Deep Water – Part 1
This CBSE English Passage Assessment will be based on: Deep Water – Part 1
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: Deep Water – Part 1
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: Deep Water – Part 1
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.
Before You Begin — Activate Prior Knowledge
This essay is a first-person account of fear — its physical grip, its psychological roots, and the long struggle to overcome it. Explore these questions before reading.
About the Author
The Essay — A Childhood Drowned in Fear
Deep Water Non-Fiction Prose | Flamingo Ch. 3
Read and Find Out — Section 1
Read and Find Out — Section 2
Read and Find Out — Section 3
Vocabulary Power — Words from the Text
Key Words and Their Meanings
Thematic Web — Core Ideas in Deep Water
Fear, Courage, and Determination — The Three Pillars
Click any theme node to explore its role in the essay.
CBSE Extract-Based Questions (CBQ)
CBQ 1 — The Terror of the Deep
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.
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What specific physical sensations does the narrator use to convey the intensity of his terror? How do they differ from ordinary fear? L2 Understand2 marksDouglas describes a paralysis of the entire body — he was "stiff, rigid with fear." His legs would not function, his arms were useless, even his screams were "frozen" in his throat. The only sign of life was the involuntary beating of his heart and the pounding in his head. This is qualitatively different from ordinary fear because it is total — rational thought, muscular control, and vocal function all collapse simultaneously. Ordinary fear alerts us to danger; this terror prevents all response to it.
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Analyse the significance of the phrase "terror that no one can understand who has not experienced it." What does this suggest about the limits of empathy? L4 Analyse3 marksThis phrase performs two functions simultaneously. First, it asserts the absolute, incommunicable nature of extreme terror — that language and imagination can only approximate what the body experiences at the threshold of death. Second, it functions as an implicit challenge to the reader: if you have not been there, you cannot fully judge. This is Douglas's way of asking for empathy without pleading for it. It also underscores the autobiographical impulse behind the essay — the need to record an experience that cannot simply be summarised but must be narrated in full sensory detail to be understood at all.
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Identify the literary device in "the screams in my throat were frozen" and explain its effect on the reader. L4 Analyse2 marksThis is a metaphor — screams, which are by nature audible sound, are described as being "frozen," a state associated with coldness and solidity. The device is especially powerful because it captures the contradiction of extreme terror: the instinct to cry out is fully present, but the terror itself prevents even that most basic release. The reader feels the horror of being trapped inside one's own body — a prisoner not just in water but in one's own paralysed form.
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At the end of the essay, Douglas quotes Roosevelt: "All we have to fear is fear itself." How does this passage from the pool support or complicate Roosevelt's claim? L5 Evaluate3 marksThe pool passage both supports and enriches Roosevelt's claim. It supports it because Douglas's primary obstacle is not the water — it is his own terror of it. The water is merely water; it is his paralysed response that creates the danger. Had he been able to think clearly and kick effectively, he might have survived on his own. Roosevelt's insight is proved: the terror defeated him before the water could. However, Douglas's experience also complicates the quote by showing how devastatingly real and physical "fear itself" can be — it is not merely a mental attitude to be dismissed with courage, but a full-body, involuntary response that requires systematic, patient dismantling. The essay shows that overcoming fear itself is an enormous labour, not simply a decision.
CBQ 2 — The Road to Conquest
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.
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What does the phrase "piece by piece, he built a swimmer" reveal about the instructor's method and philosophy of teaching? L2 Understand2 marksThe phrase reveals a methodical, incremental, and deeply patient approach to overcoming a deep-seated fear. The instructor understood that Douglas's phobia could not be cured in one dramatic session. He isolated each component of swimming — comfort in water, breathing technique, leg control, arm movement — and drilled each until it was automatic. Only then did he combine them. This is the opposite of throwing someone in at the deep end and expecting them to swim; it is engineering confidence through mastery of small steps.
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Why does Douglas say "the instructor was finished" but "I was not finished"? What does this distinction reveal about the nature of overcoming fear? L4 Analyse3 marksThe instructor could teach technical swimming skills — he had done so successfully. But he could not enter Douglas's mind and dismantle the psychological residue of trauma. The distinction reveals that overcoming fear has two phases: the external phase (learning the skill) and the internal phase (proving to oneself that the old terror no longer holds power). The external phase was complete in April. The internal phase required Douglas to swim alone, to cross Lake Wentworth, to dive into Warm Lake — to accumulate personal evidence, through his own repeated experience, that he was no longer the terrified boy sinking in the YMCA pool.
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Douglas laughs at his terror in the middle of Lake Wentworth and addresses it: "Well, Mr. Terror, what do you think you can do to me?" What does this moment reveal about his psychological transformation? L5 Evaluate3 marksThis moment marks the complete psychological reversal of Douglas's relationship with fear. At the YMCA pool, fear was absolute and Douglas was its helpless victim — he could not scream, could not think, could not move. At Lake Wentworth, fear is still present (the old sensation returns in miniature) but Douglas's response to it is laughter and direct address. He has not eliminated fear; he has changed his relationship to it. He is no longer the subject of fear — he is its observer, even its challenger. Personifying the terror as "Mr. Terror" and speaking to it dismissively is a sign that he has achieved the psychological distance necessary for genuine mastery.