Class 10 English Chapter 10
Madam Rides the Bus
Exercise - Oral Comprehension Check
Q 1.
What was Valli’s favourite pastime?
Answer
:
Valli’s favourite pastime
was to stand in the front doorway of her house and watch what was happening in
the street outside.
Q 2.
What was a source of unending joy for Valli? What was her strongest desire?
Answer
:
A source of unending joy
for Valli was the sight of the bus that travelled between her village and the
nearest town, filled with a new set of passengers each time it passed through
her street. Her strongest desire was to ride on that bus.
Q 3.
What did Valli find out about the bus journey? How did she find out these details?
Answer
:
Valli found out that the
town was six miles from her village. The fare was thirty paise one way. The
trip to the town took forty-five minutes. On reaching the town, if she stayed
in he seat and paid another thirty paise, she could return home on the same
bus. She found out these details by listening carefully to the conversations
between her neighbours and the people who regularly used the bus. She also
gained information by asking them a few questions
Q 4.
What do you think Valli was planning to do?
Answer
:
Valli was planning to travel on that bus.
Q 5.
Why does the conductor call Valli ‘madam’?
Answer
:
Valli is trying to behave more mature than her age. She is trying to look overconfident and smart. The conductor is amused at her behaviour and in an effort to tease her calls her ‘madam’.
Q 6.
Why does Valli stand up on the seat? What does she see now?
Answer
:
Valli stood up on her
seat because her view was cut off by a canvas blind that covered the lower part
of her window. She stood up to look over the blind. She saw that the road was
very narrow, on one side of which there was the canal and beyond it was palm
trees, grassland, distant mountains, and the blue sky. On the other side, there
was a deep ditch and many acres of green fields.
Q 7.
What does Valli tell the elderly man when he calls her a child?
Answer
:
When the elderly man
called her a child, Valli told him that there was nobody on the buswho was a
child. She had paid her fare of thirty paise like everyone else.
Q 8.
Why didn’t Valli want to make friends with the elderly woman?
Answer
:
The elderly woman was having big earlobes with bigger holes. She chewing betel nut and the betel juice was about to seep out of her mouth. She was giving a sight of an unrefined elderly lady. That is why Vaali did not want to make friends with her
Q 9.
How did Valli save up money for her first journey? Was it easy for her?
Answer
:
Valli saved every coin
that came her way. She made great sacrifices by controlling her normal childish
urges of having candies, toys and joyrides. This must have been difficult for
her. Kids find it very difficult to savour candy or to enjoy a toy.
Q 10.
What did Valli see on her way that made her laugh?
Answer
:
Valli saw a young cow,
whose tail was high in the air, running right in front of the bus in the middle
of the road. The bus slowed and the driver sounded his horn loudly. However,
the more he honked, the more frightened the cow became and it kept running faster
and faster, right in front of the bus. Valli found it so amusing that she had
tears in her eyes. At last, the cow moved off the road
Exercise - Oral Comprehension Check
Q 11.
Why didn’t she get off the bus at the bus station?
Answer
:
She did not get off the
bus at the bus station because she had to go back on that same bus. She took
out another thirty paise from her pocket and handed the coins to the conductor.
She just wanted to ride on the bus.
Q 12.
Why didn’t Valli want to go to the stall and have a drink? What does this tell you about her?
Answer
:
Valli did not want to go to the stall and have a drink because she did not have any money for that. Even when the conductor offered her a cold drink free of charge, she refused firmly and said that she only wanted her ticket. This shows that Valli had a lot of self-will and pride. Possibly, she did not want to take anything for free, particularly from a stranger.
Exercise - Thinking about the Text
Q 1.
What was Valli’s deepest desire? Find the words and phrases in the story that tell you this.
Answer
:
Valli’s deepest desire
was to ride on the bus she saw every day. The sentences in the story which
depict this are as follows:
“Day after day she watched the bus, and gradually a tiny wish crept into her head and grew there: she wanted to ride on that bus, even if just once. This wish became stronger and stronger, until it was an overwhelming desire.”
“Day after day she watched the bus, and gradually a tiny wish crept into her head and grew there: she wanted to ride on that bus, even if just once. This wish became stronger and stronger, until it was an overwhelming desire.”
Q 2.
How did Valli plan her bus ride? What did she find out about the bus, and how did she save up the fare?
Answer
:
Valli planned that she
would take the one o’clock afternoon bus, reach the town at one forty-five, and
be back home by about two forty-five. She found out that the town was six miles
from her village. The fare was thirty paise one way. The trip to the town took
forty-five minutes. On reaching the town, if she stayed in her seat and paid
another thirty paise, she could return home on the same bus. She had carefully
saved whatever stray coins came her way, resisting every temptation to buy
peppermints, toys, balloons, and the like, and finally she had saved sixty
paise.
Q
3.
What
kind of a person is Valli? To answer this question, pick out the following
sentences from the text and fill in the blanks. The words you fill in are
the clues to your answer.
(i) “Stop the bus! Stop
the bus!” And a tiny hand was raised ________________.
(ii) “Yes, I ____________ go to town,” said Valli, still standing outside the bus.
(iii) “There’s nobody here ____________,” she said haughtily. “I’ve paid my thirty paise like
everyone else.”
(iv) “Never mind,” she said, “I can ___________. You don’t have to help me. “I’m not a child,
I tell you,” she said, _____________.
(v) “You needn’t bother about me. I _____________,” Valli said, turning her face toward the
window and staring out.
(vi) Then she turned to the conductor and said, “Well, sir, I hope ______________.”
(ii) “Yes, I ____________ go to town,” said Valli, still standing outside the bus.
(iii) “There’s nobody here ____________,” she said haughtily. “I’ve paid my thirty paise like
everyone else.”
(iv) “Never mind,” she said, “I can ___________. You don’t have to help me. “I’m not a child,
I tell you,” she said, _____________.
(v) “You needn’t bother about me. I _____________,” Valli said, turning her face toward the
window and staring out.
(vi) Then she turned to the conductor and said, “Well, sir, I hope ______________.”
Answer
:
(i) “Stop the bus! Stop the
bus!” And a tiny hand was raised commandingly.
(ii) “Yes, I simply have to go to town,” said Valli, still standing outside the bus.
(iii) “There’s nobody here who’s a child,” she said haughtily. I’ve paid my thirty paise like everyone else.”
(iv) “Never mind,” she said, “I can get on by myself. You don’t have to help me. “I’m not a child, I tell you,” she said, irritably.
(v) “You needn’t bother about me. I can take care of myself,” Valli said, turning her face toward the window and staring out.
(vi) Then she turned to the conductor and said, “Well, sir, I hope to see you again.” For Valli, the bus journey probably symbolised the adult world. Like anyone else, she spent her money to buy the ticket. She would have attained a great sense of pride and satisfaction in doing so. Therefore, though a child, Valli wanted to be treated as a grown-up on the bus. She had a great sense of self-respect which prevented her from taking anyone’s help. She felt she was able to take care of herself very well, and was easily irritated when anyone treated her as a child
(ii) “Yes, I simply have to go to town,” said Valli, still standing outside the bus.
(iii) “There’s nobody here who’s a child,” she said haughtily. I’ve paid my thirty paise like everyone else.”
(iv) “Never mind,” she said, “I can get on by myself. You don’t have to help me. “I’m not a child, I tell you,” she said, irritably.
(v) “You needn’t bother about me. I can take care of myself,” Valli said, turning her face toward the window and staring out.
(vi) Then she turned to the conductor and said, “Well, sir, I hope to see you again.” For Valli, the bus journey probably symbolised the adult world. Like anyone else, she spent her money to buy the ticket. She would have attained a great sense of pride and satisfaction in doing so. Therefore, though a child, Valli wanted to be treated as a grown-up on the bus. She had a great sense of self-respect which prevented her from taking anyone’s help. She felt she was able to take care of herself very well, and was easily irritated when anyone treated her as a child
Q 4.
Why does the conductor refer to Valli as ‘madam’?
Answer
:
When the conductor
stretched out his hand to help her get on the bus, Valli said commandingly that
she could get on by herself, and that she did not require his help. She did not
act like a child, but as a grown-up girl and therefore, the conductor called
her ‘madam’. When the elderly man called her a child and asked her to sit down
on her seat, she replied that nobody was a child on the bus. She kept stressing
on the fact that she had paid her fare like everybody else and therefore, she
should not be treated differently.
Q 5.
Find the lines in the text which tell you that Valli was enjoying her ride on the bus
Answer
:
The following lines in
the text show that Valli was enjoying her ride on the bus:
(i) “Valli devoured everything with her eyes.”
(ii) “On the one side there was the canal and, beyond it, palm trees, grassland, distant mountains, and the blue, blue sky. On the other side was a deep ditch and then acres and acres of green fields − green, green, green, as far as the eye could see. Oh, it was all so wonderful!”
(iii) “Everyone laughed, and gradually Valli too joined in the laughter. Suddenly, Valli clapped her hands with glee.”
(iv) “Somehow this was very funny to Valli. She laughed and laughed until there were tears in her eyes.”
(v) “Valli wasn’t bored to the slightest and greeted everything with the same excitement she’d felt the first time.”
(i) “Valli devoured everything with her eyes.”
(ii) “On the one side there was the canal and, beyond it, palm trees, grassland, distant mountains, and the blue, blue sky. On the other side was a deep ditch and then acres and acres of green fields − green, green, green, as far as the eye could see. Oh, it was all so wonderful!”
(iii) “Everyone laughed, and gradually Valli too joined in the laughter. Suddenly, Valli clapped her hands with glee.”
(iv) “Somehow this was very funny to Valli. She laughed and laughed until there were tears in her eyes.”
(v) “Valli wasn’t bored to the slightest and greeted everything with the same excitement she’d felt the first time.”
Q 6.
Why does Valli refuse to look out of the window on her way back?
Answer
:
Valli refused to look out of the window on her way back because she saw a young cow lying dead by the roadside, just where it had been struck by some fast-moving vehicle. It was the same cow that was running in front of their bus, during their trip to the town. She was overcome with sadness. The memory of the dead cow haunted her and therefore, she refused to look out of the window.
Q 7.
What does Valli mean when she says, “I was just agreeing with what you said about things happening without our knowledge.”
Answer
:
Valli’s mother said that
many things happen around us, but we are usually unaware of them. Valli had
gone on a bus ride to town, all alone, and had come back without any harm. She
did all this without the knowledge of her mother. Hence, she agreed with what
her mother said.
Q 8.
The author describes the things that Valii sees from an eight-year-old’s point of view. Can you find evidence from the text for this statement?
Answer
:
The author has described
the things that Valli saw from an eight-year-old’s point of view. She was
fascinated by a bus. Watching the bus filled with a new set of people each time
was a source of unending joy for her. Her strongest desire was to ride the bus.
She saved money by cutting on peppermints, toys, and balloons, and even
resisting the temptation to ride the merry-go-round at the fair. When the
author describes the bus, the points he stresses on are the colour and look of
the bus. It was a ‘new bus’, painted a ‘gleaming white’. The overhead bars
‘shone like silver’. The seats were ‘soft and luxurious’. The descriptions that
the author gives when Valli looked outside are also typical of an
eight-year-old. The ‘blue, blue sky’ and the ‘acres and acres of green fields −
green, green, green’ show the enthusiasm of a kid on looking at different
colours. Valli clapped her hands in glee on watching a cow run right in front
of the bus. She found it so funny that tears came into her eyes. On the other
hand, she was overcome with sadness on her way back when she saw the same cow
lying dead. It had been a ‘lovable, beautiful creature’ and later it ‘looked so
horrible’. The memory of the dead cow haunted her so much that she refused to
look outside the window. These are the typical reactions of a young child.
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Thank you so much for sharing question answer for NCERT Solutions for Class 10 English
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