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Class 9 CBSE
Number of recipes found:
17
Questions and Answers
Competency-Based and Comparative Questions from Beehive
This resource provides a structured compilation of competency-based and comparative questions from Beehive, guiding students to explore key themes, character developments, and literary techniques. These questions encourage deeper analysis, drawing connections between lessons and fostering a nuanced appreciation of literature.
Prose
Best Seller
The story follows a chance meeting between the narrator and John A. Pescud, a confident and successful salesman for a plate-glass company. Pescud expresses his strong dislike for best-selling romance novels, which often feature American men falling in love with European princesses. He finds such stories unbelievable and insists that in real life, people marry within their own social circles.
However, as the conversation unfolds, Pescud shares his own love story, which ironically resembles the unrealistic tales he despises. He describes how he fell in love at first sight with Jessie Allyn, a beautiful and aristocratic woman from Virginia. Without speaking to her, he follows her across several states until he finally finds out where she lives. Determined to win her heart, he confidently approaches Colonel Allyn, Jessie’s proud father, and convinces him of his sincerity. Eventually, he succeeds in marrying Jessie, proving that his real-life romance is just as dramatic as the stories he criticizes.
The story ends with Pescud stepping off the train at Coketown, a dull and dreary place, just to find some petunias for his wife. This final act reflects his deep love and devotion to Jessie, reinforcing the idea that romance, whether in fiction or reality, often defies logic and expectations.
Through humor, irony, and satire, O. Henry masterfully highlights the contradictions in human nature, making "Best Seller" a memorable and engaging story.
Short Play
Villa For Sale by Sacha Guitry
The play opens with Juliette, a desperate villa owner, eager to sell her property at any price. However, her prospective buyer, Jeanne, is excited about the villa, while her husband, Gaston, is uninterested. Just when Juliette struggles to convince them, an unexpected opportunity arises—Mrs. Al Smith, a wealthy American, enters and expresses her immediate interest in the villa. Gaston, seizing the moment, takes advantage of the situation in a clever and unexpected way, leading to a surprising twist.
The play humorously explores human nature, business acumen, and the art of negotiation, making it an engaging and entertaining read.
Poetry
The Brook by Alfred Lord Tennyson
The poem follows the brook as it flows from its origin in the wild, moving through hills, villages, fields, and forests before finally joining a larger river. The brook vividly describes its own movements—rushing, babbling, chattering, and meandering—while also painting a rich picture of the natural world it encounters. Refrains like "For men may come and men may go, but I go on forever" highlight the poem’s central theme: the contrast between nature’s permanence and human mortality. Through its lively imagery and rhythmic flow, The Brook celebrates the eternal, unceasing journey of nature.
Revision
Moments supplementary reader for Class IX
The stories in Moments explore diverse themes such as innocence, sacrifice, kindness, and the triumph of human spirit over adversity. From the touching tale of a child's attachment to his parents in The Lost Child to the inspiring selflessness in The Happy Prince and the resilience depicted in Weathering the Storm in Ersama, the book offers meaningful lessons about life. It balances humor (The Adventures of Toto), suspense (Iswaran the Storyteller), and morality (The Beggar), making it an enriching and thought-provoking read for students.