English for Life Reader Grade 5 Home Language. Lynne Southey

English for Life Reader Grade 5 Home Language - Lynne Southey


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tale for a runaway

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      Fanie Viljoen

      A fairy tale mostly begins

      With Once upon a time,

      But this great one begins

      With Once upon a rhyme.

      A boy once saw an ode

      Scribbled on a subway wall.

      It told him of a road

      And hope for one and all.

      All who went along this way

      Past the city’s damp decay

      Will find hope without an end

      Will have their broken hearts all mend.

      This tough road, the rhyme read

      Requires pardon and true pity,

      Only then will you be led

      From this cold and darkened city.

      The boy still knew his worth

      So he left the city streets

      For his beloved place of birth

      Where his rhyming heart still beats.

      1. Look at the title of the poem. What is the poem about?

      2. What was the message of the poem on the wall?

      3. Find a word in stanza 3 that has an opposite meaning to “decay”.

      4. The first line of stanza 4 has an example of alliteration. Write down the line and underline the words repeated.

      5. Why is the city described as “cold and darkened”? This is an example of a . . . ?

      6. Does the poem end on a happy note like all fairy tales – and they lived happy ever after . . . ? How do you know?

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      Vocabulary

      ode – a lyric poem where the narrator is speaking to someone

      subway – an underground tunnel for trains

      scribbled – written down hurriedly

      decay – rotten or ruinous state

      pardon – to excuse or to forgive

      worth – what a person or thing is worth

      The rooks

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      Jane Euphemia Browne

      The rooks are building on the trees;

      They build there every spring:

      “Caw, caw,” is all they say,

      For none of them can sing.

      They’re up before the break of day,

      And up till late at night;

      For they must labour busily

      As long as it is light.

      And many a crooked stick they bring,

      And many a slender twig,

      And many a tuft of moss, until

      Their nests are round and big.

      “Caw, caw.” Oh, what a noise

      They make in rainy weather!

      Good children always speak by turns,

      But rooks all talk together.

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      Vocabulary

      rooks – black birds, belonging to the crow family

      labour – work

      tuft – bunch

      1. At what time of the year do the rooks build their nests?

      2. What is the difference between a semi-colon (;) as in line 1 and a colon (:) in line 2?

      3. There is an example of onomatopoeia (imitation of sound) in line 3. Write it down.

      4. Are the rooks lazy birds? Why?

      5. What do they use to build their nests? What do the nests look like?

      6. The diminutive of branch is twig. What are the diminutives of the following?

      a) tree

      b) goat

      c) pig

      d) bird

      7. What is the biggest difference between rooks and good children?

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      Daddy fell into the pond

      Alfred Noyes

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      Everyone grumbled. The sky was grey.

      We had nothing to do and nothing to say.

      We were nearing the end of a dismal day,

      And then there seemed to be nothing beyond,

      Then Daddy fell into the pond!

      And everyone’s face grew merry and bright,

      And Timothy danced for sheer delight.

      “Give me the camera, quick, oh quick!

      He’s crawling out of the duckweed!” Click!

      Then the gardener suddenly slapped his knee,

      And doubled up, shaking silently,

      And the ducks all quacked as if they were daft,

      And it sounded as if the old drake laughed.

      Oh, there wasn’t a thing that didn’t respond

      When Daddy fell into the pond!

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      Vocabulary

      grumbled – complained

      dismal day – miserable day

      duckweed – plants that grow on or just under the surface of the water

      daft – silly, foolish

      1. Have you ever had an embarrassing experience? What happened?

      2. Is it good manners to laugh at adults when they are in an embarrassing situation? Why?

      3. The poet makes use of short sentences to create a certain mood. What is the mood in the first line?

      4. Why were the children unhappy?

      5. How did this incident affect

      a) the children in general?

      b) Timothy?

      6. Who asked for a camera? Why?

      7. In stanza 2, line 4 we find an example of imitation of sound. Quote the word and say what it is called.

      8.


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