“And think of all those people worse off than you. Think, you might have been blinded, or born deaf, or have to live in a wheelchair, or be daft in your head and dribble.”
Q. Pick up a word from above lines which is similar in meaning as ‘fall slowly in drops or a thin stream’.
“And think of all those people worse off than you. Think, you might have been blinded, or born deaf, or have to live in a wheelchair, or be daft in your head and dribble.”
Q. Who is the speaker of these words?
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“And think of all those people worse off than you. Think, you might have been blinded, or born deaf, or have to live in a wheelchair, or be daft in your head and dribble.”
Q. How does Derry feel about this sermonising?
“So you believe everything you hear, then”
Q. About which incident the listener is talking about he had heard?
“So you believe everything you hear, then”
Q. How does Mr. Lamb interpret the conversation?
“So you believe everything you hear, then”
Q. Who is the speaker of the above lines?
“So you believe everything you hear, then”
Q. How did Derry feel about it?
“I am not fond of curtains. Shutting things out, shutting things in. I like the light and the darkness, and the windows open, to hear the wind.”
Q. What things the house is full of?
“I am not fond of curtains. Shutting things out, shutting things in. I like the light and the darkness, and the windows open, to hear the wind.”
Q. What does the listener like to hear?
“I am not fond of curtains. Shutting things out, shutting things in. I like the light and the darkness, and the windows open, to hear the wind.”
Q. Whose house is being referred here?
“I am not fond of curtains. Shutting things out, shutting things in. I like the light and the darkness, and the windows open, to hear the wind.”
Q. Why is ‘I’ not fond of curtains?
“What’ll he ever do? What’s going to happen to him when we’ve gone? How ever will he get on in this world?”
Q. Who speaks these words?
“What’ll he ever do? What’s going to happen to him when we’ve gone? How ever will he get on in this world?”
Q. Who is the listener?
“It’s got nothing to do with my face and what I look like. I don’t care about that and it isn’t important. It’s what I think and feel and what I want to see and find out and hear.”
Q. Where is the willing to go?
“It’s got nothing to do with my face and what I look like. I don’t care about that and it isn’t important. It’s what I think and feel and what I want to see and find out and hear.”
Q. What does Derry see when he returns to Lamb’s garden?