Deep Water – Exercises
This CBSE English Passage Assessment will be based on: Deep Water – Exercises
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 – Exercises
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 – Exercises
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.
Understanding the Text — NCERT Comprehension Questions
Long Answer Questions (150 words each)
Talking About the Text
Discussion Questions with Critical Perspectives
CBSE Board-Format Extract-Based Questions
CBQ — "The Curtain of Life Fell"
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow.
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What is the narrator experiencing in this passage? Why does the tone suddenly become peaceful after the preceding terror? L2 Understand2 marksThe narrator is losing consciousness — drowning. The sudden peace is a physiological reality: when the brain is deprived of oxygen for long enough, the distress signals shut down and the body experiences a final, deceptive calm before unconsciousness. This is documented in near-death accounts and medical literature. The terror was produced by the struggle to survive; once that struggle is abandoned, the terror has nothing to attach to. The peace is not psychological courage — it is biological surrender.
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Analyse the shift in sentence structure in this passage. How does the fragmented, elliptical style mirror the narrator's mental state? L4 Analyse3 marksThe passage begins with full, complete sentences — "Then all effort ceased. I relaxed." — but dissolves into fragments connected by ellipses: "This is nice... to be drowsy... to go to sleep..." The ellipses represent the fading intervals of consciousness; the fragmentary syntax mirrors the disintegration of coherent thought as oxygen deprivation takes hold. This is a deliberate stylistic choice by Douglas: long, complex sentences would imply an alert, reasoning mind, which contradicts the experience. The broken, dreaming quality of the final lines — culminating in the formal, complete sentence "I crossed to oblivion, and the curtain of life fell" — creates a powerful contrast: the unconscious mind thinking in fragments, followed by the conscious author's retrospective, composed summary of what happened.
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Identify the figure of speech in "the curtain of life fell" and explain why this image is particularly apt for what it describes. L4 Analyse2 marksThis is a metaphor comparing life to a theatrical performance whose curtain falls at its conclusion. The image is apt for multiple reasons: a falling curtain ends a performance permanently; it signals that what has just been shown is over and cannot be resumed. It also suggests that the narrator experienced his drowning as a kind of dramatic event — watched, staged, concluded. The metaphor is also notably dignified and literary rather than clinical, which speaks to Douglas's retrospective composure: he can now afford the metaphor because he survived to write it.
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The image of "tender arms like Mother's" appears in Douglas's final semi-conscious thought. What does this reveal about the psychological dynamics of extreme fear and the human need for comfort? L5 Evaluate3 marksAt the threshold of death, the mind retreats to its earliest and most powerful source of security — the mother. This is psychologically revealing in several ways. First, it suggests that the maternal bond is the deepest template for safety the human psyche possesses; it is what the mind reaches for when all other resources have failed. Second, the mother's presence in this story is not incidental — she had warned Douglas about the treacherous Yakima River from childhood, her warnings shaping his earliest relationship with water and danger. The dying mind's return to her is thus both universal (the infant seeking comfort) and specific (the mother who shaped his fear of water offering the only comfort he can imagine). It is one of the essay's most psychologically complex and moving details.
Grammar Workshop — Language in the Essay
Thinking About Language: First-Person Narration vs. Third-Person Account
NCERT Task: Rewriting in Third Person
The NCERT exercise asks: "If someone else had narrated Douglas's experience, how would it have differed from this account? Write out a sample paragraph from the point of view of a third person or observer, to find out which style of narration you consider more effective."
Study these transformations to understand the grammatical and stylistic changes involved.
Conclusion: Which Style Is More Effective?
For this particular essay, first-person narration is unquestionably more effective. The essay's power depends on the reader inhabiting Douglas's terror rather than observing it. The first person also lends the philosophical conclusion authenticity — when Douglas says the experience made his "will to live grow in intensity," we believe him, because we have been inside the experience with him. A third-person account would produce sympathy; the first-person produces something closer to understanding.
Working with Words: Movement + Weariness
The NCERT exercise asks you to find words like plod, trudge, stagger that indicate movement accompanied by weariness. Here are examples from the essay and related vocabulary:
| Word | Meaning | Example from Essay / Context |
|---|---|---|
| stagger | Walk unsteadily, nearly falling | "He staggered in the direction of the sound" — from The Rattrap; Douglas too staggered from exhaustion after recovery. |
| trudge | Walk slowly with heavy steps under great effort | Douglas "walked home" hours after the incident — the word "walked" conceals the trudge of a traumatised, weakened body. |
| plod | Walk heavily and dully without energy or spirit | The years of fearful avoidance — going "back and forth" to water, never swimming — are an emotional plod. |
| lumber | Move in a heavy, clumsy way | A person weakened by near-drowning lumbers rather than walks. |
| shamble | Walk with shuffling, dragging feet, lacking energy | The post-drowning Douglas — weak and trembling — shambled rather than walked home. |
Writing — Composition Tasks
Writing Task 1 — Personal Essay on Overcoming Fear
NCERT Writing prompt: Write an essay of about five paragraphs recounting an experience of learning something new or overcoming a fear. You could begin with the last line of the essay: "At last I felt released — free to walk the trails and climb the peaks and to brush aside fear."
Essay Structure — Five-Paragraph Model
Word limit: 200–250 words | Tone: Reflective, honest, analytical
Writing Task 2 — Letter About Learning Something New
NCERT Writing prompt: Write a short letter to someone you know about your having learnt to do something new.
Format — Informal Letter
Word limit: 150–200 words | Suggested opening (optional): "At last I felt released — free to walk the trails and climb the peaks and to brush aside fear." (paraphrased from Douglas)
[Sample for reference — do not copy verbatim]
12 Ashoka Road,
Bengaluru – 560 001
13 April 2026
Dear Rahul,
I am writing with news that I suspect will astonish you: I have learnt to swim. You of all people know how desperately I have avoided water since that afternoon at the quarry pool six years ago, so perhaps you can imagine how strange it feels to write those words.
It began with a decision in December — no more avoidance. I enrolled in classes at the sports complex and spent three months going every morning before school. The first week was humiliating: I was the only teenager in the beginners' pool alongside eight-year-olds. But the instructor was patient, and something shifted around the sixth week — my legs stopped feeling like furniture and started feeling like limbs again.
Last Saturday, I swam a full length of the competition pool without stopping. I laughed out loud, which confused the lifeguard considerably. I am not Douglas — I have not crossed a lake yet — but I feel what he must have felt: released. I recommend facing your fear, whatever it is. The other side of it is remarkably pleasant.
With warm regards,
Priya
Things to Do — Research Activity
Water Sports in India — Research and Presentation
The NCERT suggests: "Are there any water sports in India? Find out about the areas or places which are known for water sports."
- White-water Rafting: Rishikesh (Ganges), Zanskar Valley (Ladakh), Teesta River (Sikkim)
- Surfing: Varkala and Kovalam (Kerala), Mahabalipuram (Tamil Nadu), Gokarna (Karnataka)
- Scuba Diving: Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep, Netrani Island (Karnataka)
- Kayaking and Canoeing: Dal Lake (Kashmir), Brahmaputra (Assam), Periyar Lake (Kerala)
- Windsurfing and Parasailing: Goa beaches, Chilika Lake (Odisha)
- Kite Surfing: Mandrem Beach (Goa), Rameswaram (Tamil Nadu)
For a 150-word report, select two or three sports, describe their locations, the best season, and the skills or training required. Connect to the essay's theme: Douglas conquered water; India's water sports celebrate it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Deep Water – Exercises about in NCERT English?
Deep Water – Exercises 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 Deep Water – Exercises?
Key vocabulary words from Deep Water – Exercises 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 Deep Water – Exercises?
Deep Water – Exercises 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 Deep Water – Exercises?
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 Deep Water – Exercises help in board exam preparation?
Deep Water – Exercises 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.