IF I WERE YOU
Extra Questions and
Notes
INTRODUCTION
This
play is the story of an intruder. He breaks into a lonely house. A man named
Gerrard lives there. He is a playwright. The intruder is a criminal. He has
killed a policeman and is now on the run. This man has some physical
resemblance to Gerrard. His plan is to kill Gerrard and live there under his
name. But Gerrard is smarter than the criminal. He tells the intruder that he
has also killed someone and the police are after him. He offers to take the
intruder in his car to safety. He opens a door and tells the intruder that it
goes to the garage. As’soon as the intruder enters, Gerard locks the door. In
fact it is not the way to a garage but the door of a cupboard. Then he phones
the police to come and arrest the intruder.
(यह नाटक एक घुसपैठिए की कहानी है
। यह एक सुनसान घर में घुसता हैं । यहाँ जिरार्ड नामक व्यक्ति रहता
है । वह एक नाटककार है । घुसपैठिया एक अपराधी है । उसने एक पुलिस वाले की
हत्या की थी और अब वह भाग रहा था । इस
व्यक्ति की जिरार्ड के साथ कुछ शारीरिक समानता है । उसकी योजना है कि वह जिरार्ड
को मार देगा और उसके नाम के साथ वहाँ पर रहेगा, लेकिन जिरार्ड अपराधी से भी
ज्यादा होशियार है । यह घुसपैठिए को बताता है कि उसने भी किसी का खून किया है और
पुलिस उसके पीछे है । वह घुसपैठिए को अपनी कार में सुरक्षित स्थान पर ले जाने का
प्रस्ताव रखता है । वह एक दरवाजा खोलता है और घुसपैठिए को बताता है कि यह रास्ता
गैराज की तरफ जाता है । जैसे ही घुसपैठिया प्रवेश करता है, जिरार्ड
दरवाजे का ताला लगा देता है । वास्तव में यह गैराज का रास्ता नहीं है, बल्कि एक
अलमारी का दरवाजा है । तब वह पुलिस को आने और घुसपैठिए को गिरफ्तार करने के लिए
फोन करता है । )
THEME
The
theme of the play emphasizes the significance of intelligence, the presence of
mind and a cool head in situations of crisis. Panic complicates matters but
cool temperament can help one wriggle out of the tight corners with ease.
Criminals, who mastermind most deceitful crimes, can also be outwitted because
they have a fear of getting detected and caught by the law. Hence, a tactful
planning and handling of a situation can trap even the so-called smart
criminals.
TITLE
“If I Were You” is a very appropriate title.
It refers to the wishful thinking of the intruder who wants to assume Gerrard’s
identity in order to escape the law. His idea of eluding the police by living
on a borrowed identity remains unfulfilled as he is trapped by Gerrard and
outwitted before he assumes his life. His dream to impersonate Gerrard is
quashed and the ‘If’ in “If I Were You” looms forever with no hope of becoming
a concrete reality. The title, therefore, hints at the basic idea of the story,
and is, therefore, very apt.
MESSAGE
The
play gives the message that over-confidence can lead to disastrous results. One
should never consider oneself to be smarter than the opponent as is done by the
intruder who thinks that Gerrard is no match for him. The play also conveys
that intelligence, the presence of mind, and cool-headedness can help us
overcome the gravest of problems that we may encounter.
CHARACTERS
Intruder
The
intruder is a villainous scoundrel, a confirmed criminal who makes intriguing
plans to dodge the police. He has evil intentions and crafty plans to achieve
his aims. Cold blooded and cruel as he is, he does not hesitate from murdering
innocent people for his selfish gains. But his wickedness cannot sustain him
for long.
The
intruder is a criminal who has been eluding the police ever since he killed a
cop. Having no sense of remorse for the crime he has committed, he is further
sinking in the mire of criminal activities. Over-confidence makes him feel that
he has made a brilliant plan of murdering Gerrard and escaping the law by
impersonating him. However, he is soon outwitted by Gerrard and he
unsuspectingly walks into the latter’s trap. All his tall claims about his
intelligence prove to be hollow. This heartless and hardened criminal meets a
befitting end.
Gerrard
Gerrard, the protagonist of “If I Were You” is
portrayed as a man of many virtues. He is endowed with a brilliant wit, a sharp
mind, smart thinking, and a sense of humour. All these qualities, combined with
a cool temperament enable him to handle even a life-threatening situation very
successfully and easily.
Gerrard is associated with the theatre. He
writes, acts and provides props for plays. He is a refined and a cultured man,
who keeps his cool even in the most difficult situations. The sight of an
intruder doesn’t ruffle him and he talks to him very courteously and
pleasantly. His sense of humour irritates the intruder many times. Even when
acting funny, he keeps his presence of mind and lays a trap for the intruder.
Everything comes so naturally and spontaneously to him that the intruder walks
into his trap unsuspectingly. Gerrard’s intelligence not only outwits the
intruder and saves his own life, but also helps the police in nabbing a wanted
criminal. In fact, Gerrard, with his unagitated, composed mind stands as a foil
to the cruel and villainous intruder
HUMOUR
Though
the play deals with a criminal and a playwright caught unaware by him, there is
a thread of humour in the very texture of the play. The humour is neither
boisterous nor unnatural. It is refined and subtle. Gerrard’s cool-headedness
and presence of mind make him come out with such witty and sarcastic remarks
that the criminal feels irritated and the audience feels amused. When the
intruder asks him to talk about himself, rather than panicking, he says he is
happy to have a sympathetic audience. When the intruder proposes to live in his
cottage, Gerrard, rather than being shocked, says, You have not been invited”.
Talking about the intruder’s looks, Gerrard remarks, “You are not particularly
decorative”. Such humour runs throughout the play and makes it a gripping and
amusing drama.
Summary:
The
play starts in the house of Gerrard. He is a playwright. We find that Gerrard
is talking to someone on the telephone. He is going somewhere. So after the
talk is over, he starts packing a travelling bag. Suddenly a man enters
silently from the right. He is similar to Gerrard in appearance. He has a
revolver in his hand. This intruder is a criminal. He orders Gerrard to put up
his hands. Gerrard obeys him but is not afraid. He talks pleasantly to the
intruder. The intruder warns to stop being smart and answers his questions.
Gerrard says he cannot feel comfortable while his hands are up. The intruder asks
him to sit in a chair.
From
their conversation, we come to know about the intruder and also Gerrard. We
come to know that Gerrard’s full name is Vincent Charles Gerrard. He lives
there alone. He has a car also. He is a sort of mystery man. Sometimes he is
here and the very next day he is nowhere to be seen. He gives his orders on
phone and never meets tradesmen.
Then
the intruder tells Gerrard about himself. He is a criminal. He specialises in a
jewel robbery. He has killed a policeman. Now the police are after him. lie
knows that he bears a resemblance to Gerrard. Then he tells his plan to
Gerrard. He has decided to kill Gerrard and live there under the identity of
Gerrard. From the intruder’s way of talking, Gerrard guesses that he is a
foolish, boastful man. It would not be difficult to get rid of this man.
Gerrard
makes up a story. He says that he is also a criminal and a murderer. The police
are also in search Of him. That is why he lives in a mysterious way. He often
disappears from there. He tells the intruder that it would be a folly to kill
him. He killed him, he would be hanged, if not as himself, then as Gerrard. The
intruder begins to think. This is an opportunity for Gerrard. He offers to take
the intruder to a safe place in his car. He asks him to hurry up as the police
may come there any time. The intruder is taken in. Gerrard opens a door and
asks the intruder to enter it. He tells him that the door goes to the garage
and they will escape in his car. Just the intruder turns his head to step in,
Gerrard pushes him and knocks the revolver out of his hand. Then he shuts the
door and locks it. In fact, the door does not lead to any garage. It is the
door of his cupboard. The intruder shouts from inside to let him out. But
Gerrard picks up the phone and tells the police to come. In this way, Gerrard
saves his life by a clever trick.
SUMMARY IN HINDI
नाटक जिरार्ड के घर में शुरु होता है । वह एक
नाटककार है । हम देखते हैं कि जिरार्ड किसी से फोन पर बात कर रहा है । वह कहीं
बाहर जा रहा है । इसलिए बात खत्म करने के बाद वह अपना यात्रा का बैग तैयार करना
शुरु कर देता है । अचानक एक व्यक्ति चुपके से दाईं और से प्रवेश करता है । वह
देखने में जिरार्ड जैसा है । उसके हाथ में बंदूक है । यह घुसपैठिया एक अपराधी है ।
वह जिरार्ड को अपने हाथ ऊपर करने के लिए कहता है । जिरार्ड उसका कहना मानता है, लेकिन वह
डरा हुआ नहीं है । वह घुसपैठिए से बहुत अच्छी तरह से बात करता है । घुसपैठिया उसे
धमकी देता है कि वह अपने-आपको चालाक समझना बंद करे और उसके सवालों का जवाब दे ।
जिरार्ड कहता है जब तक उसके हाथ ऊपर हैं तब तक यह अपने-आपको आरामदायक महसूस नहीं
कर सकता । घुसपैठिया उसे कुर्सी पर बैठने के लिए कहता है ।
उनकी वार्तालाप से हमें घुसपैठिए और जिरार्ड
के भी बारे में पता चलता है । हमें पता चलता है कि जिरार्ड का पूरा नाम विंसंट
चार्ल्स जिरार्ड है। वह वहाँ पर अकेला रहता है । उसके पास एक कार भी है । वह एक
किस्म का रहस्यमयी व्यक्ति है । कई बार वह यहीं होता है और अगले ही दिन वह कहीं भी
दिखाई नहीं देता है । वह अपने आदेश फोन पर देता है और कभी भी किसी व्यापारी से
नहीं मिलता है ।
तब घुसपैठिया जिरार्ड को अपने बारे में बताता
है । वह एक अपराधी है । वह गहने लूटने में माहिर है । उसने एक पुलिस वाले का खून
किया था । अब पुलिस उसके पीछे है । वह जानता है कि उसकी जिरार्ड से शक्ल मिलती है
। तब वह जिरार्ड को अपनी योजना बताता है । उसने जिरार्ड को मारने और जिरार्ड की
पहचान के साथ वहाँ रहने का फैसला किया था । घुसपैठिए के बात करने के तरीके जिरार्ड
ने अनुमान लगाया कि यह बेवकूफ और र्डीगें मारने वाता व्यक्ति है । इस व्यक्ति से
छुटकारा पाना मुश्किल नहीं होगा ।
जिरार्ड एक कहानी बनाता है । वह कहता है कि
वह भी एक अपराधी और एक खूनी है । पुलिस वाले उसकी भी तलाश कर रहे हैं । यही कारण
है कि वह रहस्यमयी ढंग से रहता है । वह अकसर वहाँ से गायब हो जाता है । वह
घुसपैठिए को कहता है कि उसको मारना बेवकूफी होगी । यह उसको मारेगा तो उसे फाँसी हो
जाएगी, अगर उसे
अपने नाम से नहीं तो जिरार्ड के रुप में हो जाएगी । घुसपैठिया सोचने लगता है ।
जिरार्ड के लिए यह एक मौका है । वह घुसपैठिए को अपनी कार में सुरक्षित जगह ले जाने
का प्रस्ताव रखता है । वह उसे जल्दी करने के लिए कहता है, क्योंकि
पुलिस किसी भी समय यहाँ जा सकती है । घुसपैठिया उसकी बातों में जा जाता है ।
जिरार्ड एक दरवाजा खोलता है और घुसपैठिए को उसमें प्रवेश करने के लिए कहता है । वह
उसे बताता है कि यह दरवाजा गैराज की ओर जाता है और वे उसकी कार से भाग जाएँगे
। जैसे ही घुसपैठिया अंदर कदम रखने के लिए
अपना सिर घुमाता है तभी जिरार्ड उसे धक्का
देता है और उसके हाथ से बंदूक छीन लेता है । तब वह दरवाजा बंद करता है और उसे ताला
लगा देता है । वास्तव में दरवाजा किसी गैराज की तरफ नहीं जाता है । यह एक अलमारी
का दरवाजा है । घुसपैठिया उसे बाहर निकालने के लिए अंदर से चिल्लाता है । लेकिन
जिरार्ड फोन उठाता है और पुलिस को यहाँ जाने के लिए कहता है । इस प्रकार जिरार्ड
एक चालाक चाल से अपना जीवन बचाता है ।
EXTRACTS FOR COMPREHENSION
(I)
I’m
glad you’re pleased to see me. I don’t think you’ll be pleased for long. Put
those paws up!
1.
Who is speaking these lines and to whom? Where is the conversation taking
place?
to
The intruder is speaking to Gerrard. The conversation is taking ill place in
Gerrard’s lonely cottage situated in the wilds of Essex.
2.
Why is the speaker’ so sure that ‘his listener’ won’t be pleased for long?
The
speaker is sure that his listener’s (Gerrard’s) pleasure is going to disappear
into thin air the moment he hears about the speaker’s wicked plan to kill and
later on impersonate him to dodge the law.
3.
What does ‘paws’ mean here?
‘Paws’
here stands for ‘hands’.
4.
Why is the speaker asking the listener ‘to put those paws up’?
The
intruder asks Gerrard to put his ‘paws up’ to threaten and intimidate him. He
wants to ensure that Gerrard is not able to use his hands for self- defence.
(II)
Thanks
a lot. You’ll soon stop being smart. I’ll make you crawl. I want to know a few
things, see.
1.
Who is the speaker? Why is he thanking the listener?
The
intruder is the speaker here. He is thanking the listener, Gerrard, as the
latter had helped in while he was fumbling for a word and Gerrard had suggested
the word ‘nonchalant’.
2.
Why does the speaker think that the listener is trying to be smart?
The
intruder feels that Gerrard is trying to be smart because instead of displaying
any signs of fear, he helps the intruder complete his sentence when the former
fails to find the right word -nonchalant’.
3.
Why does the speaker expect the listener to soon stop being smart?
The
speaker feels that Gerrard will be frightened out of his wits the moment he
discloses his intention of killing him and will then forget all the witty
retorts that he had been making till then.
4.
What does the speaker mean by ‘I’ll make you crawl’?
The
speaker means that he would bring the listener down on his knees and make him
beg for mercy.
(III)
“At
last a sympathetic audience!” (Textual)
1.
Who speaks these words?
Gerrard,
the protagonist of the play, speaks these words.
2.
Why does he say it?
He
says it because he wants to pretend that he does not feel threatened by the
intruder’s presence. Actually, at a later stage, he intends to fool the
intruder into believing that the former too is a criminal like him and is quite
suave at such hostage games.
3.
Is he sarcastic or serious?
He
is certainly sarcastic because he knows that the intruder did not want to know
about him out of sympathy. Rather, he wanted to gather information only to
misuse it.
(IV)
I’m sorry. I thought you were telling me, not
asking me. A question of inflexion; your voice is unfamiliar.
1. Who is the speaker and who does he speak
to?
The speaker is Gerrard. He is speaking to the
intruder.
2.
What had the listener asked the speaker?
The
listener had asked the speaker if he lived in the cottage all by himself.
3.
What do these lines tell us about the speaker?
These
lines show that the speaker is a very cool-headed man who can think of many
ways to elude a question. His presence of mind and smartness are unparalleled.
4.
What does ‘inflexion’ mean here? What logic does the speaker give for
misinterpreting the inflexion of his voice?
‘Inflection’
here means ‘a tone of voice’. Gerrard says that since the intruder’s voice was
unfamiliar, he couldn’t know whether he was asking a question or telling
something.
(V)
That’s a lie. You’re not dealing with a fool.
I’m as smart as you and smarter, and I know you run a car. Better be careful,
wise guy!
1.
Who is the speaker? Which ‘He’ is he talking about?
The
intruder is the speaker here. He is talking about the ‘lie’ that Gerrard told
him about not running a car.
2.
Why did the speaker think he was smarter than the listener?
The
intruder considered himself smarter because he thought that he had made a very
clever plan to kill Gerrard and impersonate him to elude the police. Apart from
it, he had gathered all the information about Gerrard before coming to his
cottage.
3.
Why did he warn the listener to be careful?
The
intruder wanted to make it clear that Gerrard could not befool him by telling a
lie because the intruder had already gathered information about him. So, he
told Gerrard to be careful.
4.
What does the extract reveal about the intruder?
The
extract reveals that the intruder is over-confident about his abilities as a
criminal and over-estimates his potential to escape the law.
(VI)
I
could tell you plenty. You think you’re smart, but I’m the top of the class
around here. I’ve got brains and I use them. That’s how I’ve got where I have.
1.
Who speaks these words to whom and in what context?
These
words are spoken by the intruder to Gerrard. He utters these words when Gerrard
asks him to tell him something about himself.
2.
Why does the speaker say “I could tell you plenty”?
The
intruder says so because he is over-confident and thinks that he is smart
enough to execute his plan successfully. There is a ring of pride in his words
and his ego makes him over-estimate himself.
3.
What does he mean by ‘the top of the class around here’?
The
intruder means to say that no one else is as smart as he is. Gerrard, too, is
no match for him.
4.
How does the speaker use his brains? Where has he got to by using his brains?
The
speaker uses his brains by planning and committing crimes without getting
caught by the police. He had now got to a point where he intends to kill
Gerrard and assume his identity to escape the law further.
(VII)
I’m not taking it for fun. I’ve been hunted
long enough. I’m wanted for murder already, and they can’t hang me twice.
1.
Who is the speaker? What is ‘it’ that he claims he is not taking for fun?
The
speaker is the intruder. ‘It’ is the grave step to kill Gerrard that the
intruder claims not to be taking for fun. It is his dire need to avoid being
chased by the police.
2.
Why has the speaker been hunted long enough?
The
speaker has been hunted long enough because he had killed a cop when something
went wrong with the job that he did in the town. It has been quite a while
since then and he is still dodging the police.
3.
Explain: ‘they can’t hang me twice.’
The
intruder has already murdered a cop for which he is sure to get a death
sentence. Now, if he commits another murder, he will not be sentenced more than
once because a person can be put to death only once.
4.
What light do these lines reflect on the speaker’s state of mind?
The
lines reveal that the intruder does not have any conscience to prick him. He
weighs the crime done by him not by its wickedness but by the punishment that
he will be awarded by the court of justice.
(VIII)
I’ve
got the freedom to gain. As for myself, I’m a poor hunted rat. As Vincent
Charles Gerrard I’m free to go places and do things. I can eat well and sleep
and without having to be ready to beat it at the sight of a cop.
1.
Why does the intruder call himself ‘a poor hunted rat’?
The
intruder is being chased by the police for having killed a cop. The
apprehension of being arrested by the police keeps him on the run and he feels
that his condition is as miserable as that of a rat being chased.
2.
Why is he longing for freedom?
The
intruder’s criminal acts have made his life a miserable dodging game. He has to
be on the run always and he can neither sleep nor eat well. Therefore, he is
longing for freedom.
3.
Why does he have to run at the sight of a cop?
Having
killed a cop, the intruder lives in constant fear of being nabbed by the
police. So, he has to run at the sight of a cop in order to avoid being caught.
4.
What will he gain as Vincent Charles Gerrard?
By
impersonating himself as Vincent Charles Gerrard, the intruder will be able to
dodge the police. This way he will be able to live in peace and without any
fear of the cops.
(IX)
This
is your big surprise. I said you wouldn’t kill me and I was right. Why do you
think I am here today and gone tomorrow, never see tradespeople?
1.
Who speaks these lines and to whom?
Gerrard
speaks these lines to the intruder.
2.
What was the big surprise given by the speaker?
Gerrard
told that he too lived under the threat of being arrested as he too was
involved in crime. The intruder was naturally surprised at this revelation
since he was unaware of this aspect of his victim.
3.
What was the speaker right about? Why was he right?
Gerrard,
the speaker here, was right about the statement that he had made earlier that
the intruder wouldn’t kill him. He was right because the intruder intended to
kill an ordinary person and impersonate him to evade the police. But Gerrard
turned out to be a criminal like him. So killing and impersonating a criminal
would not serve the intruder’s purpose.
4.
What impression did the speaker wish to give the listener by claiming to have
an irregular schedule?
The
speaker wished the listener to believe that his irregular schedule was a
deliberate move to dodge the police so that he could evade arrest for the
crimes that he claimed to have committed.
(X)
“I
said it with bullets and got away”. (Textual, Modified)
1.
Who says this?
Gerrard, the protagonist of the play “If I
Were You”, says this
2.
What does it mean?
Gerrard,
by these words, means that he committed a murder with a gun.
3.
Is it the truth? What is the speaker’s reason for saying this?
No, it is not the truth. The speaker has
concocted a story to befool the intruder. He shows himself to be a murderer
wanted by police so that the intruder should give up his plan of killing him
and taking up his identity.
IMPORTANT PASSAGES FOR
COMPREHENSION
PASSAGE
1
Gerrard:
Nonchalant’ is your word, I think.
Intruder:
Thanks a lot. You’ll soon stop being smart. I’ll make you crawl. I want to know
a few things, see.
Gerrard:
Anything you like. I know all the answers. But before we begin I should like to
change my position; you may be comfortable, but I am not.
Intruder:
Sit down there, and no funny business. (Motions to a chair, and seats himself
on the divan by the bag.) Now then, we’ll have a nice little talk about
yourself!
Gerrard:
At last a sympathetic audience! I’ll tell you the story of my life. How as a
child I was stolen by the gipsies, and why at the age of thirty-two, I find
myself in my lonely Essex cottage, how…
Questions
:
(i) What threat does the intruder give to
Gerrard?
(ii) Why was Gerrard in an uncomfortable position?
(iii) Did Gerrard give correct answers to the
intruder?
(iv) Was the intruder really a sympathetic audience?
(v) Find a word in the passage which means
‘humorous’.
Answers
:
(i) The intruder threatened that he would make
Gerrard crawl.
(ii) He was standing with his hands up.
(iii)
No, he gave him the wrong answers.
(iv)
No, he was not really a sympathetic audience.
(v) Funny.
PASSAGE
2
Intruder:
Keep it to yourself, and just answer my questions. You live here alone? Well,
do you?
Gerrard:
I’m sorry. I thought you were telling me, not asking me. A question of
inflexion; your voice is unfamiliar.
Intruder :
(with emphasis) Do you live here alone?
Gerrard:
And ill don’t answer?
Intruder:
You’ve got enough sense not to want to get hurt.
Gerrard:
I think the good sense is shown more in the ability to avoid pain than in the
mere desire to do so. What do you think? Mr—er—
Intruder:
Never mind my name. I like yours better, Mr Gerrard. What are your Christian
names?
Gerard:
Vincent Charles.
Questions
:
(i) From which chapter have these lines been
taken?
(ii) Why was the intruder’s voice unfamiliar to
Gerard?
(iii) What did the intruder want Gerrard to keep
to himself?
(iv) What was Gerrard’s full name?
(v) Find a word in the passage which means
‘stress’.
Answers
:
(i)
These lines have been taken from the play ‘If I Were You’.
(ii) His voice was unfamiliar to Gerrard as he
had never met him before.
(iii) He wanted Gerrard to keep his life history
to himself.
(iv) His full name was Vincent Charles Gerrard.
(v)
Emphasis.
PASSAGE
3
Intruder:
Do you run a car?
Gerard:
No.
Intruder:
That’s a lie. You’re not dealing with a fool. I’m as smart as you and smarter,
and I know you run a car. Better be careful,
wise guy!
Gerard:
Are you American, or is that merely a clever imitation?
Intruder:
Listen, this gun’s no toy. I can hurl you without killing you, and still get my
answers.
Gerard: Of course, if you put it like that,
I’ll be glad to assist you. I do possess a car, and it’s in the garage around
the corner.
Intruder:
That’s better. Do people often come out here?
Gerard:
Very rarely. Surprisingly few people take the trouble to visit me. There are
the baker and the greengrocer, of course; and then there’s the milkman — quite
charming, but no one so interesting as yourself.
Questions :
(i)
Does Gerrard possess a car?
(ii) Why did the intruder want to hurt, not kill
Gerard?
(iii) Where is Gerrard’s car?
(iv) Why did the intruder want to know if people
came to visit Gerrard or not?
(v)
Find a word from the passage which means ‘copy’.
Answers
:
(i) Yes, he possesses a car.
(ii)
He wants to hurt him and get answers to his questions, before killing him.
(iii)
It is in the garage around the corner.
(iv) He wanted to lead a solitary life.
(v) Imitation.
PASSAGE 4
Intruder: My speciality’s jewel robbery. Your
car will do me a treat. It’s certainly a dandy bus.
Gerard:
I’m afraid jewels are few and far between in the wilds of Essex.
Intruder:
So are the cops. I can retire here nicely for a little while.
Gerard:
You mean to live with me? A trifle sudden isn’t it; you’ve not been invited.
Intruder: You won’t be here long; so I didn’t
trouble to ask.
Gerard: What do you mean?
Intruder: This is your big surprise. I’m going
to kill you.
Gerard: A little harsh, isn’t it?
Intruder
: (with heavy sarcasm) Yeah.
I’ll be sorry to do it. I’ve taken a fancy to you, but it’s just got to be
done. Why
add murder to your other crimes? It’s a grave step you’re taking.
Questions
:
(i) What is the name of the chapter from which
these lines have been taken?
(ii)
Why does the intruder think that he can live at Gerrard’s house for some time?
(iii)
What is a big surprise for Gerrard, according to the intruder?
(iv)
Why does Gerrard call the intruder’s step ‘grave’?
(v) Find a word from the passage which means
‘serious’.
Answers
:
(i) These lines have been taken from the play ‘If
I Were You’
(ii) He thinks so because that area is lonely and
police do not often come there.
(iii)
He tells Gerard that he is going to kill him.
(iv) He tells him that murder is a serious crime.
(v) Grave.
PASSAGE 5
Intruder:
I’ve got the freedom to gain. As for myself, I’m a poor hunted rat. As Vincent
Charles Gerrard I’m free to go places and do nothing. I can eat well and sleep
and without having to be ready to beat it at the sight of a cop.
Gerrard:
In most melodramas, the villain is foolish enough to delay his killing long
enough to be frustrated. You are much luckier.
Intruder:
I’m O.K. I’ve got a reason for everything. I’m going to be Vincent Charles
Gerrard, see. I’ve got to know what he talks like. Now I know. That posh stuff
comes easy. This is Mr V.C. Gerrard speaking.
(Pantomime of phoning, in imitation cultured voice.) And that’s not all.
(He stands up.) Get up a minute
(Gerrard
stands.) Now take a look at me.
Questions
(i) What will the intruder gain as Gerrard?
(ii) How does the intruder describe himself?
(iii) How is the villain in most melodramas?
(iv) Why does the intruder imitate Gerard’s
voice?
(v) Find a word in the passage which means
‘sensational play’.
Answers
:
(i) The intruder will gain freedom.
(ii) He describes himself as a poor hunted rat.
(iii)
The villain in most melodramas is foolish.
(iv)
He imitates Gerrard’s voice to show that he can talk like him.
(v) Melodrama.
PASSAGE 6
Gerrard:
You’re not particularly decorative.
Intruder:
No! Well, that goes for you, too. I’ve only got to wear specs and I’ll be
enough like you to get away with it.
Gerard:
What about your clothes? They’ll let you down if you’re not careful.
Intruder:
That’ll be all right. Yours will fit me fine.
Gerrard: That is extremely interesting, but
you seem to miss the point of my remark. I said you were luckier than most
melodramatic villains. It was not a tribute to your intelligence. You won’t
kill me for a very good reason.
Intruder:
So that’s what you think.
Questions :
(i)
What does Gerrard mean when he says that the intruder is not decorative?
(ii) Name the chapter from which these lines have
been taken.
(iii) What has the intruder to do to look like
Gerrard?
(iv) What does the intruder say about clothes?
(v) Find a word in the passage which means ‘a bad
character’.
Answers :
(i) He means to say that the intruder’s
personality is not attractive.
(ii) These lines have been taken from the play ‘If
I Were You’.
(iii) He thinks that he has only to wear spectacles
to look like Gerrard.
(iv) He says that Gerrard’s clothes will fit him.
(v) Villain.
PASSAGE
7
Gerard:
Apparently you haven’t the intelligence to ask why I am invested in this cloak
of mystery.
Intruder :
(preparing to shoot) As I said before, this conversation bores me.
Gerard:
Don’t’ be a fool. If you shoot, you’ll hang for sure. If not as yourself, then
as Vincent Charles Gerrard.
Intruder:
What is this?
Gerard:
This is your big surprise. I said you wouldn’t kill me and I was right. Why do
you think I am here today and gone tomorrow, never see tradespeople? You say my
habits would suit you. You are a crook. Do you think I am a Sunday-school
teacher?
Questions
:
(i) What is the name of the chapter from which
these lines have been taken?
(ii) What has the intruder not asked Gerard?
(iii)
What would happen, according to Gerrard, if the intruder killed him?
(iv)
Why, according to him, has Gerrard, behaves in a mysterious way?
(v) Find a word in the passage which means the
same as ‘a criminal’.
Answers
:
(i)
These lines have been taken from the play ‘If I Were You’.
(ii) The intruder has not asked Gerrard why he
lives in mystery.
(iii) He would be hanged, if not as himself, then
as Gerrard.
(iv)
He behaves in a mysterious way to escape the police.
(v) A crook.
Passage-8
Gerard:
For God’s sake clear that muddled head of yours and let’s go. Come with me in
the car. I can use you. If you find it’s a frame, you’ve got me in the car, and
you’ve still got your gun.
Intruder:
Maybe you’re right.
Gerard:
Then don’t waste time. (Goes and picks up but and bag.)
Intruder:
Careful, boss, I’m watching you.
Gerard: I have got a man posted on the main
road. He’ll ring up if he sees the police, but I don’t want to leave
………(telephone bell rings) Come on! They’re after us. Through here straight to the garage.
Intruder:
How do I know that you are telling the truth?
Gerard:
Oh, don’t be a fool. Look for yourself.
Questions
:
(i)
Name the chapter this passage has been taken from.
(ii)
What could be the ‘frame’, according to Gerard?
(iii)
Why, according to Gerrard, he has posted a man on the main road?
(iv)
Why do they plan to go straight from the room?
(v) Find a word in the passage which means ‘confused’.
Answers
:
(i) This passage has been taken from the play
‘If I Were You’.
(ii) He could deceive the intruder in order to
save himself.
(iii)
He has posted a man on the main road to inform him about the police.
(iv) They plan to go to the garage straight from
the room.
(v) Muddled.
PASSAGES FOR PRACTICE
PASSAGE
9
Intruder:
I could tell you plenty. You think you’re smart, but I’m the top of the class
around here. I’ve got brains and I use them. That’s how I’ve got where I have.
Gerard:
And where precisely have you got? It didn’t require a great brain to break into
my little cottage.
Intruder:
When you know why I’ve broken into your little cottage, you’ll be surprised,
and it won’t be a pleasant surprise.
Gerrard: With you figuring so largely in it,
that is understandable. By the way, what particular line of crime do you
embrace, or aren’t you a specialist?
Questions
:
(i)
What could the intruder tell Gerrard in plenty?
(ii) Why has the intruder broken into Gerrard’s
cottage?
(iii)
What does the intruder think about himself?
(iv)
Use ‘precisely’ in a sentence of your own.
(v) Find a word in the passage which means as
‘expert’.
PASSAGE
10
Gerard:
Your idea is to elude the police by killing me and taking on my identity?
Intruder:
Yes, I like the idea.
Gerard:
But are you sure it’s going to help you?
Intruder:
Now listen here. I’ve got this all planned. I did a job in town. Things went
wrong and I killed a cop. Since then I’ve done nothing but the dodge.
Gerard:
And this is where dodging has brought you?
Intruder:
It brought me to Aylesbury. That’s where I saw you in the car. Two other people
saw you and started to talk. I listened. It looks like you’re a bit queer kind
of mystery man.
Questions
:
(i) Name the play and its author.
(ii) What is the intruder’s idea?
(iii) Whom did the intruder kill in the town?
(iv) Where did the intnider see Gerrard?
(v)
Find a word in the passage which means the same as ‘strange’
Very Short Answer Type
Important Questions
1.
Who enters Gerrard’s cottage?
Ans. An intruder enters Gerrard’s cottage.
2.
Why did the intruder enter Gerrard’s cottage?
Ans. He wanted to kill Gerrard and disguise
himself as Gerrard.
3.
How did Gerrard react to find the intruder in his room?
Ans. He was cool and calm to see the
intruder.
4.
What did Gerrard tell the intruder about his childhood?
Ans. Gerrard told the intruder that in
childhood he was stolen by the gipsies.
5.
What was Gerrard’s Christian name?
Ans. His Christian name was Vincent Charles.
6.
What did the intruder tell Gerrard about his speciality?
Ans. ‘Hie intrudes told Gerrard that his
speciality was jewel robbery. ‘
7.
What did the intruder want to know of Gerrard?
Ans. lie wanted to know of Gerrard, how he
talked and how he met people.
8.
Why did the intruder want to hurt but not to kill Gerrard?
Ans. He wanted to hurt him and get an answer
to his questions before killing him.
9.
What is Gerrard’s profession?
Ans. Gerrard is a playwright.
10.
What crime had the intruder committed?
Ans. ‘the intruder had killed a policeman.
11.
Where did Gerrard imprison the intruder?
Ans. Gerrard imprisoned the intruder in the
cupboard.
SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS
1.
Describe Gerrard’s appearance.
Ans:-
Gerrard is a man of medium height and wears horn-rimmed glasses. When the play
opens, he is dressed in a lounge suit and a great coat. He talks in a cultured
voice and his demeanour is confident.
2.
What did Gerrard tell the intruder about himself? Was he telling the truth?
Why/Why not?
Ans:-
Gerrard told the intruder that as a child, he was stolen by the gipsies and now
in his thirties, he was all alone in life. He was not telling the truth; he was
just being funny as he wished to make it clear that he was not afraid of a
gun-toting criminal. In fact, Gerrard
had already started concocting stories about himself.
3.
What sort of information does the intruder want from Gerrard?
Ans:-
The intruder wants personal details from Gerrard like whether in the lives
alone, what his Christian name is, whether he has a car and whether people
visit him. All this information is necessary for the execution of his plan to
dodge the police by disguising it himself as Gerrard.
4.
What made Gerrard ask the intruder, Are you an American”?
Ans:-
Gerrard asked the intruder if he were an American as he had called him a ‘wise
guy’. The guy is colloquial American expression for a man. Hence, the usage of
this word by the intruder made Gerrard ask him this question.
5.
What sort of a person is the intruder? Give examples to illustrate.
Ans:-
The intruder is a dangerous person as he is carrying a pistol and claims to
have killed a cop. He is mean, heartless and crafty, for he plans to kill
Gerrard and assume his identity in order to escape the police. He is
over-confident because he claims that Gerrard is no match for him. He is also
boastful, uncouth and uncultured so as is evident from a remark he makes, ‘Put
up your paws’.
6.
The intruder announced, “I’m going to kill you”. Was Gerrard in nervous? How
would you describe Gerrard’s reactions?
Ans:-
Confident of his presence of mind, Gerrard remained unruffled of on being
threatened by the intruder. He remained so calm and too nonchalant that the
intruder was irritated. His sense of humour also enraged the intruder. Thus,
Gerrard reacted in a calm and composed way.
7.
Why does the intruder intend to kill Gerrard?
Ans:-
The intruder is a criminal who is being chased by the police for having
murdered a cop. As per his plan, the intruder intends to kill Gerrard in order
to take on his identity and avoid being caught by the police. In this way, he
can lead a peaceful life without being haunted by the fear of arrest and
punishment.
8.
Who was the intruder in Gerrard’s house? Why did he break into his house?
Ans:-
The intruder, who broke into Gerrard’s house, was a criminal. He had murdered a
cop and was being chased by the police. He intruded into Gerrard’s house with
the intention to murder him and impersonate his identity to evade the police.
9.
How did Gerrard behave on seeing a gun-toting stranger in his cottage?
Ans:-
Gerrard kept his cool and remained absolutely unruffled when he saw the
gun-totting stranger in his cottage. There was neither any panic nor any ring
of tension in his voice. He remained his normal self and talked to him
casually.
10.
Why does the intruder not kill Gerrard immediately?
Ans:-
The intruder does not kill Gerrard immediately because he first wants to get all
the necessary information from him. Without this information, his plan to
disguise and act as Gerrard will not succeed.
11.
Where did Gerrard live? Why was it a suitable place for the intruder’s plan?
Ans:-
Gerrard lived in a lonely cottage in a secluded place in the wilds of Essex.
With hardly any population around, it was easy for one to commit a crime
without getting detected. In addition, the place was visited by only a few
people. Therefore, it was suitable for the intruder to carry out his plan
successfully over here.
12.
Why does the intruder call himself ‘a poor hunted rat’?
Ans:-
The intruder describes himself as ‘a poor hunted rat’ because he is being
chased by the police and he has to keep dodging them. He has killed a cop and
is trying to escape punishment by hiding like a rat being chased by a cat.
13.
Why did the intruder choose Gerrard as the man whose identity he wanted to take
on?
Ans:-
The intruder picked Gerrard because both of them were of the same physical
structure. Moreover, as Gerrard lived alone, did not meet any people, and had
irregular hours and habits, he thought it would be easy to kill him and assume
his identity, and this way lead a life of peace. He will be away from the reach
of the law.
14.
Why has the criminal been called an intruder all through the play?
Ans:-
An intruder is a person who forces his way uninvited and unwelcomed like a
criminal. He is called an intruder throughout the play as after forcing his way
into Gerrard’s cottage, he is trying to grab Gerrard’s identity as well.
Moreover, he refuses to tell Gerrard anything about himself, even his name.
15. Bring out the contrast between Gerrard and
the intruder.
Ans:- Coarse, crude, boastful and an irritable
egoist, the intruder is overconfident and thinks that he is the smartest one
around. Gerrard, on the other hand, is pleasant, cool-headed, refined, lively
and very intelligent, but a modest and humble person. Although Gerrard does not
brag, he proves to be much smarter and more intelligent than the intruder.
16.
Why did very few people come to Gerrard’s house? Who were the few people who
visited him?
Ans:-
Gerrard lived all alone in a secluded place and his theatrical performances
made his schedule irregular. He was hardly at home, so very few people came to
his house. He was visited only by his regular suppliers like the baker, the
greengrocer and the milkman.
17.”They
cannot hang me twice.” Who says this and why? (Textual)
Ans:-
The intruder says this because he is already wanted for having murdered a cop.
If he manages to kill Gerrard, as per his plan, the punishment for this murder
too, like the first one, will be a death sentence. Hence, he cannot be hanged
twice by the police.
18.”A
mystery I propose to explain.” What is the mystery the speaker proposes to
explain? (Textual)
Ans:-
Gerrard, the speaker, proposes to explain the mystery about his queer life in
which he has an irregular routine, refuses to see tradesmen, goes away and
comes back to the house hurriedly. Gerrard has already concocted a story
attributing his strange behaviour to his being a criminal wanted in many cases
of crime.
19.”This
is your big surprise”. Who says these words in the play? When and where? What
is the surprise? (Textual)
Ans:-
This has been said by Gerrard when the intruder asks him to clarify how he
could still be killed after assuming Vincent Charles Gerrard’s identity. This
is a surprise for the intruder who never suspected Gerrard to be a criminal.
According to his information, Gerrard seemed to be the perfect person who could
be easily eliminated and then impersonated.
20.
Why and how did Gerrard persuade the intruder to get into the cupboard?
Ans:-
Gerrard concocted a story about his own criminal background. He gave the
intruder the impression that the police were looking for him and he expected a
telephone call from a friend informing the police’s arrival. So when the
telephone rang, he hurried the intruder into the cupboard and told him that it
was connected to the garage which was an escape route.
21.
How does Gerrard propose to use the intruder’s episode?
Ans:-
Being a man of the theatre, Gerrard is amused at being able to turn the tables
on the intruder. He finds the episode of outwitting a criminal by a clever but
an innocent man so interesting that he proposes to use it as a plot for his
next play.
22.
Gerrard describes this encounter with the intruder as an amusing spot of
bother’? What light does this attitude reflect on Gerrard?
Ans:-
Any other person in Gerrard’s place would have been paralysed with fear under
such circumstances. But Gerrard finds it an amusing spot of bother’ as his
nonchalant (calm and casual) approach makes him handle the situation
comfortably and outwit the intruder with ease.
23. What is Gerrard’s profession? Quote the
parts of the play that (Textual)
Ans:-
support your answer. Gerrard is associated with theatre as a writer, producer
and director. He also supplies props and makeup materials to other theatre
agencies. The following facts reveal his profession clearly.
He
tells the intruder that his actions are ‘melodramatic’ but not ‘very original’.
He
welcomes the intruder as a ‘sympathetic audience’.
He
comments on the intruder’s ‘inflexion of voice’.
He
tells someone over the phone that he cannot deliver the props in time.
He
also tells that person that he had ‘an amusing spot of bother’ which he might
put into his next play.
24.
Why was Gerrard’s schedule so irregular?
Ans:-
Having a theatrical background, Gerrard devoted time to writing, producing and
directing the plays. He also supplied other theatrical companies with props and
make-up items. Therefore, his schedule was irregular as it had to suit the
requirements at the theatres.
25.
Gerrard said, ‘You have been so modest’. Was Gerrard being ironical or
truthful?
Ans:-
Gerrard’s remark ‘you have been so modest’ was ironical. The intruder had been
boasting of his intelligence and smartness. Hence, Gerrard taunted him about
his modesty and asked him to say something about himself.
26.
Why did the intruder enter Gerrard’s cottage?
Ans.
The intruder resembled Gerrard. He had committed a murder. He made a plan to
save himself from the police. He decided that after killing Gerrard he would
take on his identity and live without any fear. So he entered Gerrard’s
cottage,
27.
Why did the intruder want Gerrard to speak to him?
Ans.
The intruder wanted to take on Gerrard’s identity after killing him. But before
killing him he wanted to know how Gerrard talked and how he dealt with people.
He could know this only when Gerrard spoke with him. So he wanted him to speak
with him.
28.
What crime had the intruder committed?
Ans.
‘the intruder was a jewel thief. When he was being chased by the police, he
killed a policeman. So he was wanted for murder also
29.
Why did he send for the sergeant?
Ans. A jewel thief and murderer entered
Gerrard’s cottage. He wanted to kill Gerrard also. Gerrard shut the murderer in
a cupboard. Then he phoned the police. Ile sent for the sergeant to get the
intruder arrested.
30.
How does Gerrard imprison the intruder and save his life?
Ans.
Gerrard asks the intruder to run away from there with him because the police
may come at any time. He opens a door. He says that this door leads to the garage.
The intruder steps in. It was the cupboard door. Gerrard pushes the intruder in
and shuts the door. Thus he imprisons the intruder and saves his life.
Important Long
ESSAY TYPE QUESTIONS
Q.1. Gerrard talks pleasantly with the
intruder. Was he really pleased to see the criminal?
Ans.
Gerrard is living alone in his house. One day an intruder enters his room.
There is a gun in his hand and he threatens to kill Gerrard. But Gerrard does
not panic. He is a clever man. He has understood that the criminal has evil
intentions. He knows that if he fights with the intruder, he will be killed. So
his best chance is to talk with the intruder in a friendly manner. Even the
intruder notes it and says that Gerrard is trying to be calm and careless. By
talking pleasantly, Gerrard makes the intruder delay his plan of killing him.
So Gerrard tells him that he is pleased to see him. We know that this is a lie.
He was not really pleased to see the criminal. By engaging the intruder in
talks, Gerrard comes to know that he is not an intelligent man and it is not
difficult to befool him. Gerrard’s behaviour shows that he is a sensible
person. He knows how to behave in a crisis. In the end, he is able to lock the
intruder in a cupboard and calls the police.
Q.2.
The intruder is boastful. He threatens Gerrard, “I’ll make you crawl” Was he
able to carry out his threat? What happened to him?
Ans.
An intruder forcibly enters Gerrard’s room. There is a revolver in his hand.
His intentions are evil. He threatens to kill Gerard. But Gerrard talks
pleasantly to him. The intruder is surprised. He thinks that Gerrard is playing
a trick. He tells him to stop playing smart. He boasts that he is intelligent.
He threatens Gerard, “I’ll make you crawl.” But the subsequent happening shows
that an intruder is a foolish person. Instead of making Gerard crawl, he finds
himself shut in a cupboard in the end. The intruder wanted to know more about
Gerrard. But Gerrard makes him talk about himself. He discloses that he is a
jewel thief. He has murdered a policeman. Now he is running from the police. He
resembles Gerrard. His plan is to kill Gerrard and live in his room under his
name. Gerrard guesses rightly that the intruder is not intelligent. He plays a
clever game and shuts him in a cupboard. Then he calls the police. Thus the
boast of the intruder is proved wrong
Q.3.
Gerrard says, “In most melodramas, the villain is foolish enough to delay his
killing long enough to be frustrated. Does this statement holds good for the
play ‘If I Were You’?
Ans.
In most melodramas, the playwright wants to make the hero successful. The
villain in the play wants to kill the hero. But he presented as someone who is
foolish. He goes on delaying the killing for one reason or the other. In the
end, his plans are frustrated and the hero is able to get the better of him.
The same thing holds good of this play. In this play, the villain is the
intruder. He resembles Gerrard. So he wants to kill Gerard and live under his name.
He has gathered a lot of information about Gerard. But he does not know that
Gerrard is a stage actor. He can act well. Gerrard poses to be pleased on
seeing the intruder. He talks to him in a tactful way. He makes the intruder
talk about himself Thus he goes on delaying the killing. This gives Gerrard
enough time to plan to get rid of him. In the end, the intruder’s plan of
killing Gerrard is frustrated and he is shut up in a cupboard.
Q.4.
The best way to deal with a crisis is not to lose your calm. Discuss this
statement with reference to the behaviour of Gerrard in the play.
Ans. A cool person is more successful than a
person who loses his temper or acts rashly. In this play, Gerrard saves his
life by acting calmly. Moreover, he is able to catch the murderer also. It
would not be possible if he lost his calm. An ordinary person is terrified of
seeing an intruder with a gun in his hand. He acts foolishly. The person fears
that he may not harm him. So, generally, in such cases, the criminal kills his
victim. But Gerrard does not lose his calmness and patience. He poses that he
is pleased to see the intruder. He talks to him a friendly manner. He makes the
criminal talk about himself. This gives Gerrard enough time to plan his line of
action. Thus Gerrard was not frightened to see the intruder: This calmness
saved his life.
Q.5.Why
was Gerrard packing a bag at the beginning of the play? How did it help him to
outwit and trap the intruder?
Ans:-Gerrard
was packing a bag at the beginning of the play as he had to deliver some props
to some theatrical company for rehearsal. When the intruder broke into his
cottage and threatened to kill him, Gerrard did not lose his cool. He
spontaneously concocted a story that he himself was a criminal and was trying to
dodge the police. This story was supported by the bag, the gun, the disguise
outfit, false moustaches etc. All this misled the intruder into believing that
Gerrard was telling the truth. He was so convinced that he got ready to escape
along with Gerrard. He did not doubt him any longer and unsuspectingly did what
he was told to, eventually getting trapped. Hence, the bag played an important
role in convincing the intruder that Gerrard too was a criminal like him and
was preparing to flee when he broke into his cottage.
Q6.
Bring out Gerrard’s intelligence, the presence of mind and sense of humour. How
did these traits help him outwit the intruder?
Ans:-Being
an intelligent person, Gerrard did not show even the slightest of nervousness
at the sight of the gun-toting criminal. He knew that his cool-headedness and
presence of mind would not only help him to manage the crisis but would also
contribute towards unnerving the intruder, who too must be having some fear
lurking in his mind. Keeping the atmosphere light and lively with his sense of
humour and funny remarks, Gerrard instantly cooked up a story about his
criminal background. Convincing the intruder that the police would arrive any
minute to nab them, he impressed upon the intruder that they would have to
escape immediately. Cleverly, he made him peep into a cupboard saying that it
was an escape route. The moment the intruder leaned forward to inspect it,
Gerrard pushed him into the cupboard and knocked the revolver out of his hand.
He then closed and locked the door. Thus, his intelligence, sense of humour,
and presence of mind turned the tables on the intruder.
Q.7.Why
did the intruder find Gerrard’s cooked up the story of his criminal background
convincing?
Ans:-Far
from being gullible the intruder suspected every move of Gerrard. He snubbed
him when Gerrard tried to begin a conversation regarding the intruder’s
identity and curtly told him to answer only what was asked. However, he
unsuspiciously walked into Gerrard’s trap because the latter did not lose his
cool and employed his presence of mind to cook up the story that he too was
wanted by the police. Actually, Gerrard supported his claim of being a criminal
by showing the intruder his bag full of disguise outfits and false moustaches
etc. The intruder did not know about the theatrical background of Gerrard and
hence found his story convincing. He believed that Gerrard was actually trying
to evade the police. Hence, the unsuspecting intruder walked into Gerrard’s
trap. This indicates that although he claimed himself to be the smartest person
around, he was in fact not very intelligent. He was outwitted by a smarter
Gerrard who foiled his evil plan.
Q
8. Imagine you are Gerrard. Write a letter to your friend describing what
happened when the intruder broke into your house. (Textual,
Modified)
You
may describe:
the
intruder’s appearance
his way of speaking, mannerism and movement
his
plan to evade the law
your
success in outwitting him
Ans:-
(Address)
(Date)
Dear
……….
Today
I am feeling extremely excited to share with you a very interesting experience
which I think may form the plot for my next play.
It
so happened that today, in the afternoon, when I was about to leave my cottage
with my bag to supply props and make-up at the Globe Theatre, I heard somebody
hit against the table in my room. On turning, I saw a man with a physique like
mine, wearing a very gaudy overcoat. Aiming his gun at me, he told me in an
uncultured manner to put my “paws up”. He did not. shoot me at once because he
needed some information about me. He told me that he had killed a cop and was
having a difficult time dodging the police. He wanted to kill me and take up my
identity to escape arrest.
But will you believe it that I foiled his plan
by outwitting him through a concocted story? I maintained my cool and told him
that I myself was a criminal charged with murder. I warned him that if he
assumed my identity after killing me, he would still be arrested and executed.
I told him that I was expecting an alert call from one of my friends, and just
then the phone rang. Actually, the call was from one of my clients at the
theatre who wanted confirmation about the props that I had assured to supply.
My
story worked perfectly and when I offered the man to escape with me in my car,
he agreed readily. I asked him to peep into the cupboard which I claimed was
connected to the garage and the secret escape route. When he learned to peep, I
pushed him in the cupboard, snatched his gun, and locked him.
I
then answered the phone and asked the caller to send the sergeant to arrest the
criminal.
I’m sure you too will find this a smart enough
act to be used as a plot for the next play. We can plan the details when we
meet on Sunday.
Your
loving friend
Gerrard
Q.9.The
intruder’s plan was clever but not feasible. Do you agree? Give reasons in support
of your answer.
Ans:-On
the face of it, the intruder’s plan to kill Gerrard and assume his identity
appeared to be a very clever one. However, its execution was not a feasible
one. In the first place, had Gerrard been killed, the disposal of his body
would have created problems for the intruder and there are chances that his
crime would have been detected and he would have been caught. If by chance, he
could have managed to deal with this part of the drama, suspicions would have
risen in the minds of his theatrical clients on being unable to contact
Gerrard. They would have certainly sought help from the police in this regard
and eventually, the intruder would have been arrested. Hence, the plan of the
intruder, however perfect according to him, was not a feasible one.
Theoretically, it appeared simple and fool-proof but it was far too complicated
in reality to be carried out flawlessly.
Value Based Questions and Answers of IF I
WERE YOU
QUICK
REVIEW OF THE CHAPTER
1.
Who was the intruder?
(A) a thief
(B) a criminal
(C) a priest
(D) a soldier
Ans.
(B) a criminal
2.
Who did Gerrard live with?
(A) his wife
(B) his son
(C) hiS friend
(D) alone
Ans. (D) alone
3.
What did the intruder have in his hand?
(A) a revolver
(B) a knife
(C) an iron rod
(D) none of the above
Ans. (A) a revolver
4.
How did Gerrard behave to see the intruder with a revolver in his hand?
(A) he started crying (B)
he remained calm
(C) he was nervous
(D) he Has fainted
Ans.
(B) he remained calm
5.
Who did the intruder want to get information?
(A)
Gerrard
(B) the police
(C) himself
(D) all of the above
Ans. (A) Gerrard
6.According
to Gerrard who comes to visit him?
(A) the banker
(B) the greengrocer
(C) the milkman
(D) all of the above
Ans. (D) all of the above
7.
What does the intruder say about his speciality?
(A) murder
(B)
kidnapping
(C) jewel robbery
(D) all of the above
Ans. (C) jewel robbery
8.
What was the intruder’s plan?
(A) to kill Gerrard and disguise himself as
Gerrard (B) to rob Gerard
(C) to stay with Gerrard
(D) all of the above
Ans.
(A) to kill Gerrard and disguise himself as Gerrard
9.
What was the intruder already wanted for?
(A) theft
(B) robbery
(C) murder
(D) kidnapping
Ans. (C) murder
10.According
to Gerrard who was luckier than most melodramatic villains.
(A) Gerrard
(B) the intruder
(C) both A and B
(D) none of the above
Ans.
(B) the intruder
11.
What was Gerrard’s full name?
(A) Bill Gerrard
(B) William Gerrard
(C) Henry Gerrard
(D) Vincent Charles Gerrard
Ans.
(D) Vincent Charles Gerard
12.
What did Gerrard do to the intruder?
(A) he killed him (B)
he knocked him down
(C) he locked him up in a cupboard (D) all of
the above
Ans.
(C) he locked him up in a cupboard
13.
Do you think Gerrard was actually a murderer?
(A) Yes
(B) No
(C) Maybe
(D) Not known
Ans.
(B) No
14.
Who was cleverer?
(A) Gerard
(B) Intruder
(C) Sergeant
(D) all of the above
Ans.
(A) Gerrard
15.
Who is the author of the lesson ‘If I Were You’?
(A) Vikram seth
(B) Douglas James
(C) A.P.J. Abdul Kalam (D) Jawaharlal Nehru
Ans.
(B) Douglas James
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