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Wednesday 25 February 2015

Comprehension! :-)))

Dear friends,

Today's topic is comprehension!

A comprehension exercise consists of a passage. Based on that questions are given. This is mainly to test one's ability of comprehending the meaning of the passage, thus the name comprehension.

Tips:

1. Read the passage thoroughly.

As you get the main idea, read it again to check whether any teensy-weensy details are left out.

2. Now understand the questions, and check the portions that give out the answer.

3. Now, the grammar bit would be tricky as it needs one to be well read then only you can answer the respective bits. :-)

Now, there are no separate books available on this, but any good grammar book would do, OR one can alternately choose a passage from the newspaper and try forming questions and answer them.

A sample is given below:

All great thinkers live and move on a high plane of thought. It is only there they can breathe freely. It is only in contact with spirits like themselves can they live harmoniously and attain that serenity which comes from ideal companionship. The studies of all great thinkers must range along the highest altitudes of human thought. One can't remember the name of any illuminative genius who did not drink his inspiration from fountains of ancient Greek and Hebrew writers; or such among the moderns as were pupils in ancient thought , and, in turn, became masters of their own. I have always thought that the strongest argument in favour of the Baconian theory was, that no man, however indubitable his genius, could have written the plays and sonnets that have come down to us under Shakespeare's name who had not the liberal education of Bacon. How this habit of intercourse with the Gods makes on impatient of mere men. The magnificent ideals that have ever haunted the human mind, and given us our highest proofs of a future immortality by the reason of the impossibility if their fulfilment here, are splintered into atoms by contact with life's realities. Hence comes our sublime discontent. You will notice that your first sensation after reading a great book is one of melancholy and dissatisfaction. The ideas, sentiments, expressions, are so far beyond those of ordinary working life that you cannot turn aside from one to the other without  an acute sensation and consciousness of the contrast. And the principles are so lofty, so super-human that it is a positive pain, if once you become imbued with them, to come down and mix in the squalid surroundings of ordinary humanity. It may be spiritual or intellectual pride that is engendered on the high plane of intellectual life. But, whatever it is, it becomes inevitable. A habitual meditation on vast problems that underline human life, and are knit into human destinies - thoughts of immortality, of the littleness of mere man, of the greatness of man's soul, of the splendours of the universe that are invisible to the ordinary traffickers in the street, as the vastness of St. Peter's is to the spider that weaves her web in a corner of the dome - these things do not fit men to understand the average human being, or tolerate with patience the sordid wretchedness of the unregenerate masses. it is easy to understand, therefore, why such thinkers fly to the solitude of their own thoughts, or the silent companionship of immortals; and if they care to present their views in prose or verse to the world, that these views take a sombre and melancholy setting from "the pale cast of thought" in which they were engendered.

Q.1. On what plane must great thinkers live and move?

Q.2. Is a liberal education necessary to produce great literature.

Q.3. Why does the reading of a great book, according to the author, make one melancholy and disappointed?

Q.4. What are the things that make it hard to understand the average human being?

Now, I know that this is a bit high for 8th graders like you, I'd be posting something easy in the next post! Till then, happy learning!

Everyone's friend,
Lakshmi. :-)))

9 comments:

  1. Hi. I am happy to see that my posts of 2014 are still being widely read and appreciated. Thanks for that. This passage was given as a test. It's quite simple. The answers are in the passage itself. Try finding it. I will be posting in another two days.

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  2. Hi there!
    Please tell me the answers of these questions. I am unable to comprehend this passage properly and hence couldn't make answers on my own. Someone please help me.Thanks in anticipation!

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  3. Okay. Many of you have requested the answers to this passage, which are given below:

    A.1. Great thinkers feel the need to live and move on a great plane. A place where they can get in touch with their highest level of creativity. It's a place where they can breathe freely, find inspiration by getting in connection with like minded souls. They attain a sense of serenity which turns them creative. They cannot thrive in an ordinary, routine life.

    A.2. Yes, it is. All the great work of literature or art, made available to us through different timelines are not of the plain, ordinary kind. It is only when all opinions and different perspectives are taken into account and welcomed, is greatness achieved.

    A.3. One feels a sense of melancholy and disappointment after reading a great book because, it transcends the boundaries of the ordinary and routine mind. The author has analysed all possible probabilities and spun a great work.

    A.4. For a great thinker, the routine and the ordinary is a curse, but, unfortunately, it comprises a major part of the population which finds stability with the ordinary and routine. Great thinkers break free the shackles of ordinary and routine as they do not want to be grounded, but, FLY. Fly away to the unimaginable heights of their own solitude or seek the companionship of like minded fliers.

    I hope this suffices.

    Thanks and regards,

    Lakshmi Srinivasan 🌺
    (7.6.2021)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Please give me a suitable title of this paragraph

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