Weave 1- Huck meets the Duke and the King
Q 1 Answer each of the following
questions in 30-40 words
a)
Jim and the narrator were shocked when the young man solemnly and
in confidence told them the secret of his birth. He said he was born a duke.
b)
The young man felt that though he was the rightful Duke of
Bridgewater, he was forlorn, torn from his estate, degraded, hunted by men,
despised by the cold world, tired and heart-broken. He felt that it was his
fault for the kind of life he was leading.
c)
The young man said that he was the rightful Duke of Bridgewater. He
asked Jim and the narrator to do something as frivolous as wait upon him and
address him as ‘your Grace’/‘My Lord’ in order to make him feel better. The old
man cried and declared that he was the Dauphin. He couldn’t correctly pronounce
his name or the names of his parents.
d)
The narrator had learnt from
his father that the best way to get along with people is to let them have their
own way. He had no objections to doing that as long as it would keep peace in
the family.
Q 2 Answer each of the following
questions in 80-100 words.
a.
Jim and the narrator pitied him and tried to comfort him, but he
said if they could acknowledge him, that would do him better than anything
else. They agreed they would, provided he told them how. He said they ought to
bow when they spoke to him, and say 'Your Grace’ or 'My Lord,' or 'Your
Lordship' and he wouldn't mind it if they called him 'Bridgewater’ which he
said was his title anyway. And one of them ought to wait on him at dinner and
do any little thing for him that he wanted to be done.
b.
The old man didn't look
comfortable over all that was going on around the ‘duke’. He seemed to have
something on his mind. So, he told the ‘duke’ that although he was sorry for
him, he was not the only person who had problems like that. He was not the only
person who had a secret of his birth. Saying this he began to cry. He narrated
that he was the poor disappeared Dauphin- ‘Looy the Seventeen’. He was the
wandering, exiled, trampled-on and suffering rightful King of France.
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