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Q. Explain: ‘Its silence silences.’
Ans. Kross of her mother is too deep for the poet. Now
she has nothing to say at all. The silence of the
whole situation silences the poet and leaves her
quiet. Ky
Q. What is ‘this circumstance’?
Ans. This circumstance means t leath of her mother.
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. What does the word ‘cardboard’ denote in the poem? Why has this
word been used? x
Ans. arate refers to the photograph only. In the
past photographs used to be fixed on a cardboard
and hung from the wall for everyone to see it.
Q2. What has not changed over the years? Does this suggest something
to you?
a
Ans. The sea has not changed over the years. It
suggests the immortality of sea as compared to the
mortal human beings whose life comes to an end
finally.
Q3. The poet’s mother laughed at the snapshot. What does this laugh
indicate? Mm mM
Ans. The poet's mother laughed at the snapshot. This is an
indication of the fun and joy she had experienced
during the beach holiday and she had fond
memories of that particular incident. It brought joy
to her when she looked at the snapshot.
Q4. What does ‘this circumstance’ refer to?
Ans“ his circumstance’ ow the loneliness and
the sense of loss that the poet suffers as she
remembers her mother who is no more.
Q5. What do you learn about the poet’s mother from the photograph?
Ans. The poet's mother had been a fun loving girl who had
taken great delight with her cousins at the beach
and had the fond memories of the holiday that she
cherished even when she was a grown up.
Q6. What has the camera captured?
—~>
Ans. The camera has captured some happy momen
from the childhood of the poet’s mother. It was a
scene taken from a beach where she had gone with
her cousins and her uncle for a sea holiday. The
girls were paddling in the water.
Q. The poet’s mother laughed at the snapshot. What did this laugh
indicate?
a
Ans. This laugh indicates her remembering her past.
AT She looked back to her childhood with nostalgia
and remembered the innocent joys of her childhood
days.
Q. What is the meaning of the line “Both wry with the laboured ease or
loss”
Ans. ‘Both’ refers to Ln holiday as remembered by her
mother and the poet remembering her mother’s
laughing face. Both these now belong to the past.
Her mother is no more now.
Q. What scene from mother’s childhood has been captured in the
photograph? Who had taken the photograph?
Ans. The scene that has been captured in the
photograph is from mother’s childhood when she
went for paddling with her two cousins. Mother’s
uncle had taken the photograph.
Q. How did the cousins accompany mother for paddling?
Ans. Her cousins accompanied mother by holding her hands
when they went for paddling.
Q. Explain the contrast given in the last two lines of the first stanza.
Ans. The contrast is between the sea and the humans. The sea had
remained the same for all these years, but the
humans have undergone changes. Her mother grew
up and now she had been dead the past twelve
years. pe
Q. How does the poet feel when she remembers the sea holiday of her
mother?
Ans. The poet feels sad when she remembers the sea
holiday of her mother. Her mother died twelve years
ago.
Q. Why doesn’t she want to think about the photograph anymore?
Ans. She doesn't want think about the photograph anymore because it
brings the pain of loss to her mind.
Q. The three stanzas depict three different phases. What are they?
4
Ans. The three stanzas depict three different phases of life. The first
stanza refers to the childhood of the poet’s mother.
The second stanza refers to the adulthood of the
poet’s mother. The last stanza refers to the last
phase of life — the death of the poet’s mother.
——-KXXXX-A Photograph
By Shirley Toulson
About the Author
Image Reference: telegraph.co.uk
Shirley Toulson was born on 20th May 1924 in Henley-on-Thames,
England. She had a great passion for writing and was greatly
influenced by her father who was a writer too. She secured a B.A.
on Literature from Brockenhurst College in London in the year
1953. Shortly, she took writing as a career but also served as the
editor for many magazines in meantime. She married Alan
Brownjohn on 6th February 1960. They had three children — Janet
Sayers, lan Toulson and Steven brownjohn. But after nine years
they divorced on March 1969.
Poem: A Photograph
The cardboard shows me how it was
When the two girl cousins went paddling
Each one holding one of my mother’s hands,
And she the big girl - some twelve years or so.
All three stood still to smile through their hair
At the uncle with the camera, A sweet face
My mother's, that was before | was born
And the sea, which appears to have changed less
Wagged their terribly transient feet.
Some twenty- ins. years later , a
She’d laugh at the snapshot. ‘See Be
And Dolly,” she‘d say, ‘and look how they
Dressed us for the beach." The sea holiday
was her past, mine is her laughter. Both wry
With the laboured ease of loss
Now she’s has been dead nearly as many years
As that girl lived. And of oe
There is nothing to say at all,
tts Silence silences.
Introduction
The poet describes how deeply she feels the loss of her mother. Her mother
has been dead for more than twelve years. The poet recalls how her mother
used to look at a photograph and remember her own childhood.
Summary
The poet looks at the photograph of her mother which was taken when her
mother was 12 years old. She had gone for a sea holiday with her cousins
Betty and Dolly. While they were paddling on the beach, her uncle clicked a
photograph. Each of the cousins was holding the hands of the poet's mother
who was the oldest among them. All the three of them stood smiling through
their hair while the photo was taken. Her mother had a sweet face, but it was a
time before she was born. Years fled past since then. Her mother grew up into
an adult. They all underwent changes while the sea stood stil.
After about twenty or thirty years the poet's mother would look at the
photograph laughing nostalgically and remembering the past. She would
appreciate the dress worn by her cousins Betty and Dolly. The sea holiday
belonged to the past of her mother and the poet still remembers how her
mother would laugh looking at the snapshot. For the poet both these bring
great sadness and an acute sense of loss.
Her mother died 12 years ago and now the poet has nothing to say about this
circumstance of the photograph. The silence of the whole situation silences the
poet and leaves her quiet.
Main Points
1. The poet looks at a childhood photograph of her mother.
2. She had gone for a sea holiday with her two cousins Betty and Dolly
3. While they were paddling on the beach, their uncle photographed their sweet
smile in a camera.
4. Both the cousins were holding the hands of her mother who was the oldest
among the girls.
5. This was before the poet was born.
6. Time fled past Since th ind all those who are in the
photograph underwent changes while the sea
remained the same.
7. Her mother would look a
t the photograph after about twenty or thirty years and laugh at this photo
nostalgically.
8. Now for the poet her mother's laughter and her sea holiday is a thing of the
past.
9. Her Mother died about 12 years ago.
SP rhe silence of the photograph silences the poet.
11. She experiences great loss.
Detailed Explanation
1. Explain: ‘The cardboard shows me how it was’.
Ans. The photograph shows the narrator who it was
that day. “Na \
Poetic device: allusion as the cardboard’s lack of
durability hints at the lack of permanence of human
life
2. Explain: ‘All three stood still to smile through their hair’.
Ans. All three of them stood smiling, their hair were
flying over their faces (possibly tossed by the beach
wind or water)
we
Poetic device: alliteration... stood still to smile
3. Explain:
‘And the sea, which appears to have changed less
Washed their terribly transient feet.’
Ans. The sea in the picture is still the same today and has changed very less. It
seems to wash their feet which by nature, are transient because human life is
short-lived as compared to nature.
Nature is perennial while human life is temporary or transient. The poet uses a
transferred epithet (terribly transient feet) in order to make this comparison and
highlight the terribly short-lived life of her mother.
Poetic device: Transferred Epithet. Human life itself is temporary not the feet.
When the adjective for one noun like life is transferred to another noun like feet,
it is called transferred epithet. It is also alliteration due to the repetition of the ‘t’
sound (their terribly transient feet) but writing only alliteration as the poetic
device will lead to a loss of marks)
4. Explain:
‘The sea holiday
was her past, mine is her laughter. Both wry
With the laboured ease of loss’
Poetic device: alliteration and personification. The situation has been given
the human quality of silence and the sound of ‘s’ has been repeated)
Extracts from the Poem
4. Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow:
The cardboard shows me how it was
When the two girl cousins went paddling
Each one holding one of my mother’s hands,
And she the big girl- some twelve years or so.
Q. What does the cardboard refer to?
Ans. The cardboard réfers to the childhood photograph of
her mother.
Q. Who was the ~~ how old was she?
Ans. The big girl was the poet’s mother. She was then twelve
years old.
Q. How one go paddling with mother?
Ans. The girl cousins went paddling with mother
holding her hand.
2. Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow:
All three stood still to smile through their hair
At the uncle with the camera, A sweet face
My mother’s, that was before | was born
Q. Who does ‘all three’ refer to here?
Ans. ‘all three’ refers to the poet's mother and her two cousins.
Q. Where are they now?
Ans. They have gone to the seashore. They are
paddling in the water. WK _
Q. Why did they smile through their hair? x
a hey smiled through their hair because they
were posing for a photograph.
3. Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow:
ss A sweet face,
My mother’s, that was before | was born
And the sea, which appears to have changed less
Washed their terribly transient feet.
Q. Where was her mother?
Ans. Her mother was ON Koes shore with her cousins
and posing for a photograph.
Q. When did this incident take place?
Ans. This incident took place When she was twelve years old.
Q. How is the poet “ver her mother’s childhood?
Ans. The poet is able to remember her mother’s
childhood when she looks into the photograph of
her mother.
Q. What has stood the onslaught of time and what has not?
Ans. The sea stood the onslaught of time. It is
still the same. However. her mother and her cousins
Q. Where are they now?
Ans. They have gone to the seashore. They are
paddling in th water.
Q. Why did they smile through their hair? wx
Ans. They smiled through their hair because they
were posing for a photograph.
3. Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow:
wee «+A sweet face,
My mother's, that was before | was born
And the sea, which appears to have changed less
Washed their terribly transient feet.
Q. Where was her nee
Ans. Her mother was ON the sea shore with her cousins
and posing for a photograph.
Q. When did this incident take place?
Ans. This incident took place When she was twelve years old.
Q. How is the poet able to remember her mother’s childhood?
Ans. The poet is able to remember her mother’s
childhood when she looks into the photograph of
her mother.
Q. What has stood the onslaught of time and what has not?
Ans. The sea nae ee the onslaught of time. It is
still the same. However. her mother and her cousins
underwent changes. Her mother grew up to be an
adult and now she is no more.
4, Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow:
Some twenty- thirty- years later
she'd laugh at the snapshot. “See Betty
And Dolly,” she'd say, “and look how they
dressed us for the beach.”
Q. Who would laugh at the snapshot after twenty — thirty years later?
Ans. The poet's mother would laugh at the snapshot after
twenty — thirty years later.
Q. How did mother remember her past?
Ans. Mother remembered her past with nostalgia.
Q v* Betty and Dolly?
Ans. Betty and Dolly were her cousins who had gone with
her to the beach for paddling.
5. Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow:
Sener The sea holiday
was her past, mine is her laughter. Both wry
With the laboured ease of loss
Q for the sea holiday in the past?
Ans. The poet’s mother had gone for the sea holiday
in the past when she was a young girl.
Q. What does ‘both’ refer to?
Ans. Both’ refers to the poet’s mother remembering
her past sea holiday as “~*~ the poet
remembering her mother’s laughter.
Q. How does the poet feel when she remembers her mother?
Mine poet experiences great sorrow the she
remembers her mother who left for heavenly abode
twelve years ago.
Q. What does the poet compare her laughter to and why?
Ans. The mother’s laughter that used to echo in the
house when she was alive has now become the
poet’s past&the comparison is given in order to
remember the mother with fondness while looking
at her photograph.
6. Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow:
Now she’s has been dead nearly as many years
As that girl lived. And of this circumstance
There is nothing to say at all,
Its silence silences.
Q. When did the poet's mother die?
Ans. The poet's mother died about twelve years ago.
Q. What does the ree of that girl?
Ans. She remembers how much her mother had changed
from a young girl. She also remembers the sweet
laughter of her mother.