Question 1. Why do the courtiers call the prince the Happy Prince? Is he really happy? What does he see around?
Answer. The Prince had led a joyous and lavish life. He was ignorant of gashes, and grief was interdicted from entering his palace. Because of this, the courtiers appertained to him as The joyous Prince. When the Prince passed down and his monument was erected in the megacity forecourt, he remained given by the same title. still, in death, the Prince was deeply rueful and melancholic. He could now witness the citizens of his city floundering in poverty. He could smell the agony his people endured. All of this burgled him of his happiness.
Question 2. Why doe the Happy Prince send a ruby for the seamstress? What does the swallow do in the seamstress home?
Answer. Perched atop the column, the joyous Prince noticed a destitute woman whose son was bad. The boy was twisting in pain on his bed. He was hankering for oranges, but his mama could n't go them. Hence, the joyous Prince dispatched a ruby for her. The swallow placed the rock on a table and gently banged the boy’s forepart with its bodies.
Question 3. For whom does the Prince send the sapphires and why?
Answer. The Prince sends one sapphire to a playwright and the other to a destitute match girl. The playwright is extremely impoverished and lacks wood to keep himself warm. The match girl begins blubbing after accidentally dropping her matches into a drain. The joyous Prince comes to their aid and gifts them his sapphires.
Question 4. What does the swallow see when it files over the city?
Answer. As the swallow ascensions over the megacity, it notices the fat indulging in luxury within their homes, while mendicants loiter at their gates. The swallow spots two youthful boys huddled together in each other's arms, trying to stay warm.
Question 5. Why did the swallow not leave the prince and for Egypt?
Answer. The Prince gave up everything for the poor and tyrannized. He indeed offered the two sapphires from his eyes, making it nearly insolvable for anyone to be more generous than him. These extraordinary rates of the joyous Prince deeply touched the swallow’s heart. The swallow formed an emotional bond with the Prince and let go of the idea of traveling to Egypt.
Question 6. Why is the statue of the Prince described as looking like a beggar and being no longer useful?
Answer. The statue of the Prince had been stripped of everything that formerly made it magnific and radiant. It had lost all its gold, sapphires, and ruby. It appeared dull and breathless.
Question 7. What proclamation does the mayor make about the death of the worn
birds?
Answer. The decree issued by the Mayor stated that no catcalls would be permitted to corrupt at the base of the statue.
Question 8. What impression do you gather of his personality form this?
Answer. The Mayor's reflections reveal that he was a disagreeable person. Rather than fastening on the exposure of the Prince's treasures, he issues affirmations without any logical base.
Question 9. What were the two precious things the angel brought to God? In hat way were they precious?
Answer. The two most precious effects were the Prince’s argentine heart and the breathless swallow. They were considered precious because both held deep compassion and love in their hearts. The Prince gave up everything for the poor, while the swallow offered its life for the Prince. unfit to endure the swallow’s death, the Prince’s heart broke into two pieces when the raspberry fell breathless. Their bond was so profound and bottomless that indeed death could n't separate them.
Question 10. What happened to the prince's heart? What feelings does the end of the story arouse in you?
Answer. The Prince’s heart split in two when the swallow fell breathless at his bases. When the argentine heart was placed in the furnace, it did n't melt, so it was discarded. therefore, the breathless raspberry and the argentine heart were reunited indeed in death. The story’s ending stirs deep sympathy for both of them.