All Summer in a Day
All Summer in a Day Questions
and Answers Extract Based
Question 1.
“Ready?”
“Ready”
“Now?”
“Soon.”
“Do the scientists really know? Will it happen today, will it?”
“Look, look; see for yourself.” The children pressed to each other like so many
roses, so many weeds, intermixed, peering out for a look at the hidden sun.
It rained.
(a) Where is the story ‘All Summer in A Day ’ set ? Why did the
children living on the planet Venus seem to be happy ?
Answer:
The story ‘All Summer in A Day’ is set on the planet where the sun shines for
only one hour once every seven years. The children were happy because they had
heard from the scientists that the sun was going to appear for a short period.
(b) Why were the characters sent on the planet Venus ? Who came
later on Venus and when ?
Answer:
The characters were sent on the planet Venus to set up civilization and live
out their lives. It was Margot who had come on Venus five years ago from Earth.
(c) How has the writer depicted the planet Venus ? How do we
come to know that the story belongs to the genre of science fiction ?
Answer:
The writer has depicted the planet Venus, as a place where it rains constantly
and the sun emerges once every seven years and that too for one hour. The story
falls into the genre of science fiction and we come to know this from the
constant reference to scientists and their forecasts regarding the sun.
(d) Why were the children unable to remember about
the sun ?
Answer:
All the children were nine years old. It means that the children would have
been only two years old the last time when the rain stopped and the sun
appeared seven years ago, hence the children were too small to remember how it
looked and how it made them feel.
(e) What do the following lines ‘Do the scientists
really know ? Will it happen today, will it ?’ Show ?
Answer:
These lines show that the children had doubts about the prediction of the
scientists. They could not easily believe that the sun was going to appear
after a very long time of seven years. They thought that the scientists could
be wrong in making prediction.
(f) The story opens with the question ‘Ready ?’ What
were the characters getting ready for ?
Answer:
The characters were getting ready to see the sun which was about appear
on Venus after a very long interval of seven years. The children living on the
planet Venus seemed to be very excited to get a glimpse of the sun and feel it.
Question 2.
It had been raining for seven years; thousands upon thousands of days
compounded and filled from one end to the other with rain, with the drum and
gush of water, with the sweet crystal fall of showers and the concussion of
storms so heavy they were tidal waves come over the islands. A thousand forests
had been crushed under the rain and grown up a thousand times to be crushed
again. And this was the way life was forever on the planet Venus, and this was
the schoolroom of the children of the rocket men and women who had come to a
raining world to set up civilization and live out their lives.
(a) What is setting of the story ?
Describe the main idea of the story.
Answer:
The setting of the story is in the future on
Venus in an elementary school where astronauts have raised their children. The
main idea of the story is that life can be tough and it is not always fair.
(b) When did the sun appear last on
the planet Venus ? Why could the children not preserve the memories of the sun?
Answer:
When the sun last emerged, all the children were
just two years old. As they were very little when the sun shone seven years
ago, it was difficult for them to preserve the memories of the sun. Hence they
remembered nothing about the sun.
(c) How long had it been raining on
the planet Venus ? What was the effect of the rain on the forests.
Answer:
It had been raining on the planet Venus for
seven years. Several forests had been crushed under the rain and grown up a
thousand times to be crushed again.
(d) How did most of the children
feel about the weather on Venus ?
Answer:
Most of the children had accustomed to the
constant rainy weather on Venus. They liked the rain because they could not
remember ever seeing the sun. Margot thought they remembered the sun only in
their dreams.
(e) What were the children doing as
‘All Summer in a Day’ was going to begin ? What do the details in the passage
given below tell you about the writer’s purpose ?
‘It had been raining for seven year; thousands
upon thousands of days compounded and filled from one end to the other with
rain, with the drawn and gush of water.
Answer:
The children were peering out a window. In the
passage given above, the writer wishes to create a mood. He wants the reader to
be able to imagine the consequence of such event upon the characters within the
story.
(f) What is the central conflict of
the story ‘All Summer in A Day’ ?
Answer:
The main conflict is between Margot and her
classmates on planet Venus. Her classmates resent her because they know that
she was on Earth for a longer time, than they were; therefore she can remember
the sun’s character better than they can.
Question 3.
“It’s stopping, it’s stopping!”
“Yes, yes!”
Margot stood apart from them, from these children who could ever remember a
time when there wasn’t rain and rain and rain. They were all nine years old,
and if there had been a day, seven years ago, when the sun came out for an hour
and showed its face to the stunned world, they could not recall.
(a) What does the story *All Summer in A Day’
introduce?
Answer:
The story introduces a group of children living on Venus which is dominated by
rainfall and the absence of the sun. In the story, Venus only receives sunlight
for one hour every seven years.
(b) Who are the protagonist and antagonist of the
story and why ?
Answer:
The protagonist is Margot because she has a conflict that needs to be solved.
William is the antagonist because he caused the conflict.
(c) What was the momentous occasion ? Who were
waiting for this occasion ?
Answer:
The momentous occasion was that the sun was going to appear in the sky for a
brief period i.e., for one hour after seven years. A group of nine years old
children was eagerly waiting for this occasion.
(d) How many times had the children seen the sun ?
Answer:
The children had only seen the sun once in their lives when they were two years
old, but now they did not remember how it looked or felt.
(e) Why was Margot standing apart ?
Answer:
Margot was standing apart from other children and showed no interest to mingle
and interact with them because the grey atmosphere of the planet Venus left
great impact of her.
(f) Why had the other children
forgotten about the sun ?
Answer:
The other children had been on Venus all their
lives and they had been only two years old when last the sun came out for an
hour. So they had forgotten colour and heat of the sun.
Question 4.
Margot stood alone. She was a very frail girl who looked as if she had been
lost in the rain for years and the rain had washed out the blue from her eyes
and the red from her mouth and the yellow from her hair. She was an old
photograph dusted from an album, whitened away, and if she spoke at all her
voice would be a ghost. Now she stood, separate, staring at the rain and the
loud wet world beyond the huge glass.
“What’ re you looking at?” said William.
Margot said nothing.
“Speak when you’re spoken to.”
He gave her a shove. But she did not move; rather she let herself be moved only
by him and nothing else. They edged away from her, they would not look at her.
She felt them go away. And this was because she would play no games with them
in the echoing tunnels of the underground city. If they tagged her and ran, she
stood blinking after them and did not follow.
(a) Who was Margot ? Why did she have memories of the sun ?
Answer:
Margot was one of the children who lived on the planet Venus. She was different
from the other children because she had lived in Ohio until she was five. So
she had memories of the sun.
(b) How did the children make preparations for the
coming summer ?
Answer:
In preparation for the coming summer, the class had spent the previous day
studying the sun and writing about it. They had written small stories or essays
or poems about it.
(c) Why was Margot totally misfit on Venus ?
Answer:
Margot had come to the planet Venus just five years ago, from earth. She was
totally a misfit on Venus. She could not adapt herself to the conditions on
Venus where it had been raining continuously for seven years, without the
appearance of the sun.
(d) What continued to fascinate Margot ? Why did she
not like to participate in any classroom activity ?
Answer:
Margot had many memories of the sun and the sun continued to fascinate her. She
did not like to participate in any classroom activity that did not include the
sun because she had been in a depressed state on Venus.
(e) What was the impact of constant rain on Margot’s
physical appearance ?
Answer:
The constant rain made its first impact on Margot’s physical appearance. It
seemed as if the rains had washed out the red colour from her face, the blue
colour of her eye and the golden colour of her hair.
(f) How did Margot look like ? Give two instances of metaphor
from the above extract ?
Answer:
Margot looked like a faded, whitened photograph from an old album. She looked
pale and sick like a ghost. Margot’s appearance and voice has been described
after years of relentless rain and devoid of sunlight as :
- ‘She was an
old photograph dusted from an album ’
- ‘ if she
spoke at all her voice would be a ghost.’
Question
5.
When the class sang songs about happiness and
life and games her lips barely moved. Only when they sang about the sun and the
summer did her lips move as she watched the drenched windows. And then, of
course, the biggest crime of all was that she had come here only five years ago
from Earth, and she remembered the sun and the way the sun was and the sky was
when she was four in Ohio. And they, they had been on Venus all their lives,
and they had been only two years old when last the sun came out and had long
since forgotten the colour and heat of it and the way it really was. But Margot
remembered.
“It’s like a penny,” she said once, eyes closed.
“No, it’s not!” the children cried.
“It’s like a fire,”she said, “in the stove.”
‘You’re lying, you don’t remember!” cried the
children.
(a) What is fantastical element in the story ?
Answer:
The children’s living on Venus is fantastical element, because we do not know
much about Venus but we do not believe at this time that it can sustain human
life. In this story, not only do people live on Venus, but also it rains all
the time there. The idea of raining on a planet for seven years is a
fantastical element.
(b) How
were Margot’s mental feelings affected by rains ?
Answer:
The rains affected Margot mentally. They gave
her lonely feelings. She liked to live in an isolated state. She never mingled
with the children. She neither played games with them nor sang songs of
happiness.
(c) Why
had the children forgotten the colour and heat of the sun ?
Answer:
The children had forgotten the colour and heat
of the sun because when
last the sun came out, they were only two years
old.
(d)
Whose biggest crime is being talked about ? Why is it considered as a crime ?
Answer:
Margot’s biggest crime is being talked about. It
was considered as a crime because Margot had come to live on Venus only five
years ago from earth and she remembered the sun and the things related to the
sun.
(e) How
does Margot compare the sun ? Why did the children accuse Margot ?
Answer:
Margot compares the sun’s roundness and ‘flaming
bronze’ to a ‘penny’, and its warmth to ‘a fire in the stove’. The children accused
her of lying when she told them that the sun is round like a penny and hot like
a fire.
(f)
When did Margot sing along with the other children ?
Answer:
When the children sang songs about happiness and
life and games, her lips barely moved, but when they sang about the sun and
summer, she sang along with them.
Question 6.
But she remembered and stood quietly apart from all of them and watched the
patterning windows. And once, a month ago, she had refused to shower in the
school shower rooms, had clutched her hands to her ears and over her head,
screaming the water mustn’t touch her head. So after that, dimly, dimly, she
sensed it, she was different and they knew her difference and kept away. There
was talk that her father and mother were taking her back to Earth next year; it
seemed vital to her that they do so, though it would mean the loss of thousands
of dollars to her family. And so, the children hated her for all these reasons
of big and little consequence. They hated her pale snow face, her waiting
silence, her thinness, and her possible future.
(a) Why did the other children resent Margot ?
Answer:
The other children resented her because she played no games with them in the
tunnels of the underground city. If they tagged her and ran, she stood blinking
after them and did not follow.
(b) How old was Margot when she moved to Venus ? How
did the other children feel about Margot ?
Answer:
When Margot moved to Venus, she was four years old. The other children hated
her because of her pale face, her constant silence, her thinness and because
she wanted to go back to Earth next year.
(c) What did Margot remember and why ?
Answer:
Margot remembered the sun because she had spent four years of her life on the
Earth. She knew very well how its colour was and how one could feel in its
presence and what impacts could be seen in the atmosphere.
(d) What were all the children waiting for as they
stood around the window ? What was Margot doing ?
Answer:
As the children stood around the class window, all they were curiously waiting
for the sun which was about to appear on the planet Venus for a brief time.
Margot was also waiting for the sun patiently as she too was eager to set a
glimpse of the sun.
(e) For what does the word ‘vital’ stand ? Why does
the writer use the word ‘vital’ here ?
Answer:
The word ‘vital’ stands for being necessary to the existence, continuence or
well being of something and of critical importance. The word ‘vital’ has been
used to describe the importance of her parents’ sending Margot back to Earth
and it means it is necessary to Margot.
(f) What does the ‘shower’ serve to
remind Margot ? Why does she rebel against it ?
Answer:
The shower only serves to remind Margot of the
endless rain which she thoroughly tired of. She wanted to be dry, not wet. She
wanted to bask the sun. She did not want to remain under the tyranny of a
constant downpour, so she rebels against the shower. To her, the shower
symbolises the constant rain she hates.
Question 7.
“Get away!” The boy gave her another push. “What’re you waiting for?” Then, for
the first time, she turned and looked at him. And what she was waiting for was
in her eyes.
“Well, don’t wait around here!” cried the boy savagely. “You won’t see
anything!”
Her lips moved.
“Nothing!” he cried. “It was all a joke, wasn’t it?” He turned to the other
children.
“Nothing’s happening today. Is it?”
They all blinked at him and then, understanding, laughed and shook their heads.
“Nothing, nothing!”
“Oh, but,”Margot whispered, her eyes helpless. “But this is the day, the
scientists predict, they say, they know, the sun…”
(a) What is the symbolical significance of the sun
for Margot ?
Answer:
For Margot, the sun is a reminder of her happy days on Earth before her family
has relocated to Venus. It reminds her of the hope for the future that she and
her parents will one day return to Earth.
(b) What did the children claim and how did they
treat with her ?
Answer:
Margot knew better than any of the children what the sun was like because her
family came to Venus from Ohio only five years ago. But the children claimed
that she could not remember the sun and treated the quiet, reserved little girl
very cruelly.
(c) Why did, the children resent her ? Why were they
angry and jealous of her ?
Answer:
The children resented her for her past experiences on Earth with the sun and
they were also angry and jealous of her because she had the opportunity to
travel back to Earth regardless of the financial costs.
(d) What does Margot’s initial exclusion from the
group show ?
Answer:
Margot’s initial exclusion from the group speaks to the difficulties of
integrating immigrants into a community. Margot struggles to fit in everyday of
her time on Venus and she does not get along with the other children.
(e) Who gave Margot another push and why ? How did
Margot react at the boy’s rude behaviour ?
Answer:
A boy named Willian who seemed to be very cruel to Margot gave her another
push. He did this act out of anger and jealousy for Margot. For the first time
Margot turned and looked at him.
(f) Why did Margot’s eyes show when she looked at
the boy ? Why did the boy say ‘you won’t see anything !’ ?
Answer:
When Margot looked at the boy, it was clearly visible in her eyes that she was
eagerly waiting for the sun’s appearance. She also seemed to be very confident
and patient while waiting for the sun’s appearance. The boy said that she would
not see anything and her waiting for the sun’s appearance would be meaningless
for her because the children had already planned to play a trick upon her as
they did not want to let her see the glimpse of the sun.
Question 8.
“All a joke!” said the boy, and seized her roughly. “Hey, everyone, let’s put
her in a closet before the teacher comes!”
“No, ” said Margot, falling back.
They surged about her, caught her up and bore her, protesting, and then
pleading, and then crying, back into a tunnel, a room, a closet, where they
slammed and locked the door. They stood looking at the door and saw it tremble
from her beating and throwing herself against it. They heard her muffled cries.
Then, smiling, they turned and went out and back down the tunnel, just as the
teacher arrived.
(a) What did the boy say to dishearten her ? How did
the other children react it ?
Answer:
The boy told her that it was all a joke and the sun was not going to appear
that day. The other children also followed the boy. They showed their agreement
with the boy and laughed at her.
(b) Why did Margot seem to be confident about the
appearance of the sun ?
Answer:
Margot seemed to be confident about the appearance of the sun because she
firmly believed in the prediction of the scientists. She knew well that the
scientists could not be wrong as they predicted after scientific observation.
(c) What did Margot respond when the children were
teasing her ? Why did Margot’s classmates feel jealous of her ?
Answer:
Margot said nothing, but she only whispered. She seemed to be helpless before
the children who were very harsh and cruel towards her. Margot’s classmates
felt jealous of Margot because she lived on the Earth and had seen the sun for
a longer amount of time than her classmates. Morever she remembered what the
sun was like.
(d) Who were the partners of William in the crime of
locking Margot in the closet and how ?
Answer:
As William was the leader of the children, the children did the same they were
asked to do. He convinced them to lock Margot in the closet. The children
became partners in crime with William and forcibly locked Margot in the closet
and thus prevented her from seeing and feeling the sun.
(e) How did Margot resist the children when they
were taking her to lock in the closet ?
Answer:
When Margot was being taken to the closet by the children, she protested,
pleaded and cried, but it was all in vain as they had crushed the humanity and
morality under their feet and had grown stem and cruel against her.
(f) How did all the children react after locking
Margot in the closet ?
Answer:
After locking Margot in the closet, all the children stood looking at the door
and saw it trumble from her beating and throwing herself against it. They heard
the muffled cries of Margot. Then they smiled at their inhuman act and turned
and went out.
Question 9.
“Ready, children1?” She glanced at her watch.
“Yes!” said everyone.
“Are we all here?” “Yes!”
The rain slacked still more.
They crowded to the huge door.
The rain stopped.
It was as if, in the midst of a film concerning an avalanche, a tornado, a
hurricane, a volcanic eruption, something had, first, gone wrong with the sound
apparatus, thus muffling and finally cutting off all noise, all of the blasts
and repercussions and thunders, and then, second, ripped the film from the
projector and inserted in its place a beautiful tropical slide which did not
move or tremor. The world ground to a standstill. The silence was so immense
and unbelievable that you felt your ears had been stuffed or you had lost your
hearing altogether. The children put their hands to their ears. They stood
apart. The door slid back and the smell of the silent, waiting world came in to
them.
(a) What tends to cause conflict and resentment and
why ? Explain it clearly in the light of story.
Answer:
Variations in people, lives and backgrounds tend to cause conflict and
resentment due to lack of understanding. Margot migrated on the planet Venus
from the Earth. On the Earth she lived in a atmosphere which was entirely
different to that of Venus, hence she could not develop a mutual
understanding with those children who were born and brought up on the planet
Venus.
(b) What made the children act audaciously against
Margot ? What hateful act did they commit and why ?
Answer:
The children’s jealous feelings towards Margot overrode their moral decisions
and made them act audaciously. In order to deprive her of seeing the sun’s
appearance, they made an aggressive attack on Margot and forcibly locked her in
a closet.
(c) What happened as the rain stopped ?
Answer:
As the rain stopped, an immense peace could be felt in the whole atmosphere of
the planet Venus. It seemed as if in the midst of a film concerning an
avalanche, a tornado, hurricane, a volcanic erruption, something had gone wrong
with the sound apparatus and ripped the film from the projector and inserted in
its place a beautiful tropical slide.
(d) Why did the teacher look at her watch ? What did
she ask the children ? Where did the children gather ?
Answer:
The teacher looked at her watch because the time was approaching when the sun
was about to appear. She asked the children if they were ready. The children
gathered to the huge door.
(e) How did the children feel for sometime when rain
stopped.
Answer:
When the rain stopped, the children felt an immense and unbelievable silence.
They felt as if their ears had been stuffed with something or they had lost
their hearing capacity completely.
(f) What did the children do when they felt extreme
silence ? What came before them as the door slid back ?
Answer:
When the children felt extreme silence, they put their hands to their ears. As
the door slid back, a picture of silent and waiting world came to them. In fact
the sun had appeared.
Question 10.
The sun came out.
It was the color of flaming bronze and it was very large. And the sky around it
was a blazing blue tile color. And the jungle burned with sunlight as the
children, released from their spell, rushed out, yelling into the springtime.
“Now, don’t go too far,” called the teacher after them. “You’ve only two hours,
you know. You wouldn’t want to get caught out!”
But they were running and turning their faces up to the sky and feeling the sun
on their cheeks like a warm iron; they wore taking off their jackets and
letting the sun burn their arms.
(a) Why did the children seem to be very eager to
see the sun ?
Answer:
The sun appeared in every seven years on the planet Venus. So when the children
were two years old, the sun appeared, but they did not have any recollections
of that day. So when they heard about the prediction of the sun’s appearing,
they seemed to be very eager to see and know about the sun.
(b) What caused the conflict between Margot and the
other children ?
Answer:
Margot remembered the sun and other children didn’t. The other children were
angry because she had a memory that they didn’t. Margot kept to herself because
nobody liked her. It caused the children to bully her into the closet.
(c) How did the children react after the sun came
out ? What warning did the teacher give to the children ?
Answer:
As the children were released with the appearance of the sun, they rushed out
yelling into the spring time. The teacher warned the children not to go too far
as they had only two hours.
(d) What games did the children play ? What did most
of the children do?
Answer:
The children ran among the trees. They slipped and fell. They pushed each
other. They played hide and seek and tag, but most of all they quinted at the
sun until the tears ran down their faces; they put their hands to that
yellowness and that amazing blueness and they breathed of the fresh air and
listened to the silence which suspended them in a blessed sea of no sound and
no motion.
(e) Do you think that the children paid any heed to
the teacher ?
Answer:
It seems that the children were so much overwhelmed with joyous feelings at the
sight of the sunshine that they did not pay any heed to their teacher’s warning
but became wholly engrossed in their games and activities.
(f) How did the sun look like ? How did the
appearance of the sun leave its impact on the sky and the ground ?
Answer:
The sun looked like a flaming bronze. It seemed to be very large. With its
appearance, the sky around it was a blazing blue tile colour. The warmth or
heat of the sun could be felt on the ground. The jungle seemed to be burning
with the sunlight.
Question 11.
And then -In the midst of their running one of the girls wailed. Everyone
stopped.
The girl, standing in the open, held out her hand.
“Oh, look, look,” she said, trembling.
They came slowly to look at her opened palm.
In the center of it, cupped and huge, was a single raindrop. She began to cry,
looking at it. They glanced quietly at the sun.
“Oh. Oh.”
A few cold drops fell on their noses and their cheeks and their mouths. The sun
faded behind a stir of mist. A wind blew cold around them. They turned and
started to walk back toward the underground house, their hands at their sides,
their smiles vanishing away. A boom of thunder startled them and like leaves
before a new hurricane, they tumbled upon each other and ran. Lightning struck
ten miles away, five miles away, a mile, a half mile. The sky darkened into
midnight in a flash.
(a) How much time did the children spend ? When did
they stop running ? What did the girl show them ?
Answer:
The children had been running and enjoying for an hour and they did not stop
running until one of the girls wailed. The girl showed them a single drop of
the rain at her palm.
(b) What reaction did the children make on hearing
the cry of one of the girls ? What did the children see in her hand ?
Answer:
On hearing the cry of one of the girls, the children stopped running. They
turned to the girl who was standing in the open with her stretched hand. The
children came to her and saw a single rain drop at her opened palm.
(c) Why did the children look quietly at the sun ?
Answer:
The children looked quietly at the sun because it seemed to them that the sun
was going to vanish behind the clouds and the violent storms and rains were
about to approach soon.
(d) Where did the children start to move and in what
mood ?
Answer:
The children’s smiles had vanished away. They felt greatly dejected and
disappointed at the disappearance of the sun. With heavy hearts, they turned
and started to walk back towards the underground house.
(e) What happened a little later when the children
had seen the drop of rain ?
Answer:
A little later when the children had seen the drop of rain, they felt that a
few cold drops fell on their noses, cheeks and mouths and a cold wind blew
around them.
(f) How was the sky changed ? Why did the children
stop in the doorway ?
Answer:
The sky darkened into midnight in a flash. The children stopped in the doorway
of the underground as they seemed to be reluctant to go inside until it rained
heavily.
Question 12.
“She’s still in the closet where we locked her.” “Margot.”
They stood as if someone had driven them, like so many stakes, into the floor.
They looked at each other and then looked away. They glanced out at the world
that was raining now and raining and raining steadily. They could not meet each
other’s glances. Their faces were solemn and pale. They looked at their hands
and feet, their faces down. “Margot.”
One of the girls said, “Well…’?”
No one moved.
“Go on,” whispered the girl.
(a) Why did the children tumble upon each other and
run ? What type of sound did they hear ?
Answer:
As the children were startled by a boom of thunder, they tumbled upon each
other and ran. They heard the gigantic sound of the rain falling in tons and
avalanches, everywhere.
(b) Why did the children look at each other ? Where
was Margot ?
Answer:
The children looked at each other because they wanted to know whatever they had
done with Margot was right or wrong. Margot was still locked in the closet.
(c) Why were the children’s faces solemn and pale ?
Answer:
The children were so much overburdened with the feeling of guilty that their
faces had grown solemn and pale. The expressions of their faces clearly showed
that they had nothing to say about their unpardonable deed.
(d) How were the feelings of the children changed
when they set free Margot from the closet ?
Answer:
When they released Margot from the closet, they had known that Margot was true
to her words about the sun. They had also known how beautiful and warm the sun
is. This made them remorseful about locking her in the closet.
(e) What do the words ‘Go on’, whispered the girl,
signify.
Answer:
All the children were so much ashamed that they had no courage to move on to
the closet, but the girl who was also involved in this immoral deed, whispered
that they should proceed to release Margot from the closet.
(f) Why did the other children lock Margot in the
closet ? In what mood did the children return ?
Answer:
The other children locked Margot in the closet because they despised her. They
did not like her as she had the recollections of the sun but they did not have.
The children returned remorsefully to let Margot out of the closet.
(g) When do the people begin to feel detach
themselves ? What is the significance of jealously ?
Answer:
When differing backgrounds cause turmoil, people begin to feel detach
themselves from one another. Jealousy can sometimes override morality. The
children’s jealous feelings towards Margot overrode their moral decisions and
made them act audaciously.
Long Answer Type Questions
Question 1.
How do the other students feel about Margot in the story ‘All Summer in A Day ’
?
Answer:
The story takes place in some future time where earthlings have somehow managed
to travel to other planets and colonize them. One of these colonies is on
Venus. Bradbury’s vision of Venus is a planet where it rains constantly. The
incessant rain really gets to people. It is particularly hard for the children
because they do not remember seeing the sun. They were too young when it last
appeared for one hour.
Margot is nine years old girl. She is different from
the other children because she is from the Earth. On Earth, apparently, the sun
still comes out. Margot desperately misses the sun. She wants to go back to
Earth in the worst way. Not only does Margot miss the sun, but she does not get
along with the other children. They are jealous of her and think she is weird
because she keeps herself apart from them. She does not fit in and does not try
to. Whenever Margot is mentioned, she is described as being alone and apart
from the other kids.
‘She was a very frail girl who looked as if she had
been lost in the rain for years and the rain had washed out the blue from her
eyes and the red from her mouth and the yellow from her hair. She was an old
photograph dusted from an album, whitened away, and if she spoke at all her
voice would be a ghost.’
The children feel excited because the sun is about
to appear for the first time in seven years. This means that the other children
were just two years old when it last emerged, and of course they don’t remember
it. For this reason, they are even more stirred up. Just as the sun is about to
come out, they decide to play a trick on Margot. They lock her in the closet.
Question 2.
Why was Margot unhappy on Venus ? Why did the children dislike Margot ? What
inferences can you make about Margot’s feelings as she comes out of the closet
at the end of the story ?
Answer:
The Reason of Margot’s Unhappiness and Children’s Disliking Her : Margot was
unhappy on Venus because she remembered the sun from when she was four and
lived on earth. Children disliked Margot because she told them that the sun was
going to come out after seven years of straight raining and they thought she
was lying. We know this because the boy from her class talks to Margot and
says, ‘It was all a joke wasn’t it V He turned to the other children.
‘Nothings happening today. Is it ?’ Another reason
why children disliked her was because she might be going back to earth. There
was a talk that her father and her mother were taking her back to earth next
year. And so the children hated her for all these reasons of big and little
consequence. They hated her pale snow face, her waiting silence, her thinness
and her possible future.
Inferences about Margot’s Feelings : We can infer
that Margot felt frustrated towards her classmates when she got out of the
closet because she was the only one who believed the sun was coming out on that
day and was the only who did not see it. We know this when Margot talks to the
boy: ‘But this is
the day, the scientists predict, they say, they know, the sun ’ At this the boy
said that it was all a joke and seized her roughly. He called the other
children and asked them to let her put in a closet before the teacher came. She
was trying to explain to her classmates that the sun would come out but they
thought she was lying. This might make her angry and aggressive when she was
taken out of the closet.
Question 3.
How does Ray Bradbury develop the mood in ‘All Summer in a Day’?
Answer:
The Use of Leitmotif : Ray Bradbury creates a leitmotif that expresses
repeatedly the idea of rain with recurring phrases; this repetition generates
the major atmospheric effect, or mood, of his story. It is an oppressive mood
of grey anxiety and cynicism. Here is an example of the use of leithmotif:
‘It had been raining for seven years; thousands upon thousands of days
compounded and filled from one end to the other with rain, with drum and gush
of water, with the sweet crystal fall of showers and the concussion of storms
so heavy they were tidal waves come over the island. ’
The Effect of Unceasing Rain on Nature and Children:
The monotony of this ever-present rain that has killed forests and flowers and
any vegetation is rather overpowering. The effect of the grey atmosphere and
unceasing rain is reflected in the children’s behaviour as well. They bully the
one girl who has come from Ohio and seen the sun and remembered it. To the
other children she has committed ‘the biggest crime of all’. So, in their envy
and cynical doubt of Margot’s truth about the sun, the children lock her in a
closet, causing Margot great anxiety.
Margot’s Suffering from Oppression and Anxiety : In
her imprisonment, Margot suffers her worst oppression and anxiety as she is
denied the vision of a sunny sky, a vision for which she has long been anxious;
she has always remembered and yearned for it. She is also prohibited from the
added satisfaction of erasing the cynicism that looms over her from other
children who are skeptical of her description of the sun. Certainly, too, the
behaviour of these other children underscores the narrator’s tone of cynicism
with regard to human nature.
Question 4.
In ‘All Summer in A Day’, what are Margot’s strengths and weaknesses ?
Answer:
Margot’s Strengths: Margot’s strength is in her sensitivity and her ability to
be true to herself. She remembers a better world on Earth where the sun often
shines. She seems to be strong in her dislike of Venus, where the sun only
comes out once every seven years. She shows integrity in her loyalty to earth.
She reveals her artistic sensitivity when she writes a poem about the sun : I
think the sun is a flower, I that blooms for just one hour. ’ One of the boys
in the class protests that she couldn’t have written that.
Because she is true to herself, she tries to
communicate her memories of the sun to the other children, comparing it to a
fire in the stove and a penny. As she is non conformist, she does not join the
other children in their games. She does not pretend to like things she doesn’t
like.
Margot’s Weakness : As with the most people, her
strengths are also her weaknesses. Her integrity being true to herself—includes
a lack of social skills : she doesn’t seem to realise how much she is
alienating the other children and acting as if she is superior for having seen
the sun.
Her sensitivity is also a weakness : it means she
writes nice poetry and has vivid and poetic memories of the sun, but it also
leads her to scream as she does not want to take a shower. It causes her
parents to think leaving Venus early, despite the money they would lose.
Question 5.
What is the resolution to Ray Bradbury’s ‘All Summer in A Day’?
Answer:
The resolution of a story comes right after the climax. After the climax when
the outcome of the conflict is revealed, the resolution usually shows how the
characters move forward or react afterward. For Rqy Bradbury’s ‘All Summer in A
Day’, the conflict is person vs. society as one little girl is bullied by her
classmates because she has seen the sun before and they haven’t. At first, the
conflict revolves around Margot and William. Margot believes the sun will shine
that day as the scientists predict; however, William, dispenses negativity and
doubt in the classroom. All of the children want to see the sunshine because
they have never experienced it—or at least they don’t remember it. Margot
probably wants to see it shine more because she misses it.
When the children shove Margot into a closet before
the sun shines, the reader wonders if she will escape in time to enjoy the rays
of the sun. This may be that someone will remember Margot in the closet and
free her in time to play in the sun. Unfortunately the climax of the story
comes when the clouds cover up the sun again and a little girl remembers her
and screams, ‘Margot!’ It is at this point that everyone knows Margot’s fate
and that she won’t be able to see the sun that day or for another seven years.
The resolution, then, is when the class goes back into the building to free
Margot from the closet after the sun goes away. The text seems to suggest that
the children know they have done something wrong to Margot because it says the
following :
‘They walked slowly down the hall in the sound of
the cold rain They
walked over to the closet door slowly and stood by it. Behind the closet door
was only silence. They unlocked the door, even more slowly and let Margot out.’
The fact that the children proceed very slowly when
freeing Margot suggests they know what they did is wrong. They are not happy,
joyful, skipping, or shouting because of a fun day in the sun. The moment is
diminished because of their hateful actions towards a classmate. Therefore, the
resolution is that Margot is freed, but she does not yet to enjoy the sun;
sadly, the children recognise that they did something they can never take back,
change or rectify.
Question 6.
In the story ‘All Summer in A Day9, how is the sun described ?
Answer:
In the story, the people who live on Venus only see the sun for an hour once
every seven years. The story revolves around a class of nine-year-old children
who were bom on Venus and cannot remember what the sun looks or feels like.
Margot however, who was born on Earth, remembers the sun vividly. Margot’s
perspective provides many figurs of speech and descriptions about the sun. For
example, Margot recalls the following about the sun :
‘About how like a lemon it was and how hot………………… ‘I
the sun is a flower ………. It’s like a penny’, she said once, eyes closed …………….
It’s like a fire’, she said, in the stove.’
In the above passage, there are three similies and
one metaphor that Bradbury uses to describe the sun through Margot’s eyes.
First, the similes compare the sun to a lemon, a penny and a fire in the stove.
Then a metaphor compares the sun to a flower. These comparisons are based on
Margot’s perspective and on things that she would know or relate to in her
child-like mind. Lemons, pennies, flowers, and fires are all possibly connected
to her life’s experiences; therefore, it is from these experiences that she is
likely to retrieve information to describe the sun. None of the other
classmates understand her, though, because they do not share similar
experiences with the sun. She could only think to herself the following :
‘She knew they thought they remembered a warmness,
like a blushing in the face, in the body, in the arms and legs and trembling
hands.’
When the sun finally comes out and the children are
released to go outside to experience it, the sun is described using
personification as follows :
‘………………. When the sun came out for an house and showed its face to the stunned
world It was the colour of flaming bronze and it was very large. And the sky
around it was a blazing blue tile colour.’
It is interesting that other visual images through
colours are observed when the sun comes out: ‘flaming bronze’ and ‘blazing
blue’. The children’s reactions also bring out colourful descriptions of the
sky as follows :
‘…………. they put their hands up to that yellowness
and that amazing blueness and they breathed of the fresh, fresh air………….’
Therefore, Bradbury uses similes, metaphors,
personification and visual images of colour to describe the sun and its effects
on characters in the story.
Question 7.
In the story ‘All Summer in A Day9 what happens while Margot is in the closet ?
Answer:
Ray Bradbury’s story is set in the future, when people live on Venus. There it
rains constantly; the sun only emerges once every seven years. Since the
children are nine years old, they have no memory of the sun. Because Margot has
moved to Venus from Earth, she remembers what the sun looks like and how it
feels warm on the flesh and ‘like a blushing’ on the face and how it looks
‘like a penny’. She stands apart from the others and does not wish to play
their games with them in the underground tunnels of the city, which are
artificially lighted. It is because she does not play with the others and
because she never sings unless the song is about the sun that the other
children hate her for ‘these reasons of big and little consequence.’
When one cruel boy sees in Margot’s eyes that she
eagerly waits for the hour of the sun, he tells her ‘It’s all a joke!’ but she insists
that this day is the one which the scientists have determined that the sun will
emerge.
All a joke!’ said the boy, and seized her roughly.
‘Hey, everyone, let’s put her in a closet before the teacher comes!’ ‘No’, said
Margot, falling back.
The cruel children push Margot into a closet,
watching as she throws herself against the door desperately. They smile as they
turn and go back down into the tunnel before the teacher arrives. When the sun
comes out, the children are ecstatic; they squint at the sun and they remove
their jackets to feel the rays upon their arms. They put their hands up to that
yellowness and that amazing bluness and they breathe of the fresh air and
listen to the silence which suspends them in a blessed sea of no sound and no
motion.
And then it is over. A raindrop falls in one girl’s
hand. Then, another girl utters a faint cry: ‘Margot.’ Margot, whose greatest
desire was to again see and feel the sun, has been in the closet all the time.
Question 8.
How did the geography of Venus change when the sun came out ?
Answer:
‘All Summer in A Day’ is a short science fiction story. The story introduces a
group of children living on Venus which is dominated by rainfall and the
absence of the sun. In the story, Venus only received sunlight for two hours
every seven years (not scientifically accurate). In the beginning of the story,
Bradbury introduces the planet’s weather and geography :
‘It had been raining for seven years ; thousands
upon thousands of days compounded and filled from one end to the other with
rain, with the drum and gush of water, with the sweet crystal fall of showers
and the concussion of storms so heavy they were tidal waves come over the
islands. A thousand forests had been crushed under the rain and grown up a
thousand times to be crushed again.’
In the story, most children aged about nine had only
experienced life on Venus, but some people remembered the environment of earth.
Margot, a transferred student, remembered the sunlight she experienced on
Earth. Her experience, which differed from that of her peers, opened her up to
criticism from her friend. In fact, Margot’s experience depicts how important
geography is to Bradury’s story for its ability to drive social interactions :
‘And then, of course, the biggest crime of all was
that she had come here only five years ago from Earth and she remembered the
sun and the way the sun was and the sky was then she was four in Ohio. ’
The story built to a moment in which the children
were finally able to experience the sun. Bradbury took this opportunity to
further describe the grography of Venus:
‘They stopped running and stood in the great jungle
that covered Venus, that grew and never stopped growing, tumultuously, even as
you watched it. It was a nest ofoctopi, clustering up great arms of flesh like
weed, wavering, flowering in this brief spring. It was the colour of rubber and
ash, this jungle, from the many years without sun. It was the colour stones and
white cheeses and ink and it was the colour of the moon.
By the end of the story, the sun had disappeared again after showing its glimpse for a brief time. Although the geography itself did not change in the story, it played a central role for the characters.
0 Comments