single quality or feature of some other things; we can say that a metaphor transfers a quality of one thing to another.

For example: The road was a ribbon of light.

• Simile is a word or phrase that compares one thing with another using the words “like” or “as”. For example: As white as snow.

Carefully read the following phrases and sentences taken from the text and name the figures of speech used.

1. Saheb-e-Alam which means the lord of the universe is directly in contrast to what Saheb is in reality.

2. Drowned in an air on desolation.

3. Seemapuri, a place on the periphery of Delhi yet miles away from it, metaphorically.

4. For the children it is wrapped in wonder; for the elders it is a means of survival.

5. As her hands move mechanically like the tongs of a machine, I wonder if she knows the sanctity of the bangles she helps make.

6. She still has bangles on her wrist, but not light in her eyes.

7. Few airplanes fly over Firozabad.

8. Web of poverty.

9. Scrounging for gold.

10. And survival in Seemapuri means rag-picking. Through the years, it has acquired the proportions of a fine art.

11. The steel canister seems heavier than the plastic bag he would carry so lightly over his shoulders.







The beauty of the glass bangles of Firozabad contrasts with the misery of people who produce them.

This paradox is also found in some other situations, for example those who work in gold and diamond mines, carpet weaving factories and the products of their labour, construction workers and the buildings they build.

• Look around and find examples of such paradoxes.

• Write a paragraph of about 200 to 250 words on any one of them. You can start by making notes.

Here is an example of how one such paragraph may begin:

You never see the poor in this town. By day they toil, working cranes and earthmovers, squirreling deep into the hot sand to lay the foundations of chrome. By night they are banished to bleak labour camps at the outskirts of the city.

What does Anees Jung want to reveal in her story ‘Lost Spring’ Stories of Stolen Childhood?

Who is Saheb and where does he hail from?

Or

What was Saheb? How did he earn his living?

Or

What is Saheb looking for in the garbage dumps and where has he come from?

Or

Where did Saheb come from? What made him & his family leave their native place.

What makes the authoress embarrassed at having made a promise that was not meant?

What is the unusual morning scene in the streets of the authoress Anees Jung?

Or

How does the writer come to recognise each of the rag-pickers in her neighbourhood?

Why do these children remain barefoot?

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