Class 12 The Last Lesson
Class 12 The Last Lesson
Class 12 The Last Lesson
❑ Introduction
❑ Characters
❑ Explanation
❑ Important Q/A
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INTRODUCTION
'The last lesson ' written by Alphonse Daudet
narrates about the year 1870 when the
Prussian forces under Bismarck attacked and
captured France.
The French districts of Alsace and Lorraine
went into Prussian hands. The new Prussian
rulers discontinued the teaching of French in
the schools of these two districts.
The French teachers were asked to leave. Now
M. Hamel could no longer stay in his old school.
Still he gave the last lesson to his students with
utmost devotion and sincerity as ever.
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INTRODUCTION
One such student of M. Hamel, Franz who
dreaded French class and M. Hamel‘s iron rod,
came to the school that day thinking he would be
punished as he had not learnt his lesson on
participles.
But on reaching school he found Hamel dressed
in his fine Sunday clothes and the old people of
the village sitting quietly on the back benches.
It was due to an order from Berlin. That was the
first day when he realized for the first time that
how important French was for him, but it was his
last lesson in French.
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INTRODUCTION
The story depicts the pathos of the
whole situation about how people
feel when they don‘t learn their own
language.
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The narrator of the story, Franz is a young school boy in the
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French region of Alsace-Lorraine in the nineteenth century.
Franz is a dawdler when it comes to schoolwork, preferring to
spend time in the woods or by the local river over going to class.
He doesn’t like learning his French grammar lessons and, when
the story begins, is terrified that his negligence will be found out
by his teacher, the stern M. Hamel.
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Lesson Explanation
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I thought he was
making fun of me,
and reached M.
Hamel’s little garden
all out of breath.
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What a thunderclap
these words were to
me! Oh, the wretches;
that was what they
had put up at the
town-hall!
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While I was
thinking of all
this, I heard
my name
called.
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“Your parents were not anxious
enough to have you learn. They
preferred to put you to work on a farm
or at the mills, so as to have a little
more money. And I? I’ve been to
blame also. Have I not often sent you
to water my flowers instead of
learning your lessons? And when I
wanted to go fishing, did I not just
give you a holiday?”
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Then, from one thing to another, M.
Hamel went on to talk of the French
language, saying that it was the most
beautiful language in the world — the
clearest, the most logical; that we
must guard it among us and never
forget it, because when a people are
enslaved, as long as they hold fast to
their language it is as if they had the
key to their prison.
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It seemed almost as if
the poor man wanted to
give us all he knew
before going away, and
to put it all into our
heads at one stroke.
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After the grammar, we
had a lesson in writing.
That day M. Hamel had
new copies for us,
written in a beautiful
round hand — France,
Alsace, France, Alsace.
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They looked like little flags
floating everywhere in the
school-room, hung from the rod
at the top of our desks. You
ought to have seen how
everyone set to work, and how
quiet it was! The only sound
was the scratching of the pens
over the paper.
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Fancy! For forty years he
had been there in the
same place, with his
garden outside the
window and his class in
front of him, just like
that.
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Down there at the back
of the room old Hauser
had put on his
spectacles and, holding
his primer in both hands,
spelled the letters with
them.
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“My friends,” said he, “I—I—”
But something choked him.
He could not go on. Then he
turned to the blackboard, took
a piece of chalk, and, bearing
on with all his might, he wrote
as large as he could — “Vive
La France!”
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M.Hamel, who had been teaching French at the school for
the last forty years, was wearing his formal suit in honour of
the last French lesson. While delivering the last lesson, he
called upon his students and the village elders to guard the
French language among themselves and never forget it,
declaring French to be the most beautiful language in the
world. Franz developed a sudden fascination for school and
the French language and a sudden respect for M.Hamel. He
wanted his teacher to stay and felt very guilty for having
neglected his French lessons as now he was being deprived
of the opportunity of learning his language.
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Question 3.
Everybody during
the last lesson is
filled with regret.
Comment.
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Answer
The one common feeling that fills each and every person who is present
in the last French lesson is an acute sense of regret. M. Hamel
reproaches himself for putting off his students’ learning till the next day
and sending them to water his flowers instead of learning their lessons.
He also gave his students a holiday when he wanted to go fishing. Franz
felt sorry for not learning his lessons and escaping school. He wished
he had attended his classes more often and even the thought of losing
his teacher saddened him. The village elders occupied the back
benches of the class to atone for their guilt and express their regret for
not having attended school regularly. They were now showing their
respect for the country that was theirs no more.
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Question 4. Our language is
part of our culture and we
are proud of it. Describe
how regretful M.Hamel and
the village elders are for
having neglected their
native language, French.
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Answer
The feeling of regretfulness for having neglected their native language,
French comes quite late to M. Hamel and the village elders. They realise
rather late that their language is part of their culture and they should be
proud of it. It is only after they have been deprived of learning their
language that they understand its value. The imposition of German
language made them suddenly realise the authority of their captors and
they felt a loss of freedom. So on the day of the last French lesson the
village elders are seated on the back desks and M. Hamel, who had been
teaching French at the school for the last forty years, was wearing his
formal suit as a mark of respect for the last French lesson.
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M. Hamel expressed how they all had a great deal to
reproach themselves for as most of the people of Alsace
could neither speak nor write French. Parents preferred to
put their children to work on farms or mills.
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THANK
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