Class Notes of Chapter 2: Lost Spring
Class 12th English
Prose
Flamingo
Prose
Flamingo
Lost Spring - Anees Jung
Topics:
- Summary
- Point Wise Summary
Summary
Characters
- Saheb-e-Alam: A ragpicker
- Mukesh: Son of a bangle maker
I – Sometimes I discover a rupee in the junk.
The initial segment enlightens the essayist's impressions concerning the life of the poor cloth pickers. The cloth pickers have moved from Dhaka and discovered a settlement in Seemapuri. Their fields and homes had been cleared away by tempests. They had gone to the huge city to locate a living. They are poor. The author watches Saheb each morning scavenging for "gold" in her neighbourhood. Waste is a method for survival for the older folks and for the kids it is something enveloped by pondering. The kids go over a coin or two from it. These individuals have wants and desire, however, they don't have the foggiest idea about the best approach to accomplish them. There are many things that are inaccessible to them, to be specific shoes, tennis and so forth. Later Saheb joins a tea slow down where he could win 800 Rupees and every one of the suppers. The activity has removed his opportunity.
II – I Want to drive a vehicle.
The second part manages the life of Mukesh, who has a place with the group of Bangle-creators. Firozabad is best known for its glass-blowing industry. Almost 20,000 youngsters are occupied with this business and the law that denies kid work isn't known here. The living condition and the workplace is a woeful story. Life in grimy cells and working near hot heaters make these kids dazzle when they venture into adulthood. Overloaded by the obligation, they can neither think nor figure out how to happen to out of this snare. The lawmakers, brokers, policemen and civil servants will all deter their method for advancement. The ladies in the family unit consider it as their destiny and simply pursue the convention. Mukesh is unique in relation to whatever remains of the people there. He dreams to end up an engine workman. The carport is far from his home yet he will walk. runs over Mukesh in Firozabad.
Point Wise Summary
Sometimes I discover a rupee in the junk.
- The author analyzes and investigations the devastating conditions and customs that sentence youngsters to an actual existence of abuse these kids are denied an instruction and constrained into hardships right off the bat in their lives.
- The essayist experiences Saheb – a cloth picker whose guardians have deserted the life of neediness in Dhaka to gain a living in Delhi.
- His family like numerous different groups of cloth pickers lives in Seemapuri. They don't have other recognizable proof other than a proportion card.
- The kids don't go to class and they are energized at the possibility of finding a coin or even a ten rupee note for scrounging in the rubbish.
- It is the main method for Earning.
- The author is tormented to see Saheb, a cloth picker whose name implies the leader of earth,
- Lose the start of youth and wanders barefooted with his companions.
- From morning to twelve the creator experiences him in a tea slow down and is paid Rs. 800 He, unfortunately, understands that he is not any more his very own lord and this loss of character weighs vigorously on his delicate shoulders.
I Want to drive a vehicle.
- The author at that point tells about another unfortunate casualty, Mukesh who needs to be an engine technician.
- He has dependably worked in the glass making industry.
- They are presented to different wellbeing risks like losing their visual perception as they work in wretched conditions, in dull and shabby cells.
- Mukesh's dad is visually impaired similar to his dad and granddad before him.
- So loaded are the bangle producers of Firozabad that they have lost their capacity to dream not at all like Mukesh who longs for driving a vehicle.
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