Leela’s Friend -Important Short Questions with answers for Class XI -WBCHSE- Final Exam:

Here we are going to discuss some Most Important Descriptive Answers from The Eyes Have It by Ruskin BondThe Eyes Have It is the first short story in the syllabus of class 12 WBCHSE. Descriptive Question Answer from The Eyes Have It can help you to improve your score/marks in English subject. Our primary focus is to bring you 'to the point' Long Question Answer from The Eyes Have It in very simple English.





Topics we have covered in this article:

  • "Then I made a mistake..." - Who made this mistake? What mistake did the speaker make? Did the speaker really make a mistake? Give the reason for your answer?
  • The man who had entered the compartment, broke into my reverie" - Whose 'reverie' is mentioned here? Who is the man? What was the reverie about? How did it come to an end?.
  • Most Important Question Answer from "The Eyes Have It".

  3.     "Then I made a mistake..." - Who made this mistake? What mistake did the speaker make? Did the speaker really make a mistake? Give the reason for your answer?

Ans: - The author of the story “The Eyes Have It”, Ruskin Bond, made this mistake. 
The speaker’s mistake was his asking the girl companion about how like the outside was.
Though it apparently seemed that the speaker made a mistake, it was not actually a mistake.

When the speaker was confused if his words about hill-stations touched the blind girl or she thought him a romantic fool, he asked her about how like the outside was. At first, the speaker took it to be a mistake. But when the girl asked him to see it by himself, he became confirmed that it was not a mistake at all. It is because if the girl would have known for his question that he is blind, she would not have asked him to see it himself.  So, his mistake was not a mistake at all.



 4.     "The man who had entered the compartment, broke into my reverie" - Whose 'reverie' is mentioned here? Who is the man? What was the reverie about? How did it come to an end?

Ans: - The author, Ruskin Bond’s reverie is mentioned here.
The ‘man’, referred to here, is the second fellow companion of Ruskin Bond.
After the girl got off at Saharanpur, the author became disappointed and found his seat close to the window. He was looking at the outside and thought that guessing what went on outside would be a fascinating game. The author’s reverie was about this game. 

When the author was having a reverie or daydream after the girl left the compartment, a male passenger came and sat on that seat, occupied before by the blind girl. He said the author that he must have been disappointed with him as he was not as beautiful as the girl. Thus, with this statement, the man broke the author’s reverie.   






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