Justice poem notes

Justic poem notes

Justice poem notes for 9th standard students. Important questions and answers were explained from the poem Justice by Praveen Kumar.

To get more video notes for 9th class students visit our YouTube channel. This channel is very useful for class 9th. Justice poem notes.

Understand the poem

1. When is justice reduced to trade?

Ans: Justice reduced to trade when it is earned for money.

2. What is the poet’s concern about justice expressed in the line, ‘A distressing gain through loss’?

Ans: Getting justice for money is like earning profit dishonestly to fill the less. The poet feels that getting justice for money become trade.

3. What kind of a right is justice?

Ans: According to the poet justice is an inherent right.

4. What kind of justice is dead, according to the poet?

Ans: According to the poet justice with no heart for truth and no dash for right cause is dead.

5. How does the poet describe justice?

Ans: The poet describes justice as cool like ice and still like rock.

6. What present status of justice worries the poet?

Ans: Justice is lost in thick jungle of lightless night and like a deer caught in lion’s lair. This status of justice worries the poet.

Questions from Justice poem:

Read and appreciate:

1. The poet compares justice to ‘gold strains’, ‘ice’ and ‘rock’. Why?

Ans: Gold strains are highly valuable and bounded in earth but man exploits it. In the same way justice is also valuable. Ice is cool and rock stands still. The justice also has the characters of coolness and stillness.

2. The poet says, ‘No easy road to charm her soul While hardship makes her no more justice.’ Do you find his opinion about justice contrasting? If so, why? If not why? Discuss in groups.

Ans: Yes, we find poet opinion about justice is contrasting. Poet says that justice is inherent right and at the same time he says that justice is cool like ice and still hard like rock. Poet says that getting justice through hard ship is not a justice.

Watch this video for explanation of the important questions and answers of the poem Justice for 9th standard students.