CBSE Class 12 English The Third Level Worksheet

Read and download free pdf of CBSE Class 12 English The Third Level Worksheet. Students and teachers of Class 12 English can get free printable Worksheets for Class 12 English Vistas Chapter 1 The Third Level in PDF format prepared as per the latest syllabus and examination pattern in your schools. Class 12 students should practice questions and answers given here for English in Class 12 which will help them to improve your knowledge of all important chapters and its topics. Students should also download free pdf of Class 12 English Worksheets prepared by teachers as per the latest English books and syllabus issued this academic year and solve important problems with solutions on daily basis to get more score in school exams and tests

Worksheet for Class 12 English Vistas Chapter 1 The Third Level

Class 12 English students should refer to the following printable worksheet in Pdf for Vistas Chapter 1 The Third Level in Class 12. This test paper with questions and answers for Class 12 will be very useful for exams and help you to score good marks

Class 12 English Worksheet for Vistas Chapter 1 The Third Level


Questions on the Extracts from the Lesson

Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
And maybe — because for so many people through the years Grand Central has been an exit, a way of escape — maybe that’s how the tunnel I got into... But I never told my psychiatrist friend about that idea.
The corridor I was in began angling left and slanting downward and I thought that was wrong, but I kept on walking. All I could hear was the empty sound of my own footsteps and I didn’t pass a soul. Then I heard that sort of hollow roar ahead that means open space and people talking. The tunnel turned sharp left; I went down a short flight of stairs and came out on the third level at Grand Central Station. For just a
moment I thought I was back on the second level, but I saw the room was smaller, there were fewer ticket windows and train gates, and the information booth in the centre was wood and old-looking.

(a) Why does the narrator refer to Grand Central as an ‘exit’?
(a) it is the medium to go to other places
(b) it is a medium of escape
(c) people enter it unknowingly
(d) people enter it willingly
Answer : B

(b) Why did Charley not tell his friend about his idea?
(a) he thought his friend might too look for this means to escape
(b) his friend might tell Louisa about it.
(c) his friend would not have agreed to it.
(d) his friend might dissuade him.
Answer : C

(c) How was the third level different from the second?
(a) the information booth was wooden
(b) there were many train gates
(c) the rooms were bigger
(d) there were many ticket windows
Answer : A

(d) What according to Charley, did the ‘hollow roar’ signify?
(a) there was an open space
(b) not a soul was there
(c) people were talking
(d) both (a) and (c)
Answer : D

 

Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
Sometimes I think Grand Central is growing like a tree, pushing out new corridors and staircases like roots.
There’s probably a long tunnel that nobody knows about feeling its way under the city right now, on its way to Times Square, and maybe another to Central Park. And maybe — because for so many people through the years Grand Central has been an exit, a way of escape — maybe that’s how the tunnel I got into... But I never told my psychiatrist friend about that idea.

(a) The above extract is NOT an example of ________.
(a) allegory
(b) analogy
(c) imagery
(d) metaphor
Answer : A

(b) Charley decided not to tell his psychiatrist friend about his idea. Choose the option that reflects the reaction Charley anticipated from his friend.
(a) “That’s such a lovely comparison. Why don’t you become a writer, Charley?”
(b) “Oh Charley. It is so sad to see your desperation to run away! So very sad.”
(c) “Maybe that’s how you entered the third level. Who would have thought?!”
(d) “You need help, my raving friend. You are way too invested in this crazy thought!”
Answer : D

(c) Look at the given image that lists some of the ways in which the symbolism of a tree is employed.
Which of the following would represent an example as used by Charley in the above extract?
(a) ‘Stay grounded’ as the train station is underground.
(b) ‘Connect with your roots’ as he desires to go back to his past.
(c) ‘Enjoy the view’ as the station leads to all tourist sights of the city.
(d) ‘Keep growing’ as the station keeps renovating and expanding.
Answer : D

(d) The idiom ‘feeling its way’ implies ______ movement.
(a) swift
(b) tentative
(c) circular
(d) disorganized
Answer : B

 

Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
And that was that. I left the same way I came, I suppose. Next day, during lunch hour, I drew three hundred dollars out of the bank, nearly all we had, and bought old-style currency (that really worried my psychiatrist friend). You can buy old money at almost any coin dealer’s, but you have to pay a premium. 
My three hundred dollars bought less than two hundred in old-style bills, but I didn’t care; eggs were thirteen cents a dozen in 1894.

(a) Why did Charley leave?
(a) he feared he would be sent to jail
(b) to get his wife
(c) to meet his psychiatrist friend
(d) to draw money from the bank
Answer : A

(b) Why does he use the phrase ‘I suppose’?
(a) he is not sure if he can find the way again
(b) he is not sure if he can find the third level again
(c) he is not sure how he had got there
(d) he is not sure if he would be able to get back
Answer : C

(c) Why did Charley not care?
(a) he did not mind paying a premium
(b) as eggs were cheap
(c) the living expenses were low
(d) he could get more money easily
Answer : C

(d) The word ‘premium’ in the passage means the same as?
(a) additional
(b) allowance
(c) discount
(d) concession
Answer : A

 

Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
Then I walked down another flight to the second level, where the suburban trains leave from, ducked into an arched doorway heading for the subway — and got lost. That’s easy to do. I’ve been in and out of Grand Central hundreds of times, but I’m always bumping into new doorways and stairs and corridors. Once I got into a tunnel about a mile long and came out in the lobby of the Roosevelt Hotel. Another time I came up in an office building on Forty-sixth Street, three blocks away. Sometimes I think Grand Central is growing like a tree, pushing out new corridors and staircases like roots.

(a) Where did Charley get lost?
(a) on the third level
(b) after heading for the subway
(c) on the arched doorway
(d) on the suburban train station
Answer : B

(b) Charley’s statement ‘That’s easy to do’ means:
(a) it is easy to get lost in the third level
(b) it is easy to reach the second level
(c) it is easy to enter and exit the Grand Central
(d) it is easy to get lost in the Grand Central
Answer : D

(c) The word ‘bumping’ means the same as:
(a) omitting
(b) colliding
(c) missing
(d) skirting
Answer : B

(d) Why does Charley compare the station’s growth to a tree?
(a) it has many corridors and staircases
(b) because of its consistent extension
(c) it is an underground station
(d) it is very huge
Answer : B

 

Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
Have you ever been there? It’s a wonderful town still, with big old frame houses, huge lawns, and tremendous trees whose branches meet overhead and roof the streets. And in 1894, summer evenings were twice as long, and people sat out on their lawns, the men smoking cigars and talking quietly, the women waving palmleaf fans, with the fire-flies all around, in a peaceful world. To be back there with the First World War still twenty years off, and World War II over forty years in the future... I wanted two tickets for that.

(a) Who does ‘you’ refer to?
(a) Charley’s psychiatrist, Sam Weiner
(b) Charley’s wife, Louisa
(c) The reader
(d) Nobody in particular, it is a figure of speech.
Answer : C

(b) Choose the option that best describes the society represented in the above extract.
(a) content, peace-loving
(b) leisurely, sentimental
(c) orthodox, upper class
(d) comfortable, ancient
Answer : C

(c) Imagine that the city of Galesburg is hosting a series of conferences and workshops. In which of the following conferences or workshops are you least likely to find the description of Galesburg given in the above extract?
(a) Gorgeous Galesburg: Archiving a Tourist Paradise
(b) Welcome to the home you deserve: Galesburg Realtors
(c) Re-imagining a Warless Future: Technology for Peace
(d) The Woman Question: The world of women at home
Answer : C

(d) “tremendous trees whose branches meet overhead and roof the streets” is NOT an example of 
I. imagery II. metaphor III. alliteration IV. anachronism
(a) Options I. and II.
(b) Options I. and III.
(c) Options II. and III.
(d) Options II. and IV.
Answer : D

 

Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
The presidents of the New York Central and the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroads will swear on a stack of timetables that there are only two. But I say there are three, because I’ve been on the third level of the Grand Central Station. Yes, I’ve taken the obvious step: I talked to a psychiatrist friend of mine, among others. I told him about the third level at Grand Central Station, and he said it was a waking dream wish fulfillment. He said I was unhappy. That made my wife kind of mad, but he explained that he meant the modern world is full of insecurity, fear, war, worry and all the rest of it, and that I just want to escape.

(a) What, according to the narrator, will the presidents swear on?
(a) the existence of the third level
(b) there being a stock of timetables
(c) the non-existence of a third level
(d) there being a second level
Answer : C

(b) The phrase ‘waking-dream wish fulfillment’ means:
(a) we do not wish for something to happen
(b) we wake up suddenly from a dream
(c) we see something as we wish to see it
(d) our subconscious mind
Answer : C

(c) Why was Charley’s wife ‘kind of mad’?
(a) to see her husband confused.
(b) to hear that her husband was not happy.
(c) as no one believed Charley about the third level.
(d) due to Charley’s insistence on there being a third level.
Answer : B

(d) What does man in the modern world want to escape?
(a) anxiety
(b) suspicion
(c) jealousy
(d) indifference
Answer : A

 

Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow.
To make sure, I walked over to a newsboy and glanced at the stack of papers at his feet. It was The World;
and The World hasn’t been published for years. The lead story said something about President Cleveland. I’ve found that front page since, in the Public Library files, and it was printed June 11, 1894. I turned toward the ticket windows knowing that here — on the third level at Grand Central — I could buy tickets that would take Louisa and me anywhere in the United States we wanted to go. In the year 1894. And I wanted two tickets to Galesburg, Illinois. Have you ever been there? It’s a wonderful town still, with big old frame houses, huge lawns, and tremendous trees whose branches meet overhead and roof the streets. And in 1894, summer evenings were twice as long, and people sat out on their lawns, the men smoking cigars and talking quietly, the women waving palm-leaf fans, with the fire-flies all around, in a peaceful world.

(a) What did the narrator want ‘ to make sure’?
(a) he was not on the third level
(b) he was not on the second level
(c) he was on the third level
(d) the date printed on the newspaper was correct
Answer : C

(b) The word ‘glanced’ means the same as:
(a) looked down upon
(b) glimpsed
(c) gaped
(d) stared
Answer : B

(c) Why did Charley want to go to Illinois?
(a) in 1894 he could go anywhere in the United States
(b) it was easy to get there
(c) his friend Sam was there
(d) he could lead an idyllic life there
Answer : D

(d) What kind of life do the people of Illinois lead?
(a) comfortable
(b) relief
(c) tranquil
(d) wonder
Answer : C

Read the extracts given below and answer the questions that follow.

1.The presidents of the New York Central and the New York,New Haven and Hartford railroads will swear on a stack of timetables that there are only two. But I say there are three, because I’ve been on the third level of the Grand Central Station. Yes, I’ve taken the obvious step: I talked to a psychiatrist friend of mine, among others.

Question. How many levels are there in reality?
(i) one level
(ii) two levels
(iii) three levels
(iv) four levels
Answer. B

Question. Whose names have been taken to confirm the levels at the station?
(i) the presidents of the New York Central and New York
(ii) the presidents of the New Haven
(iii) the president of Hartford
(iv) all of these
Answer. D

Question. Why is the speaker confident about the third level?
(i) because he had seen it on television
(ii) because he had heard it from everyone
(iii) because he had been there himself
(iv) because he had his house there
Answer. C

Question. The statement ‘But I say there are three, because I’ve been on the third level of the Grand Central Station’ made by Charley shows that he was……………. .
(i) fully confident
(ii) living under illusion
(iii) day-dreaming
(iv) reluctant to face the truth
Answer. A

2.But that’s the reason, he said, and my friends all agreed.
Everything points to it, they claimed. My stamp collecting,for example; that’s a ‘temporary refuge from reality’. Well, maybe, but my grandfather didn’t need any refuge from reality; things were pretty nice and peaceful in his day, from all I hear, and he started my collection. It’s a nice collection too, blocks of four of practically every U.S. issue, first-day covers, and so on.

Question. What did Charley’s friends agree to?
(i) that he was a brilliant person
(ii) that he wanted to escape the harsh realities of life
(iii) that he needed to go in the past
(iv) that he didn’t like the present scenario
Answer. B

Question. Why do human beings need a ‘temporary refuge from reality’ as showcased in the chapter?
(i) to get away momentarily from all the troubles
(ii) to evade the work
(iii) to elude from the truth
(iv) to experience the world of fantasy
Answer. A

Question. How was the time in his grandfather’s days?
(i) insecure
(ii) peaceful
(iii) chaotic
(iv) dangerous
Answer. B

Question. What type of stamps did Charley’s grandfather collect?
(i) amazing
(ii) blocks of four of practically every U. S. issue
(iii) first day covers
(iv) all of these
Answer. D

3.I’m just an ordinary guy named Charley, thirty-one years old, and I was wearing a tan gabardine suit and a straw hat with a fancy band; I passed a dozen men who looked just like me. And I wasn’t trying to escape from anything; I just wanted to get home to Louisa, my wife. I turned into Grand Central from Vanderbilt Avenue, and went down the steps to the first level, where you take trains like the Twentieth Century. Then I walked down another flight to the second level, where the suburban trains leave from, ducked into an arched doorway heading for the subway—and got lost. That’s easy to do. I’ve been in and out of Grand Central hundreds of times, but I’m always bumping into new doorways and stairs and corridors.

Question. What did Charley want to tell about himself?
(i) that he was a simple man
(ii) that he was wearing a Gabardine suit
(iii) that he was escaping from the real world
(iv) that he didn’t want to go home
Answer. A

Question. What is the literary device used in ‘Now, I don’t know why this should have happened to me’?
(i) symbolism
(ii) metaphor
(iii) hyperbole
(iv) alliteration
Answer. A

Question. Where was Charley actually going?
(i) out of the town
(ii) to his office
(iii) to his home
(iv) to his friend’s home
Answer. C

Question. What did Charley mean by ‘I wasn’t trying to escape from anything’?
(i) he was not in his normal state of mind
(ii) he did not want to escape from anywhere
(iii) he wanted to leave his wife Louisa at that hour
(iv) he was more comfortable in his imagination than living the reality
Answer. B

4.Sometimes I think Grand Central is growing like a tree,pushing out new corridors and staircases like roots. There’s probably a long tunnel that nobody knows about feeling its way under the city right now, on its way to Times Square, and maybe another to Central Park. And maybe.......... because for so many people through the years Grand Central has been an exit, a way of escape ............ maybe that’s how the tunnel I got into... But I never told my psychiatrist friend about that idea.

Question. Why did he think that Grand Central was growing like a tree?
(i) because it had a lot of trees in it
(ii) because it had a lot of corridors and staircases
(iii) because it had a lot of trees around it
(iv) because it had a continuously been under construction
Answer. B

Question. Identify the figure of speech used in the sentence ‘pushing out new corridors and staircases like roots’.
(i) metaphor
(ii) imagery
(iii) simile
(iv) personification
Answer. C

Question. Why did anybody not know about the long tunnel?
(i) it is a secret tunnel under the city
(ii) it is kept hidden from public
(iii) it is a kind of magical tunnel
(iv) because nobody went to that part
Answer. C

Question. What were the speaker’s feelings when he described the Grand Central?
(i) he was shocked
(ii) he got upset
(iii) he got anxious
(iv) he was fascinated
Answer. D

5.Have you ever been there? It’s a wonderful town still, with big old frame houses, huge lawns, and tremendous trees whose branches meet overhead and roof the streets. And in 1894, summer evenings were twice as long, and people sat out on their lawns, the men smoking cigars and talking quietly, the women waving palm-leaf fans, with the fireflies all around, in a peaceful world. To be back there with the First World War still twenty years off, and World War II over forty years in the future... I wanted two tickets for that.

Question. Who does ‘you’ refer to?
(i) Charley’s psychiatrist, Sam Weiner
(ii) Charley’s wife, Louisa
(iii) The reader
(iv) Nobody in particular, it is a figure of speech.
Answer. D

Question. Choose the option that best describes the society represented in the above extract.
(i) content, peace-loving
(ii) leisurely, sentimental
(iii) orthodox, upper class
(iv) comfortable, ancient
Answer. C

Question. Imagine that the city of Galesburg is hosting a series of conferences and workshops. In which of the following conferences or workshops are you least likely to find the description of Galesburg given in the above extract?
(i) Gorgeous Galesburg: Archiving a Tourist Paradise
(ii) Welcome to the home you deserve: Galesburg Realtors
(iii) Re-imagining a Warless Future: Technology for Peace
(iv) The Woman Question: The world of women at home
Answer. C

Question. “Tremendous trees whose branches meet overhead and roof the streets” is NOT an example of:
1. imagery
2. metaphor
3. alliteration
4. anachronism
(i) option (1) and (2)
(ii) option (1) and (3)
(iii) option (2) and (3)
(iv) option (2) and (4)
Answer. D

 

Stand-Alone Multiple Choice Questions

Question. ‘The Third Level’ refers to the third level at the Grand Central Station. As a metaphor, which of the following would NOT be an appropriate explanation of the title?
(a) The convergence of reality and fantasy
(b) The bridge between the past and the present.
(c) The oppressive monotony of modern life.
(d) The need for an alternate plane of understanding.
Answer : C

Question. Charley decided to take the subway instead of the bus because:
(a) it was faster
(b) he had worked late at the office
(c) he was in a hurry to meet the psychiatrist
(d) he wanted to look for the third level
Answer : A

Question. How would you describe Charley?
(a) confused, happy-go-lucky
(b) escapist, adventurous
(c) imaginative, nostalgic
(d) friendly, responsible
Answer : C

Question. In the chapter ‘The Third Level’ what is Charley’s ‘temporary refuge from reality’?
(a) his looking for the third level
(b) his stamp collecting
(c) his finding the third level
(d) his looking for a means to escape
Answer : B

Question. What did Charley suspect about his friend, Sam Weiner?
(a) he had gone to Galesburg
(b) he too was looking for the third level
(c) he pretended not to be a city boy
(d) he had studied at a school in Galesburg
Answer : A

Question. The open-flame gaslights on the third level were:
(a) glaring
(b) flickering
(c) glowing
(d) shining
Answer : B

Question. What is the theme of the chapter ‘The Third Level’?
(a) how to deal with grim realities
(b) a desire to escape from one’s profession
(c) escapism as a psychological refuge
(d) transcending boundaries of time and pace
Answer : D

Question. Why did Charley glance at the stack of papers?
(a) to see when ‘The world’ was published
(b) to read the story about President Cleveland
(c) to make sure he was in the year 1894
(d) to compare the paper to the one in the Public Library files
Answer : C

Question. What according to Charley, is a ‘first-day cover’?
(a) a new stamp
(b) a self-addressed stamped envelope
(c) a letter
(d) a mail
Answer : B

Question. How would you describe Charley’s vision of his grandfather’s life and times?
(a) wistful escapism
(b) idealized sentimentality
(c) nostalgic simplicity
(d) dreamy perfection
Answer : B

Question. “That ain’t money, mister.” Why did the clerk say this to Charley?
(a) he was giving him fake notes
(b) he had not paid the premium
(c) he was giving old-style currency
(d) his currency was not old-style
Answer : D

Question. Which of the following is a conclusion that can be drawn from the story?
(a) Reality is indeed stranger than fiction.
(b) With all its worries, modern life is not worth living.
(c) The past is undoubtedly better than the present.
(d) Imagination might be the only great escape.
Answer : D

 

1. Answer the following questions in 30-40 words each:-

a. Write how the peddler felt when he was lost in the forest.

b. What was the difference between the mastersmith and the ironmaster?

c. Why does the peddler consider going to the miller’s house like going into the lion’s den?

d. Why did the ironmaster’s daughter request her father to let the peddler stay for Christmas even after knowing his true identity?

e. Why has a thing of beauty been called ‘a joy forever’?

f. What is an endless fountain of immortal drink and why is it called so?

g. What two things are cited as ‘endless source of joy’ in the poem?

h. What is the relevance of beauty in one’s life?

i. Explain -never pass into nothingness. bower quiet for us. inhuman dearth of human nature ‘grandeur of the dooms ….. for the mighty dead’

j. Who was Charles Andrews and why did Gandhi decide not to take his help?

k. How did the servants react to the doctor’s decision?

 

2. Answer the following in 125-150 words each

a. Hana comes across as a woman with quiet strength and a soft heart. Discuss

b. Explain the relevance of the last part of the peddler’s letter ‘The rattrap is ……….. clear himself’ in the story.

c. Gandhiji epitomizes the qualities of a good leader. With reference to Indigo explain the above statement.

d. What is the theme of the lesson ‘The Enemy’ (150 words)

 

WRITING SKILLS

1.Write a speech for the Morning Assembly on ‘Science has not increased Security’.

2.Write a factual Description of The School Library

Flamingo Chapter 01 The Last Lesson
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Flamingo Chapter 02 Lost Spring
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Flamingo Chapter 03 Deep Water
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Flamingo Chapter 04 The Rattrap
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Flamingo Chapter 05 Indigo
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Flamingo Poetry Chapter 04 A Thing of Beauty
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Flamingo Poetry Chapter 06 Aunt Jennifers Tigers
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Poem Chapter 01 My Mother at Sixty Six
CBSE Class 12 English My Mother at Sixty Six Worksheet
Poem Chapter 02 An Elementary School Classroom in a Slum
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Poem Chapter 03 Keeping Quiet
CBSE Class 12 English Keeping Quiet Worksheet
Poem Chapter 04 A Thing of Beauty
CBSE Class 12 English A Thing of Beauty Worksheet
Poem Chapter 05 A Roadside Stand
CBSE Class 12 English A Roadside Stand Worksheet
Poem Chapter 06 Aunt Jennifers Tigers
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Vistas Chapter 01 The Third Level
CBSE Class 12 English The Third Level Worksheet
Vistas Chapter 02 The Tiger King
CBSE Class 12 English The Tiger King Worksheet
Vistas Chapter 04 The Enemy
CBSE Class 12 English The Enemy Worksheet
Vistas Chapter 05 Should Wizard hit Mommy
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Vistas Chapter 06 On the Face of It
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Vistas Chapter 07 Evans Tries an O-Level
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Vistas Chapter 08 Memories of Childhood
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Worksheet for CBSE English Class 12 Vistas Chapter 1 The Third Level

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