Read and download the CBSE Class 12 English My Mother at Sixty Six Worksheet Set B in PDF format. We have provided exhaustive and printable Class 12 English worksheets for Flamingo Poetry Chapter 1 My Mother at Sixty Six, designed by expert teachers. These resources align with the 2025-26 syllabus and examination patterns issued by NCERT, CBSE, and KVS, helping students master all important chapter topics.
Chapter-wise Worksheet for Class 12 English Flamingo Poetry Chapter 1 My Mother at Sixty Six
Students of Class 12 should use this English practice paper to check their understanding of Flamingo Poetry Chapter 1 My Mother at Sixty Six as it includes essential problems and detailed solutions. Regular self-testing with these will help you achieve higher marks in your school tests and final examinations.
Class 12 English Flamingo Poetry Chapter 1 My Mother at Sixty Six Worksheet with Answers
SUMMARY
The poet is driving from her parents home to Cochin by car, her mother by her side— sleeping –open mouthed very pale, colorless and frail-like a dead body indicating that her end was near. The poet looks at her and feels intense pain and agony to realize that soon death will cast her mother from her. Tries to divert her mind, looks outside at the young trees and happy children bursting out of their homes in a playful mood (a contrasting image) After the security check at the airport looked again at her mother’s face—pale and cold.
“Familiar ache-My childhood fear” –the poet has always had a very intimate and close relationship with her mother and she has always felt the fear of being separated from her mother hence it is familiar. The poet reassures her mother that they will meet again
Read the extracts given below and attempt the questions that follow:
1. Driving from my parent’s
home to Cochin last Friday
morning, I saw my mother,
beside me,
doze, open mouthed, her face
ashen like that
of a corpse and realized with pain
that she was as old as she looked but soon
put that thought away…
Questions
Question. Where was the narrator driving to?
Answer: The narrator was driving to the airport on her way to Cochin.
Question. Who was sitting beside her?
Answer: Her mother was sitting next to her.
Question. What did the narrator notice about her mother?
Answer: The narrator noticed that her mother had dozed off and she was looking old, pale and weak.
Question. Why did her mother’s face look like that of a corpse?
Answer: The mother looked old, pale and ashen. Since she had dozed off, with her mouth open, the narrator felt she looked like a corpse in that condition.
Question. Find a word from the extract which means ‘sleep lighty’.
(a) ashen
(b) doze
(c) open mouthed
(d) corpse
Answer: doze
Question. ‘ashen like a corpse’ is a
(a) simile
(b) metaphor
(c) personification
(d) alliteration
Answer: simile
2. ….looked but soon
put that thought away, and
looked out at young
trees sprinting, the merry children spilling
out of their homes
Questions
Question. What thought did the narrator put away?
Answer: The narrator realised that her mother had grown old and would not be around for very long. This thought pained her and she wanted to distract herself.
Question. What did she see when she looked out of the car?
Answer: The narrator saw young trees sprinting and merry children running out of their houses.
Question. What are the merry children symbolic of?
(a) pale and wan
(b) lack of energy
(c) youth and vitality
(d) sprinting
Answer: youth and vitality
Question. ‘sprinting trees’ is a
(a) simile
(b) metaphor
(c) alliteration
(d) personification
Answer: personification
Question. Find a word from the extract which means ‘running fast’.
(a) spilling
(b) sprinting
(c) out
(d) thought away
Answer: sprinting
Question. ‘spilling children’ is a _______.
(a) simile
(b) metaphor
(c) alliteration
(d) personification
Answer: metaphor
3. ….but after the airport’s
security check, standing a few yards
away, I looked again at her, wan, pale
as a late winter’s moon
Questions
Question. Name the poem and the poet.
Answer: The poem is ‘My Mother at Sixty six’ and the poet is ‘Kamala Das’.
Question. What did the narrator do after the security check?
Answer: The narrator stood a few yards away and looked at her mother’s face again.
Question. Why did the narrator compare her mother’s face to a late winter’s moon?
Answer: The narrator’s mother is old, frail and pale like the moon in late winter. Hence, the comparison.
Question. Find a word from the extract which means the same as ‘colourless’.
(a) pale
(b) ache
(c) yards
(d) check
Answer: pale
Question. ‘as a late winter’s moon’ is a
(a) simile
(b) metaphor
(b) alliteration
(d) personification
(vi) Who looked at whom?
Answer: simile
Question. Who looked at whom?
Answer: The narrator looked at her aging mother.
4. ….as a late winter’s moon and felt that old familiar ache, my childhood’s fear,
Questions
Question. What has been compared to a late winter’s moon?
Answer: The narrator’s ageing mother has been compared to the late winter’s moon.
Question. Why has the comparison been made?
Answer: The narrator’s mother looked old, frail and pale like the moon in late winter. Hence, the comparison.
Question. Identify the poetic device in the lines.
Answer: The poetic device used in the line ‘as a late winter’s moon’ is a simile.
Question. What is the ‘familiar ache’ mentioned in these lines?
Answer: It refers to the narrator’s childhood fear of losing her parent or fear of separation from her.
Question. Find a word in the extract that means ‘pain’.
(a) familiar
(b) felt
(c) ache
(d) fear
Answer: ache
Question. What made the narrator feel the ‘familiar ache’?
(a) winter moon
(b) late moon
(c) mother growing old
(d) returning back home
Answer: mother growing old
5. but all I said was, see you soon, Amma,all I did was smile and smile and smile…
Questions
Question. Why did the narrator say ‘see you soon, Amma’?
Answer: The narrator said this to reassure her mother and herself that she would see her soon. After the pain of realizing that her mother had grown old, there is a mood of acceptance of reality.
Question. Why did the narrator smile and smile?
Answer: The narrator tries to put up a brave in front of her mother in order to hide her true feelings of pain on seeing the old and weak condition of her mother.
Question. ‘Smile and smile and smile’ has a poetic device. Identify it.
(a) simile
(b) metaphor
(c) alliteration
(d) repetition
Answer: repetition
Question. Amma is the fond way of addressing someone.
Who is being addressed as ‘Amma’ here?
Answer: The narrator’s mother is being addressed as ‘Amma’.
Question. The name of the poet is
(a) Keats
(b) Robert Frost
(c) Kamala Das
(d) Adrienne Rich
Answer: Kamala Das
Question. What is the emotion of the narrator in this extract?
(a) happy and cheerful
(b) a feeling of vitality
(c) a feeling of lack of energy
(d) a feeling of resignation and acceptance
Answer: a feeling of resignation and acceptance
Very Short Answer type Questions
Question. How does Kamala Das try to put away the thoughts of her aging mother?
Answer: Troubled by the thoughts of her aging mother, Kamala Das tries to distract herself by not looking at her mother’s old, ashen face. Instead, she looks out of the car window at young trees sprinting and happy children running out of the their homes.
Question. What were Kamala Das’ fears as a child? Why do they surface when she is going to the airport?
Answer: As a child, Kamala Das feared losing her mother. When she is going to the airport, the fear resurfaces while she gazes at her mother. She realises that her mother is growing old and frail and nearing death.
Question. What is the significance of the parting words of the poet and her smile, in ‘My Mother at Sixty-six’?
Answer: The poet’s parting words of assurance and her smile are a deliberate attempt to hide her anxiety and fear of loss and separation. Alternatively, they are also significant because they reflect poet’s hope to see her mother again, reassuring her mother at the same time.
Question. Why has the poet’s mother been compared to the ‘late winter’s moon’?
Answer: The poet’s mother looks pale and worn out, devoid of the energy and enthusiasm of youth. In the twilight of her life, she appears as lackluster as the winter moon.
Question. What were the poet’s feelings at the airport? How did she hide them?
Answer: At the airport, the poet feels worried about her aging mother. She is anxious that soon she is going to lose her mother; final separation (by death) from her mother scared her. To hide her fear and anxiety, she smiles and calls out ‘see you soon Amma’. A cheerful farewell allows her not to show her pain.
Question. Why are the young trees described as ‘sprinting’?
Answer: The young trees are described as ‘sprinting’ because the poet wants to show a contrast between the young trees and her old mother.
Question. Why are the young trees described as ‘sprinting’?
Answer: The poet is in a car on her way to the Cochin airport. She looks outside from the moving car and feels the young trees seem to be running along with them. By describing the young trees as ‘sprinting’ the poet wants to show a striking contrast between their liveliness and her mother’s fading youth.
Question. Why are the youngsters described as springing?
Answer: The youngsters in the poem, ‘My Mother at Sixty-six’ are described as springing because they are symbolic of youth, liveliness and joy. In contrast to the poet’s frail and aging mother the children appear to be young and spirited.
Question. What was the poet’s childhood fear?
Answer: Poet Kamala Das, in her poem, ‘My Mother at Sixty-six’ says that since childhood, she feared separation from her mother. The thought of losing her mother has been making her uncomfortable ever since she was a little girl.
Question. What were the poet’s feelings as she drove to Cochin airport?
Answer: As she drove to Cochin airport, the thought that her mother looked old and withered, disturbed the poet. Her childhood fears haunted her again.
Short Answer type Questions
Question. Old Familiar ache, my childhood’s fear, but all I said was, see you soon, Amma, all I did was smile and smile and smile… … …
(a) What does the phrase, ‘familiar ache’ mean?
(b) What was the poet’s childhood fear?
(c) What do the first two lines tell us about the poet’s feelings for her mother?
(d) What does the repeated use of the word, ‘smile’ mean?
Answer: (a) The pain that her mother was growing old and the fear of separation.
(b) The poet’s childhood fear was that of her mother growing old and final separation.
(c) The poet loves her mother a lot and she feared losing her.
(d) The word ‘smile’ was repeatedly used as the poet hid her feeling from her mother by smiling and reassuring herself.
Question. … but soon put that thought away, and looked out at young trees sprinting, the merry children spilling out of their homes,…
(a) What thought did the poet drive away from her mind?
(b) What did she see when she looked out of the car?
(c) What did she see that the joyful scene did not help her drive away the painful thought from her mind?
Answer: (a) The poet drove away from her mind the thought of her mother’s impending death.
(b) When the poet looked out of car, she saw sprinting trees, happy children coming out of their homes to enjoy themselves.
(c) The poet looked at her mother’s face once again and experienced the old familiar ache, the childhood fear of losing her mother. She gazed at her mother’s pale appearance the joyful scene did not help her drive away the painful thoughts from her mind.
Question. I saw my mother, beside me, doze, open mouthed, her face ashen like that of a corpse and realised with pain that she was as old as she looked but soon put that thought away, ….
(a) What worried the poet when she looked at her mother?
(b) Why was there pain in her realisation ?
(c) Why did she put that thought away ?
(d) Identify the figure of speech used in these lines.
Answer: (a) The poet was worried about her mother’s advancing age and she feared final separation from her mother.
(b) There was pain in the poet’s realisation because her mother now looked as old as she was, her bodily infirmities that comes with old age were visible on her face. The poet was having a hard time accepting the thought of finally losing her mother.
(c) The poet put that thought away because she was going away from her mother and the thought of separation was too painful for her to bear. The realisation that old age was quickly approaching her mother filled her mind with unpleasant thoughts about losing her, which saddened and scared her deeply.
(d) The figure of speech used is a simile- “Like that of a corpse”.
Question. I looked again at her, wan, pale as a late winter’s moon and felt that old familiar ache, my childhood’s fear … … …
(a) Who is ‘her’?
(b) Why did the poet look at ‘her’ again?
(c) What was the poet’s childhood fear?
(d) Identify the figure of speech used in these lines.
Answer: (a) ‘Her’ is poet’s mother.
(b) The poet looked at her mother again due to anxiety and worry.
(c) The poet’s childhood fear was that of losing her mother, the pain of ultimate separation.
(d) Simile – pale as a late winter’s moon.
Question. …and felt that old familiar ache, my childhood’s fear, but all I said was, see you soon, Amma, all I did was smile and smile and smile…
(a) What was the childhood fear that now troubled the poet?
(b) What do the poet’s parting words suggest?
(c) Why did the poet smile and smile?
Answer: (a) Since her childhood the poet feared that one day she would lose her mother. Now, looking at her aging mother’s ashen face and fragile body the old fear came back to trouble her.
(b) The poet’s parting words suggest that she hopes to see her mother again even though she fears she might lose her sooner than later.
(c) The poet smiled and smiled because it was a deliberate attempt to hide her fear and anxiety of loss and separation from her mother.
Question. … … … … and felt that old familiar ache, my childhood’s fear, but all I said was, see you soon, Amma All I did was smile and smile and smile…
(a) Name the poem.
(b) What was the poet’s childhood fear?
(c) What does her smile signify?
(d) What does the word ‘ache mean’.
Answer: (a) The name of the poem is ‘My Mother at Sixty-six’.
(b) Since childhood, the poet feared her ultimate separation from her mother.
(c) She smiles in order to hide her true feelings, fear and anxiety.
(d) The word ache means pain.
Question. I saw my mother beside me, doze, open mouthed, her face ashen like that of a corpse and realised with pain ……
(a) Who is ‘I’?
(b) What did ‘I’ realise with pain?
(c) Why was the realisation painful?
(d) Identify and name the figure of speech used in these lines.
Answer: (a) ‘I’ in the above extract is the poet narrating the incident from a daughter’s point of view.
(b) The poet realised with pain that her mother is nearing old age.
(c) The poet is pained by the realisation because her mother now looked as old as she was, her bodily infirmities that have come, show that she was approaching her death and it was a hard fact to accept for the poet.
(d) The figure of speech used is simile and the line is, ‘ashen like that of a corps’.
Question. Driving from my parent’s home to Cochin last Friday morning, I saw my mother, beside me, doze, open mouthed, her face ashen like that of a corpse and realised with pain that she was as old as she looked…
(a) Where was the poet driving to?
(b) Why was her mother’s face looking like that of a corpse?
(c) What did the poet notice about her mother?
Answer: (a) The poet was driving from her parents’ home to the Cochin airport.
(b) Her mother’s face was looking like that of a corpse because she had aged quite a lot, was weak and had lost her youthful energy and enthusiasm.
(c) The poet noticed that her mother was sleeping with her mouth open, her face had become ashen, lacking the youthful glow. This made the poet realise that her mother was “as old as she looked”.
Question. ……… but soon put that thought away and looked out at young trees sprinting, the merry children spilling out of their homes,
(a) Which thought did the poet put away?
(b) What do the ‘sprinting trees’ signify?
(c) What are ‘the merry children spilling out of their homes’, symbolic of ?
Answer: (a) The poet put away the thought of her aging mother and her gradual declining health. It pained her to think about losing her mother to death soon and the invertible final separation.
(b) ‘Sprinting trees’ signify energy, youth and activity. The poet wants to contrast young trees with her old mother.
(c) The merry children spilling out of their homes’ is symbolic of happiness, energy and playfulness. It can also be symbolic of poet’s sad thoughts being contrasted with ‘merry children’.
Question. looked out at young Trees sprinting, the merry children spilling out of their homes, but after the airport’s security, I looked again at her, wan, pale as a late winter’s moon and felt that old familiar ache, … … …
(a) How can the trees sprint?
(b) Why did the poet look at her mother again?
(c) What did she observe?
(d) Identify the figure of speech used in these lines.
Answer: (a) The trees seem to sprint because as the car moves ahead, the movement of the trees is backward.
(b) The poet’s feeling of anxiety and fear for her mother’s health made her look again at her mother.
(c) She observed her mother’s pale appearance, resembling the late winter moon.
(d) Simile – Pale as a late winter’s moon
Question. ……… but soon put that thought away, and looked out at young trees sprinting, the merry children spilling out of their homes.
(a) Who looked out at young trees?
(b) Which thought did she put away?
(c) What do young sprinting trees signify?
Answer: (a) The poet looked out at the young trees.
(b) She put away the sad thought of her mother’s impending death.
(c) The young sprinting trees signify youthfulness, energy and life.
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Important Practice Resources for Class 12 English
CBSE English Class 12 Flamingo Poetry Chapter 1 My Mother at Sixty Six Worksheet
Students can use the practice questions and answers provided above for Flamingo Poetry Chapter 1 My Mother at Sixty Six to prepare for their upcoming school tests. This resource is designed by expert teachers as per the latest 2026 syllabus released by CBSE for Class 12. We suggest that Class 12 students solve these questions daily for a strong foundation in English.
Flamingo Poetry Chapter 1 My Mother at Sixty Six Solutions & NCERT Alignment
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