Cambridge IGCSE Cambridge IGCSE: Literature in English 0475/11
Cambridge IGCSE Cambridge IGCSE: Literature in English 0475/11
Cambridge IGCSE Cambridge IGCSE: Literature in English 0475/11
1 hour 30 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS
● Answer two questions in total:
Section A: answer one question.
Section B: answer one question.
● Follow the instructions on the front cover of the answer booklet. If you need additional answer paper,
ask the invigilator for a continuation booklet.
INFORMATION
● The total mark for this paper is 50.
● All questions are worth equal marks.
DC (RCL/GO) 185449/2
© UCLES 2020 [Turn over
2
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CONTENTS
Section A: Poetry
text question
numbers page[s]
Section B: Prose
text question
numbers page[s]
SECTION A: POETRY
Either 1 Read this poem, and then answer the question that follows it:
(Mervyn Morris)
In what ways does Morris powerfully capture the feelings of the boy and his father in this
poem?
Sonnet 29
Either 3 Read this poem, and then answer the question that follows it:
In Praise of Creation
(Elizabeth Jennings)
Explore the ways in which Jennings uses words and images to powerful effect in this
poem.
(David Constantine)
Either 5 Read this poem, and then answer the question that follows it:
Head of English
How does Duffy create vivid impressions of the speaker (the Head of English) in this
poem?
Or 6 Explore the ways in which Duffy movingly conveys how relationships change over time
in The ‘Darling’ Letters.
SECTION B: PROSE
Either 7 Read this passage, and then answer the question that follows it:
‘Let her go,’ was the only answer. ‘Loose Bessie’s hands, child: you 45
cannot succeed in getting out by these means, be assured. I abhor artifice,
particularly in children; it is my duty to show you that tricks will not answer:
you will now stay here an hour longer, and it is only on condition of perfect
submission and stillness that I shall liberate you then.’
‘Oh, aunt! have pity! Forgive me! I cannot endure it – let me be 50
punished some other way! I shall be killed if—’
‘Silence! This violence is almost repulsive:’ and so, no doubt, she felt
it. I was a precocious actress in her eyes: she sincerely looked on me as a
compound of virulent passions, mean spirit, and dangerous duplicity.
Bessie and Abbot having retreated, Mrs Reed, impatient of my now 55
frantic anguish and wild sobs, abruptly thrust me back and locked me in,
without further parley. I heard her sweeping away; and soon after she was
gone, I suppose I had a species of fit: unconsciousness closed the scene.
[from Chapter 2]
How does Brontë make you feel so sorry for Jane at this moment in the novel?
Either 9 Read this passage, and then answer the question that follows it:
Nur sat hunched, listening, while he picked his teeth and occasionally
spat into the tin spittoon under the divan. Then, raising his shaggy head
so that it looked severe and granolithic, he interrupted the babble to say,
‘Wrong, wrong, for thirty years you have been wrong. It is not a matter
of Pakistan and Hindustan, of Hindi and Urdu. It is not even a matter of 5
history. It is time you should be speaking of but cannot – the concept of
time is too vast for you, I can see that, and yet it is all we really know
about in our hearts,’ he pressed his hand to his chest and there was
comparative silence now for him to speak into. In that silence, Deven’s
heart gave a series of knocks. It gave him a sense of victory and triumph 10
that Nur had so effectively stopped the raucous babble around him and
placed the whole argument in perspective. That, he saw, was the glory of
poets – that they could distance events and emotions, place them where
perspective made it possible to view things clearly and calmly. He realized
that he loved poetry not because it made things immediate but because it 15
removed them to a position where they became bearable. That was what
Nur’s verse did – placed frightening and inexplicable experiences like time
and death at a point where they could be seen and studied, in safety. His
joy at this recognition made his heart beat a tattoo inside his chest so
that it was a minute or two before he could calm himself and listen to Nur 20
again. Looking up, he saw to his alarm Nur pointing at him as if he had all
along been aware of him in that dark corner. ‘He has come to speak for
me,’ Nur said. ‘Through his throat, my words will flow. Listen and tell me if
my poetry deserves to live, or if it should give way to – that fodder chewed
by peasants, Hindi?’ he spat at the man who had disparaged his vocation. 25
Deven responded with such an expression of terror that those who
noticed laughed. He felt as if Nur had noticed his childish moment of
satisfaction and decided maliciously to wreck it. All his joy and the regard
and the honour he had accorded Nur dispersed as if over the ledge into
the night. Nur was inviting him to join the fray, allowing the sublime concept 30
of time to dwindle into the mere politics of language again. He could not
possibly have opened his mouth or uttered a word. He knew he ought not
to have stayed, listening to this kind of talk, he a Hindu and a teacher of
Hindi. He had always kept away from the political angle of languages. He
began to sweat with fear. 35
‘What is the matter?’ Nur mocked, glaring at him with small bloodshot
eyes. Why did he choose to pick on Deven, the only one who had
remained silent and not expressed any opinion at all? ‘Forgotten your
Urdu? Forgotten my verse? Perhaps it is better if you go back to your
college and teach your students the stories of Prem Chand, the poems of 40
Pant and Nirala. Safe, simple Hindi language, safe comfortable ideas of
cow worship and caste and the romance of Krishna. That is your subject,
isn’t it, professor?’ He threw back his head and cackled with laughter but
the rest fell silent. They all stopped talking and arguing and laughing and
turned to look at Deven with a curiosity they had not felt before. 45
‘I am no poet, only a teacher,’ Deven mumbled, but no one heard.
[from Chapter 3]
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13
How does Desai vividly reveal Deven’s thoughts and feelings at this moment in the
novel?
Or 10 How far does Desai make it possible for you to have any sympathy for Imtiaz Begum?
Either 11 Read this passage, and then answer the question that follows it:
In what ways does Dickens make this first meeting between Bounderby and Harthouse
so memorable?
Or 12 Explore the ways in which Dickens makes the relationship between Louisa and Sissy so
moving.
Either 13 Read this passage, and then answer the question that follows it:
He was lying on his side facing the door like he was expecting
somebody or something.
[from Chapter 8]
How does Hurston make this such a powerful moment in the novel?
Or 14 What striking impressions does Hurston create of life ‘on the muck’ in the Everglades?
Either 15 Read this passage, and then answer the question that follows it:
‘I don’t really hate Brinker, I don’t really hate him, not any more than
anybody else.’ Leper’s swimming eyes cautiously explored me. The wind
lifted a sail of snow and billowed it past us. ‘It was only—’ he drew in his
breath so sharply that it made a whistling sound—‘the idea of his face on a
woman’s body. That’s what made me psycho. Ideas like that. I don’t know. 5
I guess they must be right. I guess I am psycho. I guess I must be. I must
be. Did you ever have ideas like that?’
‘No.’
‘Would they bother you if you did, if you happened to keep imagining a
man’s head on a woman’s body, or if sometimes the arm of a chair turned 10
into a human arm if you looked at it too long, things like that? Would they
bother you?’
I didn’t say anything.
‘Maybe everybody imagines things like that when they’re away from
home, really far away, for the first time. Do you think so? The camp I went 15
to first, they called it a ‘Reception center,’ got us up every morning when
it was pitch black, and there was food like the kind we throw out here,
and all my clothes were gone and I got this uniform that didn’t even smell
familiar. All day I wanted to sleep, after we got to Basic Training. I kept
falling asleep, all day long, at the lectures we went to, and on the firing 20
range, and everywhere else. But not at night. Next to me there was a man
who had a cough that sounded like his stomach was going to come up,
one of these times, it sounded like it would come up through his mouth
and land with a splatter on the floor. He always faced my way. We did
sleep head to foot, but I knew it would land near me. I never slept at night. 25
During the day I couldn’t eat this food that should have been thrown away,
so I was always hungry except in the Mess Hall. The Mess Hall. The army
has the perfect word for everything, did you ever think of that?’
I imperceptibly nodded and shook my head, yes-and-no.
‘And the perfect word for me,’ he added in a distorted voice, as though 30
his tongue had swollen, ‘psycho. I guess I am. I must be. Am I, though, or
is the army? Because they turned everything inside out. I couldn’t sleep in
bed, I had to sleep everywhere else. I couldn’t eat in the Mess Hall, I had
to eat everywhere else. Everything began to be inside out. And the man
next to me at night, coughing himself inside out. That was when things 35
began to change. One day I couldn’t make out what was happening to the
corporal’s face. It kept changing into faces I knew from somewhere else,
and then I began to think he looked like me, and then he …’ Leper’s voice
had thickened unrecognizably, ‘he changed into a woman, I was looking at
him as close as I’m looking at you and his face turned into a woman’s face 40
and I started to yell for everybody, I began to yell so that everyone would
see it too, I didn’t want to be the only one to see a thing like that, I yelled
louder and louder to make sure everyone within reach of my voice would
hear—you can see there wasn’t anything crazy in the way I was thinking,
can’t you, I had a good reason for everything I did, didn’t I—but I couldn’t 45
yell soon enough, or loud enough, and when somebody did finally come
up to me, it was this man with the cough who slept in the next cot, and he
was holding a broom because we had been sweeping out the barracks,
© UCLES 2020 0475/11/O/N/20
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but I saw right away that it wasn’t a broom, it was a man’s leg which had
been cut off. I remember thinking that he must have been at the hospital 50
helping with an amputation when he heard my yell. You can see there’s
logic in that.’ The crust beneath us continued to crack and as we reached
the border of the field the frigid trees also were cracking with the cold. The
two sharp groups of noises sounded to my ears like rifles being fired in the
distance. 55
I said nothing, and Leper, having said so much, went on to say more,
to speak above the wind and crackings as though his story would never be
finished. ‘Then they grabbed me and there were arms and legs and heads
everywhere and I couldn’t tell when any minute—’
‘Shut up! ’ 60
Softer, more timidly, ‘—when any minute—’
‘Do you think I want to hear every gory detail! Shut up! I don’t care!
I don’t care what happened to you, Leper. I don’t give a damn! Do you
understand that? This has nothing to do with me! Nothing at all! I don’t
care!’ 65
I turned around and began a clumsy run across the field in a line
which avoided his house and aimed toward the road leading back into the
town. I left Leper telling his story into the wind. He might tell it forever, I
didn’t care. I didn’t want to hear any more of it. I had already heard too
much. What did he mean by telling me a story like that! I didn’t want to 70
hear any more of it. Not now or ever. I didn’t care because it had nothing to
do with me. And I didn’t want to hear any more of it. Ever.
How does Knowles make this conversation between Leper and Gene so disturbing?
Or 16 Gene describes Finny as ‘noble’. How far does Knowles persuade you that this judgement
is fair?
Either 17 Read this passage, and then answer the question that follows it:
telescreen and get him alone. Winston had never made the smallest effort
to verify this guess: indeed, there was no way of doing so. At this moment 50
O’Brien glanced at his wristwatch, saw that it was nearly eleven hundred
and evidently decided to stay in the Records Department until the Two
Minutes Hate was over. He took a chair in the same row as Winston, a
couple of places away. A small, sandy-haired woman who worked in the
next cubicle to Winston was between them. The girl with dark hair was 55
sitting immediately behind.
The next moment a hideous, grinding screech, as of some monstrous
machine running without oil, burst from the big telescreen at the end of the
room. It was a noise that set one’s teeth on edge and bristled the hair at
the back of one’s neck. The Hate had started. 60
[from Part 1]
How does Orwell create striking impressions of Julia and O’Brien at this moment in the
novel?
Or 18 In what ways does Orwell make Mr Charrington and his shop such a memorable part of
the novel?
Either 19 Read this passage, and then answer the question that follows it:
The next morning, after they had eaten at the Mission House, Msimangu
and Kumalo set off for the great wide road where the buses run.
– Every bus is here the right bus, said Msimangu.
Kumalo smiled at that, for it was a joke against him and his fear of
catching the wrong bus. 5
– All these buses go to Johannesburg, said Msimangu. You need not
fear to take a wrong bus here.
So they took the first bus that came, and it set them down at the
place where Kumalo had lost his pound. And then they walked, through
many streets full of cars and buses and people, till they reached the bus 10
rank for Alexandra. But here they met an unexpected obstacle, for a man
came up to them and said to Msimangu, Are you going to Alexandra,
umfundisi?
– Yes, my friend.
– We are here to stop you, umfundisi. Not by force, you see – he 15
pointed – the police are there to prevent that. But by persuasion. If you
use this bus you are weakening the cause of the black people. We have
determined not to use these buses until the fare is brought back again to
fourpence.
– Yes, indeed, I have heard of it 20
He turned to Kumalo.
– I was very foolish, my friend. I had forgotten that there were no
buses; at least I had forgotten the boycott of the buses.
– Our business is very urgent, said Kumalo humbly.
– This boycott is also urgent, said the man politely. They want us to 25
pay sixpence, that is one shilling a day. Six shillings a week, and some of
us only get thirty-five or forty shillings.
– Is it far to walk? asked Kumalo.
– It is a long way, umfundisi. Eleven miles.
– That is a long way, for an old man. 30
– Men as old as you are doing it everyday, umfundisi. And women,
and some that are sick, and some crippled, and children. They start
walking at four in the morning, and they do not get back till eight at night.
They have a bite of food, and their eyes are hardly closed on the pillow
before they must stand up again, sometimes to start off with nothing but 35
hot water in their stomachs. I cannot stop you taking a bus, umfundisi, but
this is a cause to fight for. If we lose it, then they will have to pay more in
Sophiatown and Claremont and Kliptown and Pimville.
– I understand you well. We shall not use the bus.
The man thanked them and went to another would-be traveller. 40
– That man has a silver tongue, said Kumalo.
– That is the famous Dubula, said Msimangu quietly. A friend of your
brother John. But they say – excuse me, my friend – that Tomlinson has
the brains, and your brother the voice, but that this man has the heart. He
is the one the Government is afraid of, because he himself is not afraid. 45
He seeks nothing for himself. They say he has given up his own work to
do this picketing of the buses, and his wife pickets the other bus rank at
Alexandra.
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23
In what ways does Paton make this conversation between Stephen and Msimangu so
revealing?
Either 21 Read this passage from Secrets (by Bernard MacLaverty), and then answer the question
that follows it:
He could hear his aunt’s familiar puffing on the short stairs to her
room. He spread the elastic band wide with his fingers. It snapped and
the letters scattered. He pushed them into their pigeon hole and quickly
closed the desk flap. The brass screeched loudly and clicked shut. At that
moment his aunt came into the room. 5
‘What are you doing, boy?’ she snapped.
‘Nothing.’ He stood with the keys in his hand. She walked to the
bureau and opened it. The letters sprung out in an untidy heap.
‘You have been reading my letters,’ she said quietly. Her mouth was
tight with the words and her eyes blazed. The boy could say nothing. She 10
struck him across the side of the face.
‘Get out,’ she said. ‘Get out of my room.’
The boy, the side of his face stinging and red, put the keys on the table
on his way out. When he reached the door she called him. He stopped, his
hand on the handle. 15
‘You are dirt,’ she hissed, ‘and always will be dirt. I shall remember
this till the day I die.’
Even though it was a warm evening there was a fire in the large fireplace.
His mother had asked him to light it so that she could clear out Aunt Mary’s
stuff. The room could then be his study, she said. She came in and seeing 20
him at the table said, ‘I hope I’m not disturbing you.’
‘No.’
She took the keys from her pocket, opened the bureau and began
burning papers and cards. She glanced quickly at each one before she
flicked it onto the fire. 25
‘Who was Brother Benignus?’ he asked.
His mother stopped sorting and said, ‘I don’t know. Your aunt kept
herself very much to herself. She got books from him through the post
occasionally. That much I do know.’
She went on burning the cards. They built into strata, glowing red 30
and black. Now and again she broke up the pile with the poker, sending
showers of sparks up the chimney. He saw her come to the letters. She
took off the elastic band and put it to one side with the useful things and
began dealing the envelopes into the fire. She opened one and read
quickly through it, then threw it on top of the burning pile. 35
‘Mama,’ he said.
‘Yes?’
‘Did Aunt Mary say anything about me?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Before she died – did she say anything?’ 40
‘Not that I know of – the poor thing was too far gone to speak, God
rest her.’ She went on burning, lifting the corners of the letters with the
poker to let the flames underneath them.
When he felt a hardness in his throat he put his head down on his books.
Tears came into his eyes for the first time since she had died and he cried 45
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silently into the crook of his arm for the woman who had been his maiden
aunt, his teller of tales, that she might forgive him.
What does MacLaverty’s writing make you feel as you read the ending to the story?
Or 22 Explore the ways in which Bradbury powerfully builds tension in There Will Come Soft
Rains.
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