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A Roadside Stand

Question
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You could stop at a dhaba or a roadside eatery on the outskirts of your town or city to see:

1. how many travellers stop there to eat?

2. how many travellers stop for other reasons?

3. how the shopkeepers are treated?

4. the kind of business the shopkeepers do.

5. the kind of life they lead.

Solution

It is purely a students’ activity.

Hints: They must individually avail themselves of the opportunities to stop at a dhaba or a roadside eatery in the countryside and then note down as demonstrated below -

1. The number of travellers stopping there to eat; say 20 per hour.

2. Those who stopped for other reasons (water, cold drink, etc.); say 10 per hour.

3. How the shopkeepers treated either respectfully and courteously or roughly.

4. Kind of business of shopkeepers: eaters, items for sale, cold drinks, water bottles, fruits, magazines, pickles, etc.

5. Kind of life they lead: very hectic, full of diverse activities, not of quality, pathetic but inviting.

 

Some More Questions From A Roadside Stand Chapter

The reaction of a stopping car for the landscape was:


Read the stanza given below and answer the questions that follow each:
Offered for sale wild berries in wooden quarts
Or crook-necked golden squash with silver warts
Or beauty rest in a beautiful mountain scene
You have the money, but if you want to be mean
Why keep money (this crossly) and go along.
The hurt to the scenery wouldn’t be my complaint
So much as the trusting sorrow of what is unsaid

1. What was offered for sale and where?
2. According to the poet where does the beauty rest?
3. Explain: If you want to be mean.


The items which were sold on the roadside stand were:

Beauty, according to Robert Frost, rests in:

Moneyed people are mean. It means:

Read the stanza given below and answer the questions that follow each:
Here far from the city we make our roadside stand
And ask for some city money to feel in hand
To try if it will not make our being expand
And give us the life of the moving pictures promise
That the party in power is said to be keeping from us.

1. Who made a roadside stand and where?
2. Who wanted to feel the money in hand?
3. Who hoped to be helped and by whom?
4. What was the promise made and who made it?




The roadside stand was set up by:

From whom did the rural people desire to get money?

The promise of providing motion pictures for the rural folk was made by:

Read the stanza given below and answer the questions that follow each:
It is in the news that all these pitiful kin are to be bought out and mercifully gathered in
To live in villages, next to the theatre and the store
Where they won’t have to think for themselves anymore.

1. What was there in the news?
2. Where were the people to be settled?
3. What would be their state there?
4. Who are the ‘pitiful kin’ here?