CHAPTER 10 - OZYMANDIAS


UNIT 10

PAGE 106

Question 1 :

Look at the picture given below.





  While on a sight-seeing tour to an old and mysterious country far away from home, you saw this statue. Discuss with your partner what this picture tells you about the people, the place and the ruler.

 Note down your ideas in the web-chart.

 





  Answer :
Note: This question is to be answered on the basis of your own understanding, experience and thoughts. It is strongly recommended that you prepare the solution on your own. However, sample solutions have been provided for your reference.

The place: sand, desert,

 Deserted, dry, barren, sandy, state of decay

The ruler must have been

 Powerful, arrogant, snob, hypocrite, beheaded

The statue: broken, face is

 Beheaded, on the ground, horrifying, stony

The people:

 Suppressed, sad, under the tyrannical rule, terrified


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 Question 2:
 Write a letter to your friend about the sight you saw and your impression of it.
 

Answer :
Note: This question is to be answered on the basis of your own understanding, experience and thoughts. It is strongly recommended that you prepare the solution on your own. However, the beginning of one sample solution has been provided for your reference.

 Hey S,

 Hey, I am writing to you to describe something very interesting. The other day I was going through ‘Literature Reader’ where I saw a picture of a sculpture of two legs and a beheaded face lying on the floor in the desert. The impression of the same, on me, was very horrifying because it seemed to talk of a very powerful ruler who was no longer alive. Who might have guessed that years after his death…


 Question 4-(a):

 The poem is set in ____________________________________________

i. the wilderness

ii. an ancient land

iii. a palace

iv. a desert

 

Answer :
 iv. a desert


 Question 4-(b):
 The expression on the face of the statue is one of ____________________

i. admiration

ii. anger

iii. despair

iv. contempt
 

Answer :
 iv. contempt


 Question 4-(c):
 This poem throws light on the _________________ nature of Ozymandias.

i. cruel

ii. arrogant

iii. boastful

iv. aggressive
 

Answer :
 iii. boastful


 Question 4-(d):
 The sculptor was able to understand Ozymandias' ___________________

i. words

ii. expression

iii. feelings

iv. ambition

 

Answer :
 ii. expression


Question 4-(e):

 The tone of the poem is ________________________________________

i. mocking

ii. nostalgic

iii. gloomy

iv. gloating

 

Answer :
 iv. gloating


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Question 5-(a):

"The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed." Whose hand and heart has the poet referred to in this line?
 

Answer :
 The hand and heart referred to, here, is that of the sculptor.



Question 5-(b):

"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:" Why does Ozymandias refer to himself as King of Kings? What quality of the king is revealed through this statement.
 

Answer :
 In order to emphasise on him to be the most powerful of all kings, King Ozymandias calls himself ‘King of Kings’. The king supposedly was very powerful, aggressive, arrogant and boastful.


Question 5-(c):
"Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Who is Ozymandias referring to when he speaks of ye Mighty? Why should they despair?
 

Answer :
 Ozymandias refers to all the other rulers to come after his reign. They should despair, because according to him, they can’t surpass his glory and power.


Question 5-(d):
 Bring out the irony in the poem.
 

Answer :
 The irony of “Ozymandias” cuts much deeper as the reader realises that the forces of mortality and flexibility, described brilliantly in the concluding lines, will wear down and destroy all our lives. There is a special justice in the way tyrants are subject to time, but all humans face death and decay. The poem primarily depicts an ironic picture of Ozymandias and other rulers like him, but it is also a prominent thought on time-bound humanity: the traveler in the ancient land, the sculptor-artist who fashioned the tomb, and the reader of the poem, no less than Ozymandias, inhabit a world that is “boundless and bare.”


 Question 5-(e):
'Nothing beside remains.' What does the narrator mean when he says these words?
 

Answer :
 When the narrator says these words, he emphasises on the fact that human life is time bound. The power and popularity of the ruler descended with the descent of the ruler. Nothing is immortal and immutable in this world.


Question 5-(f):
 What is your impression of Ozymandias as a king?
 

Answer :
 To me, Ozymandias seems to be a very powerful tyrannical ruler, who was extremely boastful of himself and his kingdom.


Question 5-(g):
 What message is conveyed through this poem?
 

Answer :
 Through this poem a very important message is conveyed which explains the ultimate truth of human lives that nothing is important. Everything in this world is time-bound and not immortal. The immutability of time has been explained through this poem.


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 Question 6:
 Identify and rewrite the lines from the poem spoken by the narrator, the traveler and Ozymandias:

 The Narrator: ________________________________________________________

 ________________________________________________________

 ________________________________________________________

 The Traveller: ________________________________________________________

 ________________________________________________________

 ________________________________________________________

 Ozymandias: ________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________
_______
 

Answer :
The Narrator: The narrator starts the poem with the introduction as to how the traveller had narrated his trip to the ancient land.

The Traveler: Two huge yet without the upper part of the body sculptures stood in the desert. Near them lay a shattered face, which had a frown and a wrinkled expression on his face. The face also held a hostile expression of cold command. The expression could be read very well on these lifeless things because of the sculptor’s artistry. On the pedestal appeared the words of the king himself. It read that his name was Ozymandias, king of kings, who commanded the forthcoming rulers to look up to him, and be saddened by the fact that they can never beat the glory he had achieved.

Ozymandias: I am Ozymandias, king of all kings: look upon my work and be despaired by my might, which you can never surpass.



Question 7:

 Shelley's sonnet follows the traditional structure of the fourteen-line Italian sonnet, featuring an opening octave, or set of eight lines, that presents a conflict or dilemma, followed by a sestet, or set of six lines, that offers some resolution or commentary upon the proposition introduced in the octave. Read the poem carefully and complete the following table on the structure of the poem.   
Rhyme Scheme   
Theme

Octave       

Sestet       

Answer :

   Rhyme Scheme   
Theme

Octave   
ABAB-ACDC   
Major theme discussed here is that everything in this world is bound by time. Dynamism is the truth of the world.

Sestet   
EDEFEF   
Major theme here is that we are only human, and though we may consider ourselves to be the earth ruler's, we wither and die like everything else


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Question 8:
 Complete the table listing the poetic devices used by Shelley in Ozymandias.
Poetic Device   
Lines from the poem

Alliteration   
...and sneer of cold command

Synecdoche (substitution of a part to stand for the whole, or the whole to

stand for a part)   

the hand that mock'd them

Answer :
Poetic Device   
Lines from the poem

Alliteration   
...and sneer of cold command

Synecdoche (substitution of a part to stand for the whole, or the whole to

stand for a part)   
the hand that mock'd them

Repitition   
King of Kings

Personification   
the hand that mocked them


 Question 9:
 Imagine that Ozymandias comes back to life and as he sees the condition of his statue,realisation dawns on him and he pens his thoughts in a diary. As Ozymandias, make this diary entry in about 150 words. You could begin like this: I thought I was the mightiest of all but...
 

Answer :
Note: This question is to be answered on the basis of your own understanding, experience and thoughts. It is strongly recommended that you prepare the solution on your own. However, the following lines would give you a brief idea on how to begin your diary entry.

 I thought I was the mightiest of all but I was so mistaken. Now I realize how my power and strength are in vain, and are of no importance in the face of time. I am grief-stricken by the fact that my command is of no good. The power of nature and reality is far stronger than what I thought. It has finally dawned on me that everything on this earth is bound to change, irrespective of any personal traits or choices. I have finally come to terms with the fact that I might have been a great ruler, but it was wrong to have been boastful about it. So, I think, one should be modest and sober about one’s own self…(to be continued)


 Question 10:
'Ozymandias' and 'Not Marble, nor the Gilded Monuments' are on Time. Compare the two sonnets in terms of the way in which Time is treated by the poets. Write your answer in about 150 words.
 

Answer :
Note: This question is to be answered on the basis of your own understanding, experience and thoughts. It is strongly recommended that you prepare the solution on your own. However, the following lines would give you a brief idea on how to begin your diary entry.

 All of these poets talk about the destructive power of time. There are two completely different ways that you can look at the cruel power of time. One is where time can mature and enrich people or wine, generally a good view of time. The other is where time destroys everything in its path, like the fall of an empire. Poems under consideration focus on the destructive power of time. It is believed that the passage of time is a destructive force and that the poems using that view are better as they are more powerful and display strong images about time…(to be continued)