An Artist's Story: Questions and Answers
An Artist's Story: Questions and Answers
An Artist's Story: Questions and Answers
Augustus Pokewhistle smiled at the immense man who had come secretly into his room. Augustus
thought that the stranger was a doctor sent by some interfering so-called friend to save him from
his sufferings.
Augustus began to tell the stranger his own life story.
He was delicately brought up and it soon became clear that he was not an ordinary boy. At the age of
seven, he won a prize for a drawing of an animal, though he had intended to show sunset, on London.
His proud parents provided him with pencils and paper and gave him the opportunity of studying under
great painters.
At the age of twenty-one he started a business as a painter of people and he painted eleven pictures
of his own face. Nobody wanted them and they were still hanging sadly on the wall in his sitting room.
Nobody came to have their pictures painted, and decided not to paint any more of himself.
Augustus turned from painting people to painting the country. He painted the views from the windows
of his room; nine times from the back window, and seven times from the front window. He did not
sell any of those pictures. He became poor.
To get money, Augustus decided to draw funny pictures for the newspapers. He made thirty or
forty funny drawings every day and sent them to the papers. But he got no money. He just got his
drawings back. This expression means that a picture is extremely funny. Augustus said that his
drawings for the newspapers were so funny that his cat laughed until it was sick. However, Augustus
got his pictures back and was dishearten.
Augustus tried drawing for advertisements. He sent off pictures by the hundred, and all he received
was a sample bottle or a sample card of wool.
Augustus fell into despair and illness. So he decided to take to his bed and felt he would never rise
from it again.
The stranger was not a doctor as Augustus thought. As soon as Augustus stopped talking, the stranger
said that Augustus would certainly rise from bed. He placed Augustus on the carpet saying that he
had come from the furniture shop to take the bed away as it was not paid for.
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25- Why was the visitor sure that he would rise from his bed?
- Because he came to take the bed away because it was not paid for.
26- Show that Augustus was talkative.
-He talked all the time and did not give his visitor a chance to talk to him.
27- What kink of life had Augustus?
He had a miserable life.
28- What was Augustus's job?
-He was an artist.
29- How did Augustus's parents help him?
They gave him pencils and paper and gave him the chance of studying
under great painters.
30-Do you think that the reader should fell any sympathy for Augustus?
- The reader shouldn't feel any sympathy for him because he is not gifted
and pompous.
31-How does Augustus Pokewhistle describe his friends? Do you think he would be a
nice person to have as a friend?
-He described them as interfering so-called friends. No, he wouldn't be a
nice friend.
32- Why didn't Augustus's business as a painter of people do well?
- Because he only painted portraits of his own face.
33-Why did Augustus describe selling his drawings as selling his soul?
-Because it is against the principles of a true artist.
34- Augustus turned to paint the country, but he failed. Give a reason.
-He only painted the view from his front aback window.
35- What happened when he failed to draw for the newspapers?
-He decided to take to his bed and never to rise again.
36- What made him decide to take to his bed?
- All his attempts to earn his living failed.
37-Do you think that Augustus was a true artist? Why?
-He wasn't a true artist because his drawings weren't sold.
38- What is the moral of this story?
- One mustn't give up hope.
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2) “It’s kind of you. But I don’t think you couldn’t help me”
a- By whom did Augustus think the man was sent?{by an interfering so–called friend}
c- By whom was the stranger really sent ? {The furniture shop to take the bed}
4) “I decided, after severe struggle with my self. To Forget my soul and paint for
money.”
5) "So, I gave up the struggle. My heart was broken and I determined to take to my
bed never to rise again. "
a- Why did Augustus give up struggle? {He failed to get any money}
b- What was his last decision? {To take to his bed never to rise again.}
c- What made the stranger sure he will rise from his bed?
{ He came from the furniture shop to take the bed away}
6) “ I was delicately brought up and it soon became clear that I was not an
ordinary boy ’’
a- What happened when he was seven? He won a prize for a drawing of an animal
b- How did his parents help him? They gave him the chance to study under great painters
c- What happened at the age of twenty-one? He started a business as a painter of people.
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