Class 8 English

Chapter 1 — Wit and Wisdom

Open PDFReads in your browser
Overview

Summary

Unit 1 of the Class 8 English NCERT textbook (Poorvi), "Wit and Wisdom", bundles three texts around the theme that cleverness, humour, and keen observation are as valuable as knowledge or strength. The prose story of Tenali Ramakrishna, the humorous poem "A Concrete Example", and the play "Wisdom Paves the Way" each show wit and sharp reasoning winning the day.

  • Wit as a form of wisdomThe unit argues that cleverness and humour matter as much as strength or book-learning. Across a court story, a comic poem, and a play, characters solve problems and win respect through quick thinking and shrewd observation rather than force.
  • Persuasion by indirection"The Wit that Won Hearts" shows conflict resolved obliquely: instead of arguing, Tenali Rama stages a paddy-seeds trick that lets the king experience the truth himself, learning that a yawn is natural and not disrespect.
  • Observation and deduction"Wisdom Paves the Way" celebrates reading small clues to reach big conclusions. Four travellers reconstruct a lost camel's condition purely from its tracks, turning careful noticing into logical reasoning that clears them and earns royal posts.
  • Humour and irony"A Concrete Example" builds gentle comedy through situational irony and wordplay, ending with the speaker standing on the very flower being admired — a reminder that wit also lives in laughter at ourselves.
Essentials

Key points & formulas

  1. 01King Krishnadeva Raya (ruled 1509–29 CE) led the Golden Era of the Vijayanagara Empire; his court included eight celebrated poets called the Ashtadiggajas, among them Tenali Ramakrishna.
  2. 02In "The Wit that Won Hearts", Queen Thirumalambal yawned while the king recited his poem late at night; the king mistook this for disrespect and stopped speaking to her for weeks.
  3. 03Tenali Rama resolved the quarrel indirectly: in open court he claimed his paddy seeds would fail if sown by someone who yawns—making the king yawn spontaneously and realise that yawning is as natural as breathing.
  4. 04The poem "A Concrete Example" by Reginald Arkell uses AABBCC rhyme, a humorous tone, situational irony, alliteration, and a pun in its title (concrete = stone in a garden; concrete = a clear example).
  5. 05In the play "Wisdom Paves the Way", Ram Datt deduced lameness from uneven track depth; Shiv Datt deduced right-eye blindness because the camel grazed only left-side foliage; Har Datt deduced a short tail from mosquito-bite blood droplets; Dev Datt deduced stomach pain from the depth of the forefeet prints versus faint hind-foot prints.
  6. 06The King of Ujjain dismissed the merchant's theft accusation as baseless and appointed the four young men his royal advisers, declaring that such minds are rare and highly valued.
  7. 07The unit's language activities cover conditional sentences (three types of if-clauses), compound words, sound words, modal verbs, intonation patterns, and the literary devices of irony, alliteration, refrain, and pun.
Questions

Frequently asked questions

01

Who is Tenali Ramakrishna and why was he important in King Krishnadeva Raya's court?

Tenali Ramakrishna was one of the eight celebrated poets—collectively called the Ashtadiggajas—in the court of King Krishnadeva Raya of the Vijayanagara Empire. He was known for his quick wit and humour and served both as a poet and a witty adviser, finding clever solutions to seemingly insurmountable problems.

02

What was the cause of the quarrel between King Krishnadeva Raya and Queen Thirumalambal?

The king came to the queen late in the evening to recite a poem. She was exhausted after a tiring day and yawned several times while he read. The king thought this was a sign of disrespect for his poem and stormed off. He stopped speaking to her and ceased visiting her altogether for weeks.

03

How did Tenali Rama resolve the quarrel without directly confronting the king?

During a court discussion on paddy cultivation, Rama presented 'revolutionary' seeds and argued that the real problem lay not in the seeds but in the person sowing them—specifically, someone who yawns while sowing. The king himself yawned instinctively, and Rama pointed out that yawning is as natural as breathing. The king then realised he had been unfair to the queen, approached her with an apology that same evening, and their bond was restored.

04

What is the poem 'A Concrete Example' about, and who wrote it?

The poem was written by Reginald Arkell. It describes the speaker's next-door neighbour, Mrs. Jones, who has a garden full of stones—including a crazy path, a lily pond, a rockery, a sundial, and tiny delicate plants placed between the stones. The poem ends with situational irony: Mrs. Jones invites the speaker to admire a special flower, and when the speaker asks where it is, Mrs. Jones replies, 'You're standing on it.'

05

What literary devices are used in 'A Concrete Example'?

The poem uses a pun in its title ('concrete' means both the stones in the garden and a clear/definite example), situational irony (the speaker stands on the flower they are looking for), alliteration, a refrain (the phrase 'My next-door neighbour, Mrs. Jones' appears in each stanza), and an AABBCC rhyme scheme. Its tone is humorous and light-hearted.

06

Who are the four young men in the play 'Wisdom Paves the Way', and what were they doing at the start?

The four young men are Ram Datt, Shiv Datt, Har Datt, and Dev Datt. They had been travelling for ten days, journeying along a dusty road toward Ujjain in the hope of securing employment and, if possible, an audience with the King of Ujjain to have their talents recognised.

07

How did each of the four travellers deduce facts about the missing camel without seeing it?

Ram Datt observed that only three of the four tracks left distinct impressions, indicating one leg was lame. Shiv Datt noticed the camel had grazed only on foliage to the left of the road, leaving the right side untouched, so it was blind in its right eye. Har Datt saw small droplets of blood along the track—a sign of mosquito bites that a long-tailed camel could have brushed away—so its tail was short. Dev Datt observed that the forefeet prints were deep while the sound hind-foot print was faint, meaning the camel drew up its hind legs because of pain in its belly.

08

How did the King of Ujjain respond to the merchant's accusation against the four travellers?

After hearing each man explain his observation and the reasoning behind it, the king declared that their accusations were baseless and misguided. He told the merchant that these were men of wisdom, not thieves, and instructed him to continue searching for his camel and to be mindful of whom he accuses in the future. The merchant left the court chastened and embarrassed.

09

What reward did the four young men receive from the King of Ujjain?

The King of Ujjain was so impressed by their remarkable intelligence and ability to see beyond the obvious that he invited all four of them to become his royal advisers. He declared that their counsel would guide his decisions and their wisdom would be a beacon for his kingdom.

10

What types of conditional sentences does Unit 1 teach?

The unit teaches three types of if-clauses through examples directly from the texts. The first type uses Simple Present + Present Modal for a condition that may or may not be fulfilled ('If you like, I will try my best'). The second uses Simple Past + Past Modal for a hypothetical or imaginary situation ('If, by chance, something were to go wrong, our farmers would suffer'). The third uses Past Perfect + would have + Past Participle for an impossible-to-change past situation ('If I had known this would happen, I would have chosen another day').

11

What is the thematic link connecting all three texts in Unit 1 of Poorvi Class 8?

All three texts explore wit and wisdom as powerful tools. In 'The Wit that Won Hearts', Tenali Rama's humour and indirect approach resolve a royal quarrel without confrontation. In 'A Concrete Example', the poet uses gentle humour and irony to capture the quirky wisdom in Mrs. Jones's appreciation of her garden. In 'Wisdom Paves the Way', the four travellers demonstrate that careful observation and logical reasoning—forms of practical wisdom—can clear one's name and earn recognition.

12

Is the NCERT Class 8 English Poorvi PDF free to download?

Yes. The NCERT Class 8 English Poorvi PDF is available for free on CBSE PrepMaster. No sign-up or account is required—just open the chapter and read or download it directly.

Keep learning

More chapters in Poorvi

Read Chapter 1 of Poorvi, the Class 8 English NCERT textbook (2026-27 edition), online for free: the complete chapter as published by NCERT with every diagram, solved example and exercise, with a chapter summary, question answers and revision notes. Open the NCERT PDF above, or browse all NCERT Class 8 textbooks.

Read offline with notes, solutions & mock tests

CBSE Prepmaster — free on iOS & Android

Get the App