- The River and The Source by M. Ogolla
Akoko is at the center of the change process in the society of The River and The...(Solved)
The River and The Source by M. Ogolla.
Akoko is at the center of the change process in the society of The River and The Source, by Margaret Ogolla. Write an essay illustrating the truth of this statement
Date posted: June 7, 2019. Answers (1)
- Witi Ihimaera, The Whale Rider.
'Women and girl characters are portrayed as having admirable qualities.'How true is this assertion? Draw your
illustrations from the novel. The Whale...(Solved)
Witi Ihimaera, The Whale Rider.
'Women and girl characters are portrayed as having admirable qualities.' How true is this assertion? Draw your
illustrations from the novel. The Whale Rider.
Date posted: June 7, 2019. Answers (1)
- Drama
Francis Imbuga, Betrayal in the City.
'The outside of one cell may as well be the inside of another.'
Discuss the relevance of the above statement basing...(Solved)
Drama
Francis Imbuga, Betrayal in the City.
'The outside of one cell may as well be the inside of another.'
Discuss the relevance of the above statement basing your answer from Franchis Imbuga’s, Betrayal in the City.
Date posted: June 7, 2019. Answers (1)
-
Ilieva Emilia and Waveney Olembo (ED.), When the Sun Goes Down and Other Stories. With relevant
illustrations, discuss the effects of global warming, in the story...(Solved)
Ilieva Emilia and Waveney Olembo (ED.), When the Sun Goes Down and Other Stories. With relevant
illustrations, discuss the effects of global warming, in the story Tuesday Siesta by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Date posted: June 7, 2019. Answers (1)
- Margaret Ogola, The River and the Source.
The Western culture has totally changed the African traditions.
With reference to the 'River and the Source,' show the...(Solved)
Margaret Ogola, The River and the Source.
The Western culture has totally changed the African traditions.
With reference to the 'River and the Source,' show the validity of this statement.
Date posted: June 7, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the excerpt and answer the questions that follow. (Solved)
Read the excerpt and answer the questions that follow.
GRUSHA Noon time is meal time. Now we’ll sit hopefully in the grass, while the
good Grusha (to the CHILD): goes and buys a little pitcher of milk. (She lays the CHILD down and
knocks at the cottage door
OLD MAN: Milk? We have no milk. The soldiers from the city have our goats. Go to
the soldiers if you want milk.
GRUSHA: But grandfather, you must have a little pitcher of milk for baby?
OLD MAN: And for a God-bless-you, eh?
GRUSHA: Who said anything about a God-bless-you? (She shows her purse.) We’ll
pay like princes. “Head in the clouds, back-side in the water.” (The peasant
goes off, grumbling, for milk). How much for the milk?
OLD MAN: Three piasters. Milk has gone up.
GRUSHA: Three piasters for this little drop? (Without a word he old man shuts the
door in face). Michael, did you hear that? Three piasters! We can’t afford it!
(She goes back, sits down again, and gives the CHILD her breast). Suck.
Think of the three piasters. There’s nothing there, but you think you’re
drinking, and that’s something. (Shaking her head, she sees that the child
isn’t sucking any more. She gets up, walks back to the door, and knocks
again). Open grandfather, we’ll pay. (softly). May lightning strike you!
(When the OLD MAN appears). I thought it would be half a piaster.
But the baby must be fed. How about one piaser for that little drop?
OLD MAN: Two
GRUSHA: Don’t shut the door again. (She fishes a long time in her bag). Here are
two piasters. The milk better be good. I still have two days’ journey ahead
of me. It’s a murderous business you have here – and sinful, too!
OLD MAN: Kill the soldiers if you wan milk.
GRUSHA: (giving the CHILD some milk): This is an expensive joke. Take a sip, Michael; it’s a week’s pay.
Around here they think we earned our money just sitting
on our behinds. Oh, Michael, Michael. You’re a nice little load for a girl to
take on! (Uneasy, she gets up, puts the CHILD on her back, and walks on.
The OLD MAN, grumbling, picks up the pitcher and looks after her unmoved
SINGER: As Grusha Vashnadze went northward
The Princes’ Ironshirts went after her.
CHORUS: How will the barefoot girl escape the Ironshirts,
The bloodhounds, the trap-setters?
They hunt even by night.
Pursuers never tire.
Butchers sleep little.
(a) Explain what happens immediately before this excerpt?
(b) As Grusha’s Vashnadze went Northwards, the princes Iron shirts went after her.
Using the excerpt and elsewhere from the text, explain the importance of this mission to the soldiers.
(c) What is the attitude of the Old man towards the soldiers?
(d) Explain two character traits of Grusha as brought out in the excerpt.
(e) What is the significance of the song in the excerpt?
(f) Identify and explain two stylistic devices used in the excerpt.
(g) It is a murderous business you have here and sinful too. (Add a question tag).
(h) Identify and illustrate two themes evidently brought out in the excerpt.
(i) Give the meaning of the following statements as used in the passage.
(i) This is an expensive joke
(ii) And for a God-bless-you, eh!
(iii)Blood hounds.
Date posted: June 7, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the narrative below and answer the questions that follow. (Solved)
Read the narrative below and answer the questions that follow.
Long, long time ago animals and birds spoke just like men do. When God had to stop them speaking, he
made birds sin, like this chrrip! Chrrip……… Lions to roar like this graagh! Graagh! And hyenas to howl like
this huuu! Huuu!
And do you blame God? Listen to what naughty hyena who had gone two days without any meat did. He had
been wondering up and down the hills when he suddenly stopped, nose in the air, one foot raised.
Do I smell, eh…………smell food? He slowly raised his head to the skies as if to say, “Please God, let me
find some food, even one rotting bone will do.”
Slowly, he followed the smell, sniffing hard, stopping now and again, over grinning wider as the smell
became stronger. “Here at last”, He said as he came in sight of a calf that seemed dead, flies buzzing over its
excrement.
“God, no time to waste. Who knows the owner may be around. Oh, no, 3 see it is secured to a tree with a
“Mukwa” I’ll take my time.
Ha, I am tired too, come to think of it. God gave us pretty strong senses of smell, generous old…… man.
Still I do think some people tend to exaggerate, now who was it saying the other day ‘ati’ God is the giver of
everything and that we should be grateful. O.K.
Tell me, did God give this calf? Did you God? I found it myself, smelled my way there, all the way. Nice calf
too, rather thin but it will do. I’ll take the head home and make soup with herbs. I especially like ‘muthathii’,
and I see one over there.
OK. Here we go, where shall I start, this lovely neck? No, I know, I will start with the ‘mukwa’ then I’ll get
on to the soft stuff, the tail, the rump, ‘Mahu’……….'
After chewing up half of the ‘mukwa’ the hyena brushed his teeth with the twig of a ‘muthiga’ a tree of
stimulate his appetite. He stepped on the calf’s tail, stuffed it in his mouth and ‘snap’ it went. The calf which
was only very sick and tired shot up and bolted away in the twinkling of an eye.
The hyena rubbed his eyes, ambled after the disappearing calf and soon fell
down in exhaustion. He looked up again to the heaven, tried to speak but no words came. Hyenas have never
been able to speak ever since…….
(a) Categorise this narrative and give a reason for your classification.
(b) Identify and explain two characteristics of oral narratives evident in this story
(c) Describe two character traits of the hyena as depicted in the narrative.
(d) Identify one economic aspect of the community described in this narrative and give a reason for your
answer.
(e) What moral lesson do we learn from this narrative?
(f) Give a proverb with the same moral lesson as this narrative.
(g) If you are asked to go and collect this story in the field, state:
(i) Three things you would do before the actual field trip.
(ii) Two problems you are likely to encounter
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the following excerpt and answer the questions that follow.
Bertolt Brecht: The Caucasian Chalk Circle.(Solved)
Read the following excerpt and answer the questions that follow.
Bertolt Brecht: The Caucasian Chalk Circle.
AZDAK: Listen! Am accused instigating war? Ridiculous! Am saying ridiculous!
That enough? If not, have brought lawyers. Believe five hundred.
(He points behind him, pretending to be surrounded by lawyers) requisition all available seats for
lawyers! (The IRONSHIRTS laugh:the FAT PRINCE joins in).
NEPHEW (to the IRONSHIRTS): You really wish me to try this case? I find it rather unusual from the taste angle,
I mean.
FIRST IRONSHIRT: Lets go!
FAT PRINCE: (smiling): Let him have it, my little fox?
NEPHEW: All right. People of Grusinia versus Grand Duke. Defendant, what have you got to
say for yourself?
AZDAK: Plenty. Naturally, have read war lost. Only started on the advice of
patriots. Like Uncle Arsen Kazbeki. Call Uncle Arsen as witness.
FAT PRINCE (to the IRONSHIRTS. Delightedly): what a madcap!
NEPHEW: Motion rejected. One cannot be arraigned for declaring a war, which
every ruler has to do once in a while, but only for running a war badly.
AZDAK: Rubbish! Did not run it at all! Had it run! Had it run by Princes!
Naturally, they messed it up.
NEPHEW: Do you by any chance deny having been commander in chief?
AZDAK: Not at all! Always was commander-in-chief. At birth shouted at wet nurse. Was
trained drop turds in toilet, grew accustomed to command.
Always commanded officials rob my cash box. Officers flog soldiers only on
command.
IRONSHIRTS (clapping): He’s good! Long live the Grand Duke!
FAT PRINCE: Answer him according to the dignity of the law. Defendant, preserve the dignity of
the law!
AZDAK: Agreed. Command you proceed with trial!
NEPHEW: It is not your place to command me. You claim that the Princes forced you to declare
war. How can you claim then that they-er- “messed it up”.
AZDAK: Did not send enough people. Embezzled funds. Sent sick horses.
During attack, drinking in whorehouse. Call Uncle Arsen as witness.
NEPHEW: are you making the outrageous suggestions that the Princes of this
country did not fight?
AZDAK: No. Prince fought. Fought for war contracts
FAT PRINCE: (jumping up): That’s too much! This man talks like a carpet weaver!
AZDAK: Really? Told nothing but truth.
FAT PRINCE: Hang him! Hang him!
FIRST IRONSHIRT (pulling the PRINCE down): Keep quiet! Go on, excellency!
NEPHEW: Quiet! Now render a verdict; you must be hanged! By the neck! Having
lost war!
AZDAK: Young man, seriously advise not fall publicly into jerky clipped speech. Cannot be watchdog
if howl like wolf. Got it? If people realize Princes
speak same language as Grand Duke, may hang Grand Duke and prince, huh? By the way,
must overrule verdict. Reason? War lost, but not for Princes. Princes won their war. Got
3,863,000 piasters for horses not delivered, 8,240,000 piasters for food supplies not produced.
Are therefore victors. War lost only for Grusinia, which is not present in this court.
(a) 'am accused instigating war?' Explain the circumstances that led the speaker to say these words.
(b) Why do you think the nephew is reluctant to try the case?
(c) Explain who according to the extract is responsible for instigating the war.
(d) Discuss at least two dominant themes in this extract.
(e) Identify and illustrate two character traits of Arsen Kazbeki as brought out in this extra
(f) Pick out two stylistic devices and comment on their effectiveness.
(g) Explain the ironic twist that takes place in this extract.
(h) Rewrite the following sentences according to the instructions given after each.
(i) I find it rather unusual. (Add a question tag)
(ii) Defendant, preserve the dignity of the law.
(Rewrite in the passive).
(iii) 'It is not your place to command me.'
(Rewrite in indirect speech.)
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- Witi Ihimaera ‘The Whale Rider’
'Women have no place in the society portrayed in the novel'. Drawing examples from the Whale Rider by
Witi Ihimaera,...(Solved)
Witi Ihimaera ‘The Whale Rider’
'Women have no place in the society portrayed in the novel'. Drawing examples from the Whale Rider by
Witi Ihimaera, Write a composition in support of this statement.
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- a) The Short Story.
Iliera and Olembo (Ed) 'When the Sun Goes Down and Other stories'
People encounter many problems in search for greener pastures....(Solved)
a) The Short Story.
Iliera and Olembo (Ed) 'When the Sun Goes Down and Other stories'
People encounter many problems in search for greener pastures. With examples from Seti Atta Short
Story 'Twilight Trek'.
Write an essay in support of this statement.
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- 'The River and the Source” by Margaret Ogola.
'Despite good parenting, children can sometimes be a disappointment'. Using Elizabeth and Mark children, write
an essay in...(Solved)
'The River and the Source” by Margaret Ogola.
'Despite good parenting, children can sometimes be a disappointment'. Using Elizabeth and Mark children, write
an essay in support of this statement.
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- Longhorn Publishers: When The Sun Goes Down and Other Stories from Africa and beyond
'Terror gangs bring about devastation to any society.' Write an essay in...(Solved)
Longhorn Publishers: When The Sun Goes Down and Other Stories from Africa and beyond
'Terror gangs bring about devastation to any society.' Write an essay in support of this statement with close reference to Moses Isegawa’s story ‘The War of the Ears’.
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the following excerpt and answer the questions that follow. (Solved)
Read the following excerpt and answer the questions that follow.
OLD MAN: Pursued. Need undivided attention. Make proposition . . .
AZDAK: Make what? A proposition? Well, if that isn’t the height of insolence. He’s
making me a proposition! The bitten man scratches his fingers bloody, and the leech that’s
biting him makes him a proposition! Get out, I tell you!
OLD MAN: Understand point of view! Persuasion! Pay hundred thousand piasters one night!
Yes?
AZDAK: What, you think you can buy me? For a hundred thousand piasters? Let’s say a
hundred and fifty thousand. Where are they?
OLD MAN: Have not them here. Of course. Will be sent. Hope do not doubt.
AZDAK: Doubt very much. Get out!
The OLD MAN gets up, waddles to the door. A VOICE is heard offstage.
VOICE: Azdak!
The OLD MAN turns, waddles to the opposite corner, stands still.
AZDAK (calling out): I’m not in! (He walks to the door.) So you’re sniffing around here again,
Shauwa?
SHAUWA (reproachfully): You caught another rabbit, Azdak. And you’d promised me it
wouldn’t happen again!
AZDAK (severely): Shauwa, don’t talk about things you don’t understand. The rabbit is
dangerous and destructive beast. It feeds on plants, especially on the species of plants known
as weeds. It must therefore be exterminated.
SHAUWA: Azdak, don’t be hard on me. I’ll lose my job if I don’t arrest you. I know you
have a good heart.
AZDAK: I do not have a good heart! How often must I tell you I’m a man of intellect?
SHAUWA (slyly): I know, Azdak. You’re a superior person. You say so yourself. I’m just a
Christian and an ignoramus. So I ask, you: When one of the Prince’s rabbit is stolen and I’m
a policeman, what should I do with the offending party?
AZDAK: Shauwa, Shauwa, shame on you. I catch a rabbit, but you catch a man. Man is
made in God’s Image. Not so a rabbit, you know that. I’m a rabbit-eater, but you’re a man
eater, Shauwa. And god will pass judgement on you. Shauwa, go home and repent. No, stop,
there’s something . . . (He looks at the OLD MAN who stands trembling in the corner.) No, it
is nothing. Go home and repent. (He slams the door behind Shauwa.) Now you are surprised,
huh? Surprised I couldn’t hand over a bedbug to that animal. It goes against the grain. Now
don’t tremble because of a cop! So old and still so scared? Finish your cheese, but eat like a
poor man, or else they will catch you. Must I even explain how a poor man behaves? (He
pushes him down, and then gives him back the cheese.) That box is the table. Lay your elbow
on the table. Now, encircle the cheese on the plate like it might be snatched from you at any
moment – what right have you to be safe, huh? – now, hold your knife like an undersized
sickle, and give your cheese a troubled look because, like all beautiful things, it’s already
fading away. (AZDAK watches him.) They’re after you, which speaks in your favour, but
how can we be sure they’re not mistaken about you? In Tiflis one time they hanged a
landowner, a Turk, who could proof he quartered his peasants instead of merely cutting them
in half, as is the custom, and he squeezed twice the usual amount of taxes out of them, his zeal
was above suspicion. And yet they hanged him like a common criminal – because he was a
Turk – a thing he couldn’t do much about. What injustice! He got in the gallows by a sheer
fluke. In short, I don’t trust you.
1. Place this excerpt in its immediate context.
2. Who is the old man and why is he being pursued?
3. Identify any theme present in the excerpt.
4. Why has Shauwa visited Azdak’s home?
5. Identify any instance of irony in the excerpt
.
6. What are the traits of the characters in this excerpt?
a. Azdak……………………………………………………………………………………
b. Old Man ………………………………………………………………………………….
c. Shauwa……………………………………………………………………………………
7. Must I explain how a poor man behaves? (Change into a declarative)
8. In less than 35 words, summarise the ways in which a poor man behaves.
9. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions as used in the excerpt.
a. Insolence ________________________________________________________________
b. Exterminated _____________________________________________________________
c. Ignoramus _
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the genre below and answer the questions that follow.
‘Slipperiness knows no king.(Solved)
Read the genre below and answer the questions that follow.
‘Slipperiness knows no king.
i). Classify the above genre .
ii). What is the most appropriate audience for the above genre.
iii). What would be lost if the above genre is translated into another language.
Date posted: May 28, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.
The Man, His Son and The Squirrel(Solved)
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.
The Man, His Son and The Squirrel
There was a certain town whose only occupation was catching squirrels (ground squirrels). There was a man in
this town who excelled at catching squirrels. One squirrel was so smart that it eluded everyone in town. It was said
that only this man said to his son, “Come, let’s go to catch the squirrel.” They took an axe; they found the squirrel
near its hole. Then the squirrel ran and entered its hole. They searched out all the holes, then they stopped them
up. Then the man said to his son, “Don’t let the quirrel get out of its hole.” He answered, “Okay.” But one hole
wasn’t stopped up, and the squirrel escaped. When it escaped, the father came to his son and said to him, “Why
did you let it escape? If I go home now, I will be ashmed.” He grabbed the axe and struck his son. Then he went
on his way and left his son unconscious. Ants began to fill his eyeballs an his ears; vultures were circling above
him.
In the afternnon, the headman of a rich caravan arrived at the spot. When he arrived, he setp up camp. Then he got
up and went for a stroll and saw the boy. He called his slaves to take him and have him washed and shaved. The
boy recovered. The headman had no offspring. When he took the boy, he decided that he would make him his son.
He sent a message to the chief of the town, telling him that he had an offspring, that he was happy he had become
a complete man, and that he would now receive the gifts due to him.
The chief said, “This is a lie. He is not his son. If he is his son, then let him come that I can see.” Then the
headman arrived in town. The chief gave his sons horses worth ten pounds. He said, “Go and join the son of the
headman. Have a race. When you finish give these horses away” (forcing him to do the same). They did it and
they returned. the next day, the chief again gave them horses worth ten pounds. They did as the day before. They
did it five times. They ran out of horses. Then the chief said, “Indeed, it is his son I have run out of horses. If it
weren’t his son, he wouldn’t agree to let him give his own horses away to match the presents.” Then the chief
summoned his daughter. The Gralladima brought his to help. The Madaki also gave, and the Makama gave.
Altogether, four wives. The chief gave a big house. The headman came and brought twenty concubines and gave
to his son. There was continuous feasting.
Then one day the son saw his father, the one who had knocked him down with the axe because of the squirrels.
The father came to the house of his son and said, “Throw away your gown and start catching squirrels.” The
slaves of the headman said, “This is a crazy man, let us all strike him.” The boy said to him, “This is my father,
the one who sired me.” The headman said, “I have already lied to the chief. Let us keep that secret. I will give
your father wealth. Let him go home. Should he want to see you, let him come to visit you. If you want to see him,
then you can go and visit him.” The real father said he did not agree. Then the headman said, “Well then, let us go
out in the countryside.” They went. The headman unsheathed his sword. He handed it to the son, and said, “Kill
one of the two of us.” Here ends the story
Questions
(a) (i) Classify the above narrative.
(ii) What are the characteristics of the above classification?
(iii)What is the function of this narrative?
(b) Identify and illustrate any three features of oral narrative evident in the story.
(c) Give one economic activity that is undertaken by the community referred to in this narrative.
(d) Describe the character of the following:
(i) The young man
(ii) his father
(e) Whom do your think would be the most appropriate audience of this story.
(f) What is the moral lesson of this narrative?
Date posted: May 24, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the following excerpt and answer the questions that follow.(Solved)
Read the following excerpt and answer the questions that follow.
Grusha: Hide him. Quickly! The Ironshirts are coming! I laid him on your
doorstep. But he isn’t mine. He’s from a good family.
Peasant Woman: Who’s coming! What Ironshirts?
Grusha: Don’t ask questions. The Ironshirts that are looking for it.
Peasant Woman: They’ve no business in my house. But I must have a little talk with your, it
seems.
Grusha: Take off the fine linen. It’ll give us away.
Peasant Woman: Linen, my foot! In this house I make the decisions! “You can’t vomit in
my room!” Why did you abandon it? It’s a sin.
Grusha (looking out of the window): Look, they’re coming out from behind those trees! I
shouldn’t have run away, it made them angry. Oh, what shall I do?
Peasant Woman: (looking out of the window and suddenly starting with fear): Gracious!
Ironshirts!
Grusha: They’re after the baby.
Peasant Woman: Suppose they come in!
Grusha: You mustn’t give him to them. Say he’s yours.
Peasant Woman: Yes.
Grusha: They’ll run him through if you hand him over.
Peasant Woman: But suppose they ask for it? The silver for the harvest is in the house.
Grusha: If you let them have him, they’ll run him through, right here in this room!
You’ve got to say he’s yours!
Peasant Woman: Yes. But what if they don’t believe me?
Grusha: You must be firm.
Peasant Woman: They’ll burn the roof over our heads.
Grusha: That’s why you must say he’s yours. His name’s Michael. But I shouldn’t
have told you. (The Peasant Woman nods). Don’t nod like that. And don’t tremble –
they’ll notice.
Peasant Woman: Yes.
Grusha: And stop staying yes, I can’t stand it. (She shakes the Woman). Don’t you
have any children?
Peasant Woman: (muttering): He’s in the war.
Grusha: Then maybe he’s an Ironshirt? Do you want him to run children through
with a lance? You’d baw him out. “No fooling with lances in my house!” you’d
shout, “is that what I’ve reared you for? Wash your neck before you speak to your
mother!”
Peasant Woman: That’s true, he couldn’t get away with anything around here!
Grusha: So you’ll say he’s yours?
Peasant Woman: Yes.
Grusha: Look! They’re coming!
There is a knocking at the door. The women don’t answer. Enter
Ironshirts. The Peasant Woman bows low.
Corporal: Well, here she is. What did I tell you? What a nose I have! I smelt her.
Lady, I have a question for you. Why did you run away? What did you think I would
do to you? I’ll bet it was something unchaste. Confess!
Grusha: (While the Peasant Woman bows again and again): I’d left some milk on
the stove, and I suddenly remembered it.
Corporal: Or maybe you imagined I looked at you unchastely? Like there could be
something between us? A carnal glace, know what I mean?
Grusha: I didn’t see it.
Corporal: But it’s possible, huh? You admit that much. After all, I might be a pig. I’ll
be frank with you: I could think of all sorts of things if we were alone.
(To the Peasant Woman) Shouldn’t you be busy in the yard? Feeding the hens?
(a) Give reasons that motivate Grusha to leave Michael at the peasant woman’s doorstep. Answer in note form
(b) Identify two aspects of style used in the excerpt.
(c) Why does Grusha feel that she shouldn’t have revealed the baby’s name to the peasant woman?
(d) 'They’re after the baby'. Explain who are after the baby, under whose orders and for what reasons?
(e) With illustrations give one character trait for each of the following characters.
(i) Grusha ………………………………………………………………………………….
(ii) Corporal ………………………………………………………………………………..
(f) In reference to the rest of the text where else (a part from this scene) does Grusha encounter the same
corporal.
(g) You mustn’t give him to them. Add a question tag.
(h) What happens after this excerpt?
(i) Explain the meaning of the following as used in the excerpt.
(a) Bawl ………………………………………………………………………………
(b) Run him through ………………………………………………………………………
(c) Carnal glance …………………………………………………………………………
Date posted: May 24, 2019. Answers (1)
- Read the oral poem below and respond to the questions that follow.
A BAREFOOT BOY(Solved)
Read the oral poem below and respond to the questions that follow.
A BAREFOOT BOY
A barefoot boy! I mark him at his play…
For May is here once more, and so is he,…
His dusty trousers, rolled half to the knee,
And his bare ankles grimy, too, as they:
Cross- hatchings of the nettle, in array
Of feverish stripes, hint vividly to me
Of woody pathways winding endlessly
Along the creek, where even yesterday
He plunged his shrinking body – gasped and shook
Yet called the water ‘warm’ with never lack
Of joy. And so, half enviously I look
Upon this graceless barefoot and his track,…
His toe stubbed…, his big toe-nail knocked back
Like unto the clasp of an old pocketbook.
i) Identify and illustrate two devices that make the poem musical.
ii) How would you effectively recite line 13 of this poem?
iii) Which word would you stress in line 12? Give a reason
Date posted: May 24, 2019. Answers (1)
- The Novel, Witi Ihimaera, The Whale Rider.
'Change can sometimes be detrimental to the set order of things in a society.' Drawing your illustrations from
Witi Ihimaera’s,...(Solved)
The Novel, Witi Ihimaera, The Whale Rider.
'Change can sometimes be detrimental to the set order of things in a society.' Drawing your illustrations from
Witi Ihimaera’s, The Whale Rider, Write an essay in support of this statement
Date posted: May 24, 2019. Answers (1)
- Drama, Francis Imbuga, Betrayal in the City.
'In a dictatorial regime; the prisoners are not only the incarcerated.' Drawing illustrations from Imbuga’s
Betrayal in the City,...(Solved)
Drama, Francis Imbuga, Betrayal in the City.
'In a dictatorial regime; the prisoners are not only the incarcerated.' Drawing illustrations from Imbuga’s
Betrayal in the City, write an essay to justify this statement.
Date posted: May 24, 2019. Answers (1)
- When the Sun Goes Down and Other stories from Africa and Beyond by Longhorn Kenya Limited
'Alcohol abuse can have dire consequences.' Write an essay in...(Solved)
When the Sun Goes Down and Other stories from Africa and Beyond by Longhorn Kenya Limited
'Alcohol abuse can have dire consequences.' Write an essay in support of this statement drawing your illustrations from Retraction by Onjezani Kenani
Date posted: May 24, 2019. Answers (1)