Chapter 9 - The Great Stone Face - I Exercise 129
Solution 1
1. False
The Great Stone
Face stood miles away from where Ernest and his mother lived.
2. True
3. True
4. False
Gathergold was
very rich.
5. True
6. False
The Great Stone
Face seemed to suggest that Earnest should not lose heart, but believe that the
man whose face resembled the Great Stone Face would come.
Chapter 9 - The Great Stone Face - I Exercise 130
Solution 1
(i)
lofty loftiness
(vi)
enormous enormity
(ii)
able ability (vii)
pleasant pleasantness
(iii)
happy happiness
(viii)
dense density
(iv)
near nearness
(ix)
great greatness
(v)
noble nobility (x)
stable stability
Solution 2
(i) Why didn't
you turn up at the meeting? We all were eagerly waiting for
you.
(ii) Kindly write
your name and address in capital letters.
(iii) I
was pleasantly surprised to see him at the railway station. I
thought he was not coming.
(iv) It is perfectly believable
that I am not responsible for this mess.
(v) He fell over
the step and nearly broke his arm.
Solution 3
(i) I will
phone you when I will get home from school.
(ii) Hurry up!
Madam will be annoyed if we are late.
(iii) If
it rains today, we will not go to the play.
(iv) When
you see Mandal again, you will not recognize him.
He is growing a beard.
(v) We are off
today. We will write to you after we are back.
Solution 4
(i) The Great
Stone Face was a work of nature. It was formed on the perpendicular side of a
mountain by some immense rocks that had been thrown together so that when
viewed at a proper distance, they resembled the features of a human face. If
however the spectator approached too near, he lost the outline of the enormous
face and could see only a heap of gigantic rocks piled one upon the other.
(ii) Gazing at
the Great Stone Face, young Ernest wished that it could speak because it looked
so very kindly that he was convinced that its voice would be pleasant. He also
said that if he ever saw a man with such a face, he would love him very much.
Solution 5
The story that
was attributed to the Stone Face was that at some future day, a
child would be born near there, and he would be destined to become the
greatest and noblest person of his time. His face, in manhood, would bear an
exact resemblance to the Great Stone Face.
Solution 6
The people got
the idea that the prophecy was about to come true from a rumour that went
throughout the valley. The rumour was that the great man, who was to bear
a resemblance to the Great Stone Face, had appeared at last. Many years before,
a young man named Gathergold had left the valley and settled at a distant
seaport. He had set up as a shopkeeper and being sharp in business
matters, had become so rich that it would have taken him a hundred years only
to count his wealth. In time, he thought of his native valley, and
decided to go back there and end his days where he had been born. The people
believed that this was the prophesied man.
Solution 7
(i) No, Ernest
did not see in Gathergold the likeness of the Stone Face.
(ii) He confided
in the Great Stone Face. When everybody else believed that Gathergold
resembled the Stone Face, he turned
away from the wrinkled shrewdness of that
unpleasant face and gazed up the valley, where the Stone Face seemed to say
"He will come! Fear not, Ernest; the man will come!" He was proved
right when later Gathergold died and was buried. His wealth, which was
the body and spirit of his existence, had disappeared before his death.
Since the time he lost his gold, it had been generally agreed that
there was no likeness between him and
the majestic face upon the mountain.
Solution 8
(i) The people
believed that General Blood-and-Thunder was their man because he was another
son of the valley who had become a soldier many years before. After a great
deal of hard fighting, he became a famous commander. He had lately expressed a
desire to return to his native valley as he was old and tired. Preparations of
welcoming him were made. It was being said that at last, the likeness of the
Great Stone Face had actually appeared. When they saw him, they could see the
resemblance and were sure that he was the man as they believed he was the
greatest man of that or any other age beyond a doubt.
(ii) When Ernest
compared the man's face with the Stone Face, he concluded that there was no
resemblance. If there was such a likeness as the crowd proclaimed, then Ernest
could not recognise it.
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