About
the Author
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Pearl S. Buck was the daughter of
American missionaries and spent a significant part of her life in China. She
was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1938. She was a prolific writer
and is noted for her novels of life in China. She was an active supporter of
the rights of women and minority groups. The experience of being rejected and
at risk of being killed because of her race, religion and nationality
resonates in her work and is also seen in 'The Enemy'.
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Brief Summary of the Lesson
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‘The Enemy’ is a short story set in
Japan, during World War II. It was published in 1942, a year after the attack
on Pearl Harbor. A critically wounded blonde American washes up on the beach,
near Dr SadaoHoki’s home. The doctor is caught in a conflict between his duty
as a doctor and his duty as a Japanese citizen.
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Paragraph-wise Summary of the Lesson
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Influence of Dr Sadao’s Father on him
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The story begins with a description of
the house of Dr SadaoHoki. It is a square stone house overlooking a narrow
beach, outlined with pine trees. As a child, he had climbed those trees. He
had often visited the South Seas islands with his father. His father used to
tell him that the islands were the stepping stones to the future for Japan.
He also pointed out to his son that one is responsible for one's future, and
no one else is an obstacle to one's progress. Sadao kept this in his mind, as
he did all that his father said. His father was serious and did not joke or
play with him. Instead, he took a lot of pain to ensure that his son got a
good education. At the age of 22, he was sent to America to study medicine
and surgery. He returned to Japan at the age of 30. Before his father died,
he had the satisfaction of seeing his son as a surgeon and also as a
scientist. Dr Sadao had not been sent abroad with the troops as he was working
on a discovery that would render wounds entirely clean. Another reason was
that he might be required to operate on the old General, who was undergoing
treatment for a certain condition.
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Sadao and Hana's Relationship
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Clouds were rising from the ocean. It had
been unexpectedly warm for the last few days. From the veranda, Sadao noticed
the spreading mist and realised it would soon envelop the house too. Hana,
his wife, dressed in traditional Japanese attire, joins him. Sadao recollects
how he had met Hana in America but waited to fall in love with her only after
he was sure that she was Japanese. His father would not have accepted her
otherwise. He had met her at an American professor’s house. The professor and
his wife were kind people who wanted something for their foreign students.
Sadao had almost decided not to go since the place was small and the food
bad, but finally went and there he met Hana, a new student. They finished
their education in America and came to Japan. After his father had seen her,
their marriage was arranged in the traditional Japanese way. Sadao and Hana
were perfectly happy and had two children.
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Man Washed Ashore
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Suddenly they saw something black emerge
from the mists. A man was flung, by a huge wave, up out of the ocean. He
staggered a few steps, crawled on his hands and knees, and fall flat on his
face. Thinking it to be a fisherman, Sadao and Hana ran down the steps to the
man. The surf beyond the beach was spiked with rocks, and they knew that the
man must be badly hurt. They approached the wounded man, and Hana realised
that it was a white man. He was very young and was unconscious. From the
gunshot wound on his back, red scars on his neck and his U. S Navy hat, they
conclude that he must be a prisoner of war, who had escaped. Sadao and Hana
wonder what they should do with the man. He applied sea moss to the wound,
and the bleeding stopped. They feel that it would be best to put him back in
the sea. Sadao said that if they sheltered him, they would be arrested, and
if they handed him over, he would certainly die. Sadao felt that if the man
were fit, he would have handed him over to the police, but since he was
wounded. Hana completed his statement and said that Sadaocannotthrow the man
back in the sea. They must take him to their house and tell the servants that
they intend to hand him over to the police. She said that it would be risky
if they did not hand him over.
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The Servants Protest
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They lifted the man and carried him into
the house through the side door. They took him to the room which had been
Sado's father’s bedroom and laid him on the matted floor. Sadao checks his
pulse and heartbeat. Hana goes to fetch Yumito wash the man. The other
servants had already been briefed by Sadao. The gardener expressed his
opinion that the master should not heal the wound of the white man. Yumi
refused to wash the white man and did not want to be involved in the matter
at all. Hana started cleaning the man herself.
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The Surgery
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Sadaoentered the room with his surgeon's
emergency bag. He took over from Hana and turned the man over and washed his
back. He examined the wound and noticed the bullet was still there. The wound
was deep, and the man had lost a lot of blood. Hana was distressed at the
sight and ran out of the room to throw up. She got back to the room and
started helping Sadao. While operating, he called him friend, as it was his
habit to call his patients, "my friend ". With the most precise
incision, Sadao expertly extracted the bullet from the man's body. The man
was still unconscious, but he uttered a few words. Sadao gave him an
injection after which his pulse became stronger. He assured Hana that the man
would live.
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Recovery
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When the young man woke up, he was
terrified to realise where he was. Hana told him not to be afraid and fed him
with a spoon. On the third day after the surgery, Sadao found the man sitting
and scolded him for doing so. He warned him that such efforts might kill him.
The man wanted to know if he was going to be handed over to the authorities.
Sadao said that he did not know what he would do with the man. Hana informed
Sadao that the servants would leave if they continued to shield the white
man. They were under the impression that their employers liked Americans and
had forgotten to think about their country first. Sadao pointed out that
though the Americans were their enemies, his training as a doctor did not
allow him to let a man die. The servants continued to be openly critical of
their master's action. The man revealed to Hana that his name was Tom. Sadao
examined Tom's wound every day, and in a fortnight, he would be well. He
typed a letter to the Chief of police detailing the whole matter right from
the time they had found the washed-up prisoner and left the unfinished report
in a secret drawer of his desk.
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The Servants Quit Work
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On the morning of the seventh day, the
servants left the house with their belongings. Hana very gracefully thanked
them for their service and paid them. They were crying as they left. The cook
and the gardener had been in their service since the time Sadao was a small
boy and Yumiwas much attached to the children. Hana asked Sadao the reason
for their being different from other Japanese. Even the servants could see
what they could not.
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Time to Leave
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Sadao informs Tom that he could stand on
his feet for five minutes, and it should be gradually increased. It would be
good if he got back his strength soon. The man thanked him for having saved
his life. Sadao is summoned to the palace to treat the old General. He
confided about the prisoner to the General. The General offered to send
assassins to his house to kill the white man. He asked him to leave the outer
partition of the man's room open. Sadao agreed to the plan. After going home,
he didn't inform Hana about the General's suggestion. Tom once again thanked Sadao for having
saved his life. The next morning he peeped into Tom's room and saw him sleeping.
He was there the second morning and also the third morning. His health had
improved. Sadaotold him that he would give his boat to the man, that night,
to escape to an island nearby. He could live on the island until he saw a
Korean fishing boat pass by. The young man nodded in agreement. That
nightSadao dragged the boat to the shore, put quilts, food and water in it
and tied the boat to a post. Before going to bed, he checked the American's
temperature, heart, pulse and wound. He gave him his flashlight and told him
to signal if his food got over before he got a boat. He also gave him
Japanese clothes to wear. The young man shook Sadao's hand warmly and left
for the shore.
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Reflections
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The servants returned to the house. Sadao
was called one night to carry out an emergency operation upon the General. A
week after the successful operation, Sadao informed the General that the man
had escaped. The General recollected that he was to have sent assassins to
kill the man, but on account of his bad health, he had forgotten to do so.
Sadao searched the spot of black in the twilight and could see no flash of
light. His prisoner had gone, and he was safe. As he stood on the veranda
gazing out at the sea, he thought of the other white people that he had
known: the professor and his wife, his teacher, his landlady. He remembered
how difficult it was to find accommodation in America since he was Japanese.
Then he remembered his prisoner and found it strange that he could not kill
him. Also Read: English AHSEC Class 12 Chapterwise NotesTable of Contents
1. Section A: Reading Unseen Passage 10 Marks (Coming Soon 2012 to 2024 solved)
2. Section B: Advance Writing Skills 25 Marks
3. Section C: Grammar 20 Marks
- Narration (Direct and Indirect)
- Voices
- Tenses
- Preposition
- Transformation of Sentences
4. Section D: 45 Marks
i) Flamingo 30 Marks (Prose Section)
ii) Flamingo 30 Marks (Poetry Section)
iii) Vistas: 15 Marks
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Very Short Answer Questions (1 Mark each)
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1. Where was Dr Sadao Hoki’s house built?
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Ans. Dr Sadao Hoki’s house was built on a
spot of the Japanese coast. It was set upon the rocks above a narrow beach
outlined with pine trees.
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2. Where did Sadao's father often take
him when he was a little boy?
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Ans. When he was a little boy, Sadao’s father
often took him to the South Seas islands.
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3. What did Sadao’s father tell him
during their visits to the islands?
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Ans. During their visits to the South
Seas islands, Sadao’s father told him that these islands were the stepping
stones to the future for Japan.
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4. What was his father’s chief concern?
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Ans. Sadao’s education was the chief
concern of his father.
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5. What was the name of Dr Sadao’s wife?
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Ans. The name of Dr Sadao’s wife was
Hana.
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6. How many children did Sadao and Hana
have?
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Ans. Sadao and Hana had two children.
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7. Where did Sadao meet Hana for the
first time?
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Ans. Sadao met Hana for the first time in
America at the house of Professor Harley.
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8. What did Dr Sadao and Hana see coming
out of the mists?
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Ans. Dr Sadao and Hana saw something
black coming out of the mists. It was a man who was flung up, out of the
ocean.
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9. What was the best thing that Dr Sadao
and Hana could do about the man?
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Ans. The best thing that Dr Sadao and
Hana could do about the man was to put him back into the sea.
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10. Who was the white man found by Dr
Sadao and Hana?
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Ans. The white man found by Dr Sadao and
Hana was a sailor from an American warship. He was a prisoner of war.
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11. Who was Yumi?
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Ans. Yumi was employed by Dr Sadao and
Hana to look after their children.
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12. What did Hana observe about the white
man, just under the ear?
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Ans. Hana observed that the white man had
deep red scars on his neck, just under the ear.
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13. “Ignorance of the human body is the
surgeon’s cardinal sin, sirs!” Who said this?
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Ans. This statement was made by Dr Sadao
Hoki’s Professor of Anatomy, to the students in his class.
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14. What was the name of the white man?
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Ans. The white man’s name was Tom.
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Short Answer Questions (2 Marks each)
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1. Sadao’s father used to refer to the
islands near the Japanese coast as ‘the stepping stones to the future for
Japan’. Explain the statement.
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Ans. Sadao’s father used to refer to the
islands near the Japanese coast as stepping stones to the future for
Japan. For Japan to develop further,
the people had to step out, explore the world outside, learn from it and
bring back home well-honed talent.
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2. How did Sadao’s father show his
concern for him?
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Ans. Sadao’s father was very concerned
about his son’s education. He showed his concern for Sadao by sending him to
America at the age of twenty-two to learn all that could be learned about
surgery and medicine. Sadao spent eight years there in pursuit of this
knowledge.
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3. Why was Dr Sadao not sent abroad with
the troops?
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Ans. Dr Sadao was not just a surgeon but
also a scientist. He was involved in perfecting a discovery which would
render wounds entirely clean. Apart from this, there was one more reason for
which he was kept behind. He might be required to operate upon the old
General, who was being treated for a certain medical condition.
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4. How did Dr Sadao meet Hana? How did
their marriage take place?
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Ans. Sadao met Hana at the house
professor Harley, an American professor. He waited to fall in love with her
till he was sure that she was Japanese.
When his father had seen her, the marriage was arranged in the
traditional Japanese way, though Sadao and Hana had talked everything over
beforehand.
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5. What shows that Dr Sadao’s father,
despite his concern for his son’s education, was of a conservative nature?
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Ans. Two things show that Dr Sadao's
father, despite his concern for his son's education was of a conservative
nature. He would not have accepted anyone other than a Japanese girl as
Sadao's wife. This is why Sadao waited to fall in love with Hana until he was
sure that she was Japanese. Everything in Sadao’s father’s bedroom was
Japanese; in his own home, he would never sit on a chair or sleep in a
foreign bed.
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6. What was the best thing that Dr Sadao
and Hana could do about the man? Why?
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Ans. The best thing that Dr Sadao and
Hana could do about the man was to put him back into the sea. World War II
was going on at the time. The person was an American and an escaped prisoner
of war. If they handed him over to the police, he would certainly die. If
they did not hand him over, they would be arrested.
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7. What was the cause of the white man’s
wound?
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Ans. The white man, washed up on the
beach near Sadao's home was badly wounded. When Sadao and Hana discovered
him, he was bleeding badly. On
examining the wound, Sado found that he had been shot in the right side of
his lower back. The wound was not tended, and it had been struck again by a
rock.
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8. How did Dr Sadao tend to the wound of
the white man?
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Ans. Dr Sadao and Hana discover a white
man washed up on their beach. He was badly wounded. Though Sadao knows that
the man is an American and an escaped prisoner of war, his trained hands
seemed to be acting on their own will to stop the bleeding, and he packed the
wound with sea moss that liberally strewed(cover) the beach.
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9. How did the servants react when they
came to know about the wounded man?
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Ans. The servants were frightened when
they came to know about the wounded man. The gardener said that their master
should not care for the white man and tend to his wounds. The man should die
since he first had been shot, after which he was also wounded by the rocks.
If the master healed the wounds inflicted by the gun and the sea, they would
take revenge on them. Yumi also was
defiant and refused to wash the white man and said that it was none of her
business.
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10. Why did the servants leave Dr Sadao’s
house?
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Ans. The servants left the employment of
Dr Sadao because they felt that it was wrong on his part to treat the wounded
white man and nurse him back to health. According to them, it was treacherous
on his part to save the life of the white man. World War II was going on at
the time, and the Americans were the enemies of Japanese.
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11. What was Hana’s reaction in the face
of open defiance from the servants?
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Ans. Hana was very graceful in the face
of open defiance from the servants. When they left, she paid them and thanked
them for their service. Though she was dismayed and terrified, she did not
show it. The servants cried while leaving, but she did not cry.
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12. How was Hana affected while helping
Dr Sadao in operation?
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Ans. Dr Sadao asked Hana to help him and
give the man anaesthetic. Hana was rather distressed at the sight of the
wound and the blood. The sight of blood made Hana choke. Her face turned
pale. She rushed out of the room and Sadao could hear her vomit in the
garden.
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13. What did Hana think of when she was
giving the wounded man anaesthetic?
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Ans. While giving the wounded man
anaesthetic, she wondered if the stories they had heard of the sufferings of
prisoners were true. These used to be told by word of mouth and were usually
contradictory. However, the newspapers used to report that the Japanese
armies were received with joy wherever they went.
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14. What did Hana think of General Takima
while she saw the wounded man on the operation table?
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Ans. When Hana saw the wounded man on the
operation table, thoughts of the sufferings of prisoners came to her
mind. She remembered General Takima,
who was a cruel man and used to beat his wife. No one openly mentioned it now
as he had fought a victorious battle in Manchuria. Hana wondered if he could
be so cruel to his wife, would he not be cruel to a poor prisoner of war.
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15. “All thought left him. He felt only
the purest pleasure.” When did Dr Sadao feel so? What does it show of him as
a great surgeon?
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Ans. While operating on the wounded white
man and extracting the bullet lodged in his body, all thought left him, and
he felt only the purest pleasure. He probed the man's body and was familiar
with every atom of his body. His anatomy professor had emphasised that
complete knowledge of the human body was essential to operate and carry out
the surgery.
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16. What did Dr Sadao do when he pulled
out the last stitches and thought that the man would be well in a fortnight?
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Ans.
After pulling out the last stitches and thinking that the young man
would be well in a fortnight, Dr Sadao went to his office and typed a letter
to the Chief of Police. The letter was a detailed report of the finding of
the prisoner washed up onshore. After typing it, he kept the unfinished
report in a secret drawer of his desk.
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17. Why did the General not want anything
bad to happen to Dr Sadao?
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Ans. The General was suffering from a
certain medical condition, and he was being treated for the same. He might
require urgent surgery and the General trusted Dr Sadoa alone to carry out
the operation on him. Dr Sadao was very skilled in his work. Hence he did not want anything bad to
happen to Dr Sadao.
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18. Why would it be best if the American
was secretly killed as proposed by the General?
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Ans. The General offered to send his
private assassins at night, to Dr Sadao Hoki's house, to kill the American
quietly. The assassins would not make any noise, and they would also dispose
of his body. Thinking of Hana, Sadao agreed that this would be the best way
out of the situation.
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19. What secret plan did the General make
for the American? Why couldn’t it be executed?
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Ans. The General was to send his private
assassins to Dr Sado's house to quietly kill the American, and get rid of his
body. He had asked Sadao, to leave open the door, from the man's room to the
garden, at night so the assassins could enter. The plan could not be executed
as the health of the General worsened, and he could not think of anything else
and forgot the promise he had made to Sadao.
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20. What plan did Dr Sadao make for the
man to escape when the General’s assassin did not come to get rid of him?
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Ans. Dr Sadao made an escape plan for the
white man to escape when the General’s assassins did not come to get rid of
him. He planned to put food, water and extra clothing in his boat and put it
to the shore that night. The man could row out to the secluded little island
close to the coast. He could be on the island until he saw a Korean fishing boat
pass by and take their help to leave the island.
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21. What did Dr Sadao tell the American
to do in case his food ran out?
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Ans.
Dr Sadao told the American to send a signal to him with two flashes of
the flashlight at the same time as the sun dropped over the horizon. He
warned him not to signal in the dark as that would be seen by others. He also
advised him to catch fresh fish and eat them raw, since fire would be seen
and noticed.
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22. How did the General regret that he
had not carried out his plan to get rid of the American? What was Dr Sadao’s
reaction to it?
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Ans. The General regretted that he could
not carry out the plan to get rid of the American. The plan could not be
executed as the health of the General worsened, and he could not think of anything
else and forgot the promise he had made to Sadao. He assured Dr Sadao that
the negligence was not on account of lack of patriotism or dereliction
towards his duty. Sadao understood that the General was under his complete
control, and as a result of that, he was perfectly safe.
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23. “But Sadao searching the spot of
black in the twilighted sea that night had his reward.” What was Dr Sadao’s
reward?
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Ans. Dr Sadao’s reward was that the
American soldier was no longer on the island. There was no flash of light in
the dusk. His prisoner had gone and was safe. He must have sought help from a
Korean fishing boat.
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24. What did Dr Sadao think of the
American prejudice against Japanese like him when he had lived in America?
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Ans. Dr Sadao had gone to America at the
age of 22 to study all that he could about surgery and medicine. The
Americans were prejudiced against the Japanese, and it was very difficult for
him to find a place to live in. It was a bitter experience to endure their
prejudice when he knew that he was superior to them.
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25. What message does ‘The Enemy’ give?
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Ans. ‘The Enemy’ sends out a message
through the character and actions of Dr Sadao Hoki. Dr Sadao can rise above
petty human behaviour which has become the norm today. He follows the calling
of his duty as a doctor and saves the life of the wounded young American. He
also arranges for him to hide on a nearby island and escape from there to
freedom. ‘The Enemy’ gives us the message of peace, empathy, belief in one’s
ideals and humanism.
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26. While hatred against a member of the
enemy is justifiable, especially during a war, what makes a human being rise
above narrow prejudices?
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Ans. Hatred against a member of the enemy
is justifiable, especially during war. However, at times a human being rises
above narrow prejudices. There are occasions in life when a choice has to be
made between one's duty as a patriotic citizen and duty towards a higher
calling, humanitarianism. On finding the wounded man, Sadao cannot put him
back into the water or hand him over to the authorities. His training as a
doctor has taught him to save a life and not endanger it. Though he is in a
conflict between his duties as a citizen and as a doctor, he chooses to save
the man's life. His empathy for the suffering and wounded person helps him
rise above narrow prejudices and extend help to an enemy.
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27. Why did the messenger come to Dr. Sadao? 2020
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Ans: The messenger had come to Dr Sadao’s
house to inform him that the old General was in pain again and had to be
attended to. When Hana first saw the uniformed messenger, she got frightened,
for she thought that he had come to arrest her husband for harbouring an
enemy in their house.
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Long Answer Questions (7 Marks each) (120-150 words)
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1. Describe how Dr Sadao treated and nursed
the wounded soldier?
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Ans. Dr Sadao operated upon the wounded
man and extracted the bullet from his body. The man washed up on their shore
was a young American, and he was an escaped prisoner of war. On the shore
itself, he packed the wound with sea moss, after which he and Hana took the
man to their home, to the bedroom which had been his father's. He operated
immediately as any delay would result in the death of the injured man. After
the successful operation, he used to carefully examine the man's wound daily.
He removed the stitches when it was time to do so. When the man was slightly
better, he told him to remain on his feet for five minutes at a time.
Finally, when the young man was well enough, he made an escape plan for him
and arranged for him to remain hidden on the island nearby till he could get
help from a passing Korean fishing boat.
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2. Explain the role of Hana in the
recovery of the wounded soldier.
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Ans. When the man was brought into the
room and laid on the mat, Hana washed him since the servants were not willing
to touch the white man and felt that he deserved to die. Hana helped Sadao
while he was operating on the white man. She gave him anaesthetic. She
anxiously hoped that he had not been tortured like prisoners were, according
to the stories that she had heard. Then she noticed the red scars on his neck
below his ear. When he was recovering, she served him food herself since the
servants were defiant and did not help in anything involving the wounded
soldier. She told him not to be afraid and fed him with a spoon. She felt
moved to comfort him and encouraged him, saying that soon he would be strong.
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3. How did the marriage between Dr Sadao
and Hana come to materialise? What impression do you form of both of them as
husband and wife?
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Ans.
Dr Sadao met Hana for the first time at Professor Harley’s house. He waited
to fall in love with her till he was sure that she was Japanese. When his
father had seen her, the marriage was arranged in the traditional Japanese
way, though Sadao and Hana had talked everything over beforehand.
Though they have been married for several
years and have two children, they are a perfect couple. There are love and
mutual respect in their relationship. Both are very supportive of each
other's decisions. As a husband, Sadao is caring and protective. Most of the
decisions he takes about the American soldier are to relieve her anxiety.
When the servants leave work, he helps her with the children. As a wife, Hana
supports her husband in his decisions. She is also traditional in some
aspects like, she doesn't eat with him but serves him first. She is graceful
in difficult and intimidating situations. Sadao and Hana can rise above petty
prejudices and be compassionate human beings.
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4. How do the servants oppose the nursing
of the wounded American at their master’s house? What does it show of them?
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Ans. The servants were frightened when
they came to know about the wounded man. The gardener said that their master
should not care for the white man and tend to his wounds. The man should die
since he first had been shot, after which he was also wounded by the rocks.
Yumi also was defiant and refused to wash the white man and said that it was
none of her business. They were openly critical about Sadao treating the
white man. The gardener, cook and Yumi left the employment of Dr Sadao
because they felt that it was wrong on his part to treat the wounded white
man and nurse him back to health. According to them, it was treacherous on
his part to save the life of the white man. World War II was going on at the
time, and the Americans were the enemies of the Japanese.
The servants’ reaction shows their narrow
mindedness and inability to see beyond their prejudices. They do not display
humanitarianism or compassion.
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5. What did Dr Sadao think of American
prejudice vis-a-vis the Japanese humanism?
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Ans. Dr Sadao had gone to America at the
age of 22 to study all that he could about surgery and medicine. He spent
eight years there before coming back to Japan. In America, he faced
discrimination and was subject to people's prejudiced behaviour. The
Americans were prejudiced against the Japanese, and it was very difficult for
him to find a place to live in. It was a bitter experience to endure their
prejudice when he knew that he was superior to them. Though he had been a
victim of racial prejudice in America, Dr Sadao is not prejudiced against the
American soldier. He shows compassion and humanity towards him and saves his
life.
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6.
Draw a character sketch of Dr Sadao as depicted in ‘The Enemy’. 2019
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Ans. Dr. Sadao Hokieis, a skilled surgeon and scientist.
He is a compassionate human being
and dares tostand by his
principles. He is an obedient
son and listened to his father. As a husband, he is caring and
considerate. As a doctor, he believes that he must do whatever he can to save
a person’s life. He was not sent along with the troops as he was perfecting
an invention to render wounds completely clean. Besides this, he was also
required to carry out an emergency operation on the old General, if needed.
He operates the General with success. He deftly carries out surgery on the
American soldier and saves his life. He knows that he would be arrested for
harbouring a prisoner of war, yet he takes this risk to save the American
soldier’s life. He brings him home, operates on him and nurses him back to
health. He is a man of courage and rises above the narrow-minded norms set by
society and followed by the vast majority of people.
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7. Explain how Hana proves to be an
example of great humanism and an able companion to Dr Sadao.
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Ans. Hana is a compassionate human being
and not bound by the norms that govern the vast majority to be prejudiced.
She doesn't want to put the wounded American soldier back into the sea
through both Sadao, and she knows that it would be the best thing to do. She
hopes that he was not subject to torture like how prisoners were usually
tortured according to stories that she had heard.
She is an able companion to Dr Sadao as
seen in the story. She supports him in his decision to operate on the soldier
and save his life. She helps him in the operation by giving the anaesthetic.
When the man was recovering, she served him food herself since the servants
were defiant and did not help in anything involving the wounded soldier. She
told him not to be afraid and fed him with a spoon. She felt moved to comfort
him and encouraged him, saying that soon he would be strong. When the
servants leave work, she does not complain but faces the situation with
grace. She stands by her husband and supports him in his decisions.
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8. Describe in detail how Dr Sadao and
Hana tended to the American soldier, nursing him to recovery.
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Ans. Dr Sadao and
Hana took a lot of care of the wounded American soldier tending to him and
nursing him to recovery. Dr Sadao operated upon the wounded man and extracted
the bullet from his body. The man washed up on their shore was a young
American, and he was an escaped prisoner of war. On the shore itself, he
packed the wound with sea moss, after which he and Hana took the man to their
home, to the bedroom which had been his father's. He operated immediately as
any delay would result in the death of the injured man. After the successful
operation, he used to carefully examine the man's wound daily. He removed the
stitches when it was time to do so. When the man was slightly better, he told
him to remain on his feet for five minutes at a time. Finally, when the young
man was well enough, he made an escape plan for him and arranged for him to
remain hidden on the island nearby till he could get help from a passing
Korean fishing boat.
Hana too had a large
part in the recovery of the American soldier. When the man was brought into
the room and laid on the mat, she washed him since the servants were not
willing to touch the white man and felt that he deserved to die. Hana helped
Sadao while he was operating on the white man. She gave him anaesthetic. She
anxiously hoped that he had not been tortured like prisoners were, according
to the stories that she had heard.
When he was recovering, she served him food herself since the servants
were defiant and did not help in anything involving the wounded soldier. She
told him not to be afraid and fed him with a spoon. She felt moved to comfort
him and encouraged him, saying that soon he would be strong.
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9. How is ‘The
Enemy’ a great moral lesson in spreading love all over the world by
transcending narrow prejudices of hatred and animosity?
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Ans. Pearl Buck's
short story, 'The Enemy' is indeed a great moral lesson in spreading love all
over the world by transcending narrow prejudices of hatred and animosity.
When Dr Sadao sees the American soldier washed up on the beach near their
house, he does not see him as an enemy, but as a badly wounded human being in
need of immediate help. While operating on Tom, Dr Sadao calls him, "my
friend ", as that was his way of referring to all his patients. Sadao
and Hana show compassion and humanity instead of practising animosity and
hatred. Their actions should induce readers to overcome barriers of prejudice
and be good human beings. They also dared to offer refuge to a prisoner of
war. If it was discovered Dr Sadao could have been arrested. However, Dr
Sadao and Hana tend to the prisoner and nurse him back to health. Once he is
well enough, Dr Sadao makes arrangements for him to reach the secluded island
close to the coast from where he could take help from a passing Korean
fishing boat.
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10. Explain how Dr
Sadao becomes a rare example of sheer devotion to one’s professional duty
while at the same time upholding his duties towards his country.
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Ans. Dr Sadao is a
rare and shining example of sheer devotion to one's professional duty while
at the same time upholding his duties towards his country. He is a skilled surgeon
and scientist. He was perfecting a discovery that would render wounds
completely clean. As a doctor, he believes that he must do whatever he can to
save a person's life. He knows that the prisoner is American, and the
Americans were their enemies, yet he doesn't hesitate to operate on him and
save his life.
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At the same time, Dr
Sadao also upholds his duties towards his country. He reports the entire
matter to the old General and also agrees to his suggestion of getting the
American killed by his assassins. The suggestion does not get executed as the
General's health worsened, and he could think of nothing but himself. Dr
Sadao operates on him successfully, and he becomes better. He also wrote a
letter to the Chief of Police, detailing the finding of the prisoner. It was
incomplete, and he locked it in a secret drawer.
In the character of
Dr Sadao, we find a doctor who is a shining example of his profession and
also a duty-bound citizen.
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Exam Questions From 2019-2024
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2
Marks questions:
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1. Who was Hana? What did she notice coming out of
the mist? 2019
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2. Why did the messenger come to Dr. Sadao? 2020
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Long
Questions ( 5 Marks)
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1. Write a character-sketch of Dr. Sadao Hoki as
depicted in "The Enemy".
2019
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