12th English Elective Non-Fiction 2. The Mark On The Wall - Virginia Woolf

12th English Elective Non-Fiction 2. The Mark On The Wall - Virginia Woolf

12th English Elective Non-Fiction 2. The Mark On The Wall - Virginia Woolf


प्रश्न बैंक - सह - उत्तर पुस्तक (Question Bank-Cum-Answer Book)

Class - 12

English Elective

2. The Mark On The Wall - Virginia Woolf

Q1. An account of reflections is more important than a description of reality according to the author. Why?

Ans- Virginia Woolf writes the present essay in the Stream of Consciousness Technique. In this essay, she leaves a long string of thoughts. It is well known for its fleeting impressions. It also depicts the delicate shades of mental experience. As a modernist, writer Woolf isn't interested in describing reality as it really is, but she wants to privilege the imagination and the liberty of creation. In her essay, a simple element like a mark on the wall is responsible for the narrator's deep reflection about life and stimulates the imagination of the reader. Description of reality is always brief and based on standing facts. One cannot make the topic more interesting and whatever is written becomes merely a report of an event. So she says that an account of reflection is more important than a description of reality

Q2. Looking back at objects and habits of a bygone era can give one a feeling of phantom-like unreality. What examples does the author give to bring out this idea?

Ans- Phantom is an unreal thing. If a person peeps into his past, he remembers his bygone days as phantom-like unreality. The people find nothing clear in it. They have vagueness and the dim reflections of the glass. But it is also true that the writer has positively described the incidents and experiences. To prove her point, the writer gives different examples. She gives the examples of underground railways and omnibuses. The people ride in these means of transportation and see their faces into mirrors. But the images reflected in the mirrors are always unreal. The same feelings come in the mind of the people which are proved to be phantom-like unreality.

Q3. How does the imagery of (i) the fish (ii) the tree, used almost poetically by the author, emphasise the idea of stillness of living, breathing thought?

Ans- The narrator contemplates the life of a tree and a fish to emphasize upon the idea of stillness of living, breathing thought. She says that wood is a pleasant thing to think about. It comes from a tree, and trees grow, and we don't know how they grow to describe how still nature works silently without paying attention to the world around us. Then she further explains it using the imagery of a fish saying that she likes to think of the fish balanced against the stream like flags blown out, to describe the still life that is present in a parallel world around us that is often left unseen. Everything around us is moving, falling, slipping and vanishing or as the narrator says that there is a vast upheaval of matter.

Q4. How does the author pin her reflections on a variety of subjects on 'The Mark on the Wall'? What does this tell us about the way the human mind functions?

Ans- When the writer looks at the mark on the wall, she is lost in deep thoughts. A variety of different thoughts come to her mind. As soon as she perceives the mark on the wall, she begins to think about a long series of unmatched imaginary reflections. In reality, these reflections are not interwoven yet they are very familiar to us and related to our routine of life and traditions.

This tells about the curiosity of a human mind and the heights of the human mental process. In order to solve a petty mystery, a human mind in the process of thinking can go into various aspects. The mark on the wall makes her dig into the history, she recalls Shakespeare, the traditional norms and then these thoughts provoke her to further look into the future. Then she discusses nature and how nature intervenes and encourages action to hamper our process of thinking. This tells us about the vastness and limitlessness of a human mind when it comes to action.

Q5. Not seeing the obvious could lead a perceptive mind to reflect upon more philosophical issues. Discuss this with reference to the 'snail on the wall'.

Ans- The writer is lost into deep thoughts. She has a variety of themes and she thinks about the mark on the wall. But finally her husband appears and at once discloses that the mark on the wall is, in fact, a snail on the wall. Had she thought of the mark and found out it to be a snail, her philosophical perception and imagination might have broken. Although the mysterious mark on the wall sets a plot to the story, its content revolves in a very different direction. The narrator could have easily solved the mystery by standing up and inspecting the mark more closely in less than a minute but she chose to solve the mystery without any physical effort. So, she chooses to spend the time to think of the various possibilities that could have caused this mark, and while guessing these fanciful guesses she finds herself lost in some serious philosophical thoughts. The snail is identified just at the end of the story but is the so-called hero who provides a plot to this story. The vast streams of consciousness are a result of this snail sitting on the wall and the narrator sitting on her chair.

Q6. What is the string of varied thoughts that the mark on the wall stimulates in the author's mind?

Ans- The mark on the wall stimulates various thoughts in the author's mind and hence can be seen as a perfect example of 'stream of consciousness'. At first, she thinks of it as a result of a nail but then while rejecting this idea she starts to think about the personalities of the previous occupants of the house. Then thinking about the hole as an ink mark and not a hole she starts to philosophize about the idea of death. Again, she changes her interpretation and sees the mark as just a shadow while pondering over the writings of Shakespeare and the art character composition. She again thinks that the mark may be because of some round substance like a rose leaf in summer. She thinks that the mark may be like a tomb in a square or big nail. Finally she comes to the conclusion that the mark on the wall is wood. Her thought process breaks only when her husband comes and tells her that it is nothing but a snail.

Q7. What change in the depiction of reality does the author foresee for future novelists?

Ans- The writer tries her best on her part to find out the mystery of the mark on the wall but she is unable to solve the mystery. She is utterly confused about it. She foresees that the future novelists will have to solve such mysteries and reflections. There will be limitless reflections for them to face. According to the author, the future novelists will no more rely on deadened traits and realities to compose their characters. They will look deeper into the realms of reality and depict the hard-hidden reality which is not talked about and is left unseen. Not only these, but the future novelists will have to pursue such uncounted confusing and unreal appearances or in other words phantoms in time yet to come.

Q8. What is the author's perception of the limitations of knowledge and learning?

Ans- For the author, knowledge has nothing to do with education. One can gain knowledge when he/she starts to think, anyone under any circumstances can think. She says, "A world which one could slice with one's thought as a fish slices the water with his fin."The scope of acquiring knowledge is never limited. One can acquire knowledge as much as he wants. Knowledge and learning are such things that can be acquired at any level of life. Till now, no one is so perfect who can claim that he knows everything so there is always something left to know, study and learn. The author does not favour blind pursuits of knowledge and learning. She suggests a life, "without professors or specialists".

Q9. Describe the unbroken flow of thoughts and perceptions of the narrator's mind, using the example of the colonel and the clergy.

Ans- The author is completely confused about the mark. She wants to solve the mystery, so sometimes she runs her finger on the mark of the wall. The finger seems to mount and descend either as a tomb or a camp. She is lost in deep thoughts and imagines that it might be a tomb and some antiquary might have dug up the bones from the earth's crust and possibly the antiquary might be a retired colonel. He was doing his scientific experiments and in these experiments, he was being assisted by clergy. The writer puts the colonel and the clergy together which shows that she was afraid of post war consequences. She is thinking about what the world will look like after the war.

Q 10. Why does Virginia Woolf use 'Dustbin' in the story?

Ans- Virginia Woolf is an eminent writer. She studies

society deeply. She takes inspiration on the subject of patriarchy which, in her opinion, is a masculine perspective governing the society. Already, World War I has made the conventional wisdom of patriarchy which, she hopes, will be "laughed into the dustbin" soon. Thus, she uses Dustbin as a metaphor for the systems of thought which are ridiculously empty.

Q 11. What do you mean by Nature's game?

Ans- Virginia Woolf has presented Nature's game twice in the essay. This term is used for self protection. In another sense, Nature's game is used for those things which are not natural but seem to be natural because of its widely accepted conventional thought. It is a kind of game which is full of knowledge that masks the truth of the world from people. It means people remain ignorant towards the game of nature.

Q 12. How can you say that the body of the narrator is inactive while the mind is wandering swiftly?

Ans- It is a common tradition that if a person is bothered by some strange object, he would simply get out of his seat and would examine it but the narrator is lost in deep thoughts pondering over possibilities of it. The narrator thinks of historical periods, meaning of life and prior inhabitants of the house but, ironically, her body is still. She does not leave the chair to see the mark. Her body does not move at all while her mind is moving sharply.

Q 13. Who identifies the mark on the wall and how?

Ans- It is a dramatic twist in the story when the mark on the wall is recognized. The narrator spends a long time viewing the mark. She thinks deeply about what the mark may be. She philosophises the mark and thinks about it in different ways but she is decided about it. But on the contrary, her husband comes into the room for less than one minute and in this short span of time, he is able to identify the mark as a snail.

Q 14. What do you know about the climax of the essay?

Ans- It is clearly stated that the essay does not consist of any real climax. On the contrary, there is more of an anti-climax as the woman's husband breaks through her philosophy that she had in her mind. He tells her that he is going out to buy a newspaper. He spoils the mystery by identifying what the mark actually is. He says that the mark was nothing but a snail passing through there slowly.

Q 15. What is the major conflict within the mind of the narrator?

Ans- When the narrator sees a mark on the wall, she thinks

about it differently. She is confused about it. She thinks that this mark may be by a nail. She thinks that the novelists of the future will have to do a lot of work because of countless reflections. She thinks it to be either a tomb or a camp. But her inner conflict does not allow her to get up and go to inspect it.

Q 16. Write a short note about the imagery in the essay.

Ans- Imagery is a device utilized for the purpose of revealing the imagination and intellectual depths of the narrator. This imagery starts in the essay when the narrator sees a mark on the wall and she describes it. From there, the imagery of the mark grows increasingly metaphorical and philosophical, expanding within the consciousness of the narrator. She has presented the images to contemplate history, art, sociology and politics.

Q17. How has the writer presented modern life in the essay?

Ans- 'The Mark on the Wall' is an excellent piece of work by Virginia Woolf. She presents it through the stream of consciousness technique in which her thoughts jump from one to another. It mirrors the quality of life in the modern world. Life is fast paced, fragmented, and confusing. There are domineering people and ideologies working to shake us from peace and pleasant domination. The narrator says that in this disruptive time of war, the quest for knowledge seems more important.

Q 18. What is the importance of the opening line in the essay 'The Mark on the Wall'?

Ans- The opening line in the essay is extremely important. It provides the sense of setting necessary to understand the psychological state of the narrator. The line suggests a bit of vagueness. "Perhaps it was the middle of January"-gives a clue of vagueness in the mind of the narrator. It sets the ambiguity about whom and how many times she saw the mark. Thus, the opening line makes the essay a complicated mental experience.

Q 19. Explain the line "Oh! dear me, the mystery of life;

Ans- This line is very important in the essay as it almost

sets the theme of the essay. This also conveys that the essay is more than a mere mark on the wall. It also suggests that it is not the mark that is important but it is the mystery that is important. Which is kept unsolved for as long as possible. She could solve the mystery by just going to the mark but through this mystery, she depicts that the world is clear, ordered and precise and how it can be made more pleasant and peaceful.

Q 20. How can you say that there is a lack of closure in the essay?

Ans- Even as the truth about the mark appears to resolve itself at the end of the essay, the reader is left with a mixture of disappointment and doubt about the mark truly being a snail. The narrator's ruminations and story never really come to an end. She simply moves from one to another thought and these thoughts remain unfulfilled even after completion of the essay.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS

1. Who wrote the essay 'The Mark on The Wall'?

a. Joseph Conrad

b. Virginia Woolf

c. Issac Asimov

d. Amartya Sen

2. Who is the narrator of the essay, 'The Mark on The Wall'?

a. A woman

b. A child

c. A man

d. Totally unknown

3. In which month did she see the 'mark' on the wall?

a. August

b. April

c. February

d. January

4. Which season was it, when she first saw the mark on the wall?

a. Summer

b. Rainy

c. Winter

d. Spring

5. Where was the author sitting?

a. In the bedroom

b. In front of the fire

c. In the garden

d. In the kitchen

6. What was the author doing when she saw the mark for the first time?

a. Having lunch

b. Sewing

c. Having tea

d. Smoking a cigarette

7. The mark was a small round mark, ……. upon the white wall.

a. Black

b. Blue

c. Red

d. Yellow

8. Like what our thoughts swarm/move upon a new object?

a. Flies

b. Ants

c. River

d. Plank

9. At very first the narrator thinks that the mark should have been drawn by a ……

a. Wire

b. Stick

c. Nail

d. None of these

10. The people who had the house before author, left the house because -

a. They did not like the house anymore

b. The house was haunted

c. They had no money to pay the rent

d. They wanted to change their style of furniture

11. What does the author assume that the nail had been for?

a. Picture

b. Miniature

c. Clock

d. Show piece

12. The author says that life seems to be-

a. The perpetual waste and repair

b. Rapid

c. Casual and haphazard

d. All of these

13. What doesn't interest the narrator and is dull to her?

a. Drama

b. Poem

c. Historical fiction

d. Philosophy

14. What were 'they' discussing when the narrator came into the room?

a. Botany

b. Philosophy

c. Physics

d. Politics

15. ……….. bring back ideas of Sunday luncheons and rules and habits.

a. Dreams

b. Generalizations

c. Articles

d. Images

16. Who is followed by the Lord High Chancellor?

a. The Archbishop of Mexico

b. The Archbishop of Avon

c. The Archbishop of Canterbury

d. The Archbishop of York

17. "Everybody follows somebody", Who's philosophy is this?

a. Nelson's

b. Whitaker's

c. Shakespeare's

d. Charles'

18. Who is the antiquary in the lesson?

a. A retired colonel

b. A clergyman

c. A labourer

d. A poet

19. The narrator prefers barrows on the South Downs to be-

a. Camps

b. Homes

c. Tombs

d. Hospitals

20. According to the narrator, what is a pleasant thing to think about?

a. Bird

b. Plank

c. Flag

d. Wood

21. Where does the wood come from?

a. A meadow

b. A storm

c. A tree

d. None of these

22. The song of birds must sound very loud and strange in-

a. March

b. May

c. June

d. July

23. What was the other character of the essay going to buy?

a. A pen

b. A newspaper

c. A notebook

d. A story book

24. Finally, what was the mark on the wall?

a. A snail

b. A nail

c. A hole

d. A shadow

25. Which technique of narration has been used by the author in the essay 'The Mark on the Wall'?

a. Flashback

b. Flash Forward

c. Dialogue Narration

d. Stream of consciousness

JCERT/JAC English Elective प्रश्न बैंक - सह - उत्तर पुस्तक (Question Bank-Cum-Answer Book)

English Elective Contents

Short Stories

1.

I Sell my Dreams - Gabriel Garcia Marquez

2.

Eveline - James Joyce

3.

A Wedding In Brownsville - Issac Bashevis Singer

4.

Tomorrow - Joseph Conrad

5.

One Centimetre - Bi Shu-Min

Poetry

1.

A Lecture Upon The Shadow - John Donne

2.

Poems by Milton - John Milton

3.

Poems By Blake - William Blake

4.

Kubla Khan Or A Vision In A Dream - S.T. Coleridge

5.

Trees - Emily Dickinson

6.

The Wild Swans at Coole - W.B. Yeats

7.

Time And Time Again - A.K. Ramanujan

8.

Blood - Kamala Das

Non-Fiction

1.

Freedom - G.B. Shaw

2.

The Mark On The Wall - Virginia Woolf

3.

Film-Making - Ingmar Bergman

4.

Why The Novel Matters - D.H. Lawrence

5.

The Argumentative Indian - Amartya Sen

6.

On Science Fiction - Isaac Asimov

Drama

1.

Chandalika - Rabindra Nath Tagore

2.

Broken Images - Girish Karnad

Novel

1.

A Tiger For Malgudi - R.K. Narayan

2.

The Financial Expert - R.K. Narayan

Solved Paper of JAC Annual Intermediate Examination - 2023

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