An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum By Stephen Spender, Interpretation & Analysis, Questions & Answers


POEM: 2

An Elementary School Classroom In A Slum      Stephen Spender


INTERPRETATION & ANALYSIS

The poem is about social injustice and class inequalities. The poem is divided into four stanzas. In the first three stanzas, the poet develops the idea and suggests a solution in the final stanza.In the first stanza the poet says that the children of slums are away from fresh atmospheric air and though living on the outskirts of city, the glitzy life there is not for them. They are malnourished and unwanted by the society. They are treated like outcastes and people don’t have any sympathy or empathy for them. In the age when there should be a glow on one’s face, their faces are pale and their hair all disheveled as they can’t afford to bother about their looks. The tall girl in the class suggests how even in a tender age when the children should be carefree and happy, they are burdened with problems and responsibilities. They are lean and thin like a paper and always looking for something like a rat looking for something to nibble at. They get twisted bones in inheritance. They don’t have proper development because of lack of food. They suffer from the diseases which happen due to malnourishment and passed on from generation to generation. But in spite of all the problems and miseries, there are some like ‘unnoted, sweet and young’ who putting aside all the gloom and suffering, can enjoy their life; can dream of something different.

In the second stanza, the poet describes the poor infrastructure of the class. The walls are discolored and dull displaying the things they got in donation. There is a Shakespeare’s head, a picture showing day-break without clouds, a picture of multi-storey buildings and scenery of Tyrolese valley full of beautiful flowers and plants symbolizing natural beauty. But all these things are meaningless for them as they are not destined to enjoy these pleasures nor they are taught about any such thing. There is a map as well which tells the slum children about a different world but the children don’t understand the world shown in the map as they are perhaps never taught about that. Their world is what they see through their windows because that is the world they know; they understand; they recognize and they are familiar with. But even in that world their future is full of uncertainty. They live in narrow lanes without any hope of betterment, away from the natural beauty and even education is not meant for them.
In the third stanza the poet talks of the poor physical frame of the slum children and the futility of keeping Shakespeare and map in the class. According to the poet, both Shakespeare and the map are examples of material possessions and riches, pleasures and luxuries. Shakespeare has always written about elite class people and the map denotes the vast world out there but getting familiar with the material aspects of life, kindle desires in their heart and as there is no chance of their fulfillment, they adopt wrong ways. That’s why Shakespeare is wicked and map a bad example for the children living in the narrow hutments whose whole life is full of darkness. They live on and are surrounded by the heap of garbage with lean and emaciated body showing all bones which appear like glass pieces fitted in steel rims or bottle pieces scattered on stone. The poet says that when they are destined to live and die in the slum what is the use of keeping the map in the class. It is better to make slum in place of the map.

In the last stanza the poet tries to present the solution of the problem presented in the poem. The poet says that when somebody like a governor, inspector or visitor visits the school, the map becomes their window i.e. they are taught but otherwise the windows remain shut upon them i.e. they are not taught. Therefore, the poet wants them the break all the shackles; come out of their confinements and fill the town with their presence. The world of nature is for them as well. They should also be free to enjoy nature and most importantly, they should study because only they can create history who can glow like the sun with the light of knowledge.


GLOSSARY
Gusty                          -           Windy, Stormy
Stunted                       -           Small, Undersized
Heir                             -           Successor, Inheritor
Gnarled                       -           Twisted, Contorted
Slyly                            -           Craftily, Trickily
Cramped                     -           Confined, Narrow
Azure                          -           Blue, Cerulean
 Catacombs                 -           Tomb, Underground cemetery

Far far from gusty waves these children’s faces.
Like rootless weeds, the hair torn round their pallor:

1.         Which figure of speech has been used in the first line?
Ans:    Repetition

2.         Why have the children been compared with rootless weeds?
Ans:    Just as a rootless plant won’t get nutrition enough to survive, in the same way the children are mal-nourished. They don’t get sufficient to eat and roam about here and there aimlessly. Moreover, just as weeds are unwanted plants, these children are treated like outcaste.

3.         What does the poet mean by ‘gusty waves’?
Ans:    The gusty waves mean the fresh atmospheric air.

4.         Mention the figure of speech in“Like rootless weeds” .
Ans:    Simile

            The tall girl with her weighed-down head. The paper-
            Seeming boy with rat’s eyes. The stunted unlucky heir
            Of twisted bones, reciting a father’s gnarled disease,
            His lesson from his desk.

1.         Why does the tall girl have a weighed down head?
Ans:    The image of the tall girl suggests that the children are burdened with problems. In the tender age when they should be carefree, playing and enjoying life, they are exhausted and having a miserable life.

2.         What does the poet mean by ‘paper-seeming boy with rat’s eyes’?
Ans:    According to the poet, the children are very lean and lanky like a paper and they are always looking for something just like a rat which is always looking for something to nibble at.

3.         Why have the children been called ‘unlucky heir’?
Ans:    The children have been called unlucky heir because generally people get property and wealth in legacy but here the children get diseases as their legacy. The diseases which happen due to malnourishment are passed on from generation to generation.

            At the back of the dim class, one unnoted sweet and young
            His eyes live in a dream of squirrel’s game, in the tree room,
            Other than this.

1.         Why is the class dim?
Ans:    The class is dim because there might not be proper lighting facility.

2.         Why is the child unnoted?
Ans:    The child is unnoted because there is no proper lighting in the class. Moreover, the teachers and the authorities might not be bothered about the children.

3.         “His eyes live in a dream of squirrel’s game…” Explain.
Ans:    The boy is enjoying the squirrel’s game. He is happy watching the squirrel hop in and hop out of the tree room. To him, the game symbolizes something which has the power to keep him away from the drudgeries of life.

            On sour cream walls donations. Shakespeare’s head,
            Cloudless at dawn, civilized dome riding all cities.

            Belled, flowery, Tyrolese valley.
1.         Why are the walls sour cream?
Ans:    The walls are sour cream because they might not have been painted for a long time. It might be due to lack of fund or lack of carefulness.

2.         What is hanging on the walls?
Ans:    The things they got in donation are hanging there on the walls in the classroom.

3.         How significant the things in the classroom are?
Ans:    The things in the classroom are insignificant and irrelevant because they stand quite in contrast to the conditions of the children. They, instead of giving hope, only torment the children.

4.         What is Tyrolese valley symbolic of?
Ans:    Tyrolese valley is symbolic of natural beauty full of beautiful plants and flowers.

            Open-handed map awarding the world it’s world. And yet, for these
            Children, these windows, not this map, their world,
            Where all their future is painted with a fog.

1.         What does the poet mean by ‘open handed map’?
Ans:    An open-handed map is a map drawn by somebody with all its dimensions and showing all the territories.

2.         What is the world for the children?
Ans:    The windows are their world for the children.

3.         Why is the map not a world for the children?
Ans:    The map is not the world for the children because they don’t understand the world shown in that. What they understand and recognize is the world they live in i.e. the slum.

4.         Why is their future painted with fog?
Ans:    Their future is painted with a fog as there is no certainity in their lives.

            Surely Shakespeare is wicked and map a bad example.
            With ships and son and love tempting them to steal—
            For lives that slyly turn in their cramped holes

            From fog till endless night?
1.         Why has Shakespeare been called wicked?
Ans:    Shakespeare has been called wicked because going through his works, will kindle desires in the heart of the slum children and being unable to fulfil those desires, they adopt wrong means to achieve them.

2.         What do ships and son and love symbolize?
Ans:    They symbolize comforts, luxuries, possessions and riches in the material world.

3.         Which is the figure of speech used in the last line?
Ans:    Hyperbole

            On their slag heap, these children wear skins peeped through by bones
            And spectacles of steel with mended glass,
            Like bottle bits on stones.

1.         What is the slag heap?
Ans:    This expression refers to the poor physique of the children. Their body seems to be a heap of garbage.

2.         “Spectacles of steel with mended glass.” Explain.
Ans:    The poet has used this expression to present the poor physique of the slum children. Their body is all twisted and uneven just as in the frame of spectacle if one tries to fit in broken pieces of glass, they won’t fit in properly.

3.         Name the figure of speech in the last line.
Ans:    Simile

            Unless governor, inspector, visitor,
            This map becomes their window and these windows
            That shut upon their lives like catacombs.

1.         What do the governor, inspector and visitor symbolize?
Ans:    They symbolize hope to the slum children.

2.         How does the map become window?
Ans:    The map becomes their window as when the people like governor, inspector or visitor come, the light of knowledge falls upon them through the map i.e. they are taught.

3.         Why have the windows been compared with catacombs?
Ans:    The windows have been compared with catacombs because just as no light can enter the catacombs, in the same way when the authorities are gone or if they make no efforts for the slum children, they are not taught and darkness lingers in their lives.

            Break O break open till they break the town
            And show the children to green fields and make their world
            Run azure on gold sands, and let their tongues
            Run naked into books the white and green leaves open
            History theirs whose language is the sun.

1.         What should be broken?
Ans:    The shackles of social restrictions and prejudices imposed upon the slum children should be broken.

2.         Who can create history?
Ans:    Only those who can glow like the sun with the light of knowledge can create history.

3.         What does the poet mean by, “Let their tongues run naked into books…”
Ans:    It means that they should be allowed to study and be educated.

SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS

1.         What does the poet mean by ‘like rootless weeds’?
Ans:    The poet means that as the weeds are unwanted plants, the slum children are also   unwanted                by the society. People don’t like them and they are treated like outcaste. Besides, the poet                    uses  the term rootless to say just as a rootless plant doesn’t get sufficient nutrient and so                      wither and wilt, in the same way these children don’t get sufficient to eat.

2.         “Open-handed map awarding the world its world.” Paraphrase.
Ans:    Here open-handed map is a map drawn by somebody showing all the territories with all its dimensions and suggesting that there is more for them to know and explore. It tells the children that where they live and what they know is not the world rather it is very vast.

3.         Why does the poet call Shakespeare wicked?
Ans:    The poet calls Shakespeare wicked because Shakespeare has written only about royal class people so going through his works and knowing about material pleasures and luxuries kindle unattainable desires in their hearts leading them to adopt wrong means to fulfill those desires.

4.         Explain “spectacles of steel with mended glass.”
Ans:    It throws light on the physical condition of the slum children. Their body appears like broken glass pieces fitted into the steel rim of a pair of spectacles, some bones protruding out and some inwards. It is a metaphor of their physique.

5.         What is “Like bottle bottle bits on stone.” Which is thefigure of speech ?
Ans:    The poet has used simile in this line. He compares the physical condition with the pieces of bottle scattered on some stone.

6.         What does the poet suggest through “stars of words”?
Ans:    Here “stars of words” mean education and the poet is trying to convey that even education is not in the destiny of the slum children.

7.         Why does the poet compare windows with catacombs?
Ans:    Catacombs are tombs or cemetery. The poet makes such a comparison because as no light enters the grave in the same way when nobody visits the school the window of knowledge is shut upon them i.e. they are not taught.

8.         “For lives that slyly turn into cramped holes from fog till endless night?” Whose lives the poet is talking about? What does the poet intend?
Ans:    The poet is talking about the children who live in slums. The poet intends to say that the children furtively come in and go out of their cramped hutments escaping the notice of people out of embarrassment and out of fear. For them even the morning is foggy i.e. it seems their whole life is wrapped in endless darkness.

9.         “Let their tongues run naked into white and green leaves open.” Explain.
Ans:    The poet wants the slum children to be educated because that is the only way out of their misery. Until they study hard there can never be any betterment in their lives. Education is entitled to all and they should avail their right.

10.       Why does the poet ask the map to be blotted with slum?
Ans:    The poet asks the map to be blotted with slum because the children don’t understand the map hanging in the classroom as they are never taught. What they understand is their world and that is the slum where they are born; they grow up and die.

PREVIOUS YEARS' QUESTIONS
(2018)    Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow?                [4 Marks]
              …On their slag heap these children
               wear skins peeped through by bones and spectacles of steel
              with mended glass like bottle bits on stone.
(a)          Name the poet and the poem.
(b)          Explain : ‘slag heap’.
(c)          What future awaits these children?
(d)          Name the figure of speech in the third line?
(2017)    Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow?                [4 Marks]
              Far far from gusty waves these children’s faces
              Like rootless weeds; their hair torn around pallor
              The tall girl with her weighed-down head…
(a)          Who are these children?
(b)          Which figure of speech has been used in the first two lines?
(c)          Why is the tall girl’s head weighed-down?
(d)          What does the word ‘pallor’ mean?

(2016)    How is Shakespeare wicked and map a bad example?
(2015)    Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow?                [4 Marks]
              On their slag heap, these children
              Wear skins peeped through by bones and spectacles of steel
              With mended glass, like bottle bits on stones.
              (a) Who are these children?
              (b) What is their slag heap?
              (c) Why are their bones peeping through their skins?
              (d) What does 'with mended glass' mean?

(2014)    Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow?                [4 Marks]
               And yet, for these
              Children, these windows, not this map, their world.
              Where all their future's painted with a fog,
              A narrow street sealed in with a lead sky
              Far far from rivers, capes, and stars of words.

              (a) Who are the 'children' referred to here?
              (b) Which is their world?
              (c) How is their life different from that of other children?

(2013)    Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow?                [3 Marks]
              The stunted, unlucky heir
              Of twisted bones, reciting a father's gnarled disease,
              His lesson, from this desk. At back of the dim class
              One unnoted, sweet, and young. His eyes live in a dream,
              Of squirrel's game, in tree room, other than this

              (a) Who is the 'unlucky heir' ?                           
              (b) What will he inherit?
              (c) Who is sitting at the back of the dim class?

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