LOST SPRING - Textual Question - Answers
LOST SPRING - Textual Question - Answers
Q3. Is Saheb happy working at the tea-stall? Explain.Ans. No, Saheb is not happy working at the tea-stall. He is no
longer his own master. His face has lost the carefree look. The steel canister seems heavier than the plastic bag he would
carry so lightly over his shoulder. The bag was his. The canister belongs to the man who owns the tea-shop.
THINK AS YOU READQ1. What makes the city of Firozabad famous?Ans. The city of Firozabad is famous for its
bangles. Every other family in Firozabad is engaged in making bangles. It is the centre of India’s glass-blowing industry.
Families have spent generations working around furnaces, welding glass, making bangles for the women in the land.
Q2. Mention the hazards of working in the glass bangles industry?
Ans. Boys and girls with their fathers and mothers sit in dark hutments, next to lines of flames of flickering oil lamps. They
weld pieces of coloured glass into circles of bangles. Their eyes are more adjusted to the dark than to the light outside. They
often end up losing eyesight before they become adults. Even the dust from polishing the glass of bangles is injurious to
eyes. Many workers have become blind. The furnaces have very high temperature and therefore very dangerous.
UNDERSTANDING THE TEXTQ1. What could be some of the reasons for the migration of people from villages to
cities?Ans. People migrate from villages to cities in search of livelihood. Their fields fail to provide them means of survival.
Cities provide employment, jobs or other means of getting food. The problem in case of the poor is to feed the hungry
members. Survival is of primary concern.
Q2. Would you agree that promises made to the poor children are rarely kept? Why do you think this happens in the
incidents narrated in the text?Ans. The promises made to the poor are rarely kept. The author asks Saheb half-joking,
whether he will come to her school if she starts one. Saheb agrees to do so. A few days later he asks if the school is ready.
The writer feels embarrassed at having made a promise that was not meant. Promises like hers abound in every comer of
their bleak world.
Q3. What forces conspire to keep the workers in bangle industry of Firozabad in poverty?Ans. Certain forces conspire
to keep the workers in bangle industry of Firozabad in poverty. These include the moneylenders, the middlemen, the
policemen, the keepers of law, the bureaucrats and the politicians. Together they impose a heavy burden on the child.