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Essays: My Watch NCERT Solutions | Class 11 English Woven Words - Humanities/Arts PDF Download

Understanding the Text

Q1: What was the importance of the watch to the author?
Ans:
The watch was important to the author as it showed him the correct time thus keeping him punctual. He had it working properly for 18 months until he let it run down. He had staunch faith on its judgement and its prediction. It worked perfectly until then without gaining or losing any part of it.

Q2: What were the attempts made by the author to get his watch repaired?
Ans:
After a possession of 18 months, the author let his watch run down. Devastated, the author went to all possible watch makers starting from the chief jeweller, the very next day. The head of the establishment pushed the regulator of the watch a little too much, which did no good, rather worsened its condition. Then the author went to another watch maker who kept it for a week and slowed it down, however, too much. Then he went to another one who kept it for three days; and then couple of more. Even after having spent thousands dollars, none of the watch makers could fix the watch. Hopeless, the author gave it a last shot and went to a watch maker who turned out to be an erstwhile, not a good, steam-boat engineer. It was now that the author realised that “a good horse was a good horse until it had run away once, and that a good watch was a good watch until the repairers got a chance at it. ”

Q3: Why did the author finally give up on his watch?
Ans: 
The author got the watch repaired seven times. By the end, he realised that the watch, with its original cost being two hundred dollars, had cost him two to three thousand on repairs itself. And the watch was still malfunctioning. It was when he reached the seventh watch maker and acknowledged the mechanic to be an old acquaintance, a steam-boat engineer of other days and not a good engineer. He gave his verdict like all other watch makers, the author was not gullible and this time he perceived what his uncle William used to say that a good horse was a good horse until it had run away once, and that a good watch was a good watch until the repairers got a chance at it. So, he finally gave up the repairing and decided to let the watch be.

Q4: What was Uncle Williams' comment on the 'tinkerers' of the world?
Ans: 
Uncle William is not a character in the story; however, the author gives a glimpse of him. When the author gave the watch for mending the last time, he reckoned that it was costing him more than the original cost. All the attempts so far have been futile and the verdict of the last watch maker made him remember what uncle William used to say that a good horse was a good horse until it had run away once, and that a good watch was a good watch until the repairers got a chance at it. The author perceived what his uncle had known with all his knowledge and experience. All the unsuccessful tinkers in the world are not specialists. They are the 'Jacks' of all trades and masters of none. Uncle William used to wonder what became of all those gunsmiths, shoe-makers, engineers and blacksmiths who never could be successful in their work sphere. It is important to acquire specialisation at least in one particular field, else one is left being a tinker, an apprentice, and not a specialist.

Q5: Explain these lines
(i) 'I seemed to detect in myself a sort of sneaking fellow-feeling for the mummy in the museum, and a desire to swap news with him.
Ans: 
After being oiled and cleaned and 'regulated' for the second time, the watch came home to the author after a week. However, the watch was slowed down to such a degree that the author missed all his appointments, his dinner. He felt like he was drifted in the past somewhere. Gradually the watch slowed even more, he felt like he was living in the previous week. The author felt like he missed all that was happening in the world. He was solitary and lingered in the past all because of his watch. The author here compares his situation to that of a mummy, who belongs to bygone ages. He felt it ideal to find a fellowship with the mummy in some museum he probably had been to or an imaginary one. He felt travelling in the past just like the mummy due to the slow time projected by his watch.

(ii) Within a week it sickened to a raging fever and its pulse went up to a hundred and fifty in the shade.
Ans: 
When the author let his watch run down after eighteen months, he took it to chief jeweller's to set it by the exact time. The head of the establishment however, despite being stopped by the author, pushed the regulator. This gave the watch, probably, a kick and the watch shot ahead of its time. It gained faster and faster, day by day. Post two months, it appeared to be having some sort of a fever with an extremely high pulse rate. It moved 13 days ahead of the actual date and when the year touched October, the author commented, the watch was enjoying the snow fall of November already. This erratic behaviour annoyed the author a lot and so he decided to get it doctored once again.

(iii) She makes too much steam–you want to hang the monkey wrench on the safety valve!
Ans:
The seventh time the author took the watch to a watch maker, he reckoned the apprentice to be an old acquaintance, a steam-boat engineer of other days and not a good engineer. Like all watch makers, he diagnosed and gave his verdict. The author observed keenly and judged him at his very verdict when he said, “She makes too much steam–you want to hang the monkey wrench on the safety valve! The author immediately remembered what his uncle William used to say and perceived that a tinker is a tinker after all, this being an unsuccessful engineer and wondered like his uncle what became of all the unsuccessful tinkers.

Talking About The Text

Q1: Discuss in pairs or groups of four
Replacing old machines with new is better than getting them repaired.
Ans: 
Whenever we are using an old machine, and it starts malfunctioning, we find ourselves facing an important question. Should the machine be repaired or should it be replaced?
Many a times, if the malfunctioning is on a very minimal scale, it is ignored. But if it is causing a problem, we get it repaired. An old machine had already been repaired quite a lot of times in order to maintain it and to use the same machine instead of buying a new one. But what needs to be thought of and considered, is that sometimes machines get spoilt frequently as they get old and eventually it can be seen that more money has been spent in order to repair the old machine than what was needed to buy the machine. In order to save money and to have a more efficiently and properly functioning machine, the old machine could always be replaced by a new one, thus saving the costs for the repairing of the old machine as well as increasing the efficiency of the machine. Thus, sometimes replacing old machines with new is better than getting them repaired.

Q2: It is difficult to part with personal items like a watch which have a sentimental value attached to them.
Ans:
Sometimes, we get attached to materialistic things that we hold close to our heart, like a gift from a loved one or something you really love with all your heart. We often find these things around us all the time. If we do not find them, or if the stop functioning, it causes us pain, because we tend to get emotionally attached to that personal item and start loving it, just like people love each other. These personal things hold a lot of sentimental value to us and we cannot even thing about not having them with us. For example, if a doll was gifted to a girl by her father, she could attached to the doll and hold sentimental value for it as it was given to her by someone who loved and cared for her. If the girl grew up and was asked to separate from the doll, it could be difficult for her to do so, as she held the sentimental value of the doll close to her heart and if she separated from the doll, she could feel like she was separating from something she loved truly with her heart. So, people often find it to be difficult to part with personal items that have a sentimental value attached to them.

Apperciation

Q1: How is humour employed to comment on the pains that the author took to get his watch set right.
Ans: It is funny how the author and his dear watch had to go through all the pain that was delivered by seven watch makers. In the end, it was all futile and no good was done to the watch. The seven episodes with the watch makers are humorous as while all the watch makers tried their hand on the watch, toying it all up and operating and exploring and dissembling and then assembling every inch of it, it all gave sheer pain to the author to whom the watch was so dear. Every time with all the hope and strength he took it to a new watch maker; however, not a single of all the tinkers could put it all back to place to make it function all properly. How strange it is that none of the seven watch makers could mend the watch while they all experimented and did all sorts of research and development on it.

Q2: 'The author's treatment of the subject matter makes the readers identify themselves with the experience.' Comment on the statement.
Ans:
Samuel L. Clemens, Mark Twain, had less than ten years of schooling. He worked as a printer's apprentice, a steamboat pilot, a prospector and a journalist. All this gave him varied experiences and a wide knowledge of humanity. In all his works, he brings in elements from his own experiences and his own life creating a replica of his own self. All his stories have a combination of realistic and make believe world. What he presents are the situations that any ordinary human might face in her/his daily life; thus, making them all appear very realistic and hence the readers easily connect to the story and identify themselves with the experiences. For instance, in the story, the author faced a problem that is so ordinary. Any of us might have a watch that malfunctions and has a simple error. However, the problem rather than being mended, aggravates every time we take it to be doctored. This is a typical example of how an ordinary human faces problems with not just gadgets; it might be a medical condition or as simple as an argument with a known face.

Q3: Identify some of the improbable images the author has used to effect greater humour.
Ans: 
There are instances when the author goes on exaggerating the actual situation to add humour to the story. For example, when the watch is repaired for the second time, it slowed down. The description is a hyperbole of the actual happening. No matter how slow a watch is, it will show the time according to 12 hours, it cannot literally travel in the past. However, the way the author describes its watch enjoying snowfall before the season arrives is humorous. Also, the citation of the mummy is funny, plus it describes the mental state of the poor author.

Language Work

Q1: Make a list of the expressions that imbue the watch with human attributes.
Ans:
The following is the list of some expressions that have brought about human attributes in the watch (personification):

  • "infallible in its judgment"
  • "she is four minutes slow"
  • "it sickened to a raging fever and its pulse went up to a hundred and fifty in the shade"
  • "It was away into November enjoying the snow, while the October leaves were still turning"
  • " it would go like the very mischief, and keep up such a barking and wheezing and whooping and sneezing and snorting"
  • " She makes too much steam— you want to hang the monkey-wrench on the safety-valve!"
The document Essays: My Watch NCERT Solutions | Class 11 English Woven Words - Humanities/Arts is a part of the Humanities/Arts Course Class 11 English Woven Words.
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FAQs on Essays: My Watch NCERT Solutions - Class 11 English Woven Words - Humanities/Arts

1. How does the speaker feel about his watch in the essay "My Watch"? $#
Ans. The speaker in the essay "My Watch" feels a strong attachment to his watch and values it as a precious possession.

2. What significance does the watch hold for the speaker in the essay "My Watch"? $#
Ans. The watch in the essay "My Watch" symbolizes the passage of time and serves as a reminder of the importance of time management and productivity.

3. How does the speaker describe the physical appearance of his watch in the essay "My Watch"? $#
Ans. In the essay "My Watch," the speaker describes his watch as old and worn-out, yet he cherishes it for its sentimental value and the memories associated with it.

4. What lessons does the speaker learn from his watch in the essay "My Watch"? $#
Ans. Through his watch, the speaker learns the importance of valuing and making the most of every moment in life, as time is a precious and limited resource.

5. How does the speaker's watch reflect his personal growth and maturity in the essay "My Watch"? $#
Ans. In the essay "My Watch," the speaker's watch serves as a symbol of his personal growth and maturity, as he learns to appreciate the fleeting nature of time and the need to prioritize his actions and decisions.
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