CBSE Class 12 English Flamingo Aunt Jennifers Tigers Worksheet

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Flamingo Poetry Chapter 6 Aunt's Jeniffer Tigers English Worksheet for Class 12

Class 12 English students should refer to the following printable worksheet in Pdf in Class 12. This test paper with questions and solutions for Class 12 English will be very useful for tests and exams and help you to score better marks

Class 12 English Flamingo Poetry Chapter 6 Aunt's Jeniffer Tigers Worksheet Pdf

FLAMINGO: AUNT JENNIFER’S TIGERS
ADRIENNE RICH
 
Twentieth century poet, critic, scholar and feminist, Adrienne Rich wrote ‘Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers’ as a part of her first book of poetry ‘A Change of World’ (1951).Feminism was making its presence felt in the 1950s fighting for equal voting, legal and social rights for women. This poem is Adrienne’s voice against the emotional and physical brutalities women face as part of their marriages especially, in a patriarchal society. On the surface, this is a simple poem with an uncomplicated rhyme scheme about a woman busy with needlepoint. However, the true meaning emerges when the layers are peeled.
 
Relevant Background: Adrienne Rich is an American poet who was born in 1929. - She was brought up in a well-off family. - Adrienne was the elder of two daughters. - Her father was a doctor and her mother was a music composer. - She grew up in with a Jewish father and a Protestant mother. As a result of this mixed marriage she was used to tensions between her parents. - Rich felt dominated by her father’s strong personality while growing up. It was he who most guided her as a young poet. This wasn’t always to her liking as he expected her to write her poems his way. - When Rich was growing up men dominated and women were expected to become dutiful wives in their adult lives. - All these elements may have influenced the picture of marriage Rich drew in this poem. At the heart of the poem is an image of a husband who controls and frightens his wife. - Rich wrote a lot of poems based on everyday experience. In the poem ‘Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers’, Rich mocks the weakness of Aunt Jennifer, and the clout and authority of her husband in their marriage. Rich was also fascinated by how people could use a hobby like art-work to create a happier and prettier world than their daily life. - Rich has been one of America’s most important female poets for the past fifty years.
 
Summary: This poem of three four-line stanzas imagines a person whose hobby is needlework. - Aunt Jennifer reveals her dreams of a happier life in her needlework. - From the titles given to the adults, it seems as if the speaker is a child. - In the first stanza the relative, Aunt Jennifer, makes a panel with images of tigers parading proudly across it. The tigers are free, unlike their maker. - Her panel contains animals that are happier and more confident than she is. There is a ‘certainty’ about them that their maker lacks in herself. - Aunt Jennifer paints confident, proud tigers. They are assured and confident dwelllers, ‘denizens’,of their green world. ‘Denizen’ suggests independent citizen. - It would seem that Jennifer is not an independent citizen of her own world. She is instead a wife, weighed down by duties as we learn in the second stanza. - Jennifer uses sharp and contrasting colours, sharp yellow against a green background. - Her tigers are as bright as topaz, a yellow gem. - Her picture contains an image of men under a tree, though the proud tigers show no fear of the men. This is mentioned to show that they differ from Jennifer, who lives in fear of her husband to some extent. - The tigers remind the poet of knights, full of courtesy and style. Chivalric men respected their women and acted kindly towards them. Again, this seems to contrast with how ‘Uncle’ behaved towards Aunt Jennifer according to the second stanza. - In the second stanza, the poet describes Aunt Jennifer’s nervous hands struggling to pull the wool with her ivory needle. The word ‘fluttering’ suggests trembling. - We get the impression of a frail woman who finds it hard to pull the needle.- It is interesting that if her needle is made of ivory it may have come from an elephant’s tusk. Ivory is a bit like topaz, a precious material. As ivory involves the killing of elephants for their valuable tusks, it would seem that Jennifer may not care much for tigers in the wild or know much about their reality. - Thus, her artwork is unrealistic. Perhaps the poet feels it is a pointless and empty type of art. - The poet humorously suggests that Aunt Jennfer’s fingers find it hard to hold the weight of her wedding ring and then pull the needle at the same time. - The wedding band is another reference to a precious substance, probably gold. - By mentioning that it is ‘Uncle’s wedding band’, the poet suggests that Uncle owns Jennifer too and that as a female she is the property of her husband. - The words ‘massive’ and ‘heavily’ suggest Aunt Jennifer lives a demanding sort of life in which she has to attend to her husband’s needs and fulfil his commands. As a result she is somewhat worn out in her old age. - In the third stanza, the poet predicts that, when Aunt Jennifer dies, her hands will look worn from all her needlework as well as the hard time she has trying to please her husband. - Aunt Jennifer is ‘ringed’, trapped in her marriage and controlled like an animal. Her husband is her master. - Her artwork will live on after her as a reminder of the dreams she never fulfilled.
 
Themes:
1. Marriage is unequal due to male domination/Inequality: The woman at the centre of the poem, Aunt Jennifer, is a nervous and fearful wife. She lacks inner conviction or ‘certainty’, unlike the tigers she portrays. Aunt Jennifer is ‘mastered’ in her life. She lives a life of inequality. She is so nervous that her fingers ‘flutter’ through the wool she is using in her tapestry or panel. The poet portrays the marriage of Jennifer as an unhappy one for her. Aunt Jennifer feels the burden of duty and obedience. This is shown by the symbol of the wedding ring that she wears. It is described as her husband’s property: ‘Uncle’s wedding band’. It ‘sits heavily’ on her hand because he dominates her life. Her life with her husband is described as a life of ‘ordeals’. The poem therefore provides a negative picture of marriage. The poem is probably saying that the ‘Uncle’ or husband is behaving like a tiger, and the tigers are ‘chivalric’ like the husband should be. Each world is the reverse of what it should be.
 
2. The world of art is happier than the real world/Dream versus Reality: Aunt Jennifer’s hobby is making designs and pictures from wool. Jennifer produces wool tapestries that she places on panels. The creatures she places there are free and proud, the opposite to herself. She is ‘ringed’ or mastered in marriage and therefore she is not free, but controlled. It seems that she creates a happier looking world than the one she lives in. She makes precise and brightly coloured pictures like the sharp yellow tigers of the poem, pictured against a green background. These bright contrasting colours are probably much more vivid than Jennifer’s everyday world. Her artistic work will live on after she dies, as, according to the poet, her tigers will ‘go on prancing’. The figures she creates are stronger and happier than she is. They are proud and ‘prance’ about, unlike their creator, who is nervous and fears her husband. The word ‘prance’ or parade contrasts sharply with ‘fluttering’, meaning trembling. The tigers do not fear the men the aunt places under some trees in her tapestry. Therefore, the imaginary tigers produced by Aunt Jennifer live a type of proud and free life that she can only dream about. Perhaps Aunt Jennifer uses art as an escape from her troubles. In her artwork Jenniger imagines the kind of life she would have liked. Values raised in the poem: Respect for women, equality, equity, gender sensitivity, empathy, feminism, value for art.
 
Literary Devices used in the poem: Comparison: The tigers are compared to knights from the time of chivalry in the middle ages. – Imagery: The main images are of Aunt Jennifer as a fearful wife and,secondly, the magnificent tigers she creates in her panel. Images of precious substances run through the poem: ‘topaz’, ‘ivory’ and the gold of ‘wedding band’. – Metaphor: The poet compares the yellow stripes of the tigers to a precious stone, topaz. – Contrast: [difference] The main contrasts are between nervous Aunt Jennifer and her confident tigers. Another contrast is between the strong yellow and green colours. The words ‘prancing’ and ‘fluttering’ contrast as well. - Mood/Atmosphere: Fear is the main atmosphere in Aunt Jennifer’s life of ‘ordeals’ where her fingers tremble and show terror. An air of freedom and confidence dominates the atmosphere in her artistic creations. The men beneath the tree create an atmosphere of mystery. The image of Aunt Jennifer’s corpse from the future is a bit eerie or creepy. –
 
Hyperbole: [Exaggeration] The poet exaggerates the weight of her husband’s wedding ring to make a point about how dominating he is. – Paradox: [apparent contradiction] Here a trembling and ‘mastered’ woman creates free and confident creatures in her artistic endeavours. ‘Fluttering’ fingers produce something that has ‘certainty’. – Tone: The tone appears to be positive and cheerful when the poet describes the tigers. See the comment on sibilance below. The tone becomes sad and even creepy at times in describing the life of Aunt Jennifer. – Repetition: The word ‘prance’ is repeated to emphasise the pride and freedom of the tigers.  ‘Ringed’ echoes ‘wedding band’. There is repetition of various sounds as indicated in the next few bullet points. - Alliteration: [repetition of consonant sounds at the start of nearby words] e.g ‘p’ in ‘prancing proud’ emphasises the feeling of confidence expressed in the tigers’ movements. –
 

Extract Based Questions:

1. Aunt Jennifer‘s tigers prance across a screen Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
They do not fear the men beneath the tree;
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty. 

Question. Why do the tigers not fear the men beneath the tree?
Answer: tigers are brave, strong, fearless and full of confidence.

Question. What do you understand by 'Chivalric Certainty‘?
Answer: refers to sense of confidence and chivalry that the tiger possesses. "
they are confident/ sure of their power and strength.

Question. Are the tigers real? Give reasons for your answer
Answer: No -can be seen on a panel - embroidery done by Aunt Jennifer.

Question. Why are the tigers called Aunt Jennifer‘s tigers?
Answer: tigers are the art work / embroidery done by Aunt Jennifer- they represent her hidden dreams and aspirations.

Question. What is the 'screen‘?
Answer: the panel /tapestry where she is doing the needlework.

Question. How are they described here?
Answer: as inhabitant of green forest, bright yellow in colour, prancing unafraid.

Question. What does the word 'chivalric‘ mean?
Answer: brave

2. "Aunt Jennifer's finger fluttering through her wool
Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
The massive weight of Uncle's wedding band
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer's hand.

Question. Describe the irony in the third line
Answer: The wedding band is a symbol of conjugal happiness but for Aunt Jennifer, it has become a burden.

Question. What is Aunt Jennifer doing with her wool?
Answer: working on an embroidery panel creating tigers.

Question. Why does she find it difficult to pull her ivory needle?
Answer: she is weak, afraid and has lost confidence in herself.

Question. Identify the figure of speech in 'fingers fluttering‘. What does the expression suggest?
Answer: Fig of Speech "Alliteration. It suggests Aunt‘s physical tiredness. It also implies her fear of her husband.

Question. What has caused this condition?
Answer: Her troubled marriage and domination by her husband has caused this condition.

Question. What does the weight of the 'band‘ symbolize?
Answer: Band symbolizes oppression by her husband " burdened by marital responsibilities – feels subjugated.

3. "When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid."

Question. In the poem, art has been used as
(a) a symbol of marriage
(b) The institution of marriage
(c) The reality of life
(d) A medium of escape from reality.

Answer: A

Question. Why are Aunt Jennifer‘s hands called " terrified‘?
Answer: due to the fear of her dominating husband.

Question. What are they still ringed with?
Answer: They still seem to carry the burden of hardships which troubled her.

Question. Which word in the stanza shows the unparalleled sufferings of the aunt?
(a) Prance
(b) Ordeal
(c) Terrified
(d) Dead

Answer: B

Question. The figure of speech in ―The massive weight of Uncle‘s wedding band‖.
Answer: Hyperbole

Question. What will happen tothe Tigers after her death?
Answer: tigers will continue to live proud and unafraid – the art created by aunt will go on.

 
Short Answer Questions:
 

Question. Why are Aunt‘s hands fluttering?
Answer: She is terrorized by her husband - Sign of nervousness/ weak – She lives in
constant fear of her husband and very weak

Question. What is the difference between her and the tigers?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer is quite weak and submissive, whereas the tigers are strong, bold and powerful. She is bound by the constraints of her married fife, while the tigers are free to move about in the green woods.

Question. W hat will happen to Aunt Jennifer‘s tigers when she is dead? 
Answer: The tigers that Aunt created will live fearlessly and walk with grace, elegance and confidence.

Question. What will happen to Aunt Jennifer‘s tigers when she is dead?
Answer: The tigers will still keep prancing over the panel even when Aunt is dead.
They will outlive her.

Question. Why has Aunt Jennifer created the tigers so different from her own character?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer is a timid / weak woman who has been treated badly by her husband. She could never stand up boldly against her husband. But revolts silently in her own way by creating tigers,ie through her artistic expression. The tigers created by Aunt Jennifer are an expression of her desire to free herself from the constraints of her married life. She wants to be bold and fearless like her tigers.

Question. Why are the tigers not afraid of the men?
Answer: The tigers are not afraid of men because they are brave, strong, fearless and full of confidence.

Question. Why are the tigers called "Aunt Jennifer‘s tigers"?
Answer: because it is she who is embroidering them and they are a reflection of her suppressed self.

Question. Explain the massive weight of uncle‘s wedding band?
Answer: symbol of bondage/ She is chained in the unhappy marriage life. It suggests her sufferings in marriage life

Question. Why does he wedding band ' sit heavily‘ upon Aunt Jennifer‘s hand?
Answer: Wedding ring – a constant reminder to Aunt Jennifer of the miserable marriage – it‘s a sign of oppression.

Question. Why is she "ringed with ordeals"?
Answer: The 'ring‘ here refers to her wedding band or ring, which has brought with it a host of family responsibilities. She feels so surrounded (i.e. ringed) by her marital constraints that it seems like an ordeal to her.

Question. How do the tigers symbolize her inner longing?
Answer: Aunt creates tigers to express her suppressed personality and her natural longing to be free and independent.

Question. How does Aunt Jennifer express her bitterness and anger against male dominance?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer is too terrified to openly resist the oppression that she is victim of She expresses her bitterness and anger against male dominance silently through her art.
She creates tigers on her tapestry; animals that are symbolic of bravery, fearlessness and strength. Besides, she portrays these tigers as creatures unafraid of the men around them.
The tigers she creates are wild and free from any kind of bondage.

Question. What picture of male chauvinism (tyranny) do we find in the poem? 
Answer: Aunt Jennifer - controlled by her husband – her freedom exists only in her dreams – heaviness of the ring and trembling of fingers in dread indicate oppression.

Question. How do 'denizens‘ and 'chivalric‘ add to our understanding of the tiger‘s attitude? 
Answer: denizens – (tigers live in world of green/ forest), chivalric (brave, fearless, basic nature of the tigers) / brave and fearless animals living in the forest .

Question. What are the 'ordeals‘ Aunt Jennifer is surrounded by, why is it significant that the poet uses the word 'ringed‘? What are the meanings of the word 'ringed‘ in the poem.
Answer: Although Aunt Jennifer‘s ordeals are not explicitly mentioned in the poem, but we can easily judge that she suffers from matrimonial oppression and is a victim of patriarchy and male chauvinism. Her personal liberty and desires are constricted by her domineering husband. She might be burdened with heavy responsibilities towards the family and her husband.
The poet uses the word 'ringed‘ to signify that after her death also, Aunt Jennifer‘s hands will still be affected by the dominance of a male, perhaps her husband. The word 'ringed‘
could have several shades of meaning. First of all, the ring refers to the wedding ring which symbolizes the sacred bond of marriage. In Aunt‘s case, the marriage has proved
to be burdensome and restrictive. So the word 'ringed‘ in the poem also refers to the confines, constraints and demands of marriage that bind a woman.

Question. How do ‘denizens’ and ‘chivalric’ add to our understanding the tiger’s attitude?
Answer: The tigers embroidered by Aunt Jennifer are free inhabitants of the vibrant green forests, masters of their domain and movements. They are ‘chivalric’- i.e. noble and majestic, pacing powerfully and confidently, fearless of the hunters. They stand in stark contrast to their frail creator who is timid, fearful of her husband, confined and crushed in an oppressive marriage.
 
Question. Why do you think Aunt Jennifer’s hands are ‘fluttering through her wool’ in the second stanza? Why is she finding the needle so hard to pull?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer struggles to express her dreams through needlework,but her fingers tremble nervously as she tries to pull the light ivory needle because she fears her domineering husband, who has made her physically and emotionally frail. She is weighed down by uncle’s wedding band-a symbol of her suffocating marriage and the compulsions therein, in a patriarchal society.
 
Question. What is suggested by the image ‘massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band’?
Answer: Uncle’s wedding band is heavy as it is a symbol of bondage, of being crushed in an unhappy marriage. It has kept her encircled and trapped in a burdensome marriage in a patriarchal society- a relationship of subjugation and domination. It has restricted her freedom and eroded her individuality.
 
Question. Of what or whom is Aunt Jennifer terrified in the third stanza?
Answer: Even after death, Aunt would carry her fear of her domineering husband as she would yet bear the burden of the wedding band on her finger. The ordeals faced by her in an oppressive marriage would continue to terrify her.
 
Question. What are the ordeals Aunt Jennifer is surrounded by, why is it significant that the poet uses the word ringed? What are the meanings of the word ringed in the poem?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer’s ordeals are those suffered by all women who face physical, mental or emotional trauma at the hands of insensitive husbands in a patriarchal society, restricting a woman’s personal liberty and dignity. The wedding ring has kept her ringed in i.e. trapped in a gender role – a victim of male domination.
 
Question. Why do you think Aunt Jennifer created animals that are so different from her own character? What might the poet be suggesting through this difference?
Answer: The timid and fearful Aunt Jennifer creates an alternative world of free and fearless tigers to express her longing for freedom, a medium of escape from her grim marriage. The ironical contrast underscores a warning by the poet against acceptance of subjugation by women as it crushes their dreams, individuality and a full life. Irony: It is ironical that Aunt Jennifer’s creations- the tigers will continue to pace and prance freely, while Aunt herself will remain terrified even after death, ringed by the ordeals she was controlled by in her married life.
 
Question. Interpret the symbols in the poem. Wedding band is a symbol of oppression in an unhappy marriage?
Answer: Marriage is socially and legally binding, making women silently accept their subjugation and male domination, especially in a patriarchal society. Its weight refers to the burden of gender expectations. Ringed means encircled or trapped, losing individuality and freedom. She is a typical victim of male oppression in an unhappy marriage, who suffers loss of individuality, dignity and personal freedom silently. She becomes dependent, fearful and frail.

Tigers– symbolize untamed free spirit. Here they are antithesis of their creator’s personality. The use of colours implies that Aunt Jennifer’s tigers and their land are more vital and enjoy a sense of freedom far greater than her. Yellow (bright topaz) connotes the sun and fierce energy, while green reminds one of spring and vitality. They pace and prance freely, proudly, fearless, confident and majestic in their bearing a creative expression. The artwork expresses the Aunt’s suppressed desires and becomes her escape from the oppressive reality of her life. (last stanza) – as opposed to Aunt Jennifer. It shows that she has lost her identity completely, thus lost even her name. ‘Pace’ and ‘prance’ are action words. The rhyme mimics the movement of the tigers.
 
Question. Do you sympathize with Aunt Jennifer? What is the attitude of the speaker towards her?
Answer: Aunt Jennifer’s plight as a victim of gender oppression in an unhappy marriage draws our sympathy. However, the poet underscores that Aunt by accepting her suffering silently let her life be completely mastered over by her husband and lost her personal freedom and individuality. Her desires expressed in her art work will remain only a dream unless women like her assert their equal status.
 
Read the extracts and answer the questions that follow:
 
1. Aunt Jennifer’s tigers prance across a screen,
Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
They do not fear the men beneath the tree:
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.
 
a) What does prancing tigers symbolize?
b) What are Aunt Jennifer’s tigers doing? How do they look like?
c) Where do they live? Who are they not afraid of?
d) Explain: They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.
 
2. Aunt Jennifer’s fingers fluttering through her wool
Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
The massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer’s hand.
 
a) Why do Aunt Jennifer’s fingers flutter through her wool?
b) Why does she find it hard to pull the ivory needles?
c) Explain: massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band.
d) How is Aunt Jennifer affected by the ‘weight of matrimony’?
 
3. When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.
 
a) What is Aunt Jennifer’s death symbolic of?
b) What does ‘ringed with ordeals’ imply?
c) What will happen to the tigers after her death?
d) Name the poem and the poet.

Stanza 3.

When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.

Question. What is Aunt doing in the poem?
(a) cooking
(b) embroidery
(c) reading
(d) sleeping

Answer : B

Question. Of what or of whom is aunt Jennifer terrified of in the 3rd stanza?
(a) of tigers
(b) of her death
(c) of her old age
(d) of her husband

Answer : D

Question. What is the significance of the word ringed?
(a) falling into a trap
(b) moving in a circle
(c) wearing a ring as a symbol of
(d) engagement responsibilities that formed circles like a ring surrounding her finger

Answer : D

Question. Who mastered the aunt with ordeals?
(a) the poet
(b) her Father
(c) her Husband
(d) none of these

Answer : C

Question. ‘Proud’ and ‘unafraid’. These two adjectives have been used for
(a) the uncle
(b) the males in the society
(c) the tigers on the forest
(d) the tigers on the panel

Answer : D

Question. ‘Still ringed’ means
(a) oppression will continue
(b) too many rings on her fingers
(c) ring of the bell
(d) quiet and peaceful

Answer : A

Question. What is Aunt Jennifer doing with wool?
(a) she is embroidering a wall panel
(b) she is knitting a scarf
(c) she is making a ball of wool
(d) she is knitting a cap

Answer : A

Question. What do the Tigers do on the screen? They were .....
(a) singing
(b) Jumping
(c) catching the prey
(d) prancing

Answer : D

Question. What would Jennifer’s terrified hands tell after her death?
(a) story of her life
(b) her constrained married life
(c) her strength to find her ways and beat the fears
(d) all of these

Answer : D

Question. She was mastered by is a reference made to the
(a) hardships and difficulties that Aunt Jennifer faced during her lifetime
(b) she was a slave
(c) she had a rude master
(d) her teacher taught her nothing

Answer : A

Question. Why did aunt embroider tigers on the panel?
(a) to express her suppressed feelings
(b) to express her strengths
(c) to express her fighting spirit of a warrior
(d) all these

Answer : D

Question. What did ordeals or tough times do in Jennifer’s life?
(a) they made her a hard hearted person
(b) she developed hatred
(c) she became weak
(d) they crushed her artistic personality

Answer : D

Question. What did marriage bring for Jennifer?
(a) un-happiness
(b) loss of freedom
(c) loss of freedom and burden as if she has put on a heavy band
(d) a heavy mountain

Answer : C

Answer the following in about 30-40 words.

1. What are the characteristics of the tigers that lend a contrast to the Aunt?

2. Describe the tigers on the panel.

3. What is suggested by the image ‘massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band’?

4. What is the theme of the poem?

5. What does Aunt Jennifer’s creation of the tigers symbolize?

Please click on below link to download CBSE Class 12 English Flamingo Aunt Jennifers Tigers Worksheet

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