Birth — A.J. Cronin
This CBSE English Passage Assessment will be based on: Birth — A.J. Cronin
Assessment Format:
• 2 Short Answer Questions (2 marks each) = 4 marks
• 2 Fill in the Blanks Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Short Answer Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Multiple Choice Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
Total: 8 Questions, 10 Marks
This CBSE English Grammar Assessment will be based on: Birth — A.J. Cronin
Assessment Format:
• 10 Randomized Grammar Questions (1 mark each)
• Question Types: Fill in the Blanks, MCQs, Error Identification, Reported Speech, Sentence Completion
Total: 10 Questions, 10 Marks
This English Vocabulary assessment will be based on: Birth — A.J. Cronin
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.
📖 Before You Read — Anticipation Guide
A.J. Cronin's excerpt from The Citadel is a story about a young doctor's first great test. Explore these ideas before reading.
1. What is the difference between knowing medicine from textbooks and practising it on real patients? Can you think of any profession where theory and practice diverge most sharply?
2. Andrew is described as "dull and listless" and preoccupied with personal problems when he arrives at the Morgans' house. How might a doctor's emotional state affect their professional performance? Is objectivity always possible?
3. The story describes the baby as "white and soft as tallow" and "like a strange white fish." What do these similes suggest about the emotional atmosphere of the scene? How does Cronin use physical description to create tension?
4. Joe Morgan has "walked up and down with short steps" waiting all night. What does this small detail reveal about his character and his relationship to the birth?
About the Author
Birth — Annotated Story
💡 Stop and Think
1. Why does Andrew hand the child to the nurse and attend first to the mother, even though the child appeared dead?
2. The story says Andrew acted "blindly, instinctively" throughout the crisis. Is this a criticism of his method or a celebration of it?
Plot Arc — Freytag's Pyramid
Story Structure: Birth
Andrew, emotionally preoccupied, is met by Joe Morgan at midnight. The setting — a Welsh mining town, nearly midnight — establishes poverty, urgency, and isolation.
Andrew waits through the night, brooding. The delivery is prolonged and harsh. The child arrives lifeless; the mother collapses. Andrew faces an impossible dilemma.
After thirty minutes of feverish effort — apparently failing — the child's chest heaves and its cry fills the room. The midwife weeps: "It's come alive!"
Andrew walks out into the early morning with the miners. His exhaustion is transfigured by a sense of genuine achievement: "I've done something real at last."
Vocabulary Power
Literary Devices
| Device | Example | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Simile | "white and soft as tallow" / "like a strange white fish" / "like some crazy juggler" | "Tallow" and "white fish" both convey cold, inert, lifeless whiteness — making the baby's stillness viscerally disturbing. "Crazy juggler" captures Andrew's frantic, repetitive hot-cold alternation with grim dark humour. Each simile is precisely chosen for emotional impact. |
| Imagery | "first streaks of dawn crept past the broken edges of the blind" / "iridescent bubble" / "blanched skin slowly turning pink" | The story moves from midnight darkness to dawn light — a visual metaphor for the movement from death to life. The "iridescent bubble" at the baby's nostril is one of the most beautiful images in the story — something ugly (mucus) made luminous (iridescent). "Slowly turning pink" is the most emotionally loaded image: colour returning as life returns. |
| Symbolism | The old woman praying / Joe's pacing footsteps / The child's cry | The grandmother's silent prayer symbolises faith beyond Andrew's science — a reminder that the outcome is not his alone. Joe's footsteps symbolise the helpless vigil of love. The child's cry is the story's symbolic climax — the sound of life entering the world and Andrew entering his true vocation. |
| Contrast / Juxtaposition | Andrew's personal preoccupation vs the urgency of the crisis / stillbirth → live birth / darkness → dawn | The story's emotional architecture is built on contrasts: Andrew's brooding self-absorption is shattered by the crisis; apparent death is reversed into life; night gives way to dawn. Each contrast is thematically loaded — the story is about transformation through crisis. |
| Stream of Consciousness | "He let his chin sink upon his chest… stared broodingly into the fire… thoughts were so filled with Christine…" | Cronin gives readers access to Andrew's inner turmoil — his tangled thoughts about marriage, Christine, and his colleagues' failures. This interior view creates ironic contrast: the reader knows Andrew is distracted from what will be the most important moment of his career. |
Extract-Based CBQ
Extract — The Miracle of Life Returns (Paragraph 15)
Think About It — NCERT Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Birth — A.J. Cronin about in NCERT English?
Birth — A.J. Cronin is a lesson from the NCERT English textbook that covers important literary and language concepts. The lesson includes vocabulary, literary devices, comprehension exercises, and writing tasks aligned to the CBSE curriculum.
What vocabulary is important in Birth — A.J. Cronin?
Key vocabulary words from Birth — A.J. Cronin are highlighted throughout with contextual meanings, usage examples, and interesting facts. Click any highlighted word to see its full definition and example sentence.
What literary devices are used in Birth — A.J. Cronin?
Birth — A.J. Cronin uses various literary devices including imagery, symbolism, and figurative language. These are identified with coloured tags throughout the text for easy recognition and understanding by students.
What exercises are included for Birth — A.J. Cronin?
Exercises include extract-based comprehension questions in CBSE board exam format, grammar workshops connected to the passage, vocabulary activities, and creative writing tasks with model answers provided.
How does Birth — A.J. Cronin help in board exam preparation?
Birth — A.J. Cronin includes CBSE-format extract-based questions, long answer practice with model responses, and grammar exercises that mirror board exam patterns. All questions follow Bloom's Taxonomy levels L1-L6.