Лист за преговор: Faith and Hope in Action

📋 Course Outline

  1. Faith and Lencho’s letter to God
  2. Money order form and post office process
  3. Hailstorm destroys Lencho’s crops
  4. Postmaster’s response and God’s signature
  5. Lencho’s anger and request for remaining money
  6. Hope, relative clauses, and negatives for emphasis
  7. Storm types vocabulary and hope usage
  8. Metaphors in the story and comparison table
  9. Speaking, listening, and classroom activities
  10. Robert Frost poem Dust of Snow
  11. Robert Frost poem Fire and Ice

📖 1. Faith and Lencho’s letter to God

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Lencho : A farmer who relies on his crops and responds to disaster by writing a letter to God.
  • Letter to God : A written request Lencho sends to God asking for money after his crops are ruined.
  • Faith : A belief that something unseen can act, shown in the story through the characters’ trust in God.
  • Money order : A postal service form used to send a fixed amount of money through the post office.

📝 Essential Points

  • Lencho’s crops fail, so he turns to a letter to God instead of asking people directly.
  • The story frames a question: whether Lencho’s letter reaches God and whether money is sent.
  • Lencho’s farm is described as the only house in the valley, on a hill with views of river and corn.
  • The family’s daily routine includes checking the sky for rain, and the woman replies “God willing.”
  • The text links faith to action by showing a practical way to send money: using the post office.
  • The money-order activity highlights form parts and key terms like counter, counter clerk, acknowledgement, and counterfoil.

💡 Memory Hook

Faith vs method: Lencho prays in a letter, but the post office shows how messages and money can be delivered.

📖 2. Money order form and post office process

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Money Order form : A money order form is the document used to request postal transfer of money to a specified recipient.
  • Space for Communication : The Space for Communication is the part of the form where the sender writes a message for the recipient.
  • Acknowledgement section : The Acknowledgement section is the part of the form that the post office returns to the sender after processing.
  • Official use part : The official use part is the section of the form handled by the post office for its internal processing.

📝 Essential Points

  • The form has three parts: the Money Order form, the part for official use, and the Acknowledgement.
  • The sender must sign the form in addition to providing sender details.
  • The Acknowledgement is sent back by the post office to the sender after the required signs are completed.
  • The Space for Communication is used to write the message you want included with the money order.
  • The form is completed with sender and receiver details, and you submit it at the nearest post office.
  • The form is used both for sending money to someone else and for practicing by filling it with yourself as sender and your partner as receiver.

💡 Memory Hook

Think: Communication = message; Acknowledgement = proof returned to sender.

📖 3. Hailstorm destroys Lencho’s crops

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Hailstorm : A hailstorm is a severe weather event that drops ice pellets and can wipe out crops quickly.
  • Lencho’s crops : Lencho’s crops are the plants in his field that are destroyed when the hail hits.
  • Locusts comparison : The locusts comparison is Lencho’s way of describing the damage as if insects had eaten the plants.
  • Letter to God : A letter to God is Lencho’s written request for help after the hail leaves him with no harvest.

📝 Essential Points

  • The hail removes the flowers and leaves Lencho’s plants with nothing left to harvest.
  • Lencho concludes the year’s corn will fail because the hail has destroyed everything.
  • Lencho’s night is marked by despair and fear of hunger for his family.
  • After the storm, Lencho writes a letter addressed to God and asks for money to sow again.
  • Lencho believes God can see everything, including what is deep in a person’s conscience.

💡 Memory Hook

Hail = “nothing left” → despair → “letter to God” for money to resow.

📖 4. Postmaster’s response and God’s signature

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Postmaster : A postal official who reads Lencho’s letter and decides how to respond while protecting Lencho’s belief.
  • Lencho’s faith : A strong belief that God will act directly and correctly on Lencho’s requests.
  • Answering the letter : The postmaster’s plan to reply to Lencho so Lencho keeps trusting God.
  • Signature God : The single-word sign-off used by the postmaster to make the reply seem authored by God.

📝 Essential Points

  • The postmaster had never seen that address before, yet he recognized the letter’s religious intent.
  • He first laughed, then became serious and praised the writer’s faith as extraordinary.
  • To avoid damaging Lencho’s belief, he collected money from employees, his own salary, and friends’ charity.
  • He could not raise the full 100 pesos, so he sent a little more than half to Lencho.
  • The reply envelope was addressed to Lencho and the letter was signed with only the word “God”.
  • Lencho accepted the money without surprise, but he became angry after counting it and concluding God must not have made a mistake.

💡 Memory Hook

Cause→effect: postmaster protects faith → sends money → signs as God.

📖 5. Lencho’s anger and request for remaining money

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Lencho’s anger : Lencho’s anger is the emotional reaction he shows when he receives only part of the money he asked for.
  • Request for remaining money : A request for remaining money is Lencho’s demand that the sender send the rest because he still needs it badly.
  • Distrust of post office employees : Distrust of post office employees is Lencho’s belief that the people at the post office are dishonest and have taken some money.
  • Letter addressed to God : A letter addressed to God is Lencho’s way of directing his plea to a divine figure rather than to a human helper.

📝 Essential Points

  • Lencho is not satisfied because only seventy pesos of the amount he asked for reaches him.
  • He asks for the rest urgently, stating he needs the money very much.
  • He instructs the sender not to use the mail service because post office employees are described as crooks.
  • Lencho’s anger is triggered by the gap between what he expected and what he actually received.
  • Lencho assumes the missing money was taken by post office employees, creating an ironic mismatch between his faith and the outcome.

💡 Memory Hook

Partial delivery → anger; “God” sender → but “crooks” at the post office.

📖 6. Hope, relative clauses, and negatives for emphasis

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Hope verb : Hope as a verb means wishing that something will happen or turn out a certain way.
  • Hope noun : Hope as a noun means a chance or expectation that something good may happen.
  • Relative clause : A relative clause is a clause that adds extra information about a noun using a relative pronoun.
  • Relative pronoun : A relative pronoun links a relative clause to the noun it describes, such as who, whom, whose, or which.
  • Non-defining relative clause : A non-defining relative clause gives extra information and does not help identify the person or thing.

📝 Essential Points

  • In the story, hope can be a verb meaning “wish for it to happen” (e.g., I hope it passes quickly).
  • In the story, hope can be a noun meaning “a chance for something to happen” (e.g., There was a single hope).
  • Relative clauses usually start with a relative pronoun such as who, whom, whose, or which.
  • Non-defining relative clauses are marked by commas (or sometimes a dash) because the identity is already known.
  • If a non-defining relative clause comes at the end, it is followed by a full stop rather than a comma after it.

💡 Memory Hook

Verb hope = wish; noun hope = chance.

📖 7. Storm types vocabulary and hope usage

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Relative pronoun : A relative pronoun introduces a relative clause and links it to a noun, such as who, whom, whose, which.
  • Hidden relative pronoun : A hidden relative pronoun is omitted in a relative clause, so the sentence still makes sense without it.
  • Hope (feeling good will happen) : Hope can mean a feeling that something good will probably happen, even if it may not occur.
  • Hope (polite concern) : Hope can mean a polite way of showing concern that what you say should not offend or disturb the other person.
  • Hope (wish, unlikely) : Hope can mean wishing for something to happen even when it is very unlikely.

📝 Essential Points

  • Use which for things and for relative clauses after a noun like Mumbai, e.g., Mumbai is the commercial capital of India (which).
  • Use who for people in relative clauses, e.g., a person who cooks very well.
  • Use whose to show possession in a relative clause, e.g., Their performance has been excellent (whose).
  • Use whom for object position of a person in a relative clause, e.g., I trusted him (whom).
  • In some relative clauses, the relative pronoun can be omitted, e.g., The house — the only one in the entire valley — sat on the crest of a low hill.
  • Hope meanings include: probable good event, polite concern, and a wish even if very unlikely, so context decides the sense.

💡 Memory Hook

Who/whom/whose = people; which = things; hope can be probable, polite, or unlikely—check the context.

📖 8. Metaphors in the story and comparison table

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Negative words : Negative words like no, not, and nothing can signal absence or contradiction in meaning.
  • Emphatic negation : Emphatic negation uses negative words to stress an idea rather than to deny it.
  • Metaphor : A metaphor is a comparison where a quality or feature of one thing is transferred to another.
  • Greek origin of metaphor : The term metaphor comes from Greek and relates to the idea of transfer between things.

📝 Essential Points

  • Negative words can show absence, as in “no corn” meaning corn is missing.
  • Negative words can show contradiction, as in “not raindrops” meaning the drops are actually coins.
  • In the story, negation can emphasise usefulness, not absence, of the rain to the farmer.
  • “Nothing else but” and “no other reason than” express “only this” with emphasis.
  • “Not the slightest surprise” means “no surprise at all,” stressing the man’s calm reaction.
  • Metaphors compare two ideas by transferring a feature, like “leg of the table” for the supporting part.

💡 Memory Hook

Negation can be either absence (missing) or emphasis (only/very). Metaphor = transfer of a feature.

📖 9. Speaking, listening, and classroom activities

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Periodic comprehension checks : Comprehension checks are short questions used during reading to confirm students understand what they have just read.
  • Holistic understanding check : A holistic understanding check is an end-of-activity check that tests overall meaning rather than isolated details.
  • Authentic speaking context : An authentic speaking context is a classroom setup that gives learners a realistic reason to speak, not just a grammar drill.
  • Listening activity passage : A listening activity passage is the text read by the teacher or audio that students use to complete tasks while listening.

📝 Essential Points

  • Students complete a table by listening to a letter read aloud or on audio.
  • The listening task uses a specific letter passage with address and date details.
  • Classroom reading is supported by comprehension checks at intervals to guide understanding.
  • After reading, a holistic check confirms students’ overall grasp of the activity.
  • Speaking tasks are linked to an authentic context so learners practise language for a real purpose.

💡 Memory Hook

Checkpoints during reading → then a final overall check.

📖 10. Robert Frost poem Dust of Snow

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Dust of Snow : A short lyric poem where a small natural event changes the speaker’s feelings and outlook.
  • Crow : A bird in the poem whose action triggers the snowfall-like dust that affects the speaker’s mood.
  • Hemlock tree : A poisonous tree with small white flowers that is the source of the snow-dust in the poem.
  • Rued : A past feeling of regret in which the speaker had been unhappy about what had happened earlier.
  • Change of mood : An emotional shift where the speaker’s negative mood is replaced by a more hopeful feeling.

📝 Essential Points

  • The poem’s central idea is that a tiny, accidental change in nature can transform a person’s mood.
  • The crow shakes the hemlock tree, and the falling dust of snow reaches the speaker.
  • The speaker says the dust of snow gives a change of mood and saves part of a day they had regretted.
  • Hemlock is identified as a poisonous plant with small white flowers, adding contrast to the pleasant effect.
  • The poem is presented as a simple moment with a larger significance beyond the immediate event.

💡 Memory Hook

Tiny trigger → mood shift: crow shakes hemlock → dust of snow → regret-day partly saved.

📖 11. Robert Frost poem Fire and Ice

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Dust of snow : A small amount of snow that falls or is shaken loose from a tree, creating a brief but noticeable change in the speaker’s day.
  • Hemlock tree : A poisonous evergreen tree with small white flowers, used as a setting that contrasts with the speaker’s mood shift.
  • Crow : A bird associated with the dust of snow scene, whose action triggers the speaker’s change in mood.
  • Fire : A metaphor for destructive forces such as intense desire, greed, or hatred that can lead to ruin.
  • Ice : A metaphor for destructive forces such as hate and cold indifference that can also bring about destruction.

📝 Essential Points

  • In Dust of Snow, the speaker’s mood changes from regret to a more hopeful or lighter feeling after the crow shakes snow from a hemlock tree.
  • The hemlock’s “poisonous” nature makes the moment feel more surprising, since the mood improvement comes from an unlikely source.
  • In Fire and Ice, Frost presents two competing ideas about the world’s end: one driven by fire and one driven by ice.
  • The speaker chooses fire as the first option based on what he has “tasted of desire,” then argues that if there were a second end, hate would be enough through ice.
  • The poem uses a contrasting structure (fire vs ice) to balance desire and hate as causes of destruction, reinforced by its rhyme pattern.

💡 Memory Hook

Fire = desire; Ice = hate (both can end the world).

📊 Synthesis Tables

Hope: verb vs noun

FormMeaningExample from story
verbwish for something to happen“I hope it passes quickly.”
nouna chance for something to happen“There was a single hope: help from God.”

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing hope as a verb (wish) with hope as a noun (chance), especially in “I hope it passes quickly” vs “There was a single hope.”
  2. Thinking the postmaster sends money because he believes in God directly; the text says he protects Lencho’s faith by answering the letter.
  3. Assuming Lencho is surprised by the money; the story says he showed not the slightest surprise, then became angry after counting.
  4. Mixing up relative clause types: non-defining relative clauses are marked by commas (or a dash) and add extra information, not identification.
  5. Forgetting that non-defining relative clauses at the end take a full stop after the clause, not a comma.
  6. Misreading negatives for emphasis: “nothing else but” and “not the slightest surprise” stress “only/very much,” not absence.
  7. Treating metaphors as simple comparisons; the text defines metaphor as transfer of a feature from one idea to another (e.g., “heart of the city”).

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Explain what Lencho’s faith is in and what he does after his crops are ruined.
  2. State the story’s guiding questions: whether Lencho’s letter reaches God and whether God sends money.
  3. Describe the post office money-order process at the level of the form’s three parts: Money Order form, official use, and Acknowledgement.
  4. Identify what the ‘Space for Communication’ is used for and what the sender must do (including signing).
  5. Complete the key idea of the money-order form: the Acknowledgement is sent back to the sender after required signs are completed.
  6. Summarise how the hailstorm destroys Lencho’s crops and how Lencho describes the damage (including the locusts comparison).
  7. Explain Lencho’s night of despair and his “single hope” (help from God), then state how he writes and sends the letter.
  8. Explain what the postmaster does after reading the letter, including why he collects money and why he signs the reply “God.”
  9. Describe Lencho’s reaction when he receives only seventy pesos and what he writes in his second letter (including the accusation about post office employees).
  10. Use grammar rules: define non-defining relative clauses, name relative pronouns (who/whom/whose/which), and state comma/dash/full-stop punctuation patterns.
  11. Use negatives for emphasis: distinguish absence/contradiction from emphasis, and interpret examples like “nothing else but,” “no other reason than,” and “not the slightest surprise.”
  12. Identify metaphors in the story by explaining the ‘transfer’ idea (e.g., “leg of the table” style) and apply it to at least one metaphor from the text’s examples.

Тествайте знанията си

Тествайте знанията си по Faith and Hope in Action с 11 въпроса с множество отговори с подробни корекции.

1. Why does Lencho write a letter to God after his crops are ruined?

2. What is the purpose of the money order form used in the post office process?

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Lencho — role?

A farmer who trusts in God after crop failure.

Letter to God — purpose?

A request for money after the hailstorm.

Faith — meaning?

Belief in unseen divine aid.

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