QA On The Ball Poem
QA On The Ball Poem
QA On The Ball Poem
In this poem, John Berryman tells us about our reactions at some material loss. A boy loses
a ball. He is very upset at the loss. Buying a new ball does not cost much. It is also easily
available. But the poet wants the child to understand and accept the loss. He wants him to
also learn to overcome the loss himself.
Comprehension Questions
Answer the following questions in 30-40 words:
2. What shows that the ball was valuable for the boy?
The ball was valuable for the boy is obvious from the way he reacts after losing it He was
shocked, remained fixed, trembled with grief staring at the place where the ball had fallen.
All this shows that he loved the ball and it was valuable for him.
3. Do you think the boy has lost anything earlier? Pick out the words that suggest
the answer.
I don’t think the boy has lost anything earlier. The first loss is shocking and full of grief. The
line ’An ultimate shaking grief fixes the boy’ reflects it. Also in the ‘senses first responsibility’
the word first shows that it was his first loss.
6. Explain the line, “And no one buys a ball back. Money is external”.
This line means that no one can buy something that is lost forever. No one can buy the boy
that very ball which he has lost. Money is an external thing. It is a medium of possessing
things. But even money cannot compensate for the sense of loss suffered by a person.
1. How did the boy really react to the loss of the ball or was he fearful of something
or someone? Are there any lessons to be learnt?
(i) The boy was not fearful of anyone; in fact, he was really upset about the loss of the ball.
The ball was valuable for him. He was shocked, remained fixed, trembled with grief staring
at the place where the ball had fallen. His family must not have been affected by the loss as
a ball is easily available and
inexpensive.
(ii) The loss of the ball teaches a lesson to us. Money is external in the sense that it can
give you only outer happiness or pleasure not inner happiness. Money cannot buy the
emotions and heavenly virtues. It cannot be linked with old memories. Moreover, self-
consolation, realization or understanding is more effective and lasting than done by an
external agency or a person.
1. Why does the poet say, “I would not intrude on him”? Why doesn’t he offer
him money to buy another ball?
When a person is trying to come over his grief on his own, he is busy making himself
understand certain things. Then, if someone intrudes or disturbs, his chain of thoughts is
broken. It makes him irritated. Moreover, self-consolation, realization or understanding is
more effective and lasting than when it is done by an external agency or a person. The poet
knows it. So he does not intrude on him. His offer of money to buy another ball is useless
for the boy wants the same ball he is attached to and has been playing for a long time. No
other ball will be able to take its place.
2. ”...staring down /All his young days into the harbour where/His ball went...” Do
you think the boy has had the ball for a long time? Is it linked to the memories of
days when he played with it?
Yes, the boy has had the ball for a long time. It is clear from the lines in the poem ‘staring
down/ All his young days...’ These lines show that the ball is linked to the memories of many
days when he played with it.
4. Do you think the boy has lost anything earlier? Pick out the words that suggest
the answer.
The boy has lost something earlier also. It is clear in the opening line ‘What is the boy now’.
5. What does the poet say the boy is learning from the loss of the ball? Try to
explain this in your own words.
The poet says that the boy is learning to live with his loss. In this world, loss is a fact. The
boy has lost his ball. He is shaken by it. But he must try to understand the emotional
implication of the sense of loss.
6. Have you ever lost something you liked very much? Write a paragraph
describing how you felt then, and saying whether—and how—you got over your loss.
Yes. I have lost many things in life. But the loss of my camera will always remain fresh in
my memory. My father had given it to me on my fourteenth birthday. I was very happy. I
showed it to many friends. One day we went to see a match. We went to the local bus. I
placed it on my seat. When the bus stop came, I left the bus and forgot the camera on the
bus. It was lost forever. I remained sad for many days at that loss.
Practice Questions
Q1. Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
(a) No use to say. ‘O there are other balls’: Ultimate shaking grief fixes the boy As he stands
rigid, trembling, staring down All his young days into the harbour where His ball went. I
would not intrude on him;
iv. Find the word from the passage which means ‘to enter a situation where one is not
welcome’.
a. intrude
b. grief
c. rigid
d. trembling
(b) What is the boy now, who has lost his ball?
What, what is he to do? I saw it go
Merrily bouncing down the street, and then
Merrily over-there it is in the water!
No use to say ‘0 there are other balls’;
(a) Express your views on the title of the poem, ‘The Ball Poem’.
When one reads the title ‘The Ball Poem’, one assumes that the poem may be a light-
hearted one, perhaps about the joys of childhood. However, as the reader reads the poem,
the seriousness of the topic comes forth, as does the title’s appropriateness.
(b) A ball is an easily available, inexpensive thing. Then, why is the boy so sad to
lose it?
No doubt the ball is an easily available and inexpensive item but the ball, the boy has lost is
valuable for him. His memories of young days are associated with it for he had been playing
with it for a long time. It was not an ordinary but special a ball for him. No other ball could
take its place. So, he is sad to lose it.
(a) Should the boy be allowed to grieve for his ball? If his loss is irreparable or
irretrievable then how should one handle it? What lessons can be learnt?
Yes, the boy should be allowed to grieve for his ball, as he had that ball for a long time. He
had many old memories associated with it since his childhood. Moreover, when a person is
trying to come over his grief on his own, then one should not intrude or disturb him as it may
break his chain of thoughts and may irritate him. One should have self-consolation, and
understanding in order to bear the loss. Self- realization and understanding are more
effective and lasting than when it is done by an external agency or a person.