3
The Selfish Giant
Exercise 20
Solution 1
The Giant is called selfish because although he had
a large, lovely garden when he returned from visiting his friend he did not
allow the children to play in it. He shouted at them with a very gruff voice
and they all ran away. He then built a high wall all around it and put up a
notice board which read
"TRESPASSERS WILL BE PROSECUTED".
Solution 2
On one occasion the children said: "How happy
we are here!". This was the time when the children were playing in the
giant’s garden while the giant had gone to visit his friend. It was a large
lovely garden with grass, beautiful flowers, peach trees and birds singing in
the trees. It was when the happy children stopped their games to listen to the
birds that they said these words.
On the other occasion the children said:
"How happy we were there!". This refers to the time when the giant
had returned from his friend's place after seven years and seeing the children
playing in the garden shouted and chased them away and built a high wall around
it. The children were not allowed to play there and tried playing on the dusty
roads but did not like it. While wandering round the high walls and talking
about the beautiful garden they sadly said these words.
Solution 3
(i) The winter stands for loneliness, sadness, a
place without any activity, happiness or life. It also indicates that the
garden was a deserted place where no one used to come. Since happiness had left
with the children no birds cared to sing, the trees forgot to blossom and even
the beautiful flowers felt sorry for the children and slipped back into the
ground to sleep.
(ii) In the garden of the giant there was still
winter. The birds did not care to sing and the trees and flowers did not bloom
with no happy children around. The only people who were pleased were the Snow
and the Frost. They were very happy that spring had forgotten this garden and
they would now be able to live there all the year round. They invited the North
Wind and Hail to visit and stay with them. The Snow covered the grass with her
great white cloak and, Frost painted all the trees silver. The North Wind found
the garden a delightful spot. He came wrapped in furs and he roared all day
about the garden and blew the chimney pots down. Hail rattled on the roof of
the castle till he broke all the slates and ran round and round the garden as
fast as he could, dressed in grey with his breath like ice.
Solution 4
The giant was sad over the state of the garden
because in his garden it was still winter. Spring and Summer never came to
his garden. The Autumn gave golden fruit to every garden but to the Giant's
garden she gave none.
Solution 5
On hearing the linnet's song, the Hail stopped
dancing over his head, and the North Wind ceased roaring and a delicious
perfume came to him through the open casement.
Chapter 3 - The
Selfish Giant Exercise 24
Solution 1
(i) The most wonderful sight the Giant saw was that
through a little hole in the wall the children had crept in, and they were
sitting in the branches of the trees. Every tree had a child in it. The trees
were so glad to have the children back again that they had covered themselves
with blossoms and were waving their arms gently above the children's heads. The
birds were flying about and twittering with delight and the flowers were
looking up through the green grass and laughing. It was a lovely scene.
(ii) On seeing the lovely sight the giant realised
how selfish he had been by not allowing the children to play in his garden and
that was the only reason why the spring had not come to his garden.
Solution 2
In the farthest corner of the garden it was still
winter because there stood a little boy who was so small that he could not
reach up to branches of the tree. The poor tree was still covered with frost
and snow and the North Wind was blowing and roaring above it. The tree bent its
branches down as low as it could but the boy was too tiny to reach it and so he
wandered all round it crying bitterly.
Solution 3
On seeing the little boy the Giant crept downstairs
and opened the front door softly and went out into the garden. When the
children saw him, they were so frightened that they all ran away, and the
garden became winter again. Only the little boy did not run, for his eyes were
so full of tears that he did not see the Giant coming. The Giant stole up
behind him and took him gently in his hands and put him up into the tree. The
tree broke at once into blossom, and the birds came and sang on it. The little
boy stretched out his two arms and flung them round the Giant's neck and kissed
him.
Solution 4
After a long interval one morning when the Giant
looked out of his window he saw a marvelous sight. The little boy he loved was
standing under the tree at the farthest corner. The tree itself was covered
with lovely white blossoms, its branches were golden, and silver fruit hung
down from them. He ran downstairs in great joy. He hastened across the
grass, and came near the child. When he came close his face grew red with
anger, and asked who had dared to wound him as on the palms of the child's
hands were the prints of two nails and the prints of two nails were on the
little feet. He begged of the child to tell him who had wounded him so that he
could take his big sword and slay him. The child told him they were the wounds
of Love. A strange awe fell over the giant and he knelt before the child. The
child smiled and said that once the Giant had allowed him to play in his garden
and so that day he would go with him to his garden which was paradise. In the
afternoon when the children came they found the Giant lying dead under the tree
covered with white blossoms.
Solution 5
The sentence indicates that the once selfish giant
was blessed by the little boy who was Jesus Christ. He was happy that the giant
was no longer selfish and so had returned to reward him and take the kind, old
feeble giant back with him to his garden which was paradise.
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