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Saturday, September 7, 2024

NCERT Class 9 English Chapter 6 No Men Are Foreign Questions and Answers

No Men Are Foreign


Have you ever thought of some people as strange, or other countries as ‘foreign’? We have many ways of thinking of other people as different from ‘us’, as ‘them.’ ‘ They’ may belong to a different country, or speak a different language. In this poem, however, the poet reminds us of the many ways in which we are all the same — for we are all human.

Remember, no men are strange, no countries foreign
Beneath all uniforms, a single body breathes
Like ours: the land our brothers walk upon
Is earth like this, in which we all shall lie.

They, too, aware of sun and air and water,
Are fed by peaceful harvests, by war’s long winter starv’d.
Their hands are ours, and in their lines we read
A labour not different from our own.

Remember they have eyes like ours that wake
Or sleep, and strength that can be won
By love. In every land is common life
That all can recognise and understand.

Let us remember, whenever we are told
To hate our brothers, it is ourselves
That we shall dispossess, betray, condemn.
Remember, we who take arms against each other

It is the human earth that we defile.
Our hells of fire and dust outrage the innocence
Of air that is everywhere our own,
Remember, no men are foreign, and no countries strange.

Author: JAMES KIRKUP

GLOSSARY
dispossess: dislodge; deprive
defile: make dirty; pollute
outrage the innocence of: violate the purity of

Thinking about the Poem

1.
(i) “Beneath all uniforms . . .” What uniforms do you think the poet is speaking about?
Answer
: The poet is talking about the uniforms that people wear, like soldiers’ uniforms. These uniforms make us look different from one another, but underneath, we are all the same.

(ii) How does the poet suggest that all people on earth are the same?
Answer
: The poet says that all people are the same because we all share similar things, like we breathe the same air, walk on the same earth, and live in the same world.

2. In stanza 1, find five ways in which we all are alike. Pick out the words.
Answer
: In stanza 1, the five ways we are alike are:
A single body breathes (everyone breathes the same).
The earth our brothers walk on (we all walk on the same earth).
Beneath all uniforms (we are the same beneath our clothes).
The land is earth (the same land is under all of us).
We all shall lie in it (we all will die and return to the earth).

3. How many common features can you find in stanza 2 ? Pick out the words.
Answer
:In stanza 2, the common features are:
Sun, air, and water (we all need these to live).
Fed by peaceful harvests (we all eat food from the earth).
War’s long winter starv’d (war affects everyone, making people suffer).
Hands (we all work with our hands).
Labour (we all do work that is not different from each other’s).

4. “... whenever we are told to hate our brothers ...” When do you think this happens? Why? Who ‘tells’ us? Should we do as we are told at such times? What does the poet say?
Answer
: This happens when people in power or leaders tell us to fight or hate other people. They tell us to hate our brothers during times of war or conflict. The poet says we should not listen to such things, because when we fight, we only hurt ourselves and the world we live in.


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