1. The Third Level: Writer: Jack Finney (Notes
Prepared by Shish Pal Chauhan)
Short_Answer Type Qs
Q1. How does Jack Finney describe the Grand
Central like the roots of a tree?
Ans. Jack Finney describes the Grand Central as growing like a
tree. He finds new corridors and staircases coming out in front of him. He
compares them to the roots of a tree, which are often invisible.
Q2. Describe four unusual things which Charlie
finds at the third level?
Ans. Everything was quite different at the third level for
Charlie. The room was smaller. There were fewer ticket windows. The lights were
dim and flickering because they were open-flame gas lights. There were brass
spittoons on the floors.
Q3. Describe the men at the third level as
seen by Charlie in his reverie.
Ans. The people Charlie saw in his reverie
were dressed in the old style of the year 1890-something. They wore derby
hats and four buttoned suits with small lapels. Men had beards, side-whiskers, and
mustaches.
Q4. Why was Charlie not able to purchase tickets
from the third level? How did he manage to purchase them?
Ans. Charley was unable to purchase tickets
from the window because he had modern currency. It was invalid as old-style
bills were accepted at the booking window. The next day Charley managed to get
old-style bills to purchase two tickets.
Q5. What is the first-day cover? Elaborate it.
Ans. When a new stamp is issued, the stamp
collectors buy some. They use them on envelopes, write their own addresses, and
post them into the mailbox. They also put blank paper inside the envelopes.
It is done on the first day of the sale of the new stamps. They keep the
date-stamped envelope in the record.
Q.6. How did the psychiatrist's friend react to
his description of the third level at the Grand Central Station?
Ans. His friend, Sam did not believe it and
said that it was the product of his imagination only. He called it a waking
dream wish fulfillment.
Q.7. How does the writer defend himself
at the allegation of escaping in fantasy by way of stamp collecting? (Notes
Prepared by Shish Pal Chauhan)
Ans. The writer defends himself from the
allegation of escaping from the real world. He admits that it is a temporary
refusal from reality. He adds that his grandfather was also in the habit of
collecting stamps. Life was peaceful and without any problems. There was no
need of escaping from real life in those days.
Q.8. What proof does the
writer get that Sam is living in Galesburg in 1984?
Ans. The envelope mailed to Charlie’s
grandfather was showing July 18, 1894. A note was also written by Sam,
admitting his arrival at Galesburg through the third level. He also invited
Charlie and his wife Louisa to reach there.
Q9.Do you think the third level was a medium
of escape for Charlie?
Ans. The third level was really a medium of
escape for Charlie., who was also a victim of the stressful life of the modern age.
People get themselves lost in the world of their imagination by various means
of escape. Stamp collecting is one of them. The person.
Long Answer-type Qs. (Notes Prepared by Shish
Pal Chauhan)
Q1. How often did Charlie get lost at the
Grand Central Station?
Ans. One day Charley worked for more time at the office. So he was late for home. So he took the subway from Grand Central
to reach the second level of it. From there he was to catch a train. He started
walking quickly. He reached the second level. But, all of a sudden, he lost his
way there. He entered a corridor that had a left turn. It was also slanting
somewhat downwards. It was like a tunnel. He met no one on the way. There was
dead silence. Even he could hear the sound of his own footsteps. Then
the corridor took a sharp left turn. After coming down a flight of stairs he
reached the third level of the Grand Central Station.
Q2. What unusual things did he notice there at
the third level? How was it different from the other two levels?
Ans. Everything was quite different at the
third level for Charlie. The room was smaller. There were fewer ticket windows.
The lights were dim and flickering because they were open-flame gas lights.
There were brass spittoons on the floors. Everything there at the third level
was old and belonged to the eighteen-ninety-something. Nothing was there which
could be called belonging to modern times. The furniture at the third level
was of ancient times. A man was using an old type of watch which he kept
in his vest pocket. The dresses of the men and women were also of the very old
style. He also saw an old type of engine. It was a locomotive with a funnel-shaped chimney. Old-style bills were accepted there. He could not purchase
tickets as he had the modern type of bill.
Q3. ‘The modern consumerist world is full of
fear, insecurities, stress, and wars.’ What are the ways in which we try to
combat them? Answer with reference to The Third Level.
This world is full of fear, insecurities,
stress, and wars. Charley is also the product of the same kind of world. He must
have been a victim of stress and anxiety. So, he developed a
habit of slipping into the world of escape, the third level. He must have had
a dormant (hidden) desire of such a platform from where one could go anywhere
in the U.S.A. That was the reason he wished to purchase two tickets for
Galesburg. So one day, that wish was fulfilled in his waking dream.
There are many ways to combat (fight) these
types of stress. People can do creative writing and lose themselves in
imagination. They can enjoy the beauties of nature. They can make several
hobbies like listening to music, dancing, painting, and gardening. But they
should not become habitual of non-desirable habits like drinking wine and
taking drugs or intoxicants.
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