Class 9 English Solutions| Chapter 9 Poem The Snake Trying


 

The Snake Trying — Complete Study Material

Class 9 English Beehive Poem Solutions & Notes


✅ Summary (Assamese / সাৰাংশ)

'The Snake Trying' কবিতাটোত কবি ডব্লিউ. ডব্লিউ. ই. ৰাছে (W.W.E. Ross) এটা সৰু সেউজীয়া সাপৰ বৰ্ণনা কৰিছে, যিয়ে এজন মানুহৰ হাতৰ লাঠীৰ কোবৰ পৰা নিজৰ প্ৰাণ বচাবলৈ চেষ্টা কৰিছে। সাধাৰণতে মানুহৰ ধাৰণা যে সকলো সাপেঁই বিষাক্ত আৰু ক্ষতিকাৰক, গতিকে সাপ দেখিলেই মানুহে তাক মাৰিবলৈ খেদি যায়। কিন্তু কবিয়ে ইয়াত এক বিপৰীত দৃষ্টিভংগী দাঙি ধৰিছে।

কবিয়ে সাপটোৰ শৰীৰৰ ধুনীয়া, দীঘল আৰু লাহী ভাঁজবোৰৰ প্ৰশংসা কৰিছে। সাপটোৱে লাঠীৰ আঘাতৰ পৰা সাৰিবলৈ পানীৰ ওপৰেদি লাহেকৈ বগাই গৈছে। কবিয়ে মানুহজনক অনুৰোধ কৰিছে যাতে সাপটোক কোনো আঘাত নকৰাকৈ পানীত থকা নল-খাগৰিৰ (reeds) মাজত লুকাই যাবলৈ এৰি দিয়ে। এই সাপটো একেবাৰেই নিৰীহ আৰু ই আনকি সৰু লৰা-ছোৱালীৰ বাবেও ক্ষতিকাৰক নহয়। অৱশেষত, সাপটো পানীত সৃষ্টি হোৱা সৰু সৰু ঢৌৰ মাজত আৰু সেউজীয়া খাগৰিৰ আঁৰত অদৃশ্য হৈ পৰে। এই কবিতাটোৱে আমাক প্ৰকৃতিৰ প্ৰতিটো জীৱৰে প্ৰতি দয়াশীল হ'বলৈ শিক্ষা দিয়ে।

✅ Word Meaning (English → Assamese)

English Word Assamese Meaning
Pursuing পিছা কৰা / খেদি অহা
Curvings ভাঁজবোৰ / বক্ৰতা
Glides লাহেকৈ পিছলি যোৱাৰ দৰে বগাই যোৱা
Stroke আঘাত / কোব
Reeds নল-খাগৰি (পানীৰ কাষত গজা ওখ ঘাঁহ)
Vanishes অদৃশ্য হৈ পৰা
Ripples পানীত উঠা সৰু সৰু ঢৌ

✅ Exact NCERT Textbook Questions & Answers

Thinking about the Poem

I. Answer the following questions:

1. What is the snake trying to escape from?
Answer: The snake is trying to escape from a human being who is chasing it with a pursuing stick to hurt or kill it.
2. Is it a harmful snake? What is its colour?
Answer: No, it is not a harmful snake. It is completely harmless, even to small children. The colour of the snake is green.
3. The poet finds the snake beautiful. Find the words he uses to convey its beauty.
Answer: The words and phrases the poet uses to convey the snake's beauty are: "beautiful and graceful", "glides", "beautiful shapes", and "small and green".
4. What does the poet wish for the snake?
Answer: The poet wishes that the snake should be allowed to go safely away over the water and escape into the slim green reeds to hide without being hurt or killed.
5. Where was the snake before anyone saw it and chased it away? Where does the snake disappear?
Answer: Before anyone saw it and chased it away, the snake was lying peacefully along the sand. It finally disappears in the ripples of the water among the slim, green reeds.

II. Extended Activities:

1. Find out as much as you can about different kinds of snakes (from books in the library, or from the Internet). Are they all poisonous? Find out the names of some poisonous snakes.
Answer: No, all snakes are not poisonous. In fact, out of thousands of snake species in the world, only a small percentage are venomous. Most snakes are non-venomous and harmless to humans. Some famous poisonous snakes include the King Cobra, Indian Krait, Russell's Viper, Saw-scaled Viper, and Black Mamba.
2. Look for information on how to find out whether a snake is harmful.
Answer: While it is safest to treat all wild snakes with caution, certain physical characteristics can distinguish venomous snakes. Venomous snakes often have a triangular head, slit-like elliptical pupils (resembling a cat's eyes), and a noticeable heat-sensing pit located between their eyes and nostrils. Non-venomous snakes typically possess rounded heads and round pupils. However, these rules vary by region, so professional identification is always recommended.
3. As you know, there are people in our country who have traditional knowledge about snakes, who even catch poisonous snakes with practically bare hands. Can you find out something more about them?
Answer: In India, these people are traditionally known as 'Saperas' or members of the 'Kalbelia' community. They possess deep, generationally inherited knowledge about snake habitats, behavior, and various natural herbal remedies for treating snake bites. They are skilled at handling snakes safely using simple sticks or bare hands. They also traditionally played a musical instrument called the 'Been' to showcase snakes, although modern wildlife protection laws now heavily restrict the catching and public display of wild snakes to protect biodiversity.

✅ Important MCQs

1. Who has written the poem 'The Snake Trying'?
  • (A) Robert Frost
  • (B) W.W.E. Ross
  • (C) Coates Kinney
  • (D) Phoebe Cary
Answer: (B) W.W.E. Ross
2. What is the snake trying to escape from?
  • (A) A wild predator
  • (B) A pursuing stick
  • (C) A forest fire
  • (D) A net
Answer: (B) A pursuing stick
3. The snake described in the poem is:
  • (A) Big and black
  • (B) Small and green
  • (C) Yellow and dangerous
  • (D) Completely blind
Answer: (B) Small and green
4. According to the poet, the green snake is harmless even to:
  • (A) Large animals
  • (B) Birds
  • (C) Children
  • (D) Other snakes
Answer: (C) Children
5. Where does the snake finally hide and disappear?
  • (A) In a deep hole
  • (B) Behind a large rock
  • (C) In the ripples among the reeds
  • (D) Under the dry sand
Answer: (C) In the ripples among the reeds

✅ Additional Questions & Answers

Q1. What artistic quality does the poet see in the movements of the snake? (Short Answer Type)
Answer: The poet observes a unique artistic beauty and elegance in the snake's graceful gliding movements. The continuous, curving shapes of its long, slender body appear extremely attractive and artistic rather than frightening to the poet.
Q2. What central message or theme does the poet want to deliver through 'The Snake Trying'? (Long Answer Type)
Answer: The central theme of the poem revolves around the unnecessary human cruelty toward harmless wildlife due to deep-seated myths and fear. Humans naturally assume that all snakes are highly venomous and pose an immediate danger, which leads to attacking them on sight. Through this poem, W.W.E. Ross tries to change this biased mindset by highlighting a small, completely harmless green snake that avoids human confrontation.

The poet appeals to humanity to cultivate a compassionate, eco-friendly perspective toward nature. Instead of attacking out of blind panic, humans should appreciate the natural elegance of these creatures and allow them to survive peacefully in their respective natural habitats.

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