The Third Level Important Questions Answer MP Board Solution
The Third Level Important Questions Answer MP Board Solution
Question 1. What does the third level refer to? What is the significance of the third level?
Answer:
The third level is a medium of escape
through which man yearns to be away from life’s harsh realities. Modem life is
devoid of peace and tranquility so man in his quest to seek solace escapes to a
place where his aim is to seek the realization of his dreams and unfulfilled
wishes of his subconscious mind.
Question 2. What convinced Charley that he had reached the third level at Grand Central Station and not the second level?
Answer:
The general layout of the third level
was different from that of the second level. It had comparatively smaller
rooms, fewer ticket windows and lesser train gates. The infor¬mation booth in
the centre was made of wood and looked old. The place with its brass spittoons
did not look very bright. So Charley was convinced it was not the second level.
Question 3. How does Charley, the narrator describe the third level at Grand Central Station?
Answer:
Charley says that the rooms on the
third level were smaller than that of the second level. There were fewer ticket
windows and train gates and the information booth in the centre was wood and
old looking. There were open- flame gaslights and brass spittoons on the floor.
Everyone at the station was dressed in nineteenth century dresses.
Question 4. How did Charley make sure that he was not in the present time?
Answer:
To make sure that he was not in the
present time, Charley did a reality check. He looked at the newspapers which
were on sale at a kiosk and found a copy of the newspaper ‘The World’, which
carried the main story on President Cleveland. Then he confirmed from the
Public Library files that the newspaper he had seen was dated 11th June, 1894.
Question 5. How did Charley often get lost on the Grand Central Station?
Answer:
The Grand Central Station was growing
like a tree pushing out endless corridors, doorways and stairs like roots. It
had intricate and tangled pathways. The network of passages was so complicated
that instead of reaching his destination, one did tend to move up and down to
look for entries and exits. So, Charley often got lost on this station.
Question 6.
Why did Charley suspect that Sam had
gone to Galesburg?
Answer:
When Sam disappeared all of a sudden and no one knew about his whereabouts, Charley suspected he had gone to Galesburg as Sam was a city boy and liked Galesburg very much. Then Charley found an envelope mailed to Sam by his grandfather from his home in Galesburg and so it confirmed that Sam was indeed in Galesburg.
Question 7.
How does Charley describe Galesburg
as it used to be in 1894?
Answer:
Charley describes Galesburg as a
quiet, simple and peaceful place with big old frame houses, huge lawns and
tremendous trees. The summer evenings were rather long and people sat out on
their lawns in a peaceful world, men smoking cigars and women waving palm-leaf
fans.
Question 8.
What did Charley learn about Sam from
the stamp and coin store?
Answer:
From the stamp and coin store Charley
gets to know that Sam had bought old style currency worth eight hundred
dollars. This money was sufficient to set him up in a little hay, feed and
grain business in Galesburg.
Question 9.
How did Sam reach Galesburg? What did
he advise Charley to do?
Answer:
Sam was fascinated by Charley’s description of Galesburg. He was so burdened by the tensions and stress of modem life that he thought of escaping to the peaceful world of Galesburg. His advice to Charley is that, he (Charley) and his wife, Louisa should come over to Galesburg through the medium of the ‘third level’.
Question 10.
Why did the booking clerk refuse to
accept the money?
Answer:
The booking clerk refuses to accept
the money because the notes Charley had given him were of old style. He did not
pay in the currency notes that were in circulation in 1894. So the clerk stared
at him and told him, “That ain’t money, Mister”. He thought Charley was trying
to cheat him and even threatened to get him arrested.
Question 11.
Why did Charley rush back from the
third level?
Answer:
When Charley took out the modem
currency to pay for the two tickets to Galesburg, the ticket clerk accused him
of trying to cheat him. He threatened to hand Charley over to the police.
Charley was frightened and he decided to rush back from the third level, lest
he was arrested and put into prison.
Question 12.
How did Charley reach the third level
of Grand Central? How was it different from the other levels?
Answer:
One night Charley worked till late at the office. Then he was in a hurry to get back to his apartment. So he decided to take the subway from Grand Central. He went down the steps and came to the first level. Then he walked down to the second level from where the suburban trains left. He ducked into an arched doorway that headed to the subway. Then he got lost. Knowing that he was going wrong he continued to walk downward. The tunnel turned a sharp left and then taking a short flight of stairs he came out on the third level at the Grand Central Station. Here he saw many unusual things. There were very few ticket windows and train gates that were old-looking and made of wood. Dim gaslights flickered and men wore derby hats and four-button suits. It was a rather strange world of sideburns, beards and fancy moustaches.
Question 13.
Do you think that the third level was
a medium of escape for Charley? Why?
Answer:
The fears, anxieties and insecurities
of the modem world are taking a toll on man’s mind. He feels helpless and
frustrated and seeks temporary respite from life’s harsh realities. Charley too
was unable to cope up with his fastpaced and stressful life so his flight to
the third level was undoubtedly a medium of escape for him. It is nothing but a
creation of Charley’s own mind. He wants to escape from the modern world’s
insecurity, fear, worries and stress and so seeks an exit, a medium to get away
into the world of dreams and fancies.
Question 14.
What made Charley believe that the
was actually standing at the third level?
Answer:
One night Charley worked late at the
office. He was in a hurry to get to his apartment. So he decided to take the
subway from Grand Central. He ducked into an arched doorway and then he got
lost. He walked down the steps to the second level, turned left and kept on walking.
He came out on the third level at the Grand Central Station. This was a
different, old and romantic world. So he was convinced that he was actually
standing at the third level. There were fewer ticket windows there which were
made of wood and were old-looking. There were open flame gaslights. He saw
people with beards, sideburns and fancy moustaches. Then he caught a glimpse of
an old locomotive and also saw an 1894 issue of ‘The World’ newspaper. Perhaps
Charley is under pressure to escape from the harsh world of realities. He would
like to escape to the peaceful world of 1894.
Question 15.
What kind of people did Charley ‘See’
at the third level?
Answer:
Having worked late at the office Charley decided to take a train back home. So he came to Grand Central Station and from the second level he got lost while ducking into an arched doorway and found himself inside a tunnel. This tunnel took him to another light of stairs and he found himself on the third level of the station. As compared to the second level, the third level had smaller rooms, fewer ticket windows and train gates. Everyone there was dressed in ‘eighteen-ninety-something’. Charley came across men and women wearing 19th century dresses. Men sported fancy moustaches, beards and sideburns. Tiny lapels, four-button suits, derby hats and pocket gold watches seemed to be in vogue. Women were wearing fancy cut sleeves, long skirts and high-buttoned shoes. Charley was confused to see people sporting old-fashioned clothes and hair styles at the third level.
Question 16.
How does Charley make his description
of the third level very realistic?
Answer:
To make his description of the third
level very realistic, Charley describes its minute details, vividly comparing
it to the second level of the Grand Central station. He says the rooms here
were smaller. There were fewer ticket windows and train gates, and the
information booth was wooden and old-looking. He also gives a detailed
description about the people he saw at the third level and their dresses. He
says the people wore nineteenth century dresses; many men had beards, sideburns
and fancy moustaches. He also buys tickets to Galesburg, Illinois thus making
the reader believe that he was actually at the third level.
Question 17. What is being inferred from Sam’s letter to Charley?
Answer:
Sam’s letter to Charley is dated 18th
July, 1894. It is written from Galesburg, Illinois. In response to Charley’s
claim of having visited the third level, Sam who is equally insecure wishes the
entire episode is true, as he too believes in the existence of the third level.
There are some inferences made by the letter. The introductory part of the
letter confirms Charley’s belief in the existence of the third level. It also
suggests that those who find the third level can travel across to Galesburg and
enjoy the festivities, songs, music and peaceful world of the 1890s. So the
author uses Sam’s letter as a unique combination of the real and fantasy world.