21.03.2013 Views

Question Bank of As You Like It

Question Bank of As You Like It

Question Bank of As You Like It

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

AS YOU LIKE IT ‐ SHAKESPEARE<br />

Q 1: Read the extract and answer the following.<br />

Act 1 Scene 1<br />

Orlando: <strong>As</strong> I remember, Adam, ,it was upon this fashion: (he) bequeathed me by will but poor a<br />

thousand crowns, and, as thou sayest charged my brother, on his blessing, to breed me well: and there<br />

begins my sadness.<br />

1. Who is Adam? How is he related to the brother?<br />

Ans: Adam is an old family servant <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys. He had been a faithful and honest servant for<br />

many years.<br />

He referred to here is Sir Rowland de Boys. The brother mentioned by Orlando is his elder brother<br />

Oliver, Sir Rowland de Boys’ eldest son.<br />

2. What does Orlando mean by saying there begins my sadness?<br />

Ans: Sir Rowland de Boys had granted one thousand crowns to Orlando by will. He had given Oliver the<br />

responsibility to look after Orlando. Despite this, Oliver denied him his part <strong>of</strong> the will and thus, he<br />

deprived Orlando <strong>of</strong> the place <strong>of</strong> a brother, <strong>of</strong> education, and <strong>of</strong> a proper living. So, Orlando did not<br />

grow up with the love <strong>of</strong> a brother.<br />

3. What are the grievances Orlando points out to Adam?<br />

Ans: Orlando complained to Adam that Oliver had been cruel to him and had kept him like a peasant.<br />

Oliver denied Orlando his rightful education and training in spite <strong>of</strong> being <strong>of</strong> noble birth. His life was no<br />

better than that <strong>of</strong> an ox. He also that Oliver’s horses were bred better and that the trainers were paid<br />

well whereas Orlando gained nothing but physical growth. He seemed to lose his natural abilities. He<br />

was forced to feed with the farm labourers. Oliver did not treat Orlando las his brother but like a slave.<br />

4. How does Orlando feel about the grievances and what does he plan?<br />

Ans: Orlando declared that he could not bear the injustice <strong>of</strong> his brother towards him anymore. He was<br />

furious about his upbringing as a farm labourer. His nature was more like his father’s. He was brave,<br />

strong, fearless and noble. He felt that his father’s virtuous and gentle spirit within him was ready to<br />

revolt against Oliver’s ill treatment. He could not tolerate the servile condition anymore although he did<br />

not have a practical plan to end it.


5. Who entered just after this conversation and describe what happened between him and Orlando.<br />

Ans: Oliver entered just after this conversation. Oliver rebuked Orlando for not being worthy <strong>of</strong> any<br />

work. Orlando accused Oliver <strong>of</strong> the unfair treatment meted out to him. At this, Oliver stroke Orlando,<br />

but Orlando, being stronger than Oliver, held him in a wrestler’s grip. Orlando threatened Oliver that he<br />

would not let go unless Oliver would promise to take proper care <strong>of</strong> him or gave him the thousand<br />

crowns he had inherited. At this juncture, Oliver agreed to pay and Orlando left him.<br />

Q 2: Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Orlando: I am no villain; I am the youngest son <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de boys; he was my father and he is thrice<br />

a villain that says such a father begot villains. Wert thou not my brother, I would not take this hand from<br />

thy throat till this other had pulled out thy tongue for saying so: thou hast railed on thyself.<br />

1. Who is the person to whom these lines are spoken to? Who else is present there? Where are they?<br />

Ans: The above lines are spoken to Oliver, the envious brother <strong>of</strong> Orlando.<br />

Adam, the faithful family servant is also present there.<br />

They are in an orchard near Oliver’s house.<br />

2. What kind <strong>of</strong> relation does Orlando share with his brother? Why?<br />

Ans: Oliver is the eldest son <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland De Boys. He was entrusted with the duty <strong>of</strong> upbringing <strong>of</strong> his<br />

brother Orlando, in which he failed. Oliver denied Orlando’s education and the thousand crowns given<br />

to him by his father. Oliver was jealous and wicked, thus Orlando suffered at the hands <strong>of</strong> his envious<br />

brother. Oliver had no respect or love for Orlando.<br />

Oliver hated Orlando because <strong>of</strong> his virtues and goodness that made him popular and loved by all. His<br />

good qualities were a threat to Oliver who was greedy and selfish.<br />

3. Explain the circumstances which led to the above situation.<br />

Ans: Oliver compelled Orlando to live a rustic life. Orlando had suffered for long. He planned to rebel<br />

against his malicious brother who had not treated him as a gentleman <strong>of</strong> noble birth. Orlando<br />

demanded his inheritance so that he could set out on his own. But Oliver had a personal grudge towards<br />

Orlando and did not agree to his demands. Instead,he stroke Orlando in anger. Orlando held him in a<br />

wrestler’s grip and Oliver retaliated by calling him a villain.<br />

4. Who tries to intervene? What does he say?<br />

Ans: Adam tries to intervene. He is the old family servant <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys, and is faithful to<br />

Orlando.<br />

Adam says that the brothers should make peace between each other for the sake <strong>of</strong> their honourable<br />

father.<br />

5. What does Orlando accuse his brother <strong>of</strong> just after the extract? How does he show that the spirit <strong>of</strong><br />

his father grows strong in him?<br />

Ans: Orlando accused Oliver that he never fulfilled his responsibility and neglected Orlando’s upbringing.<br />

He had been treated like a farm labourer and Oliver had hindered the growth <strong>of</strong> gentleman like qualities<br />

in Orlando.<br />

Orlando would no longer bear the unfair treatment meted out to him. Sir Rowland De Boys was noble<br />

and honourable and Orlando would not let down this temperament which he also possessed.


Q 3: Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Charles: Good morrow to your worship.<br />

Oliver: Good Monsieur Charles, what’s the new news at the new court?<br />

1. Who is Charles? Who brings him in to meet Oliver? Where are they?<br />

Ans: Charles is the court wrestler to Duke Frederick.<br />

Dennis, the servant to Oliver brings him there.<br />

They are in an orchard near Oliver’s house.<br />

2. What old news does Charles give to Oliver?<br />

Ans: Charles reported that the old Duke Senior had been banished by his younger brother, the new<br />

Duke. Three or four loyal lords had voluntarily gone with the Duke. <strong>As</strong> a result, the land and revenues <strong>of</strong><br />

those lords became the property <strong>of</strong> the new Duke.<br />

3. What were the three other questions which Oliver asked Charles?<br />

Ans: Oliver asked if Rosalind, the Duke’s daughter had been banished too, the second question was<br />

about the Duke as to where would he live during his banishment. Lastly, Oliver enquired whether<br />

Charles would wrestle before the new Duke Frederick.<br />

4. Why has Charles come to meet Oliver?<br />

Ans: A wrestling bout was to take place between Charles and Orlando. Charles was the champion court<br />

wrestler. <strong>It</strong> is revealed here that he was vain yet kind. He came to meet Oliver to ask him to dissuade<br />

Orlando from the wrestling match. He was unaware that Oliver had a grudge against Orlando. He was<br />

afraid that Orlando being inexperienced, would be badly injured during the fight. He notified Oliver that<br />

he would fight for his credit and would have no mercy on his opponent.<br />

5. How does Oliver reveal his wickedness during his conversation with Charles?<br />

Ans: Oliver’s malicious character is revealed here. He was mean‐minded and envious towards his noble<br />

minded younger brother Orlando. Oliver slandered him and incited Charles the wrestler. His<br />

contemptuous attitude is revealed when he wanted Orlando to get killed by the champion wrestler. He<br />

provoked Charles against Orlando, and also warned Charles that if he underestimated his opponent, it<br />

would prove murderous for him.<br />

Q 4: Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Oliver: I’ll tell thee, Charles, it is the stubbornest young fellow <strong>of</strong> France; full <strong>of</strong> ambition, an envious<br />

emulator <strong>of</strong> every man’s good parts, a secret and villainous contriver against me, his natural brother:<br />

therefore use thy discretion.<br />

1. Where are Oliver and Charles now? Who is the stubbornest young fellow <strong>of</strong> France?<br />

Ans: Oliver and Charles are in an orchard near Oliver’s house.<br />

Orlando is the stubbornest fellow <strong>of</strong> France, according to his brother Orlando.


2. What is the real truth about the person spoken about?<br />

Ans: Orlando is the person spoken <strong>of</strong> here. He is humble, generous and popular. Oliver is jealous <strong>of</strong><br />

Orlando, and his avarice led him to slander him. Oliver utters sheer lies about his younger brother.<br />

Oliver is greedy and power hungry, so Orlando’s gentleman‐like qualities are a threat to him. He<br />

conspires against Orlando secretly and wants him to be killed.<br />

3. Explain the meaning <strong>of</strong><br />

1) an rnvious emulator<br />

2) a villainous contriver<br />

Ans: An envious emulator means a jealous rival. Orlando is being referred to as a jealous rival <strong>of</strong><br />

a man’s good qualities.<br />

A villainous contriver means a wicked plotter. This has again been used for Orlando by his<br />

brother.<br />

4. How does Oliver describe his natural brother to Charles?<br />

Ans: Oliver treated his natural brother Orlando with contempt. He slandered about him to Charles and<br />

incited Charles against Orlando. Oliver warned Charles that Orlando was the stubbornest young fellow <strong>of</strong><br />

France and was determined to kill Charles. His secret attempts to dissuade Orlando had failed. He lied to<br />

Charles that Orlando was over‐ambitious, a jealous rival and a conspirer. Charles should not treat<br />

Orlando with honour during the wrestling match because Orlando would retaliate and kill Charles. He<br />

went on to say that if Orlando’s true character was revealed in detail, then Charles would be horrified<br />

and Oliver would be in tears.<br />

5. According to Oliver, why should Charles be afraid <strong>of</strong> the person spoken <strong>of</strong>? How far is he correct<br />

about his warning?<br />

Ans: Charles, the wrestler is warned by Oliver that Orlando would take any opportunity to show his<br />

wresting skills and defeat Charles. If Charles underestimated him and Orlando remained alive, then in<br />

some way or the other, Orlando would get Charles killed in a secret way or poison him.<br />

Orlando is partially correct about his warning. Orlando was powerful, strong and resolute. He would win<br />

the bout <strong>of</strong> wrestling whether it was Charles or anyone else but Oliver lied to Charles about Orlando that<br />

he would murder Charles if he remained alive.<br />

Q 5: Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Oliver: Now will I stir this gamester. I hope I shall see an end <strong>of</strong> him; for my soul, yet I know not why,<br />

hates nothing more than he.<br />

1. To whom are the above lines spoken to? Who is the gamester? Who has just left?<br />

Ans: The above extract is Oliver’s soliloquy in the play.<br />

Orlando is the gamester. Charles the court wrestler has just left.<br />

2. Why does Oliver wish to see an end <strong>of</strong> him?<br />

Ans: Oliver suffers from avarice, malice and jealousy, and hates his brother Orlando. Orlando is more<br />

popular and is loved by the people. His nobility and generosity are a threat to Oliver. Nothing would be<br />

better for Oliver than to see the death <strong>of</strong> Olrlando at the wrestling match the following day.


3. List out three good qualities <strong>of</strong> the person spoken about in this extract as told by Oliver.<br />

Ans: In this soliloquy, Olive highlights that Orlando was not educated yet learned, gentle, noble and so<br />

much more popular among his people.<br />

4. Oliver’s character is revealed in this scene. Discuss.<br />

Ans: Oliver was the eldest <strong>of</strong> the three sons <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys. He was envious <strong>of</strong> Orlando. He ill‐<br />

treated Orlando and did not educate him. He was selfish and unjust and had no intention <strong>of</strong> giving the<br />

thousand crowns allotted to Orlando by his father. He treated the old family servant Adam with<br />

disrespect. He was slanderous and attempted to get Orlando killed.<br />

5. Which event has been hinted at by Oliver? What promise did the person who left before the extract<br />

make to Oliver?<br />

Oliver hinted at the wrestling bout which was to take place before the new Duke Frederick. Charles had<br />

been convincingly persuaded by Oliver to kill Orlando. Charles promised that after his bout, Orlando<br />

would not be able to walk without help and if such was not, Charles would give up his pr<strong>of</strong>ession.<br />

Act 1 Scene 2<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Celia: Herein I see thou lovest me not with the full weight that I love thee. If my uncle, thy banished<br />

father, had banished thy uncle, the duke, my father, so thou hadst been still with me, I could have taught<br />

my love to take thy father for mine: so wouldst thou, if the truth <strong>of</strong> thy love to me were so righteously<br />

tempered as mine is to thee.<br />

1. Where is Celia and with whom? Who is the banished father and the uncle?<br />

Ans: Celia is in a garden in front <strong>of</strong> the Duke’s palace. She is with Rosalind, her cousin and Duke Senior’s<br />

daughter. Rosalind’s father, Duke Senior is the banished father spoken <strong>of</strong> here and Celia’s father, Duke<br />

Frederick is the uncle who has been mentioned here.<br />

2. Why does Celia speak these lines? What is the mood <strong>of</strong> the person to whom these lines are addressed<br />

to?<br />

Ans: Celia tries to cheer up her cousin Rosalind whose father Duke Senior had been deposed by Celia’s<br />

father.<br />

Rosalind is sad. <strong>As</strong> her father Duke Senior has been banished to the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden by the usurping<br />

Duke Frederick. She is unable to cope up with the injustice done to her father.<br />

3. What does Celia promise to do for the person addressed to? What would happen if she broke the oath?<br />

Ans: Celia told Rosalind that she should not be upset because when Celia would inherit the kingdom<br />

from the usurping Duke, she would return it to Rosalind, the rightful heir.<br />

Celia said that if she does not fulfill the promise to return the kingdom, she would turn into a monster.


4. What sports does her cousin plan? What is Celia’s reply?<br />

Ans: Rosalind is her cousin and she decides to play the game <strong>of</strong> falling in love as a pastime. Celia<br />

hesitates to play this game. She advises Rosalind not to be serious about it or it will lead to shame and<br />

humiliation.<br />

5. What sport does Celia propose to indulge in? What is discussed in the conversation that follows?<br />

Ans: Celia says that they should make fun <strong>of</strong> the Goddess <strong>of</strong> Fortune who does not distribute her<br />

bounties fairly.<br />

Rosalind and Celia discussed about the Goddesses <strong>of</strong> Nature and Fortune. Rosalind said that Fortune<br />

played her part in the distribution <strong>of</strong> bounties like wealth and fame whereas Nature awarded natural<br />

qualities like beauty and virtue. Celia said that Fortune could make a beautiful person fall into fire and<br />

lose her beauty. <strong>It</strong> is Nature who gave them the wit to make fun <strong>of</strong> the Goddesses and the sudden<br />

appearance <strong>of</strong> Touchstone was Fortune’s part.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

No? when Nature hath made a fair creature, may she not by Fortune fall into the fire? Though Nature<br />

hath given us wit to flout at Fortune, hath not Fortune sent in this fool to cut <strong>of</strong>f the argument?<br />

1. Who speaks these words and to whom? Where are they at present?<br />

Ans: Celia speaks these words to Rosalind. They are in a garden in front <strong>of</strong> the Duke’s palace.<br />

2. What reference has been given to Nature and Fortune in the extract?<br />

Ans: Celia and Rosalind decide to pass their time by mocking Nature and Fortune. Celia is <strong>of</strong> the opinion<br />

that the goddess <strong>of</strong> Fortune shall be driven out from her wheels because she does not distribute her<br />

bounties equally. According to Rosalind, the goddess <strong>of</strong> Fortune cannot endow the qualities in a<br />

person’s nature. Fortune can change wealth and fame but not one’s nature.<br />

3. Who enters during this conversation? What does the person tell Celia?<br />

Ans: Touchstone, the pr<strong>of</strong>essional fool enters during this conversation. He tells Celia that she must go to<br />

her father. Celia inquires whether he is sent by her father; he answers that he is not.<br />

4. What does Celia mean by saying for always the dullness <strong>of</strong> the fool is the whetstone <strong>of</strong> the wits?<br />

Ans: Celia addresses Touchstone’s foolishness. She says that Nature and Fortune has sent Touchstone so<br />

that his stupidity can act as a grindstone to sharpen their wits.<br />

5. What kind <strong>of</strong> a bond exists between Celia and Touchstone as is revealed later in the act?<br />

Ans: A bond <strong>of</strong> trust exists between Celia and Touchstone. Later in the act, when Rosalind and Celia plan<br />

to escape from the Duke’s palace, Touchstone accompanies them. Rosalind puts the idea through to<br />

Celia to take Touchstone with them. Celia says with full confidence that Touchstone will accompany her<br />

anywhere in the world. She trusts him and he will be helpful to them in the unknown Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.


Q3. Read the following extract and answer the questions that follow.<br />

Enter Le Beau<br />

Bon jour, Monsieur Le Beau: what’s the news?<br />

1 .Who is Le Beau? Which other characters are present? Where are they?<br />

Ans: Le Beau is an enthusiastic attendant <strong>of</strong> Duke Frederick. He is known for being informative and<br />

possessing a pompous way <strong>of</strong> talking.<br />

Rosalind, Celia and Touchstone are present in this scene.<br />

They are in a lawn before the Duke’s palace where a wrestling match is due to take place.<br />

2. What news does Le Beau bring forth? Why is he amazed?<br />

Ans: Le Beau brought the news <strong>of</strong> a wrestling match in which Charles the champion wrestler had broken<br />

the ribs <strong>of</strong> three sons <strong>of</strong> an old man. He also said that the best part <strong>of</strong> the match was yet to take place.<br />

He was amazed at the remarks made by Touchstone, Celia and Rosalind.<br />

3. What does Le Beau mean by saying the best is yet to do?<br />

Ans: Le Beau is speaking to Rosalind and Celia about the wrestling that they have missed. He meant that<br />

the beginning <strong>of</strong> the wrestling match was not as interesting as the one which was to take place and they<br />

should watch it.<br />

4 .Which adjectives are used by Le Beau to describe the three young men? Describe the match they<br />

fought with Charles as related by Le Beau.<br />

Ans: Le Beau uses the words Three proper young men, <strong>of</strong> excellent growth and presence.<br />

Le Beau related that an old man entered with his three sons. The eldest <strong>of</strong> the three wrestled with<br />

Charles and in a moment Charles threw down and broke his ribs with little chances <strong>of</strong> his survival.<br />

Charles did the same thing with the other two sons <strong>of</strong> the old man. He said that they lay there with the<br />

old man grief‐stricken, lamenting over their conditions and the people who passed by too shed tears.<br />

5. Bring out the humour exhibited by one <strong>of</strong> the characters during this conversation.<br />

Ans: Touchstone the court jester, Rosalind and Celia were in conversation with Le Beau. When Le Beau<br />

described the gruesome wrestling match between Charles and the three young men, Touchstone asked<br />

him which fun sport he thought <strong>of</strong> describing to the ladies when he had come. Le Beau answered that it<br />

was the same wrestling match in which Charles had broken the ribs <strong>of</strong> the young men .Touchstone<br />

brought out the humour and remarked that he gained wisdom that breaking <strong>of</strong> ribs was a sport for the<br />

ladies.<br />

Q4. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Come on: since the youth will not be entreated, his own peril on his forwardness.<br />

1 .Who is the speaker? Which other characters are present there? Who is the youth spoken about?<br />

Ans: Duke Frederick is the speaker. Rosalind, Celia and Le Beau are present .Orlando is the youth who is<br />

being spoken about.


2. What is the occasion for their presence? Why was the speaker concerned about the youth?<br />

Ans: Charles the Duke’s wrestler is about to fight Orlando, an amateur in wrestling. The Duke, Rosalind<br />

and Celia have come to witness the match.<br />

The Duke is aware that Orlando is not an equal to the skills <strong>of</strong> Charles who is a pr<strong>of</strong>essional wrestler. He<br />

knows that Orlando is too young, and wants him to withdraw from the match so that he does not suffer<br />

at the hands <strong>of</strong> the wrestler.<br />

3. Who asks whom to dissuade the youth to refrain from the bout? What stance does this person take<br />

against the youth later in the play?<br />

Ans: Duke Frederick asks Rosalind and Celia to speak to the youth and convince him not to fight with<br />

Charles. Later in the play when the Duke comes to know that Orlando was the son <strong>of</strong> his enemy Sir<br />

Rowland de Boys, he shows immense displeasure towards him. He even suspects that Orlando has<br />

helped Rosalind and Celia escape.<br />

4. How does the youth react to the people who try and dissuade from the match?<br />

Ans: Orlando is determined to fight the challenge. Rosalind and Celia try to convince him not to fight<br />

Charles but Orlando tells them with due respect that he can not comply with the request <strong>of</strong> the<br />

beautiful ladies. Instead he wants the support <strong>of</strong> their lovely eyes and good wishes. If he suffers defeat,<br />

it will come to one who was never praised, one who had all the will to die, and no friends to cry for him.<br />

He says that his death would be no loss as he would be replaced by a more worthy individual.<br />

Q5.Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind:<br />

He calls us back: my pride fell with my fortunes; I’ll ask him what he would. Did you call, sir? Sir, you<br />

have wrestled well, and overthrown more than your enemies.<br />

1. Who is present there with Rosalind? Where are they? Who is Rosalind speaking about?<br />

Ans: Celia is present with Rosalind. They are in a lawn in front <strong>of</strong> the Duke’s palace. Rosalind is speaking<br />

about Orlando.<br />

2. What does Rosalind mean by saying my pride fell with my fortunes?<br />

Ans: Rosalind says that she parted with all her dignity when misfortunes overtook her. She had fallen in<br />

love with Orlando and she felt that he had called.<br />

3. What does Rosalind give sir and why? What does she say about her misfortune?<br />

Ans: Rosalind gives Orlando a chain as a gift for his victory against Charles. She also says that she has<br />

fallen in love with Orlando.<br />

She said that she had been a victim <strong>of</strong> misfortune so she could not give something more valuable to<br />

Orlando.<br />

4. What does quintain mean? Why does the sir addressed in the scene compare himself with a quintain?<br />

Ans: A quintain is a dummy wooden figure which horse‐riders use to practice tilting.<br />

Orlando had fallen in love with Rosalind and he was tongue‐tied with the emotion. He could not speak<br />

when Rosalind rewarded him a chain for his victory against Charles. He stood like a dummy or a quintain<br />

before her, not knowing what to say.


5. What does the person say about Rosalind when she leaves the scene?<br />

Ans: Orlando is attracted to Rosalind at first sight. He realizes that a powerful emotion had swept him<br />

<strong>of</strong>f and he could not speak to Rosalind to thank her. He says to himself that he was defeated either with<br />

the after effects <strong>of</strong> the fight with Charles or with feeling <strong>of</strong> love for Rosalind.<br />

Q6. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Orlando: I thank you, sir; and pray you, tell me this: Which <strong>of</strong> the two was daughter <strong>of</strong> the duke, that<br />

here was at the wrestling?<br />

Le Beau: Neither his daughter, if we judge by manners:<br />

1 .Who is Orlando and Le Beau? Where are they?<br />

Ans: Orlando is the youngest son <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys. He is Oliver’s brother and suffers under him.<br />

He is gentle and humble. Orlando does not receive a proper upbringing under Oliver.<br />

Le Beau is a courtier and a favourite attendant <strong>of</strong> the Duke Frederick. In this scene, he is a mouthful <strong>of</strong><br />

news and brings a lot <strong>of</strong> information.<br />

They are in a garden in front <strong>of</strong> the Duke’s palace just after the wrestling match gets over.<br />

3. Which Duke is being referred to here by Orlando? Why does Orlando want to know about the<br />

daughter?<br />

Ans: Duke Frederick the usurper has been referred here by Orlando.<br />

Celia and Rosalind had both met Orlando. He was snubbed by the Duke for being Sir Rowland de Boys’<br />

son. He had fallen in love with Rosalind and so he wanted to remove his doubts about her father.<br />

3. What does Le Beau mean in the given extract? Explain.<br />

Ans: Le Beau knows the Duke’s nature. He means that Celia is a good natured lady whereas the Duke is<br />

selfish and rude. The character <strong>of</strong> the Duke and his daughter are different.<br />

4. Why does Orlando thank Le Beau? Which danger does Orlando talk about at the end <strong>of</strong> the scene?<br />

Ans: Le Beau advised Orlando that the Duke’s displeasure would result in an enmity so Orlando should<br />

leave the court immediately. He also told Orlando that lately the Duke had turned hostile towards his<br />

niece because she was more popular than his daughter.<br />

Orlando talked about his tyrant brother Oliver who was the other danger apart from his new enemy, the<br />

wicked Duke.<br />

Act 1 Scene 3<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Celia: No, thy words are too precious to be cast away upon curs; throw some <strong>of</strong> them at me; come; lame<br />

me with reasons.


Rosalind: Then there were two cousins laid up; when the one should be lamed with reasons and the other<br />

mad without any.<br />

1. Introduce the two characters. Where are they?<br />

Ans: Rosalind is the daughter <strong>of</strong> the banished Duke Senior and Celia is the daughter <strong>of</strong> the tyrant Duke<br />

Frederick. They are in a room in the palace.<br />

2. In what mood is Rosalind now?<br />

Ans: Rosalind is in love with Orlando. She confesses her love to Celia. She has just met Orlando after the<br />

wrestling match and is impressed by him.<br />

3. What reasons does Rosalind give for her mood?<br />

Ans: Rosalind’s love for Orlando has turned intense. When Celia asks her the reason for being so quiet,<br />

she answers that she was affected by her passionate love for Orlando. She does not mention the<br />

sadness for her father, the banished Duke. In fact, she mentions Orlando as her child’s father for whom<br />

she is so passionate.<br />

4. How would the two cousins be laid up according to Rosalind?<br />

Ans: Laid up means affected. Rosalind would be crippled with worries and tensions for her love and Celia<br />

would have no reason to become tensed.<br />

5. What advice does Celia give Rosalind? What is Rosalind’s reaction?<br />

Ans: Celia is surprised by the intense love which Rosalind has for Orlando. She advises Rosalind to<br />

wrestle with her affection and suppress her feelings. She explains that Rosalind shall gain some self<br />

control this way. Though Rosalind agrees to Celia yet she says that the burrs were not in her clothes but<br />

in her heart.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Enter Duke Frederick, with Lords.<br />

Duke Frederick: Mistress, dispatch you with your safest haste, And get you from our Court.<br />

1. Where is the Duke? Whom is he speaking to?<br />

Ans: Duke is in a room in the palace. He is speaking to Rosalind and Celia.<br />

2. What remarks does Celia make when the Duke enters?<br />

Ans: Celia remarks that the Duke entered with blazing eyes, i.e. full <strong>of</strong> anger.<br />

3. What does the Duke mean by saying dispatch you with your safest haste?<br />

Ans: The Duke was in extreme anger. He showed displeasure towards Rosalind, asking her to leave the<br />

court as quickly as possible with all her possessions.<br />

4. Why did the Duke show displeasure to the person spoken to? Who else did he show displeasure to?<br />

Ans: The Duke was jealous <strong>of</strong> Rosalind. He felt that Rosalind’s goodness and popularity would affect<br />

Celia, his daughter. Rosalind became the victim <strong>of</strong> his tyranny and was asked to leave the court. Duke<br />

Frederick had earlier shown displeasure towards Orlando, who was Sir Rowland de Boys’ son.<br />

5. How does the mistress counter for the blame put on by the Duke?<br />

Ans: Rosalind behaves in the most dignified manner when the Duke banishes her. With all respect she<br />

asks the Duke the reason for her banishment. When the Duke calls her a traitor, she replies that he<br />

should not suspect her for being so and that she was innocent. But he continues to blame that she is the


daughter <strong>of</strong> her father, Duke Senior and that is enough to prove that she is a traitor. Rosalind replies<br />

that if that is so, then she has been a traitor when the Duke usurped her father’s kingdom. Her father is<br />

no traitor and the Duke shall not blame her for being one simply because she is poor.<br />

Q3. Read the following extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Duke Frederick: Thus do all traitors: If their purgation did consist in words, they are as innocent as grace<br />

itself: Let it suffice thee that I trust thee not.<br />

1. Whom does Duke Frederick refer to as traitor? Where is he? Who else is present there?<br />

Ans: Rosalind is referred to as a traitor. They are inside a room in the palace. Celia is present there too.<br />

2. What declaration did the Duke make just before the given extract?<br />

Ans: The Duke declared a sentence <strong>of</strong> banishment for Rosalind. He asked her to leave the court as quickly as<br />

possible.<br />

3. How does the person spoken to justify against being called a traitor?<br />

Ans: Rosalind was the banished Duke Senior’s daughter and Duke Frederick was her Uncle. She declared that<br />

she had the same relationship with the Duke when her father was banished by him. Treason was not<br />

hereditary and even if it was, it would make no difference as her father was never a traitor. She blames the<br />

Duke that he was being cruel simply because she was poor.<br />

4. Who supports the person blamed by the Duke and how?<br />

Ans: Celia came out in support <strong>of</strong> Rosalind, her cousin. She spoke against her tyrant father, Duke Frederick’s<br />

decision. She asked for the same judgement upon her too as she and Rosalind were inseparable just like the<br />

swans <strong>of</strong> Juno. They had slept together, woke up together, played together, and eaten together.<br />

5. What reasons does the Duke give in support <strong>of</strong> the declaration he made earlier?<br />

Ans: Duke Frederick is jealous <strong>of</strong> Rosalind. He does not want Rosalind to be superior to Celia. He wants to<br />

convince Celia about his decision by saying that Rosalind was crafty and cunning. Her cheerfulness is to gain<br />

sympathy <strong>of</strong> the people. She pretends to be innocent and steals all the popularity and admiration from<br />

Celia. If Rosalind leaves, Celia will be more appreciated.<br />

Q4. Read the extract and answer the following questions:<br />

Celia: Why so am I; we still have slept together, Rose at an instant, learn’d, play’d, ate together.<br />

1. Who is Celia speaking about and to whom?<br />

Ans: Celia is speaking about Rosalind to her father, Duke Frederick.<br />

2. Why does she utter the above lines and what is her relationship with the person she’s speaking about?<br />

Ans: The tyrant Duke had banished Celia’s cousin. Celia was disturbed and amazed at her father’s behavior.<br />

She tried to convince the Duke to take back his sentence. She said that she was acquainted with Rosalind’s<br />

character and was confident that Rosalind was innocent. Celia could not live without Rosalind because they<br />

had learned, played, and ate together.<br />

3. Which situation has developed here in this scene? Why does she say so am I?<br />

Ans: The Duke had banished Rosalind and Celia spoke in support <strong>of</strong> Rosalind out <strong>of</strong> her nobility. She declared<br />

to the Duke that they were inseparable and expected the Duke to take back the sentence.


According to Celia, if Rosalind was guilty <strong>of</strong> treason, then she must be so too. Celia and Rosalind were close<br />

to each other and so, she insisted that they both should be considered traitors.<br />

4. What does she compare herself to prove her closeness?<br />

Ans: Celia gave the example <strong>of</strong> Juno’s swans which could not be separated. Juno was the Greek queen <strong>of</strong><br />

Gods. This example was used by Celia to prove her closeness to Rosalind.<br />

5. How does the person spoken to justify that the decision taken was in support <strong>of</strong> Celia?<br />

Ans: Duke Fredrick did not want Rosalind to be superior to Celia. He wanted to convince Celia by saying that<br />

Rosalind was crafty and cunning. Her cheerfulness was to gain sympathy <strong>of</strong> the people. She pretended to be<br />

innocent and stole all the popularity and admiration from Celia. If Rosalind left, Celia would be more<br />

appreciated.<br />

Q5. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: But, cousin, what if we assay’d to steal<br />

The clownish fool out <strong>of</strong> your father’s court?<br />

Would he not be a comfort to our travel?<br />

1. Where is Rosalind going and with whom? Where are they now?<br />

Ans: Rosalind has planned to escape to the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden along with Celia. They are in a room in the<br />

palace.<br />

2. Whom does Rosalind suggest to steal and why?<br />

Ans: Rosalind wants to steal Touchstone, the court jester, as he will be helpful in protecting them in the<br />

Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden when they escape.<br />

3. What advice does this cousin give to Rosalind?<br />

Ans: Celia decides the details <strong>of</strong> their escape. She advises Rosalind to carry their jewels and wealth with<br />

them and devise the fittest time and safest way to escape to freedom.<br />

4. Who suggests the destination? Which two things would be required by that person to disguise?<br />

Ans: Celia suggests that they would escape to the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden and join Duke Senior, Rosalind’s<br />

father. Celia disguises herself in shabby clothes and paints her face brown.<br />

5. What names were chosen by them? Bring out the significance <strong>of</strong> their names.<br />

Ans: Celia chose the name Aliena which means stranger and Rosalind chose the name Ganymede who<br />

was the mortal boy with whom Jove, the king <strong>of</strong> the Classical Gods fell in love and carried him to Mount<br />

Olympus to serve as his own page or cup‐bearer. The name was appropriate because Ganymede was an<br />

effeminate boy while the disguised Rosalind would be a woman with a masculine appearance.


Act 2 Scene 1<br />

Q1. Read the following extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Amiens: I would not change it. Happy is your Grace,<br />

That can translate the stubbornness <strong>of</strong> fortune<br />

Into so quiet and so sweet a style.<br />

Duke Senior: Come, shall we go and kill us venison? And yet it irks me the poor dappled fools, being<br />

native burghers <strong>of</strong> this desert city, should, in their own confines, with forked heads have their round<br />

haunches gor’d.<br />

1. Where are the speakers? Why are they there?<br />

Ans: The speakers were in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. They were there because Duke Senior was banished by<br />

his younger brother, Duke Frederick and some <strong>of</strong> his loyal lords had left the court along with him and<br />

fled to the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

2. What would Amiens not change?<br />

Ans: Amiens would not change the way <strong>of</strong> life in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

3. What is meant by Happy is your Grace that can translate the stubbornness <strong>of</strong> fortune?<br />

Ans: Duke Senior had told the advantages <strong>of</strong> living in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. He explained that the forest<br />

was free from the superficial life <strong>of</strong> the people in the court. They were more happy and safe in the forest<br />

than among the envious people <strong>of</strong> the court. This had convinced Amiens and he remarked that the Duke<br />

Senior was able to perceive all that was positive in the misfortune.<br />

4. Why was the Duke not happy about killing the deer?<br />

Ans: According to the Duke, the deer were the rightful inhabitants <strong>of</strong> the forest. But they were hunted<br />

down in their own domain just like the Duke had suffered in the hands <strong>of</strong> the tyrant brother in his<br />

Dukedom. They were in fact being wounded in spite <strong>of</strong> being innocent.<br />

5. Who shared the same opinion and what does the person say?<br />

Ans: Jaques believed that hunting <strong>of</strong> the deer in the forest was far more cruel than the usurper Duke<br />

Fredrick. Jaques shared the same opinion that the deer should not be hunted down in the forest, which<br />

is their own habitat.<br />

He also said that the humans were in fact robbers and oppressors or even worse in hunting the poor<br />

animals in their natural home.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

First Lord: O, yes, into a thousand similes. First, for his weeping into the needless stream; ‘Poor deer’,<br />

quoth he, ‘thou mak’st a testament as worldlings do, giving thy sum <strong>of</strong> more to that which had too<br />

much’: then, being there alone,<br />

1. Who is the First Lord speaking to? Who else is there? Who is he?<br />

Ans: The First Lord is speaking to Duke Senior.<br />

Amiens and other lords accompanying the Duke are also there.<br />

He is the melancholy Jaques.


2. What does the First Lord say about he earlier? Narrate the incident which is told by the First Lord?<br />

Ans: The First Lord uses the term melancholy Jaques.<br />

The First Lord and Amiens had seen Jaques stretch under a tree near the stream in the forest. He was<br />

troubled with the fact that the hunting <strong>of</strong> the deer was a greater cruelty than the duke’s banishment.<br />

According to him, Duke Senior was a greater usurper than Duke Frederick. A poor wounded stag lay by<br />

the stream.<br />

Jaques used a thousand comparisons to grieve about the poor wounded stag. The tears shed by the stag<br />

added water to the stream nearby which was already abundant with water. He compared this with<br />

human beings who give more to those who already have too much. The next comparison also laid<br />

emphasis on the worldly fact that unhappiness turns away friendship. The stag was abandoned by its<br />

herd uncaringly. That is exactly what prosperous men do. He considered hunting <strong>of</strong> the wild animals in<br />

the forest as an act <strong>of</strong> usurpation.<br />

3. What does the First Lord mean when he said <strong>As</strong> worldlings do, giving thy sum <strong>of</strong> more to that which had<br />

too much?<br />

Ans: The First Lord quoted Jaques that the people <strong>of</strong> this world gave more to those who already had too<br />

much. Jaques said this when he was in a forest near the stream and watched a wounded stag shed tears<br />

and add water to the abundant stream. The tears <strong>of</strong> the stag were not required by the stream.<br />

4. Which philosophy <strong>of</strong> life had been later quoted by the First Lord as said by he? What is the moral drawn<br />

from it?<br />

Ans: Two philosophies are explained by Jaques through comparisons, that the people give more to those<br />

who already have too much and unhappiness turns away friendship. The moral drawn is that the<br />

wealthy men do not care for the miserable.<br />

5. What opinion does the person spoken to have about he?<br />

Ans: Duke Senior is fond <strong>of</strong> Jaques and his philosophies impress him. He believes that Jaques’<br />

philosophies have a lot <strong>of</strong> moral in them.<br />

Q3. Read the following extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Duke Senior: Sweet are the uses <strong>of</strong> adversity,<br />

Which like a toad, ugly and venomous,<br />

Wears yet a precious jewel in his head.<br />

1. To whom are these lines addressed? Where are they now?<br />

Ans: These lines are addressed to Amiens and the lords who accompanied Duke Senior.<br />

They are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

2. Explain the first line <strong>of</strong> the extract.<br />

Ans: This line means that misfortune and suffering bring its own compensations and teach us valuable<br />

lessons in life. The adversities or difficulties have their own advantages and value in them.<br />

3. What is the toad compared to and why?<br />

Ans: The toad has been compared to adversity. The difficulties in life look ugly and venomous just like<br />

the exterior <strong>of</strong> a toad. But the toad has a unique advantage which adorns its head. The precious jewel on<br />

the head <strong>of</strong> the toad acts as an antidote to poison. In the same way adversities have their own<br />

advantages and have their own value in life.


4. What examples did the Duke use to prove that sweet are the uses <strong>of</strong> adversity?<br />

Ans: The Duke said that the hard life in the forest was much better than the artificial life in the court.<br />

They were more safe and happy in the forest than in the envious court. The adversities <strong>of</strong> the forest had<br />

a lesson to teach. Nature was no flatterer. In fact the aspects <strong>of</strong> Nature were truthful counselors. The<br />

trees taught in their own language, the streams were like books to read, the stones imparted wisdom in<br />

their own languages. Thus sweet were the uses <strong>of</strong> adversity.<br />

5. Where does the Duke propose to go? What feeling does he have for the act which he is about to commit?<br />

Ans: The Duke proposes to go hunting deer.<br />

The Duke regrets that a deer should be hunted in its own habitat.<br />

Act 2 Scene 2<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Duke Frederick: Can it be possible that no man saw them?<br />

<strong>It</strong> cannot be: some villains <strong>of</strong> my court are <strong>of</strong> consent and sufferance in this.<br />

1. Where is the Duke? Who else is there?<br />

Ans: The Duke is inside a room in the palace.<br />

The first lord and the second lord are there with him.<br />

2. In what mood is the Duke now? What has been the reason for his mood?<br />

Ans: The Duke is furious.<br />

The duke is furious when he is informed about the flight <strong>of</strong> his daughter, Celia, his niece, Rosalind and<br />

Touchstone.<br />

3. Who had overheard Celia and her cousin? What did she hear?<br />

Ans: Hisperia, the princess’ gentlewoman confessed that she had secretly overheard Celia and Rosalind<br />

praise Orlando. She believed that wherever they had gone, Orlando had accompanied them.<br />

4. Who else is missing? What epithet has been given to the person? Who gives this news?<br />

Ans: Touchstone is missing.<br />

He is called the roynish clown.<br />

This news is given by the second lord.<br />

5. In what disguise did Rosalind and Celia escape?<br />

Ans: Rosalind dressed up as a man, and named herself Ganymede and Celia named herself Aliena. She<br />

wore shabby clothes and smeared her face with brown paint.


Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Duke Frederick: Send to his brother; fetch that gallant hither; If he be absent bring his brother to me; I’ll<br />

make him find him. Do this suddenly, and let not search and inquisition quail to bring again these foolish<br />

runaways.<br />

1. Who is the brother and why has he been ordered to come by the Duke?<br />

Ans: Oliver is the brother. The Duke is agitated with the information <strong>of</strong> the flight <strong>of</strong> his daughter and<br />

niece. He suspects that Oliver’s brother, Orlando helped them escape.<br />

2. Who is the brother in the second line <strong>of</strong> the extract? Who is the gallant?<br />

Ans: In the second line <strong>of</strong> the extract, the brother is Oliver. The gallant is Orlando.<br />

3. How was the gallant treated by the Duke earlier in the play?<br />

Ans: The Duke showed immense displeasure to the gallant earlier in the play when he came to know<br />

that he was Sir Rowland de Boys’ son.<br />

4. How had the brother treated the gallant earlier in the play?<br />

Ans: Oliver hated his brother Orlando. He was jealous <strong>of</strong> his bravery and popularity. He ill treated<br />

Orlando, confiscated his liberty and inheritance given by their father, Sir Rowland de Boys.<br />

5. What orders does the Duke give his <strong>of</strong>ficers?<br />

Ans: Oliver was banished from the court by the tyrannical Duke Frederick. He had been compelled to<br />

find Orlando and he ordered his <strong>of</strong>ficers to be quick in action in search <strong>of</strong> the fugitives.


Act 2 Scene 3<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Adam: What my young master? O my gentle master! O my sweet master! O you memory <strong>of</strong> Old Sir<br />

Rowland! Why, what make you here?<br />

1. Who is Adam? Where is he now? Whom is he talking to?<br />

Ans: Adam is the loyal servant, who had served Sir Rowland de Boys.<br />

He is outside Oliver’s house.<br />

Adam is talking to Orlando, the youngest son <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys.<br />

2. Why does Adam say O you memory <strong>of</strong> Old Sir Rowland?<br />

Ans: Adam was an old servant who had worked for Sir Rowland de Boys. He believed that Orlando, the<br />

youngest son was an image <strong>of</strong> his father, Sir Rowland de Boys.<br />

3. Who is the young master? Mention four qualities as told by Adam about the person?<br />

Ans: The young master is Orlando.<br />

Adam praises Orlando and calls him virtuous, gentle, strong and valiant.<br />

4. What does Adam want the person to do and why?<br />

Ans: Adam wants Orlando to escape from his house because his wicked brother Oliver had planned to<br />

get rid <strong>of</strong> him.<br />

5. What according to Adam had become the young master’s enemies?<br />

Ans: Orlando was virtuous and possessed many good qualities. His goodness <strong>of</strong> nature had betrayed him<br />

and it had turned an enemy towards Orlando’s destruction. The praises for Orlando had reached Oliver<br />

who was jealous <strong>of</strong> his younger brother and thus had planned to get him killed.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Adam: Come not within these doors; within this ro<strong>of</strong> the enemy <strong>of</strong> all your graces lives. <strong>You</strong>r brother ‐ no,<br />

no brother; yet the son‐ yet not the son, I will not call him son <strong>of</strong> him I was about to call his father<br />

1. Whose doors does Adam talk about? What epithet had just been used before the extract?<br />

Ans: Oliver’s house, where Orlando lives has been referred to as these doors.<br />

O unhappy youth is the epithet that has just been used before the extract.<br />

2. Who is the enemy <strong>of</strong> all his graces and why?<br />

Ans: Oliver is the enemy <strong>of</strong> all his graces because Orlando is virtuous, gentle, strong and valiant. This<br />

made Oliver jealous <strong>of</strong> him.<br />

3. What four things does Adam say about the house?<br />

Ans: He says that this house is but a butchery:<br />

Abhor it, fear it, do not enter it.


4. Why does Adam dissuade Orlando to enter the house?<br />

Ans: Adam had overheard Oliver’s plots. He planned to burn Orlando within the house. If he failed, he<br />

would have him murdered by some other way. So he did not think that the house was any longer safe<br />

for Orlando.<br />

5. Why is it that the person about whom Adam is speaking does not deserve to be called either a brother or<br />

a son?<br />

Ans: <strong>As</strong> a brother, Oliver was wicked, cruel and jealous towards Orlando. He could not be a natural<br />

brother since he had plotted to kill him. <strong>As</strong> a son <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys, he was not kind and<br />

considerate. He was rude to Adam and despotic towards his younger brother.<br />

Q3. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Orlando: O good old man! how well in thee appears the constant service <strong>of</strong> the antique world, when<br />

service sweat for duty, not for meed!<br />

1. Who is the good old man?<br />

Ans: Adam is the good old man. He is the loyal servant to Orlando.<br />

2. What are his good qualities?<br />

Ans: He was loyal, sincere, and hard working. He rendered his services without the expectation <strong>of</strong> any<br />

reward.<br />

3. When and where does this conversation take place? Give a few details about the situation which has<br />

developed?<br />

Ans: This conversation took place just after the wrestling match when Orlando was about to return to<br />

his house. Adam stopped him on his way and warned him not to enter the house. They were outside<br />

Oliver’s house.<br />

Gallant Orlando had defeated the Duke’s champion wrestler, Charles. His praises reached Oliver and he<br />

had decided to kill Orlando.<br />

4. What does the old man <strong>of</strong>fer Orlando and why?<br />

Ans: Adam <strong>of</strong>fered five hundred crowns that he had saved for his old age, so that it could help Orlando<br />

in his escape.<br />

5. What decision does Orlando take?<br />

Ans: Orlando agreed to the devoted servant. He decided to take Adam along with him and before<br />

Adam’s savings would be over, he would find a house where they could live in peace.


Act 2 Scene 4<br />

Q1. Read the following extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: Well, this is the forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

Touchstone: Ay, now I am in Arden; the more fool I: when I was at home, I was in a better place: but<br />

travelers must be content.<br />

1. Where are the characters now? Who is Touchstone?<br />

Ans: The characters, i.e. Rosalind, Celia and Touchstone are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

Touchstone is the court jester in the court <strong>of</strong> Duke Frederick.<br />

2. Why should Rosalind behave differently?<br />

Ans: Rosalind was disguised as a man. She was in male attire, and changed her name to Ganymede and<br />

Celia dressed up as a shepherdess and called herself Aliena.<br />

3. What does Touchstone mean when he says the more fool I?<br />

Ans: Touchstone is a pr<strong>of</strong>essional fool and he criticized the life in the court sarcastically, yet when he is<br />

in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden, he misses the luxury and comfort <strong>of</strong> the court. So he remarks that he is now<br />

more <strong>of</strong> a fool that he has left the court.<br />

4. Who enters the stage just after this extract? What are they talking about?<br />

Ans: Corin, an old shepherd and Silvius, a young shepherd entered the stage. They were talking about<br />

their lady love. Silvius discussed about Phebe and Corin remembered his youth when he was in love.<br />

5. What does Touchstone say about the time when he was in love?<br />

Ans: Touchstone recollected that he had broken his sword on a stone in a fit <strong>of</strong> love and told the stone<br />

that it served him right because it was on the path <strong>of</strong> Jane Smile, his love. He remembered that he loved<br />

every object his lady love touched and he agreed that all creatures in love are foolish.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Silvius: But if thy love were ever like to mine ‐ as sure I think did never man love so ‐ how many actions<br />

most ridiculous hast thou been drawn to by thy fantasy?<br />

1. Who are the ones having this conversation? What condition is one <strong>of</strong> them in?<br />

Ans: Corin and Silvius are the ones having this conversation. Silvius is a young shepherd, and he is in<br />

love.<br />

2. Who are the people listening to their conversation? How have they reached there?<br />

Ans: Rosalind, Celia and Touchstone are listening to their conversation. They have escaped from the<br />

Duke’s court and reached the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.


3. What does the extract mean?<br />

Ans: Silvius believed that he was a true lover and Corin would not be able to understand the true<br />

conception <strong>of</strong> his love. Corin had become old and he could not be so much in love as Silvius was. He<br />

asked Corin about his follies committed when he was in love. Corin answered that he had behaved<br />

foolishly thousands <strong>of</strong> times in love and he had forgotten all that he had done.<br />

4. What according to Silvius is the sign <strong>of</strong> a true lover? Give three examples.<br />

Ans: Silvius said that if Corin had forgotten the silliest thing he did when he was in love, then in reality it<br />

was not love. Secondly, if Corin had never tried to praise his mistress and test the patience <strong>of</strong> the<br />

listener, he was not in love, and lastly, if his passion never made him quit the company <strong>of</strong> friends as<br />

Silvius was forced to do, he was not in love.<br />

5. What happens later in the play between Phebe and Rosalind?<br />

Ans: Later in the play it is the case <strong>of</strong> a love triangle between Rosalind, Silvius and Phebe. Phebe fell in<br />

love with Ganymede, who was actually Rosalind and Phebe used Silvius to send a letter to Rosalind. In<br />

return, Rosalind chided Silvius for being in love with an unfaithful lover, Phebe.<br />

Q3. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: Alas, poor shepherd! Searching <strong>of</strong> thy wound, I have by hard adventure found mine own.<br />

1. Who are Rosalind and Touchstone reminded <strong>of</strong>?<br />

Ans: Rosalind remembered Orlando, with whom she had fallen in love and Touchstone remembered<br />

Jane Smile, when he was in love with her.<br />

2. What had Touchstone done in the fit <strong>of</strong> love‐sickness?<br />

Ans: He recollected that he had broken his sword on a stone in the fit <strong>of</strong> love sickness because he felt<br />

jealous <strong>of</strong> it as it lay on the path <strong>of</strong> his beloved, Jane Smile. He also recollected that he had gathered two<br />

peapods from the plant and gave it to her, and begging her to wear them.<br />

3. Which philosophy does he end his speech with?<br />

Ans: He ends by saying that all humans are genuine lovers. But it is certain that all creatures in love are<br />

foolish just as all creatures are subjected to death.<br />

4. What are the feelings <strong>of</strong> Celia? What suggestions does she make?<br />

Ans: Celia is extremely tired. She suggested if one <strong>of</strong> them could go and ask Corin if he could sell them<br />

something to eat because she was dying <strong>of</strong> hunger.<br />

5. What request does Rosalind make to Corin?<br />

Ans: Rosalind requested Corin to provide them with some food in this forest in exchange <strong>of</strong> love and<br />

money. She wanted him to find a shelter for them because Celia was exhausted for want <strong>of</strong> food.<br />

Q4.Read the following extract and answer the questions.<br />

I prithee, shepherd, if that love or gold<br />

Can in this desert place buy entertainment,<br />

Bring us where we may rest ourselves and feed.<br />

Here’s young maid with travel much oppress’d<br />

And faints for succour.


1. Where is the speaker? Who else is here?<br />

Ans: The speaker is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Celia, Rosalind’s cousin and Touchstone are also present.<br />

2. Why does Corin address Rosalind as sir?<br />

Ans: Rosalind is in a man’s disguise .She and Celia had escaped from the Duke’s court. She wore a<br />

doublet and a hose, a man’s attire. So, Corin addressed her as sir.<br />

5. Which two things does Rosalind ask from Corin? Who is the young maid?<br />

Ans: Rosalind requests for shelter and food in exchange <strong>of</strong> love or gold.<br />

Celia is the young maid.<br />

6. What answer does Corin give to Rosalind? What does he say about his master?<br />

Ans: Corin expressed his sympathy towards Celia. He wished that he had enough to help her but he was<br />

a shepherd to another man and did not own the sheepcote.<br />

He said that his master did not believe in deeds <strong>of</strong> charity.<br />

7. Explain the line And faints for succour.<br />

Ans: Celia is on the verge <strong>of</strong> collapsing, she is extremely tired, hungry and exhausted.<br />

Act 2 Scene 5<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Jaques: More, more, I prithee, more.<br />

Amiens : <strong>It</strong> will make you melancholy, Monsieur Jaques.<br />

Jaques: I thank it. More, I prithee, more! I can suck melancholy out <strong>of</strong> a song as a weasel sucks eggs.<br />

More, I prithee, more!<br />

1. Who is Jaques? What does he want more?<br />

Ans: Jaques is a pr<strong>of</strong>essional man <strong>of</strong> melancholy in Duke Senior’s court. He’s a man <strong>of</strong> great philosophy.<br />

He remains in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden with Duke Senior.<br />

Jaques wants to hear more <strong>of</strong> Amiens’ song.


2. What kind <strong>of</strong> song does Amiens sing? Give its meaning.<br />

Ans: Amiens sings about people who care to fling away their ambition and enjoy carefree life <strong>of</strong> the<br />

woods, people who care to hunt for meal before they enjoy it, and those content with the wild bird<br />

song. <strong>It</strong> means that they will meet no foes except winter and the rough weather.<br />

s<br />

3. What answer does Amiens give to Jaques’ request? Why does he sing later?<br />

Ans: Amiens says that his song would make Jaques more sad and gloomy. So he does not want to sing<br />

again.<br />

Later when Jaques requests him further to sing a song and says that he asks him to sing the song only for<br />

pleasure, he does not bother about the meaning, Amiens sings again.<br />

4. What is Jaques’ opinion about compliment?<br />

Ans: Jaques remarks that when people exchange compliments, it looks as if two dog faced baboons are<br />

grinning at each other and when anyone thanks, it looks as if he is a beggar who has been paid to give<br />

thanks.<br />

5. What information does Amiens give about Duke Senior to Jaques? What does Jaques reply?<br />

Ans: Amiens said that Duke Senior intended to have dinner under the shelter <strong>of</strong> the tree. He also told<br />

Jaques that the Duke had been searching for him the whole day.<br />

Jaques replied that he had been careful to keep out <strong>of</strong> Duke Senior’s way. He was not comfortable with<br />

the questions asked by the Duke.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Jaques: Thus it goes:<br />

If it do come to pass,<br />

That any man turn ass,<br />

Leaving his wealth and ease,<br />

A stubborn will to please,<br />

Ducdame, ducdame, ducdame:<br />

Here shall he see<br />

Gross fools as he,<br />

And if he will come to me.<br />

1. Where is Jaques? Who else is with him?<br />

Ans: Jaques is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Amiens is with him.<br />

2. What is the meaning <strong>of</strong> Jaques’ song?<br />

Ans: In his song, Jacques points out the people who foolishly give up their luxurious life to satisfy the<br />

whims <strong>of</strong> a man who is as stubborn as an ass and faces the difficulties <strong>of</strong> forest life. They shall come to<br />

Jaques.


3. Who had sung a song earlier? How does he use the word ducdame?<br />

Ans: Amiens had sung a song earlier.<br />

Ducdame is a meaningless word coined by Jaques as a parody to Amiens’ line come hither. He explains<br />

to Amiens that it is a Greek invocation used in inviting fools to form a ring.<br />

4. What pun had been intended in his song and for whom?<br />

Ans: Jaques criticizes Duke Senior humourously for he and other lords had left the comfort and wealth<br />

<strong>of</strong> the court to please a stubborn man like Duke Senior.<br />

5. Explain the reference I’ll rail against all the first born <strong>of</strong> Egypt.<br />

Ans: According to a Biblical reference in Exodus II, God destroyed the first‐born <strong>of</strong> every Egyptian family<br />

including that <strong>of</strong> the king as a punishment for not allowing Israelis to leave Egypt. <strong>As</strong> a consequence, there<br />

was great lamentation in the country all night, preventing people from sleeping. Jaques said that if he could<br />

not sleep, he would curse all the first‐borns. Here he meant that Duke Senior, the elder brother should not<br />

have allowed the younger brother to oust him from his Dukedom, such that Jacques would not have had to<br />

follow him to the forest and lead that hard life. He did not want to be personally <strong>of</strong>fensive to Duke Senior<br />

hence he says all the first‐born indirectly to duke senior.<br />

Act 2 Scene 6<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Orlando: if this uncouth forest yield anything savage, I will either be food for it, or bring it for food to<br />

thee.<br />

1. Where are the characters? What is Adam’s condition?<br />

Ans: They are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Orlando is carrying old Adam on his back. Adam is completely tired<br />

and dying <strong>of</strong> hunger.<br />

2. What promise does Orlando make to Adam?<br />

Ans: Orlando promised Adam that he would come back with food for Adam and if he returned empty<br />

handed, Adam was free to die.<br />

3. How does Orlando make Adam stay a little comfortable?<br />

Ans: Orlando carries Adam to some shelter from the cold winds and encourages him to stay alive till he<br />

comes back.


4. Why have these two come here? Whose son is Orlando? What do you know <strong>of</strong> his other brothers?<br />

Ans: Orlando and Adam escaped from his tyrant brother Oliver’s house. Oliver had planned to kill<br />

Orlando. Adam, the loyal servant informed Orlando about his wicked brother’s plans. So they escaped to<br />

safety in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

Orlando is the son <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys.<br />

Oliver is the eldest brother <strong>of</strong> Orlando, who is wicked and selfish towards Orlando. Jaques, the other<br />

brother was looked after well by Oliver and received education.<br />

5. How was Orlando repaying Adam’s debt?<br />

Ans: Adam was honest, loyal and sincere as a servant. He had saved Orlando and <strong>of</strong>fered him five<br />

hundred crowns to make a living. In return, Orlando carried him on his back and promised to give food<br />

and shelter and stay with him.<br />

Act 2 Scene 7<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Jaques: A fool, a fool!I met a fool I’ the forest,<br />

A motley fool; a miserable world!<br />

<strong>As</strong> I do live by food, I met a fool;<br />

1. In what mood is Jaques now? Who remarks about his mood just before the extract?<br />

Ans: Jaques is in a cheerful mood. Duke Senior remarks that Jaques looks merry and cheerful.<br />

2. How does this mood contrast with his personality?<br />

Ans: Jaques was a person <strong>of</strong> melancholy and was philosophical with a serious outlook. But when he saw<br />

the fool, he became cheerful which he seldom was. This was in contrast to his personality.<br />

3. What opinion does Duke Senior have about Jaques on being musical?<br />

Ans: Duke Senior remarked that if Jaques, whose heart and mind seemed so strange with discords,<br />

became devoted to music, it would surely throw the stars out <strong>of</strong> harmony.<br />

4. What does a motley fool mean and who is he?<br />

Ans: A motley fool refers to a colourfully dressed pr<strong>of</strong>essional fool. He was Touchstone.<br />

5. What was the motley fool doing when Jaques had met him?<br />

Ans: When Jaques met him, he greeted him with a good morning fool but the fool said no sir! Do not call<br />

me a fool till fortune has favoured me, then he pulled a small watch from his pocket and stared at it dully<br />

and read out the time aloud. The fool remarked only an hour ago it was nine o’clock and that after an<br />

hour it would be eleven o’clock. <strong>As</strong> the hours passed on, one grew older and more mature but at the<br />

same time moved nearer to death. Such was the life <strong>of</strong> a man.


Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Duke Senior: What fool is this?<br />

Jaques: O worthy fool! One that hath been a courtier… O that I were a fool! I am ambitious for a motley<br />

coat.<br />

Duke Senior: Thou shalt have one.<br />

Jaques: <strong>It</strong> is my only suit….<br />

1. Who is the pr<strong>of</strong>essional fool? What reasons does Jaques give to prove that he is a worthy fool?<br />

Ans: Touchstone, the pr<strong>of</strong>essional jester <strong>of</strong> Duke Frederick’s court is the pr<strong>of</strong>essional fool.<br />

Jaques justified that Touchstone had been a courtier and gained much experience. He was wise to<br />

understand that women who were beautiful used their beauty to their advantage. According to Jaques,<br />

Touchstone’s brain was as dry as the last remaining biscuit on the ship. He had packed up knowledge in<br />

every corner <strong>of</strong> his brain through his variety <strong>of</strong> experiences, and so he was a worthy fool.<br />

2. What is the pun intended on the word suit? What conditions does Jaques put on Duke Senior before he<br />

accepts the motley coat?<br />

Ans: Jaques believes that the motley coat is best suit for him and the other meaning is that if he becomes a<br />

fool, it would fit him well because he would have all the freedom <strong>of</strong> speech.<br />

Jaques clarified to the Duke before he accepted the motley coat that he should not consider Jaques as a<br />

wise person anymore, and he had to be granted all the power to criticize anybody in the society. He<br />

could use his sarcasms against anybody just as the wind chooses to blow. Jaques should be granted the<br />

license to express freely.<br />

3. Who according to Jaques should laugh the loudest? Why?<br />

Ans: The man who is hit hardest by the criticism <strong>of</strong> the fool should laugh the loudest. He must show that he<br />

is not affected by the criticism <strong>of</strong> the fool. If he does not remain indifferent to the comments <strong>of</strong> the fool<br />

then the world will laugh at him.<br />

4. Explain the metaphor through which Jaques states what he will do if he becomes the fool.<br />

Ans: If he becomes the fool and is given the freedom <strong>of</strong> expression, then Jacques will remove all the evils<br />

from the society, acting as a medicine.<br />

5. What is the Duke’s reply?<br />

Ans: The Duke made fun <strong>of</strong> Jaques saying that he was not the appropriate person to cleanse the world. He<br />

had led a sinful life in his youth and his sins were like sores on the body. He would in fact corrupt the world<br />

with his behaviour.<br />

6. What philosophy does Jaques share about pride?<br />

Ans: Jaques said that pride is like a huge sea which rises like the tide and carries away all the belongings <strong>of</strong><br />

the proud person and then he is reduced to a beggar. Therefore, pride results in poverty.<br />

Q3. Read the extract and answer the following questions:<br />

Orlando: Speak you so gently? Pardon me, I pray you:<br />

I thought that all things had been savage here,


And therefore put I on the countenance<br />

Of stern commandment.<br />

1. Where is Orlando? Whom is he speaking to? Who else is present there?<br />

Ans: Orlando is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden where the Duke and the lords are ready to have their meal. He is<br />

speaking to Duke Senior. Jaques and Amiens are present there.<br />

2. In what manner had Orlando spoken to the person earlier in the scene?<br />

Ans: Orlando had spoken in an unkind and commanding manner to the Duke. He said that the sharp thorns<br />

<strong>of</strong> necessity had deprived him <strong>of</strong> the usual courtesy.<br />

3. Which questions did Orlando ask the Duke starting with if? What made Orlando ask those questions?<br />

Ans: Orlando asked for help from the Duke. He asksed a few conditional questions to the Duke like if he had<br />

ever known prosperous days, if he had ever lived within the sound <strong>of</strong> church bells, if he had ever enjoyed<br />

the hospitality <strong>of</strong> a good man, if he had ever shed tears <strong>of</strong> compassion or if he had known what is to pity or<br />

to be pitied.<br />

Orlando had promised Adam to bring him food so he asks the Duke to give him some food.<br />

4. How did the Duke answer Orlando?<br />

Ans: The Duke welcomed Orlando to have dinner with them. He told Orlando that they had seen more<br />

fruitful days, had been summoned to church by the sacred chime <strong>of</strong> the church bell, had enjoyed the<br />

hospitality <strong>of</strong> worthy men, and had shed tears <strong>of</strong> holy pity. Because <strong>of</strong> his noble manners, Orlando was<br />

invited to have dinner.<br />

5. Why could Orlando not accept the Duke’s invitation immediately?<br />

Ans: Orlando asked the Duke to hold his dinner for a while because he had to bring a poor old man dying<br />

<strong>of</strong> hunger who had trudged many long miles in weariness and pain out <strong>of</strong> pure affection for him.<br />

Orlando would not eat unless he had fed the poor old man.<br />

Q4. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

And then the whining school‐boy, with his satchel,<br />

And shining morning face, creeping like snail<br />

Unwillingly to school.<br />

1. What are first five lines <strong>of</strong> the extract?<br />

Ans: All the world’s a stage,<br />

And all the men and women merely players:<br />

They have their exits and their entrances;<br />

And one man in his time plays many parts<br />

His acts being seven ages…<br />

2. Explain the first two stages <strong>of</strong> a man’s life?<br />

Ans: The first stage is that <strong>of</strong> an infant, whimpering and puking either in its mother’s or nurse’s arms. <strong>It</strong><br />

needs care and attention. The second stage is that <strong>of</strong> a childhood when the bright eyed boy goes to<br />

school with his bag unwillingly.<br />

3. In which stage is the lover? How does a lover behave?


Ans: The third stage in a man’s life is that <strong>of</strong> the lover. Love fills his heart and he sighs with passion. He<br />

composes sad love songs dedicated to his beloved’s eyebrow.<br />

4. In which stage <strong>of</strong> a man’s life does he wear lean and slipper’d pantaloon? Describe this stage.<br />

Ans: The sixth stage is the stepping stone <strong>of</strong> old age. He is thin and his trousers don’t fit him properly. He<br />

wears spectacles which come down on his nose and hangs his bag beside him. The breeches which he<br />

had worn in his youth do not fit him now because his legs are too thin for them .His deep voice changes<br />

into the high–pitched voice <strong>of</strong> a child.<br />

5. What does Jaques compare the world and man to? What is meant by exits and entrances?<br />

Ans: Jaques compares the world to a stage or a theatre and the men and women to actors.<br />

According to Jaques, the world is a stage and all the men and women are actors. Just as actors take<br />

their entry on the stage and play their part and then leave, in the same way, men and women take birth,<br />

play their role and die.<br />

Q5. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Duke Senior: If that you were the good Sir Rowland’s son,<br />

<strong>As</strong> you have whispered faithfully you were,<br />

And as mine eye doth his effigies witness<br />

Most truly limn’d and living in your face<br />

Be truly welcome hither:<br />

1. Where is the speaker? Who else is there?<br />

Ans: The speaker is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. The other characters present here are Orlando, Jaques, Adam<br />

and a lord <strong>of</strong> the Duke.<br />

2. Who is the Duke referring to by good Sir Rowland’s son? Who is Sir Rowland?<br />

Ans: The Duke is referring to Orlando. Sir Rowland de boys is the father <strong>of</strong> Oliver, Orlando and Jaques. He<br />

was a good friend <strong>of</strong> Duke Senior.<br />

3. What does the Duke say about Orlando’s father and Adam?<br />

Ans: The Duke said that he loved Sir Rowland de boys, Orlando’s father. He called Adam a good old man and<br />

welcomed him to his cave.<br />

4. Explain the lines: And as mine eye doth his effigies witness<br />

Most truly limn’d and living in your face.<br />

Ans: The given lines mean that Duke Senior was able to see the image <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland alive and etched<br />

on the face <strong>of</strong> Orlando, the youngest son <strong>of</strong> Rowland de boys.<br />

5. What was theme <strong>of</strong> the song that Amiens was singing just before this extract?<br />

Ans: In his song, Amiens was comparing the cold harsh wind to the ungrateful people <strong>of</strong> the world. The cold<br />

winter wind was not as cruel as the hypocrisy <strong>of</strong> those people.


Act 3 Scene 1<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Oliver: O that your highness knew my heart in this<br />

I never lov’d my brother in my life.<br />

Duke Frederick: More villain thou. Well, push him out <strong>of</strong> door,<br />

And let my <strong>of</strong>ficers <strong>of</strong> such a nature<br />

Make an extent upon his house and lands.<br />

Do this expediently, and turn him going.<br />

1. Where are the speakers? Who is Oliver?<br />

Ans: The speakers are in a room in the Duke’s palace.<br />

Oliver is the eldest son <strong>of</strong> Sir Rowland de Boys, Duke Fredericks enemy. He is the wicked brother <strong>of</strong><br />

Orlando.<br />

2. Why is the Duke furious? Who is Oliver’s brother?<br />

Ans: The Duke had summoned Oliver to know the whereabouts <strong>of</strong> Orlando. Oliver told the Duke that he had<br />

not seen Orlando since the wrestling match. He did not love his brother so he had no information about his<br />

whereabouts .The Duke thought that that Oliver was lying to him and became furious.<br />

Orlando is Oliver’s brother who has escaped from his house to be safe from Oliver’s plots <strong>of</strong> killing him.<br />

3. Is the Duke honest about his own assessment just before the extract? Justify.<br />

Ans: The Duke told Oliver angrily that if it were not for the most part made <strong>of</strong> mercy, he would have taken<br />

revenge on Oliver instead <strong>of</strong> his missing brother. The Duke was not correct in his assessment because he had<br />

banished his own brother Duke Senior. He had done injustice with his own niece Rosalind too and banished<br />

her. Again when Orlando had won the match, he did not appreciate his victory when he was informed that<br />

Orlando was Sir Rowland de Boys’ds son. The Duke is wicked, unjust and greedy.<br />

4. What orders does the Duke give Oliver?<br />

Ans: The Duke ordered Oliver to search for Orlando by night as well as by day. He had to find his brother and<br />

bring him either dead or alive within a year, and if he failed to do so, then he would be outlawed from the<br />

Duke’s dominion.<br />

5. Does Oliver deserve the treatment meted out to him by Duke Frederick? Why?<br />

Ans: Yes, Oliver deserved the treatment as he got a taste <strong>of</strong> his own medicine. He had deprived his brother<br />

Orlando <strong>of</strong> his property, and was then in the verge <strong>of</strong> losing all himself at the orders <strong>of</strong> the Duke.


Q1. Read the extract and answer the following.<br />

Act 3 Scene 2<br />

Touchstone: Truly, thou art damned, like an ill‐roasted egg, all on one side<br />

Corin: For not being at court? <strong>You</strong>r reason.<br />

Touchstone: Why, if thou never wast at court, thou never sawest good manners, then thy<br />

manners must be wicked; and wickedness is sin, and sin is damnation. Thou art in a parlous<br />

state, shepherd.<br />

1. Who is Touchstone and Corin? Where are they?<br />

Ans: Touchstone is the pr<strong>of</strong>essional fool in the court <strong>of</strong> Duke Frederick who accompanies Rosalind<br />

and the Duke’s daughter Celia when they escape from his palace. He is known for his sarcastic<br />

comments throughout the play.<br />

Corin is an old shepherd in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. They are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

2. Why is Corin damned according to Touchstone? What is Corin’s reply?<br />

Ans: According to Touchstone, Corin is damned because he was never at the court, so he never learnt<br />

good manners, which made him wicked and wickedness is sin which in turn is damnation.<br />

Corin does not agree to Touchstone’s explanation. The good manners <strong>of</strong> the court would be absurd in<br />

the forest, as such ceremonious manners are not suitable in the forest.<br />

3. Who had entered earlier in the scene? What did the person plan to do?<br />

Ans: Orlando had entered earlier in the scene. He expressed his love for Rosalind and planned to hang<br />

love poems on every bark <strong>of</strong> every tree and praise the beautiful woman.<br />

4. How had Corin helped Rosalind and Celia earlier? When did Orlando meet the princesses for the<br />

first time?<br />

Ans: Corin had arranged food and shelter for Rosalind and Celia in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

Orlando had met them just before the wrestling match in a lawn outside the Duke’s palace.<br />

5. Why does Touchstone say that Corin is a natural philosopher?<br />

Ans: Corin’s observations are that a man who lacks money, means and content, lacks three good friends.<br />

He further says that the nature <strong>of</strong> rain is to wet, fire is to burn and a good pasture gives good quality<br />

sheep and darkness comes after the setting <strong>of</strong> the sun. He adds that a person who possesses no wit and<br />

no talent could claim that he comes from a backward family. So, Touchstone felt that Corin is a natural<br />

philosopher.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the questions.<br />

Rosalind: I pray you, what is it o’clock?<br />

Orlando: <strong>You</strong> should ask me, what time o ’ day; there’s no clock in the forest.<br />

Rosalind: Then there is no true lover in the forest: else sighing every minute and groaning every<br />

hour would detect the lazy foot <strong>of</strong> Time as well as a clock.


1. Where are the two characters? How have they come here?<br />

Ans: Rosalind and Orlando are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Rosalind had escaped from the Duke’s palace and<br />

Orlando had been warned by Adam, his servant that his brother Oliver had planned to get rid <strong>of</strong> him, so<br />

he should run for safety.<br />

2. How could a true lover tell the time according to Rosalind?<br />

Ans: The true lover would sigh every minute and groan every hour and this would tell him the slow<br />

passing <strong>of</strong> the time as correctly as a clock.<br />

3. Which words are used by Rosalind to describe movement <strong>of</strong> time?<br />

Ans: Rosalind says that time ambles, trots, gallops and stands still.<br />

4. Which examples did Rosalind give to explain the pace <strong>of</strong> time?<br />

Ans: Rosalind compares the movement <strong>of</strong> time with the speed <strong>of</strong> the horse. Time has been personified<br />

here. Time trots with a girl from the day <strong>of</strong> fixing <strong>of</strong> her marriage to the day <strong>of</strong> the wedding ceremony.<br />

Even if it is only a week, time passes so heavily with her that each day seems a year long.<br />

Time paces gently with a priest who has never worried himself with learning, and with a wealthy man<br />

who is free from gout. The priest does not have to study and the rich man does not suffer from pain.<br />

Time gallops for a thief who has been condemned to death. Though he walks slowly, he reaches the spot<br />

too soon. Time does not move at all with lawyers who sleep during vacation.<br />

Q3. Read the extract and answer the questions that follow.<br />

Rosalind: Peace, you dull fool: I found them on a tree.<br />

Touchstone: Truly, the tree yields bad fruit.<br />

Rosalind: I’ll graff it with you, and then I shall graff it with a medlar: then it will be the earliest<br />

fruit i’ the country; for you‘ll be rotten ere you be half ripe, and that’s the right virtue <strong>of</strong> the<br />

medlar.<br />

1. What does Rosalind find on a tree?<br />

Ans: Rosalind finds a paper with love poems hanging from a palm‐tree.<br />

2. Where are the speakers at the moment?<br />

Ans: The speakers Rosalind and Touchstone are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

3. What is a medlar?<br />

Ans: A medlar is a kind <strong>of</strong> apple which cannot be eaten until it is over‐ripe. Rosalind puns on ‘meddler’‐<br />

an interfering person, and says that Touchstone will be dead or rotten before his mind has matured.<br />

4. How was Touchstone compared with a medlar? Whom does he appeal to?<br />

Ans: Touchstone was meddlesome and he would be dead or rotten before his mind has matured.<br />

When Rosalind puns with the word medlar, he remarks that those statements were Rosalind’s and he<br />

appealed to the woods for a verdict as to their wisdom or folly.


5. Who enters just after this conversation and what is the person doing?<br />

Ans: Celia, Rosalind’s cousin enters reading a paper. This paper was also found hanging on the tree.<br />

Q4.Read the extract and answer the following.<br />

Celia: Why should this a desert be?<br />

For it is unpeopled? No;<br />

Tongues I’ll hang on every tree<br />

That shall civil sayings show.<br />

1 .Where is Celia? Where has she found this? Who listens when she reads?<br />

Ans: Celia is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. She has found a paper hanging from a tree. Rosalind and Touchstone<br />

listen to her while she reads the love poem.<br />

2. Whom does Celia ask to go away and why?<br />

Ans: Celia had entered reading a long love poem. When she finished reading, Rosalind remarked that<br />

Touchstone and Corin were bored with it so Celia asks both <strong>of</strong> them to retire and take rest.<br />

3.Explain the extract given.<br />

Ans: The poem had been written by Orlando. He said that there were no dwellers in the forest but it did<br />

not mean that the forest would lay silent. He would make the trees speak the ways and manners <strong>of</strong><br />

civilized life in an eloquent manner.<br />

4.To whom is the poem dedicated and how is that person made <strong>of</strong> many parts?<br />

Ans: The poem is dedicated to Rosalind.<br />

Nature was commanded by God to put all the womanly attributes <strong>of</strong> good quality in one body. Nature<br />

obeyed the order and produced the fair face <strong>of</strong> Helen leaving out her faithlessness. Nature added the<br />

dignity <strong>of</strong> Cleopatra combined with Atalanta’s speed and humble nature <strong>of</strong> Lucretia. Thus, Rosalind was<br />

made <strong>of</strong> many parts.<br />

3. What did Rosalind say about seven <strong>of</strong> the nine days out <strong>of</strong> the wonder and Pythagoras?<br />

Ans: Rosalind referred to the phrase as a short lived surprise and said that she had almost recovered<br />

from her amazement <strong>of</strong> the verses hanging from the trees which praised her. The Greek philosopher<br />

believed that souls were transmitted from one form <strong>of</strong> animal to another. Rosalind claimed to have<br />

been a rat at the time <strong>of</strong> Pythagoras. <strong>As</strong> an Irish rat she had been killed by ritual incantation but never<br />

had been a subject <strong>of</strong> so many poems.<br />

Q5.Read the extract and answer the following.<br />

Rosalind: Love is merely a madness, and, I tell you, deserves as well a dark house and a whip as madmen<br />

do; and the reason why they are not so punished and cured is, that the lunacy is so ordinary that the<br />

whippers are in love too. Yet I pr<strong>of</strong>ess curing it by counsel.<br />

1. Whom is Rosalind speaking to? Where are they?<br />

Ans: Rosalind is speaking to Orlando. They are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.


2. What did Rosalind mean by saying dark house and a whip as madmen do?<br />

Ans: Rosalind told Orlando that love is merely madness and the lovers should be treated like madmen.<br />

The madmen in Elizabethan times were thought to be possessed <strong>of</strong> evil. If the devil could be kept in a<br />

dark room and whipped out, then the madmen could be cured <strong>of</strong> the insanity called love.<br />

3. Did Rosalind cure any love sick person before and how?<br />

Ans: Yes, she did cure a youth before. She told Orlando that she asked the youth to imagine that she was<br />

his lady‐love. He pretended her to be so, showing all his love for her. Rosalind pretended to be moody<br />

just as young men and women are, sometimes she would be grateful, weak, foolish, fickle, tearful and<br />

smiling, showing signs <strong>of</strong> every emotion but feeling no emotion sincerely. Sometimes she hated him,<br />

sometimes accepted him and at other times rejected him. The youth was tired <strong>of</strong> all this and his<br />

passionate love changed to real madness. This is how Rosalind claimed that she cured the lover.<br />

4. What conditions did Rosalind lay on Orlando before she cured him?<br />

Ans: Rosalind convinced Orlando that if he called her by Rosalind’s name and courted her daily there at<br />

her cottage, she would be able to cure him.<br />

5. How had Rosalind and Orlando first met and under what circumstances?<br />

Ans: Rosalind and Orlando had first met just before the wrestling match which was to take place<br />

between the champion wrestler Charles and Orlando. Duke Frederick had asked Rosalind and Celia to<br />

dissuade him from challenging Charles who was a pr<strong>of</strong>essional wrestler. These were the circumstances<br />

when Rosalind and Orlando first met.<br />

Act 3 Scene 3<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Touchstone: Come apace, good Audrey: I will fetch up your goats, Audrey. And now, Audrey? am I the<br />

man yet? doth my simple feature content you?<br />

Audrey: <strong>You</strong>r features! Lord warrant us, what features?<br />

1. Introduce the characters.<br />

Ans: Touchstone is a pr<strong>of</strong>essional court jester in the court <strong>of</strong> Duke Frederick. He wittily unmasks the folly<br />

<strong>of</strong> others. He is the satirist <strong>of</strong> the play.<br />

Audrey is a country girl. She is homely and simple. Touchstone met Audrey in a forest and they were<br />

about to marry each other.


2. Why have they come here? Who are they waiting for?<br />

Ans: Audrey and Touchstone are ready to be married.<br />

They are waiting for a preacher, Sir Oliver Martext.<br />

3. What has Touchstone said about a man’s feelings when his verses cannot be understood?<br />

Ans: When a man finds that his poetry is not understood and his jokes full <strong>of</strong> wisdom fall flat because his<br />

listener does not have enough humour or wit to understand them, it is far more miserable for him than<br />

having to pay a large bill for very poor entertainment. He says this because Audrey being a country girl<br />

did not have the wisdom to understand his philosophies.<br />

4. What answer does Audrey give when Touchstone asks her if she liked poetry?<br />

Ans: Audrey was a simple country girl with no literary wisdom. She said that she was unaware <strong>of</strong> the<br />

word poetical. She had never heard <strong>of</strong> it. She asked if it had a good character and was it a real thing.<br />

5. Who else was present with Touchstone and Audrey? What were his suggestions?<br />

Ans: Jaques was present there. He asked Touchstone to change his motley coat. He further suggested<br />

that they should not be married under a tree in the forest. In fact they should go to the church and<br />

marry under a priest <strong>of</strong> good reputation who understood what he was doing. Such a marriage as in the<br />

forest could not be binding and it would soon fall apart.<br />

Act 3 Scene 4<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: Never talk to me: I will weep.<br />

Celia: Do, I prithee; but yet have the grace to consider that tears do not become a man.<br />

Rosalind: But have I not cause to weep?<br />

1. Where are they? What is the contrast in the mood <strong>of</strong> each <strong>of</strong> the character above?<br />

Ans: Rosalind and Celia are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.<br />

Rosalind was very upset and obsessed with her love for Orlando and was very annoyed at his failure to<br />

come to her cottage. Rosalind was complaining to Celia that Orlando had not come to visit her. Celia<br />

made fun <strong>of</strong> both <strong>of</strong> them. Teasing Rosalind with all her genius, Celia made fun <strong>of</strong> her impatience and<br />

provoked her by saying that Orlando was as faithless as Judas.<br />

2. Rosalind makes two contradictory statements about someone’s hair? Why does she say so?<br />

Ans: Rosalind remarked that Orlando’s hair was red brown in colour. She blamed herself for being<br />

tricked by Orlando. She said that she should have known that red brown hair was a deceitful<br />

dispossession. On the other hand she said that his hair was <strong>of</strong> a very nice colour.


3. How does Celia tease Rosalind about Orlando being unfaithful in love?<br />

Ans: Celia teased Rosalind by saying that Orlando was not in the habit <strong>of</strong> keeping his word, which<br />

showed that he was not a faithful lover. The vows <strong>of</strong> such a lover were not reliable. They were like the<br />

words <strong>of</strong> a wine dealer. Both <strong>of</strong> them were in the habit <strong>of</strong> making blunders in their calculations.<br />

4. Where is Orlando now? Did Orlando recognize Rosalind when they met the day before?<br />

Ans: Orlando is with Rosalind’s father, Duke Senior.<br />

Orlando did not recognize Rosalind because she was dressed up like a man.<br />

5. What promise did Orlando make to Rosalind the day before?<br />

Ans: Orlando had promised Rosalind to come to her cottage, as she had claimed to cure him <strong>of</strong> his<br />

madness <strong>of</strong> love.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Celia: O, that’s a brave man! he writes brave verses, speaks brave words, swears brave oaths, and breaks<br />

them bravely, quite traverse, athwart the heart <strong>of</strong> his lover; as a puisny tilter, that spurs his horse but on<br />

one side, breaks his staff like a noble goose. But all’s brave that youth mounts arid folly guides. Who<br />

comes here?<br />

1. Where is the speaker? Who else is present there?<br />

Ans: The speaker is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Rosalind is present there.<br />

2. What does Celia mean by brave verses?<br />

Ans: Celia means fine lines <strong>of</strong> poetry.<br />

4. How does Celia describe the brave man? What is the irony here?<br />

Ans: Celia describes the brave man as one who writes brave verses, speaks brave words, swears brave<br />

oaths and breaks the oaths crosswise like a sword from one side to the other side <strong>of</strong> his lover’s heart.<br />

The irony is that she makes a funny comparison with an inexperienced competitor in a tilting match who<br />

spurs his horse on one side and makes a fool <strong>of</strong> himself.<br />

5. What is the philosophy behind this explanation?<br />

Ans: She means that all love that is ruled by youth and guided by folly is fine.<br />

6. Who enters the scene now? Whom does he address and how?<br />

Ans: Corin the old shepherd enters the scene. He addresses Rosalind and Celia as master and mistress<br />

respectively.


Act 3 Scene 5<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Silvius: Sweet Phebe, do not scorn me; do not, Phebe: Say that you love me not, but say not so in<br />

bitterness.<br />

1. Who is Phebe? In what frame <strong>of</strong> mind is Silvius now?<br />

Ans: Phebe is Silvius’ beloved. She is a young witty shepherdess. She is cruel and mocks Silvius’ poems.<br />

Though Silvius loves her, she is not in love with him.<br />

Silvius was heartbroken because Phebe had scorned him and was cruel to him. He pleaded her to love<br />

him and if she could not, she should tell him so kindly.<br />

2. With whom is he comparing Phebe and how?<br />

Ans: Silvius compares Phebe with the executioner whose heart is hardened by the repeated sight <strong>of</strong><br />

death and who never cuts the head <strong>of</strong> the victim without asking for forgiveness <strong>of</strong> his deed. In the same<br />

way Phebe and her pride do not give in to Silvius’ love.<br />

3. What does Phebe accuse Silvius <strong>of</strong>?<br />

Ans: Phebe said that she did not want to hurt Silvius and he should not blame her by saying that she<br />

could kill with her glances. Eyes are very delicate and tender organs, which shrink from every speck <strong>of</strong><br />

dust. So, eyes could not play the part <strong>of</strong> slayers and he should be ashamed <strong>of</strong> blaming her eyes as<br />

murderous.<br />

4. What does Phebe say about a pin, rush, and her eyes?<br />

Ans: Phebe accused Silvius <strong>of</strong> blaming her for murderous eyes. If that was so, she wanted some pro<strong>of</strong>.<br />

He should show the wound made by her eyes. She used the example <strong>of</strong> a pin that which always left<br />

some scratch behind. Even a s<strong>of</strong>t reed could make a mark upon the hand for a few seconds, and as far as<br />

her eyes were concerned, the darts thrown by her eyes had no power <strong>of</strong> hurting others.<br />

5. State the differences between Phebe and Audrey.<br />

Ans: Phebe is a young shepherdess and she is cruel to Silvius and mocks his poems. She has no mercy for<br />

Silvius and chides him, whereas Audrey is a simple honest country girl. She is in true love with<br />

Touchstone.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Silvius: Wherever sorrow is, relief would be: if you do sorrow at my grief in love. By giving love, your<br />

sorrow and my grief were both extermin’d.<br />

Phebe: Thou hast my love: is not that neighbourly?<br />

Silvius: I would have you.<br />

1. Who are Silvius and Phebe? Where are they?<br />

Ans: Silvius is a young shepherd, in love with Phebe and Phebe is a young shepherdess, who is the<br />

mistress <strong>of</strong> Silvius.<br />

They are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden.


2. Why is Silvius sad?<br />

Ans: Silvius is in love with Phebe and she has scorned him.<br />

3. In what way can Phebe end her own sorrow and Silvius’ grief?<br />

Ans: Phebe can put an end to her sorrow and grief by giving her love to Silvius.<br />

4. What Biblical reference does Phebe use to explain her love for Silvius?<br />

Ans: Phebe says that she has given the love <strong>of</strong> a neighbour to Silvius. The Biblical reference here is the<br />

second commandment <strong>of</strong> Jesus, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.<br />

5. What does Phebe say when Silvius desires to have her?<br />

Ans: Phebe refers to the tenth commandment <strong>of</strong> Moses, Thou shalt not covet, stands for greed.<br />

Q3. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: Foul is the most foul, being foul to be a sc<strong>of</strong>fer. So take her to thee, shepherd. Fare you well.<br />

Phebe: Sweet youth, I pray you, chide a year together: I had rather hear you chide than this man woo.<br />

1. What advice does Rosalind give to Phebe?<br />

Ans: Rosalind told Phebe that not many men would give their heart to a woman like her because she<br />

was not as beautiful as she thought herself to be. She should apologize to Silvius for her cruelty, show<br />

him some kindness, and listen to his proposals. Lack <strong>of</strong> beauty seems uglier if it is also disdainful.<br />

2. Who is the shepherd? What impression does he give?<br />

Ans: Silvius is the shepherd who is woefully in love with Phebe. He becomes a slave <strong>of</strong> his beloved,<br />

though she scorns him and is cruel to him. His love goes to the extent <strong>of</strong> bearing messages between<br />

Phebe and Ganymede.<br />

3. How has Rosalind chided the shepherd?<br />

Ans: Rosalind called Silvius a silly fellow to go on following Phebe like a misty south wind, drenched with<br />

tears and noisy with signs. She told him that he was much better looking than she is. According to<br />

Rosalind, such fools as Silvius flattering such plain women like Phebe made the world full <strong>of</strong> ugly<br />

children. Phebe’s vanity had been aroused because she saw herself with Silvius’ eyes which prove to be<br />

more flattering to her, and Rosalind advises her to see herself in a truth telling mirror.<br />

4. Why does Rosalind get angry just after this extract?<br />

Ans: Phebe remarked that she could hear Rosalind scold her for twelve months and she preferred<br />

Rosalind’s rebukes than Silvius’ love. Actually, Phebe was caught in a complicated situation, because<br />

Rosalind was in the disguise <strong>of</strong> Ganymede. Rosalind rebuked Phebe by saying that she should not lose<br />

her heart to Rosalind or she would make sarcastic remarks to Phebe.<br />

5. What request does Rosalind make to Phebe before leaving?<br />

Ans: Rosalind begged Phebe not to lose her heart for her because she was unstable and untrustworthy.<br />

She also told Phebe openly that she disliked her.


Act 4 Scene 1<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Jaques: I have neither the scholar’s melancholy, which is emulation; nor the musician’s, which is<br />

fantastical; nor the courtier’s, which is proud; nor the soldier’s, which is ambitious; nor the lawyers,<br />

which is politic; nor the lady’s, which is nice; nor the lover’s, which is all these: but it is a melancholy <strong>of</strong><br />

mine own, compounded <strong>of</strong> many simples, extracted from many objects, and indeed the sundry<br />

contemplation <strong>of</strong> my travels, in which my <strong>of</strong>ten rumination wraps me in a most humorous sadness.<br />

1. Whom is Jaques speaking to? Where are they? Who else is here?<br />

Ans: Jaques is speaking to Rosalind. They are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Celia is also present there.<br />

2. What makes Jaques talk about his melancholy?<br />

Ans: Jaques wants to be better acquainted with Rosalind. When Rosalind remarks that he’s known as<br />

melancholy Jaques, he gives an interesting description <strong>of</strong> melancholy.<br />

3. How does Jaques describe the different kinds <strong>of</strong> melancholy <strong>of</strong> different people<br />

Ans: Jaques remarks that his melancholy is not <strong>of</strong> a scholar nor just pr<strong>of</strong>essional jealousy nor that <strong>of</strong> a<br />

musician who is moody. His melancholy does not match that <strong>of</strong> a courtier who is proud. His melancholy<br />

is not that <strong>of</strong> a dissatisfied soldier, neither does it resemble that <strong>of</strong> a lawyer who is clever, nor the<br />

whimsical sadness <strong>of</strong> a lady which is rather fastidious, nor is it like the depression <strong>of</strong> a lover which has<br />

much <strong>of</strong> all these together.<br />

4. How does Jaques describe his melancholy?<br />

Ans: <strong>It</strong> is a melancholy peculiar to himself, like a medicine made up <strong>of</strong> many herbs. <strong>It</strong> is the result <strong>of</strong><br />

reflections on the varied experiences he has gone through in the course <strong>of</strong> his travels.<br />

5. What is Rosalind’s remark about Jaques as a traveller?<br />

Ans: Rosalind exclaimed that Jaques has great reason to be sad if he was a traveller. She blamed him for<br />

selling his own land to see other men’s. Though he had returned home rich in experience <strong>of</strong> what he had<br />

seen, he possessed nothing to call his own. <strong>It</strong> was like having rich eyes and poor hands.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: Now tell me how long you would have her after you have possessed her?<br />

Orlando: For ever and a day.<br />

Rosalind: Say ‘a day’, without the ‘ever’…<br />

1. How do Orlando and Rosalind propose each other?<br />

Ans: Rosalind asks Orlando whether he would he marry her if she was his mistress.


2. What have they gone through just now?<br />

Ans: They have gone through a marriage ceremony just now.<br />

3. Who conducts it? How does that person rebuke Rosalind?<br />

Ans: Celia conducts it.<br />

She blames Rosalind for giving an unflattering picture <strong>of</strong> her womanhood. She should have been<br />

reserved and shown her true colours.<br />

4. What does Rosalind say in the last line <strong>of</strong> the extract?<br />

Ans: In the last line <strong>of</strong> the extract, she said that she would shed tears continuously like Diana in the<br />

fountain for no reason, when Orlando was disposed to be merry, and when he was inclined to be asleep,<br />

she would laugh like a hyena.<br />

5. What does she go on to say about certain months <strong>of</strong> the year?<br />

Ans: Rosalind comments that men are kind and sweet as April when they woo the girls, but become cold<br />

and harsh like December once they are married. Girls are also charming as May before they are married,<br />

but the aspect changes when they are wives.<br />

Q3. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: No, faith, die by attorney. The poor world is almost six thousand years old, and in all this time<br />

there was not any man died in his own person, videlicet, in a love‐cause.<br />

1. What in love is a serious <strong>of</strong>fence? Who is a better lover and why?<br />

Ans: The lover’s breaking <strong>of</strong> an hour’s promise in love is a serious <strong>of</strong>fence. He that will divide a minute<br />

into thousand parts and he that will break the thousandth part <strong>of</strong> a minute in keeping an appointment in<br />

love cannot be in true love.<br />

A snail would have been a better lover as it granted security in love because it carried on his head the<br />

house in which he lived. Moreover he owned a fortune. Orlando could not be a true lover because he<br />

had come late and empty handed.<br />

2. What does Rosalind mean by die by attorney?<br />

Ans: An attorney is an agent who is appointed to act for another. When Orlando says that he will die in<br />

his own person, Rosalind tells him to get someone else to die for him just as she has not refused him in<br />

his own person but through Ganymede.<br />

3. What reference has been given about Troilus and Cressida?<br />

Ans: Troilus was the son <strong>of</strong> Priam, King <strong>of</strong> Troy. He fell in love with Cressida, an unfaithful lover. He was<br />

killed in the battle by Achilles. Rosalind invents the club in order to defame the patterns <strong>of</strong> lovers died,<br />

but not for love. Troilus is regarded as the epitome <strong>of</strong> constant lover by medieval writers but Rosalind<br />

wants to prove that he had sufficient cause to die for Cressida, as a disappointed lover, but he was killed<br />

in the battle, that too by a club.<br />

4. How does she twist the famous love story <strong>of</strong> Hero and Leander?<br />

Ans: According to Greek mythology, Leander swam across the Hellespont every night to visit Hero whom<br />

he loved. One day he lost his way and drowned as the light on the tower lit by Hero was put out due to<br />

the storm. When Hero saw his body, she threw himself into the sea and was killed. Rosalind disagreed<br />

and thought that Leander would have lived to old age even if Hero had become a nun. She says that<br />

what brought about Leander’s death was not love but crams which seized him while bathing in<br />

Hellespont on a warm summer night.


5. What had Orlando said which made Rosalind twist the myths? Why does Rosalind twist the two versions?<br />

Ans: Orlando said that as he is Orlando, if his love is not returned by Rosalind, he will have no option but<br />

to die.<br />

Rosalind twisted the myths <strong>of</strong> Troilus Cressida and Hero and Leander to suit her theory <strong>of</strong> love that no<br />

man ever died for love.<br />

Act 4 Scene 2<br />

QI. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Jaques: Which is he that killed the deer?<br />

First Lord: Sir, it was I.<br />

Jaques: Let’s present him to the duke, like a Roman conqueror; and it would do well to set the deer’s<br />

horns upon his head, for a branch <strong>of</strong> victory. Have you no song, forester, for this purpose?<br />

1. Where are the speakers? What is the occasion?<br />

Ans: The speakers are in the other part <strong>of</strong> the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. The first lord has killed a deer. Jaques<br />

ironically praises that lord. They are all in a merry mood.<br />

2. Why should the lord be presented like a Roman conqueror?<br />

Ans: Jaques is ironical about the whole situation. He disliked the killing <strong>of</strong> the deer and he wanted to ridicule<br />

the lord for this act. So he asks other lords to put a wreath on his head for accomplishing this feat.<br />

3. What does wearing <strong>of</strong> a horn signify?<br />

Ans: Men whose wives were unfaithful were believed to grow horns on their heads which was a sign <strong>of</strong><br />

shame.<br />

4. What according to the song sung later will the hunter have?<br />

Ans: The hunter will have horns on his head. These horns should not be treated with contempt as they<br />

were a mark <strong>of</strong> honour, a helmet worn by a conqueror.<br />

5. Which incident are you reminded <strong>of</strong> by the killing <strong>of</strong> the deer earlier in the play?<br />

Ans: Jaques had lamented by the side <strong>of</strong> a river when he saw a wounded stag. He had interpreted the<br />

situation with a melancholic philosophy.<br />

6. Why was this short scene included?<br />

Ans: <strong>It</strong> is a stop gap scene introduced to fill up the interval before Orlando’s presence. Dramatically two<br />

hours <strong>of</strong> parting is suggested by this scene.


Act 4 Scene 3<br />

Q1. Read the following extract and answer the questions.<br />

Silvius: I know not the contents; but as I guess,<br />

By the stern brow, and waspish action<br />

Which she did use as she was writing <strong>of</strong> it,<br />

<strong>It</strong> bears an angry tenor: pardon me,<br />

I am but as a guiltless messenger.<br />

1. Who is Silvius? Whom is he speaking to? Who is he talking about?<br />

Ans: Silvius is a young shepherd in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. He is speaking to Rosalind. He is talking about<br />

Phebe.<br />

2. What does the first line <strong>of</strong> the extract mean? What is the relation <strong>of</strong> Silvius with the person he is<br />

speaking about?<br />

Ans: Silvius has carried a letter from Phebe to Rosalind. He says that he does not know the contents <strong>of</strong><br />

the letter. Silvius is in love with Phebe.<br />

3. What were the contents as read by the person to whom Silvius speaks to?<br />

Ans: Rosalind remarked that patience would be startled and be aggressive if she read Phebe’s letter. If<br />

Rosalind was able to endure that letter, she would be able to bear anything. She said that Phebe had<br />

written that Rosalind was not fair in appearance, that she was rude and Phebe could never care for a<br />

man like Rosalind‐Ganymede. Rosalind remarked that she was not looking for Phebe’s love.<br />

4. What is Silvius suspected <strong>of</strong> by the person he is speaking to?<br />

Ans: Rosalind suspects that it was not Phebe but Silvius who has written the letter because a woman’s<br />

hand could not write such a letter.<br />

5. Why is Celia sorry for Silvius when he knows the real contents?<br />

Ans: The letter which was given to Rosalind conveyed feelings <strong>of</strong> love from Phebe to Rosalind. She<br />

referred Rosalind as a divine power who had besieged the heart <strong>of</strong> a woman. She said no human eye<br />

could harm her. In her letter, Phebe refers to the chiding she received from Rosalind. If her chiding could<br />

make Phebe fall in love, what might Rosalind’s loving behavior accomplish! She wrote that Silvius who<br />

was carrying the letter was ignorant <strong>of</strong> Phebe’s love for Rosalind. She requested Rosalind to send her a<br />

reply in a sealed letter. If Rosalind rejected Phebe’s love then she would seek death as soon as possible.<br />

Thus Silvius was heartbroken and Celia felt sorry for him.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following.<br />

Oliver: And well he might so do.<br />

For well I know he was unnatural.<br />

1. Where is Oliver? Who else is present there?<br />

Ans: Oliver is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Celia and Rosalind are present there.


2. Who is he in the extract? What has been said about him?<br />

Ans: Oliver is the he in the extract. Oliver narrated the incident in the forest where Orlando saved him from<br />

a snake and a lioness. This surprised Celia and she asked Oliver whether it was the same cruel and wicked<br />

brother <strong>of</strong> Orlando. Celia and Rosalind were unaware <strong>of</strong> the true identity <strong>of</strong> Oliver.<br />

3. What according to Rosalind was the correct punishment for the he mentioned above? How did she<br />

recognize Oliver?<br />

Ans: According to Rosalind, Orlando’s brother should have been left to fall prey to the hungry lioness. While<br />

narrating the incident, Oliver revealed his identity that he was the cruel brother <strong>of</strong> Orlando.<br />

4. What had the brother done to Orlando earlier in the play?<br />

Ans: Oliver had treated Orlando miserably. He did not send him to school or give him food properly. He did<br />

not give his share <strong>of</strong> the will inherited from his father, Oliver had also tried to murder his brother Orlando.<br />

5. What news did Oliver bring for Rosalind? What did he show them?<br />

Ans: Oliver had come with the news that Orlando could not keep his promise because he had met with an<br />

adventure and could not reach Rosalind on time.<br />

Q3. Read the following extract and answer the questions.<br />

Oliver: Be <strong>of</strong> good cheer, youth. <strong>You</strong> a man! <strong>You</strong> lack a man’s heart.<br />

Rosalind: I do so, I confess it. Ah sirrah! a body would think this was well counterfeited. .I pray you, tell<br />

your brother how well I counterfeited. Heigh ho!<br />

Oliver: This was not counterfeit: there is too great testimony in your complexion that it was a passion <strong>of</strong><br />

earnest.<br />

Rosalind: Counterfeit, I assure you.<br />

1. Where are they present? Who does Oliver refer to by man?<br />

Ans: They are present in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. Oliver refers to Rosalind who is dressed in a man’s clothes.<br />

2 .What did Rosalind counterfeit?<br />

Ans: Rosalind had swooned when she saw the blood soaked napkin shown by Oliver. He had said that<br />

Orlando was wounded by the lioness. But she told Oliver that she had pretended to faint, it was not real.<br />

3. What change is noticed in Oliver’s character as told to Rosalind?<br />

Ans: Oliver had reconciled with Orlando amid tears. He was no more the wicked brother.<br />

4. What advice does Oliver give Rosalind? What is Rosalind’s reply?<br />

Ans: Oliver advises her to show courage because she was a man. Rosalind agrees to follow his advice,<br />

though she says that she should have been a woman by right.<br />

5. Why does Celia ask Oliver to accompany them?<br />

Ans: Oliver and Celia have been attracted to each other from the moment they met each others and so,<br />

she wants Oliver to be with her.


Act 5 Scene 1<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Touchstone: The heathen philosopher, when he had a desire to eat a grape, would open his lips when he<br />

put it into his mouth, meaning thereby that grapes were made to eat and lips to open.<br />

1. Where is Touchstone? Whom is he speaking to?<br />

Ans: Touchstone is in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. He is speaking to William and Audrey.<br />

2. Who is a heathen philosopher? What reference has been given by him about such a philosopher?<br />

Ans: Touchstone was not referring to any particular philosopher. Probably William stared at Touchstone<br />

open mouthed in awe <strong>of</strong> the wise man.<br />

He told William that when the heathen philosopher had a mind to eat grapes, he used to open his<br />

mouth and put the grape in it. This showed that mouths were to be opened and grapes were to be<br />

eaten. The philosopher was Touchstone, the grape was Audrey and to open his lips meant to begin the<br />

marriage ceremony. In other words William should not consider Audrey his beloved.<br />

3. Which proverb is Touchstone reminded <strong>of</strong>? Explain.<br />

Ans: When William replied to Touchstone, he is reminded <strong>of</strong> The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man<br />

knows himself to be a fool.<br />

Touchstone confused William to think that he was actually a fool who considered himself wise.<br />

4. Which five questions does Touchstone ask William and what is his reply?<br />

Ans: Touchstone asked William’s name and he wittily replied five and twenty, sir. Secondly, he asked his<br />

name and he said William it was. Thirdly, he asked whether William was born in the forest and he replied<br />

that he did and was grateful to God for it. Fourthly, he asked whether William was rich and he replied that<br />

he was so‐so. Lastly, Touchstone asked whether William thought that he was wise and he replied that he<br />

was.<br />

5. What rhetoric is used by Touchstone to impress William?<br />

Ans: Touchstone said that one did not possess a thing till one actually possessed it. William was not in<br />

possession <strong>of</strong> Audrey. He said that when wine is poured from a cup into a glass, the cup became empty<br />

while the glass was filled. So Audrey belonged to Touchstone.


Act 5 Scene 2<br />

Q1. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Orlando: Wounded it is, but with the eyes <strong>of</strong> a lady.<br />

Rosalind: Did your brother tell you how I counterfeited to swoon when he showed me your handkerchief?<br />

Orlando: Ay, and greater wonders than that.<br />

1. Who is in disguise and why?<br />

Ans: Rosalind was in disguise <strong>of</strong> a man and she had chosen the name <strong>of</strong> Ganymede. She and Celia had<br />

escaped from the duke’s palace when Duke Frederick had banished Rosalind.<br />

2. Who is the brother? How did the brother meet Rosalind?<br />

Ans: Oliver is the brother mentioned here. Orlando had sent Oliver to Rosalind with a message that he<br />

could not meet her as promised because <strong>of</strong> his sudden adventures in the forest with a lioness and a<br />

snake in order to save his brother Oliver. This is how he met Rosalind.<br />

3. What are the greater wonders that Orlando is referring to? What does Rosalind compare the great<br />

wonder with?<br />

Ans: Oliver had fallen in love with Celia and this was the great wonder.<br />

Rosalind compared the love between Celia and Oliver as a fight between two rams who fight with least<br />

provocation. The second example was <strong>of</strong> Julius Caesar who after defeating King <strong>of</strong> Pontus sent a short<br />

message to the Roman Senate ‘Veni, Vidi,Vici’ (meaning: I came, I saw, I overcame).<br />

4. How did Oliver and Celia make a pair <strong>of</strong> stairs to marriage?<br />

Ans: Oliver and Celia did not waste time in their decision to get married. They fell in love at first sight, no<br />

sooner did they longed for each others as lovers do. No sooner did they sigh than they sought the<br />

reason. Then they searched a solution to be together. They have climbed step by step to the temple <strong>of</strong><br />

marriage.<br />

5. Whom did Orlando plan to invite and for what occasion? How does he feel?<br />

Ans: Orlando decided to invite the Duke to the marriage ceremony <strong>of</strong> Oliver and Celia. He felt depressed at<br />

the thought <strong>of</strong> his beloved with whom he wanted to marry. He could feel the happiness <strong>of</strong> his brother who<br />

got what he wished for.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Silvius: <strong>It</strong> is to be all made <strong>of</strong> fantasy,<br />

All made <strong>of</strong> passion, and all made <strong>of</strong> wishes;<br />

All adoration, duty and observance;<br />

All humbleness, all patience, and impatience;<br />

All purity, all trial, all obedience;<br />

And so am I for Phebe.


1. To whom are these lines addressed? Who else is present?<br />

Ans: These lines are addressed to Phebe, the beloved <strong>of</strong> Silvius. Rosalind , Orlando and Phebe are present.<br />

2. How was Silvius treated by Phebe earlier?<br />

Ans: Phebe was cruel to Silvius. She did not love Silvius, instead she used his services to send a letter to<br />

Rosalind to convey her feelings <strong>of</strong> love.<br />

3. What do the characters promise to each other?<br />

Ans: Rosalind, Orlando, Silvius and Phebe promised each other to be faithful to their beloveds.<br />

4. What announcement does Rosalind make to them?<br />

Ans: Rosalind announced that they should all assemble for the marriages <strong>of</strong> Silvius to Phebe and Orlando to<br />

Rosalind.<br />

5. How would the real Rosalind be present there to get married to Orlando?<br />

Ans: Earlier, Rosalind told Orlando that she had magical powers and with the help <strong>of</strong> those she would bring<br />

Rosalind to get married to Orlando.<br />

Act 5 Scene 4<br />

Q1.Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Rosalind: I have promised to make all this matter even<br />

Keep you your word…<br />

1. Where is Rosalind? Whom is she talking to?<br />

Ans: Rosalind is in another part <strong>of</strong> the forest. These lines are spoken to Duke Senior.<br />

2. What has she promised Orlando?<br />

Ans: Rosalind has promised him to bring the real Rosalind by the magical powers she possessed.<br />

3. What resemblance <strong>of</strong> Rosalind is mentioned by the Duke and Orlando?<br />

Ans: The duke said that the boy or Ganymede resembled his daughter Rosalind. Orlando said that when he<br />

first saw Ganymede he thought that he was a brother to Rosalind.<br />

4. From where did Rosalind get her magical powers?<br />

Ans: Rosalind told Orlando that she had learnt the magical powers from her uncle since the age <strong>of</strong> three.


5. What promises do the characters present make?<br />

Ans: Orlando said that he would marry Rosalind, and Duke Senior promised to bestow his daughter to<br />

Orlando. Phebe promised to marry Ganymede if he is willing, if not, then she would marry Silvius.<br />

Q2. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Jaques: There is, sure, another flood toward, and these couples are coming to the ark. Here comes a pair<br />

<strong>of</strong> very strange beasts, which in all tongues are called fools.<br />

1. Who is Jaques talking about? What does Jaques mean by another flood? What is the Bibilical reference?<br />

Ans: Jaques is talking about Touchstone and Audrey who have just entered as one <strong>of</strong> the four pair <strong>of</strong><br />

lovers. Another flood refers to the fact that all the pairs <strong>of</strong> lovers have gathered to escape from<br />

drowning. The biblical reference has been made to Noah’s ark which carried the faithful to safety.<br />

2. Whom does he refer to as strange beasts? Why does he refer to them as such?<br />

Ans: Touchstone and Audrey are referred to as strange beasts, because Touchstone was the<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional fool.<br />

3. Which couples are coming to the ark? Why have they all come together?<br />

Ans: The couples are Orlando and Rosalind, Oliver and Celia, Silvius and Phebe, and Touchstone and<br />

Audrey. Rosalind brought them together and they are to be married to each other.<br />

4. Why did not the strange beasts get married earlier?<br />

Ans: Touchstone and Audrey could not get married earlier because Jacques had interfered and stopped<br />

them from getting married by Sir Oliver Martext, saying he was not a good clergyman and the marriage<br />

would fall <strong>of</strong>f. He also said that they should not get married under a bush.<br />

5. What suspicion does Jaques have about one <strong>of</strong> the fool who entered?<br />

Ans: Jaques told Duke Senior that the fool who entered claimed <strong>of</strong> being a witty courtier.<br />

Q3. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Touchstone : God ‘ild you, sir; I desire you <strong>of</strong> the like. I press in here, sir, amongst the rest <strong>of</strong> the country<br />

copulatives, to swear, and to forswear, according as marriage binds and blood breaks.<br />

1. Who is Touchstone speaking to? What does he mean by God ‘ ild you sir? Who introduced him?<br />

Ans: Touchstone is speaking to Duke Senior. God ‘ild’ you sir means may God reward you.<br />

2. Who introduced him and how?<br />

Ans: Jaques introduced him to Duke Senior who was delighted by his presence. Jaques said that<br />

Touchstone is a whimsical fool in mind as well in dress whom he had quite <strong>of</strong>ten met in the forest. He<br />

also said that Touchstone had claimed to be a courtier.


3. Explain to swear and forswear, according as marriage binds and blood breaks?<br />

Ans: These lines were spoken by Touchstone to Duke Senior and his lords. He said that he had come to<br />

join the other couples who would swear vows <strong>of</strong> loyalty to their marriage partners, but who would in<br />

course <strong>of</strong> time break those vows and then also break the bonds <strong>of</strong> marriage as a result <strong>of</strong> continuing<br />

quarrels after passion would break between them.<br />

5. Who is introduced by Touchstone? What was the comparison <strong>of</strong> poor virgin?<br />

Ans: Audrey is introduced by Touchstone.<br />

Poor virgin was Audrey. He said that he had come with a plain maid, an ordinary and ugly woman but<br />

she was his own. She belonged to him. He accepted Audrey whom no other man would take. The purity<br />

and chastity in ugly Audrey was just like a rich man who lived in a poor cottage because <strong>of</strong> his<br />

miserliness and just as a most precious pearl lived inside an ugly shell fish.<br />

5. What is your opinion about Touchstone in this scene? Comment.<br />

Ans: Touchstone is amusing in his speeches. Here Touchstone ridicules the woman he wants to marry.<br />

Without any ill‐will he says that Audrey is poor and ugly but he is happy with her. He uses the<br />

appropriate similes to prove his point. Touchstone proves that he the perfect jester by his courtly wit<br />

and ability to talk well. Though he is realistic and unromantic, yet he has been able to amuse his<br />

audience.<br />

Q4. Read the extract and answer the following questions.<br />

Duke Senior: By my faith, he is very swift and sententious.<br />

Touchstone: According to the fool’s bolt, sir, and such dulcet diseases.<br />

Jaques: But, for the seventh cause; how did you find the quarrel on the seventh cause?<br />

1. Where are all these characters? What does the Duke mean by his statement?<br />

Ans: The Duke, Touchstone and Jaques are in the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. This statement <strong>of</strong> the Duke has been<br />

made for Touchstone that he is quick‐witted and that he is capable <strong>of</strong> making pithy remarks.<br />

2. How does Touchstone explain the seven lies?<br />

Ans: When Jaques asked Touchstone if he resolved the fight on the seventh cause, he replied that lie<br />

passed through six stages and reached the seventh. He related that once he had told a courtier that his<br />

beard was not appropriate, to which the courtier sent a message that it did not matter because it was<br />

Touchstone’s personal opinion. That was a Reply Courteous. He told the courtier again that his beard<br />

was not cut properly and the courtier replied that it was not to please Touchstone but himself. That<br />

stage is Quip Modest. When he said that beard was not cut properly again, the courtier declared that<br />

Touchstone’s judgement was totally unsound and that was Reply Churlish. Touchstone repeated his<br />

comment and the courtier replied that Touchstone did not speak the truth, which was Repro<strong>of</strong> Valiant.<br />

He sent a word again to the courtier and the courtier said that Touchstone lied, which was called<br />

Counter Check Quarrelsome. Then came the stage <strong>of</strong> Lie Circumstantial and then Lie Direct.


3. How does Touchstone resolve the matter with the courtier?<br />

Ans: Touchstone said that he did not go beyond Lie Circumstantial nor did the courtier have courage to<br />

tell him that he is a liar. So they met and measured their swords to satisfy themselves that they were <strong>of</strong><br />

the same length and then parted.<br />

4. According to Touchstone, what were the different degrees <strong>of</strong> lie?<br />

Ans: The first was polite and sharp reply ‘Reply Courteous’, the second was mildly sarcastic ‘Quip<br />

Modest’, the third was ill‐tempered reply ‘Reply Churlish’, the fourth was a brave reply that is ‘Repro<strong>of</strong><br />

Valiant’, the fifth was on provocation ‘Countercheck Quarrelsome’, the sixth was the conditional lie<br />

‘Reply Circumstantial’ and the seventh was ‘Lie Direct’.<br />

5. What is the way to avoid the seventh lie?<br />

Ans: The seventh lie leads to actual fight and it can be avoided by the use <strong>of</strong> the word if in the following<br />

manner, If you say so then I would say so. But if you did not say so, then I assure you that I also did not<br />

say so. <strong>It</strong> is the word ‘if’ that is capable <strong>of</strong> making peace.<br />

Q5. Read the extract and answer the following.<br />

Jaques de Boys: Let me have audience for a word or two; I am the second son <strong>of</strong> old Sir Rowland; That<br />

bring these tidings to this fair assembly.<br />

1. What had been said about this character and by whom?<br />

Ans: Jaques de Boys was Orlando’s brother who was sent to school by their eldest brother Oliver and<br />

reports said in golden terms <strong>of</strong> the progress that Jaques made in school.<br />

2. What was the first message brought by him?<br />

Ans: Jaques de Boys said that Duke Frederick had gathered a large and powerful assembly when he<br />

learnt that many <strong>of</strong> his learned men fled to the Forest <strong>of</strong> Arden. He marched towards the forest to kill<br />

his brother there and put him to death. After some discussion with a hermit he met on the outskirts, he<br />

became a convert. He decided to renounce the world.<br />

3. How does Jaques de Boys bring welcome gifts for both his brothers?<br />

Ans: Duke Frederick had given back his dukedom to his banished brother Duke Senior .He had also<br />

returned the confiscated land to Oliver. Duke Senior would give his dukedom to Orlando as dowry for his<br />

marriage to Rosalind his daughter. In this way, Jaques de Boys brought gifts for his brothers.<br />

4. What does Jaques decide to do?<br />

Ans: Jaques decided to meet Duke Frederick who had converted and renounced the world and learn<br />

from him instead <strong>of</strong> being a part in the merry making.<br />

5.What was not the fashion <strong>of</strong> the day according to Rosalind? What does she tell the men and women?<br />

Ans: Rosalind says that it is not a custom to see a lady speak the epilogue but at the same time it is no<br />

more surprising to hear a lady speaking the epilogue than to hear a gentleman speaking the prologue.<br />

She said that she would cast a spell on the women first and then the men. She said, O women for the<br />

sake <strong>of</strong> the love you bear to men, should appreciate the play and to the men she said, O men for the<br />

sake <strong>of</strong> the love you bear to women, the play should be appreciated too.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!