ENGLISH The Tenants
The Tenants
Date- 9/8/21
Topics covered- Reading and explanation of the chapter.
Date- 11/8/21
Topics covered- New words
1.soliciting.
2.wincing
3.peevish
4.gaiters
5.guttural
6.ruffianly
Textual Answers: Read the story and answer the following
questions: |
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Q 1 |
Answer
each of the following questions in 30-40 words. |
|
a) |
Mr Lockwood was Mr Heathcliff’s new
tenant and wanted to rent Thrushcross Grange. He called upon
his landlord on his arrival to solicit the
occupation of the place.
He had heard
the day before
that Mr Heathcliff had some thoughts regarding it. |
|
b) |
Joseph was
a very old
man, though hale
and sinewy. He
was apparently one
of the senior staff
of Mr Heathcliff’s household. He spoke in undertones with a
sour face while relieving the narrator of his horse.
His attitude indicated peevish displeasure. He did not appear when
Mr Heathcliff called
him to get some tea. |
|
c) |
Mr Heathcliff tried to calm
down the narrator after he was
attacked by the dogs. He told
the narrator that
guests were so
rare in his
house that neither he nor the dogs
knew how to receive them.
He and his dogs were
willing to own up to it. |
|
d) |
The house
and furniture at Wuthering Heights would have been
nothing extraordinary as
belonging to a homely, northern farmer. But Mr Heathcliff formed
a singular contrast to his abode
and style of
living. He was
a dark-skinned gipsy
in aspect, in
dress and manners a gentleman like a
country squire and
rather slovenly. Yet,
he did not
look amiss because he had an
erect and handsome but rather a morose figure. |
|
Q 2 |
Answer
each of the following questions in 80-100 words. |
|
a. |
Mr Heathcliff met Mr Lockwood at the gate
of his house.
He interrupted Mr. Lockwood with a wince
as he was
giving his introduction and reason for
his visit. Instead of using welcoming words he said
‘walk in’ with
closed teeth. The narrator felt
that even the gate over
which he leant
manifested no sympathising movement to the words. When
he saw the narrator’s horse pushing the barrier, only then did
he put out
his hand to
unchain it, and
then |
|
sullenly preceded him up the causeway. |
b. |
Mr Heathcliff went in search
of Joseph when
he did not
respond to his
call for tea and left
the narrator with
the ruffian canine and a pair
of grim shaggy sheep-dogs.
The narrator did
not want to come in
contact with their
fangs so he sat
still but unfortunately indulged in winking and making faces
at the trio, and something irritated the canine that
she suddenly broke
into a fury
and leapt on the narrator’s knees.
He flung her back and
hastened to place
the table between them. This proceeding aroused about
half-a-dozen more of four-footed fiends, of various sizes and ages, who came in from
hidden dens to the room. The narrator felt his
heels and coat-laps being targets of assault. He was trying to parry off the large
dogs as effectively as he could
with the poker. But then he had to loudly demand assistance
from the others in the household to re-establish peace. |