Questions from the textbook.  
Thinking about the Text 
1.     Do you keep a
  diary? Given below under ‘A’ are some terms we use to describe a written record
  of personal experience. Can you match them with their descriptions under ‘B’?
  (You may look up the terms in a dictionary if you wish.) 
 
2.     Here are some
  entries from personal records. Use the definitions above to decide which of
  the entries might be from a diary, a journal, a log or a memoir. 
 
Thinking
  About the Text 
1.     Was Anne
  right when she said that the world would not be interested in the musings of
  a thirteen-year-old girl? 
No, Anne was not right when she said that the world would not be
  interested in the musings of a thirteen-year-old girl. Her diary was
  published under the name ‘The Diary of a Young Girl’. It was translated from
  Dutch into many languages and it became one of the world’s most widely read
  books. There have also been several films, television and theatrical
  productions, and even an opera based on the diary. It was described as the
  work of a mature and insightful mind. It provides an intimate examination of
  life under Nazi occupation. Anne Frank became one of the most renowned and
  discussed of the Holocaust victims. 
2.     There are
  some examples of diary or journal entries in the ‘Before You Read’ section.
  Compare these with what Anne writes in her diary. What language was the diary
  originally written in? In what way is Anne’s dairy different? 
Anne’s diary was originally written in Dutch. Her
  diary is different from the others in many aspects. She had named her diary
  ‘Kitty’. She thought of it as her only true friend whom she could confide in.
  She treated it as another person who was listening to her daily accounts. She
  wrote all her stories in it. She started by writing ‘Dearest Kitty’ and ended
  the account by writing, ‘Yours, Anne’. Her diary was a lot more personal than
  other diaries. 
3.     Why does Anne
  need to give a brief sketch about her family? Does she treat ‘Kitty’ as an
  insider or an outsider? 
Anne gave a brief sketch of her life since no one would understand a
  word of her stories if she were to plunge right in. She treated Kitty as an
  insider because she called it her best friend and was ready to confide in it. 
4.     How does Anne
  feel about her father, her grandmother, Mrs. Kuperus and Mr. Keesing? What do
  these tell you about her? 
Anne felt that her father was the most adorable father she had ever
  seen. Anne remembered her grandmother even after her death. She wrote in her
  diary that no one knew how often she thought of her grandmother and still
  loved her. In the sixth form at the Montessori nursery school, her teacher was
  Mrs Kuperus, who was also the headmistress. At the end of the year, they were
  both in tears as they had a heartbreaking farewell. Mr Keesing was her Maths
  teacher. He was annoyed with her because she talked too much. However, Anne
  was able to justify her talkative nature every time she was punished by Mr.
  Keesing. On each occasion, he was impressed by the manner in which she
  presented her arguments. All these incidents show how lovable and intelligent
  Anne was.  Everybody was attached to
  her, and even Mr. Keesing could not help but laugh at her essays and
  acknowledge her intelligence. 
5.     What does
  Anne write in her first essay? 
In her first essay, titled ‘A Chatterbox’, Anne wanted to come up with
  convincing arguments to prove the necessity of talking. She wrote three pages
  and was satisfied. She argued that talking was a student’s trait and that she
  would do her best to keep it under control. She further wrote that she would
  never be able to cure herself of the habit since her mother talked as much as
  she did. There was not much that one could do about inherited traits. Mr
  Keesing too had a good laugh reading her arguments. 
6.     Anne says
  teachers are most unpredictable. Is Mr Keesing unpredictable? How? 
Anne felt that a quarter of her class was dumb, and should not be promoted
  to the next class. However, she also felt that teachers were the most
  unpredictable creatures on earth. Mr Keesing could be termed as
  unpredictable. The way Anne always talked while the class was going on, any
  teacher would lose his temper. However, after several warnings, all Mr
  Keesing did was to assign her extra homework. She had to write an essay on ‘A
  Chatterbox’. In this way, he tried to play a joke on her. Each time that he
  asked her to write such essays, she wrote very well. She kept countering his
  jokes. One could not have predicted that he would take all the jokes in the
  right spirit. Finally, he accepted her talkative nature and actually allowed
  her to talk in class. He did not even assign her any more extra homework.
  That is why it can be said that Mr Keesing was unpredictable. 
7.     What do these
  statements tell you about Anne Frank as a person? 
(i)            
  We don’t seem to be able to get any closer, and
  that’s the problem. Maybe it’s my fault that we don’t confide in each other. 
These lines show that though Anne was friendly,
  she did not have a friend in whom she could confide in. She even blames
  herself for not trusting people enough to confide in them. 
(ii)           
  I don’t want to jot down the facts in this diary
  the way most people would, but I want the diary to be my friend. 
This line shows that Anne wasn’t interested in
  keeping records. Instead, she wanted a friend who could patiently listen to
  her.  
(iii)         
  Margot went to Holland in December, and I followed
  in February, when I was plunked down on the table as a birthday present for
  Margot. 
This statement shows that Anne was a fun-loving.
  She was witty and knew how to present things in a funny way. The use of
  ‘plunked down’ shows her sense of humour. 
(iv)         
  If you ask me, there are so many dummies that
  about a quarter of the class should be kept back, but teachers are the most
  unpredictable creatures on earth. 
This statement shows that she considered herself
  intelligent enough to make it to the next class while a quarter of her class
  was stupid in her opinion. 
(v)           
  Anyone could ramble on and leave big spaces
  between the words, but the trick was to come up with convincing arguments to
  prove the necessity of talking. 
This statement shows that Anne took the punishment
  as a challenge. She was intelligent enough to come up with arguments for
  talking. 
 | 
 
Summary  
Anne Frank was a young Jewish girl. She lived with her
  parents in Germany. But Hitler’s Nazi Party was against the Jews. The Nazis
  were killing the Jews or forcing them to work in the concentration camps. The
  Frank family fled from Germany in 1933 and took shelter in the Netherlands.
  But in 1940, Germany attacked the Netherlands and captured it. Now the Nazis
  started arresting the Jews and sending them to the concentration camps. The
  Frank family went into hiding. They lived secretly in the upper floors of
  their business premises. They hid there for 25 months. Their non-Jewish
  friends gave them food. 
Anne had started writing her diary before going into
  hiding. In August 1944, the Germans came to know of their hiding. They were
  arrested and sent to Germany. Anne, her sister, Margot and her mother soon
  died in a concentration camp. Her father survived and published part of
  Anne’s diary. In this diary, Anne gives a moving and tragic account of the
  difficulties faced by her family and the other Jews. The part of the diary
  reproduced in this chapter is about the days when Anne was a schoolgirl and
  she and her family had not yet moved to the secret quarters. 
Vocabulary  
 
Comprehension Questions  
Answer
  the following questions in 30-40 words: 
1.     Mr. Keesing is a kind, but strict
  teacher. Explain. 
Mr. Keesing was
  annoyed with Anne as she was a very talkative girl. He was kind enough to
  warn her several times but she didn’t change. So, he punished her by giving
  an essay to write. 
2.     How did Sanne help Anne Frank in
  writing the third essay? 
Anne’s friend
  Sanne was good at poetry. She helped Anne write the third essay in verse. It
  turned out to be a good poem, and even the teacher, Mr. Keesing, took it in
  the right way. 
3.     How did Anne want her diary to be
  different? 
Anne did not
  want to jot down the facts in her diary, the way most people do. She wanted
  the diary to be her friend and she would address the diary as ‘Kitty’.  
4.     Explain ‘teachers are the most
  unpredictable creatures’.   
Anne believed
  that a quarter of her class was stupid and should be kept back. However, she thought
  that teachers were the most unpredictable creatures’ as nobody knew what
  there was in their minds and whom would they pass or fail. 
Answer the following questions in 100-120 words:  
1.     “Paper has
  more patience than people.” Elucidate. 
Anne had loving parents, an elder sister and a number of friends. She
  could talk to them about common everyday matters. But she could not express
  her inner feelings to them. So she felt depressed and lonely. She wanted a
  patient listener to whom she could confide in. But she felt that neither did
  people have the patience to listen to her nor could she trust them with her
  secrets. So she decided to maintain a diary believing that it would be more
  patient than anybody. Hence, Anne Frank says that paper has more patience
  than people. 
2.     Why was the
  whole class shaking in its boots? How does Anne Frank describe the behaviour
  of her classmates? 
The annual results were to be disclosed soon. The teachers were going
  to hold their annual meeting to decide which of the students would be
  promoted to the next class and which of them would be kept back in the same
  class. As a result, the students were nervous and shaking in their boots.
  Half the class was making bets. Anne and her friend G.N. laughed heartily at
  their classmates C.N. and Jacques who had staked their entire holiday savings
  on their bet. They were all the time speculating who would pass and who would
  not. Anne was angry with many of them. But they would not calm down.
  According to her, a quarter of her class was dummies and should be kept back.
  But she also felt that teachers were the most unpredictable creatures on
  earth. 
Questions from the textbook.  
Thinking about the Text 
1.     Do you keep a
  diary? Given below under ‘A’ are some terms we use to describe a written record
  of personal experience. Can you match them with their descriptions under ‘B’?
  (You may look up the terms in a dictionary if you wish.) 
 
2.     Here are some
  entries from personal records. Use the definitions above to decide which of
  the entries might be from a diary, a journal, a log or a memoir. 
 
Thinking
  About the Text 
1.     Was Anne
  right when she said that the world would not be interested in the musings of
  a thirteen-year-old girl? 
No, Anne was not right when she said that the world would not be
  interested in the musings of a thirteen-year-old girl. Her diary was
  published under the name ‘The Diary of a Young Girl’. It was translated from
  Dutch into many languages and it became one of the world’s most widely read
  books. There have also been several films, television and theatrical
  productions, and even an opera based on the diary. It was described as the
  work of a mature and insightful mind. It provides an intimate examination of
  life under Nazi occupation. Anne Frank became one of the most renowned and
  discussed of the Holocaust victims. 
2.     There are
  some examples of diary or journal entries in the ‘Before You Read’ section.
  Compare these with what Anne writes in her diary. What language was the diary
  originally written in? In what way is Anne’s dairy different? 
Anne’s diary was originally written in Dutch. Her
  diary is different from the others in many aspects. She had named her diary
  ‘Kitty’. She thought of it as her only true friend whom she could confide in.
  She treated it as another person who was listening to her daily accounts. She
  wrote all her stories in it. She started by writing ‘Dearest Kitty’ and ended
  the account by writing, ‘Yours, Anne’. Her diary was a lot more personal than
  other diaries. 
3.     Why does Anne
  need to give a brief sketch about her family? Does she treat ‘Kitty’ as an
  insider or an outsider? 
Anne gave a brief sketch of her life since no one would understand a
  word of her stories if she were to plunge right in. She treated Kitty as an
  insider because she called it her best friend and was ready to confide in it. 
4.     How does Anne
  feel about her father, her grandmother, Mrs. Kuperus and Mr. Keesing? What do
  these tell you about her? 
Anne felt that her father was the most adorable father she had ever
  seen. Anne remembered her grandmother even after her death. She wrote in her
  diary that no one knew how often she thought of her grandmother and still
  loved her. In the sixth form at the Montessori nursery school, her teacher was
  Mrs Kuperus, who was also the headmistress. At the end of the year, they were
  both in tears as they had a heartbreaking farewell. Mr Keesing was her Maths
  teacher. He was annoyed with her because she talked too much. However, Anne
  was able to justify her talkative nature every time she was punished by Mr.
  Keesing. On each occasion, he was impressed by the manner in which she
  presented her arguments. All these incidents show how lovable and intelligent
  Anne was.  Everybody was attached to
  her, and even Mr. Keesing could not help but laugh at her essays and
  acknowledge her intelligence. 
5.     What does
  Anne write in her first essay? 
In her first essay, titled ‘A Chatterbox’, Anne wanted to come up with
  convincing arguments to prove the necessity of talking. She wrote three pages
  and was satisfied. She argued that talking was a student’s trait and that she
  would do her best to keep it under control. She further wrote that she would
  never be able to cure herself of the habit since her mother talked as much as
  she did. There was not much that one could do about inherited traits. Mr
  Keesing too had a good laugh reading her arguments. 
6.     Anne says
  teachers are most unpredictable. Is Mr Keesing unpredictable? How? 
Anne felt that a quarter of her class was dumb, and should not be promoted
  to the next class. However, she also felt that teachers were the most
  unpredictable creatures on earth. Mr Keesing could be termed as
  unpredictable. The way Anne always talked while the class was going on, any
  teacher would lose his temper. However, after several warnings, all Mr
  Keesing did was to assign her extra homework. She had to write an essay on ‘A
  Chatterbox’. In this way, he tried to play a joke on her. Each time that he
  asked her to write such essays, she wrote very well. She kept countering his
  jokes. One could not have predicted that he would take all the jokes in the
  right spirit. Finally, he accepted her talkative nature and actually allowed
  her to talk in class. He did not even assign her any more extra homework.
  That is why it can be said that Mr Keesing was unpredictable. 
7.     What do these
  statements tell you about Anne Frank as a person? 
(i)            
  We don’t seem to be able to get any closer, and
  that’s the problem. Maybe it’s my fault that we don’t confide in each other. 
These lines show that though Anne was friendly,
  she did not have a friend in whom she could confide in. She even blames
  herself for not trusting people enough to confide in them. 
(ii)           
  I don’t want to jot down the facts in this diary
  the way most people would, but I want the diary to be my friend. 
This line shows that Anne wasn’t interested in
  keeping records. Instead, she wanted a friend who could patiently listen to
  her.  
(iii)         
  Margot went to Holland in December, and I followed
  in February, when I was plunked down on the table as a birthday present for
  Margot. 
This statement shows that Anne was a fun-loving.
  She was witty and knew how to present things in a funny way. The use of
  ‘plunked down’ shows her sense of humour. 
(iv)         
  If you ask me, there are so many dummies that
  about a quarter of the class should be kept back, but teachers are the most
  unpredictable creatures on earth. 
This statement shows that she considered herself
  intelligent enough to make it to the next class while a quarter of her class
  was stupid in her opinion. 
(v)           
  Anyone could ramble on and leave big spaces
  between the words, but the trick was to come up with convincing arguments to
  prove the necessity of talking. 
This statement shows that Anne took the punishment
  as a challenge. She was intelligent enough to come up with arguments for
  talking. 
 | 
 
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