- Action, Linking, and Auxiliary Verb: Definitions, Functions, and Examples
- Correct Use of Verbs
- Correct Use of Preposition
- Present Perfect vs. Present Perfect Continuous Tense
- Uses of Articles (A, An, The)
- Active and Passive Voice
- Indefinite and Definite Articles: Definition and Examples
- Pronouns and Possessive Adjectives
- Comparison of Adjectives & Adverbs: Examples, Sentences & Exercises
- Adjectives
- Irregular Verbs with Examples
- Modal Auxiliary Verb
- Use of Modal Verbs
- Compound Antecedents: Definition & Examples
- What is an Antecedent? Definition, Meaning & Examples
- What Are Collective Nouns?
- What Are Possessive Nouns? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Sentence Structure: Understanding Grammar
- Parts of Speech
- Degree of Comparison
- Difference Between Direct & Indirect Objects in Sentence Structure
- Gerunds: Are They Verbs? Are They Nouns?
- Conjunction vs. Preposition
- Combining Dependent & Independent Clauses
- Conjunctions: Coordinating & Correlative
- Complex Subject-Verb Agreement: Inverted Order, Compound Subjects & Interrupting Phrases
- Point of View: First, Second & Third Person
Comprehensive English: Organization
- Organizational Patterns for Writing: Purpose and Types
- How to Write an Essay
- How to Write Strong Transitions and Transitional Sentences
- Writing: Main Idea, Thesis Statement & Topic Sentences
- Paragraphs: Definition & Rules
Comprehensive English: Writing Mechanics
Comprehensive English: Figurative Language
- Allusion and Illusion: Definitions and Examples
- Narrators in Literature: Types and Definitions
- What is a Metaphor? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Writing Assessment Tools & Strategies
- Qualities of Good Assessments: Standardization, Practicality, Reliability & Validity
- Forms of Assessment
- Self-Assessment in Writing: Definition & Examples
- How to Set a Grading Rubric for Literary Essays
- Standard Score: Definition & Examples
- Raw Score: Definition & Explanation
- How to Create a Writing Portfolio
Comprehensive English: Effective Listening & Speaking
Comprehensive English: Developing Word Identification Skills
English: Class 6 : Honey Suckle
- The Banyan Tree
- Desert Animals
- A Game of Chance
- Fair Play
- Who I Am
- A Different Kind of School
- An Indian-American Woman in Space: Kalpana Chawla
- How the Dog Found Himself a New Master
- Who Did Patrick’s Homework
English: Class 6 : Poem
English: Class 6 : A Pact with the sun
- A Strange Wrestling Match
- What Happened to the Reptiles
- A Pact with the Sun
- The Wonder Called Sleep
- The Monkey and the Crocodile
- Tansen
- The Old Clock Shop
- The Shepherd’s Treasure
- The Friendly Mongoose
- A Tale of Two Birds
English: Class 7 : Honeycomb
English: Class 7: Alien Hand
- An Alien Hand
- A Tiger in the House
- The Bear Story
- Chandni
- I Want Something in a Cage
- Golu Grows a Nose
- The Cop and the Anthem
- The Desert
- Bringing Up Kari
- The Tiny Teacher
English: Class 7: Poem
- Garden Snake
- Meadow Surprises
- Dad and the Cat and the Tree
- Mystery of the Talking Fan
- Trees
- Chivvy
- The Shed
- The Rebel
- The Squirrel
English: Class 8: Honey Dew
- The Great Stone Face II
- The Great Stone Face I
- A Short Monsoon Diary
- A Visit to Cambridge
- This is Jody’s Fawn
- The Summit Within
- Bepin Choudhury’s Lapse of Memory
- Glimpses of the Past
- The Best Christmas Present in the World
English: Class 8: Poem
English: Class 8: It so happened
- Ancient Education System of India
- The Comet — II
- The Comet — I
- Jalebis
- The Open Window
- The Fight
- The Treasure Within
- The Selfish Giant
- Children At Work
English: Class 9: Beehive
- Kathmandu
- If I were You
- The Bond of Love
- Reach for the Top
- Packing
- My Childhood
- The Snake and the Mirror
- A Truly Beautiful Mind
- The Sound of Music
- The Fun They Had
English: Class 9: Poem
English: Class 9: Moments
- A House Is Not a Home
- The Last Leaf
- Weathering the Storm in Ersama
- The Happy Prince
- In the Kingdom of Fools
English: Class 10: First Flight
- The Proposal
- The Sermon at Banaras
- Madam Rides the Bus
- Mijbil the Otter
- Glimpses of India
- The Hundred Dresses - II
- The Hundred Dresses - I
- From the Diary of Anne Frank
- Two Stories about Flying
- Nelson Mandela Long Walk to Freedom
- A Letter to God
English: Class 10: Poem
English: Class 10: Foot prints
English: Class 10: Supplementary : Prose
English: Class 10: Supplementary: Poetry
English: Class 11:Hornbill
- Silk Road
- The Adventure
- The Browning Version
- The Ailing Planet: the Green Movement’s Role
- Landscape of the Soul
- Discovering Tut: the Saga Continues
- We’re Not Afraid to Die..if We Can All Be Together
- The Portrait of a Lady
English: Class 11: Supplementary
- The Tale of Melon City
- Birth
- The Ghat of the Only World
- Albert Einstein at School
- Ranga’s Marriage
- The Address
- The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse
English: Class 11: Poem
- 2Ajamil and the Tigers
- Ode to a Nightingale
- Felling of the Banyan Tree
- Refugee Blues
- For Elkana
- Hawk Roosting
- Mother Tongue
- The World is too Much With Us
- Telephone Conversation
- Coming
- Let me Not to the Marriage of True Minds
- The Peacock
English: Class 12: Prose
- Going Places
- The Interview
- Poets and Pancakes
- Indigo
- The Rattrap
- Deep Water
- Lost Spring
- The Last Lesson
English: Class 12: Supplementary
Introduction
Hello Learners, today we will be exploring the short story “The Wonder Called Sleep”, which is the seventh chapter of the textbook Engpsh Supplementary Reader A Pact with the Sun. A story doesn’t always need to be set in a world which doesn’t look pke ours. Sometimes the stories can come directly from us and our experiences. Sleeping is a universal human experience.
This tutorial talks about the importance of sleep. It also tries to look at the concept of dreams. We will look at a poem in the end as well.
Story Summary
This is a story that talks about sleep. Sleep is one of the most fundamental activities of human pfe. When we work throughout the day our body gets fatigued and to get out of this fatigue we need rest. We get this rest in the form of sleep. Both our mind and body get refreshed after a good night’s sleep. Sleep reduces our blood pressure and body temperature. It also reduces and calms our heartbeat.
Images Coming soon
While sleeping we often dream; however, we don’t always end up remembering our dreams.
Dream essentially is an activity that your mind does while you are asleep.
Dreams often don’t let us reapze noises and disturbances.
Dreams may be helpful to understand some of the troubles that we are going through but dreams don’t tell you the future.
It is important to understand our dreams, there are a few people who maintain a dream journal to go back to some of their dreams.
The chapter also includes two stanzas of a poem called “Lights Out” by Edward Thomas. We can observe that the poet has encapsulated the idea of sleep in a beautiful capsule of poetry. The imagery in the poem is beautiful. It is fascinating how words can create such beautiful patterns and a narrative through the same. The poet compares sleep to the unfathomable deep forest. A forest where people can’t see a way, an experience where the person has no choice.
However, the whole experience as the poet acknowledges happens in an unknown space. Thus, going back to the activity of the mind and soul. It is really interesting how the entire chapter is structured. It starts with the idea of sleep itself. It helps you to correlate your own personal pved experience to the chapter and then it ends beautifully with a poem that tells you about someone else’s idea of sleep. It then leaves you with a question see what is the idea of other people’s sleep and whether are people getting good and peaceful sleep or not.
FAQs
Q1: What is the most obvious advantage of sleep?
Ans: The most obvious advantage of sleep is to help your mind and body to get out of the state of fatigue. It helps you to rest and cools down your system. Without sleep, your body will not function properly. It reduces your blood pressure and calms down your heart rate. It also improves your day-to-day functioning. As they say, early to bed and early to rise to make a human healthy, wealthy and wise.
Q2: What happens to our bodies when we sleep?
Ans: Our body goes into a state of relaxation. Through our sleep, every bit of our body relaxes. Our heartbeat drops. Our Blood pressure stabipzes and we also attain a sense of peace and calm. It calms our mind and body. Our muscles and organs also relax through sleep. We sometimes get dreams and these dreams also happen during our sleep. Dreams are nothing but activities done by our minds during sleep.
Q3: Define a dream in your own words.
Ans: A dream is a pattern of multiple things which we see in our day-to-day pves. These patterns tell us something concerning our own pves. It is full of darkness but also has multiple images which signify something in our daily routine. For a few people, it might feel pke being in a short film, for others, it might be an aspect of self-participation in the whole experience. There is a motivational quote that says “dreams are not what you see during your sleep, but dreams are something that doesn’t let you sleep”, it’s a nice quote.
Q4: Why are dreams important? Mention two reasons.
Ans: Dreams are important because -
They tell us a lot about what we might be going through, emotionally and spiritually. The images which we see in the darkness are created by the references that our mind collects throughout our pfe.
They help us to avoid noise and other disturbances while we are asleep. We can often notice that people’s sleep breaks when they hear sounds. Dreams act as a security shield against that because it makes your mind busy with images in the darkness. That’s why dreams are extremely important.
Q5: Why has sleep been called a wonder?
Ans: Sleep has a very beautiful and mystical quapty. It is a moment where you end up being yourself but at the same time, you experience patterns that might not be very probable in your real pfe. It is a part of your imagination and it is in itself a very important message which is being sent to you while your mind is doing the activity during your sleep time. This complex nature of something very simple makes the idea of sleep a wonder. We can even think of things that a person cannot pve without and we will find that sleep is definitely on the pst.
Q6: What is a “lullaby”?
Ans: We have often heard of songs that our mothers and grandmothers used to sing to make us fall asleep. The calm, peaceful, lyrical and melodious nature of the sound made us fall into sleep quickly. Sometimes we heard stories through these lullabies as well. In different languages and cultures, there are different lullabies present which can still widely be noticed and this activity is a part of the culture in general.