NCERT Solutions for Class 10 English (First Flight) Chapter 1: A Letter to God
Complete solutions for Class 10 English First Flight Chapter 1 – “A Letter to God” by G.L. Fuentes: an original summary, theme and message, word meanings, and every textbook exercise (Oral Comprehension Check, Thinking about the Text, Thinking about Language, Talk about it) answered fully. The questions are kept exactly as in the NCERT book, with original, exam-ready answers written by ClearStudy.
About the author
“A Letter to God” was written by Gregorio López y Fuentes (G.L. Fuentes), a noted Mexican writer, journalist and poet. Born in 1895 in the state of Veracruz, he grew up among farmers and the rural countryside, and these everyday village people became the heart of his stories. He is best remembered for his novel El Indio (1935), a powerful portrait of Mexico’s indigenous people, which won the country’s first National Prize for Literature. His simple, realistic style and deep sympathy for ordinary working folk shine through this short story about a poor, faithful farmer named Lencho.
Summary
Lencho, a hard-working farmer, lives with his family in the only house on a low hill in the valley. His field of ripe corn promises a good harvest, but the crop needs rain. When the rain finally arrives, Lencho is overjoyed and compares the big drops to ‘new coins’. His happiness, however, is short-lived. A sudden storm brings heavy hail that falls for a full hour and destroys the entire crop, leaving the field looking white, as if covered with salt. Lencho is filled with sorrow, fearing his family will go hungry that year.
Yet Lencho has one deep, unshakeable hope – the help of God, whose eyes, he believes, see everything. Being a literate man, he writes a letter to God asking for a hundred pesos to sow his field again and survive until the next harvest. He drops the letter, addressed simply ‘To God’, into the post box. A postman, amused, shows it to the postmaster.
The kind-hearted postmaster is touched by Lencho’s incredible faith and decides not to let it be shaken. He collects money from his employees, his friends and his own salary, but can gather only a little over half. He sends seventy pesos to Lencho, signing the letter ‘God’. The next Sunday, Lencho takes the money without surprise, but becomes angry on counting it. He writes again to God, complaining that only seventy pesos reached him and asking for the rest – but warns God not to send it through the mail, because the post-office employees are ‘a bunch of crooks’.
Theme & message
The story explores the theme of faith versus reality, and the contrast between human goodness and a simple man’s blind trust. Lencho’s unquestioning faith in God is so absolute that he never doubts that his prayer will be answered. The deep irony is that the very people he calls ‘crooks’ – the postmaster and his staff – are the kind, charitable human beings who actually helped him. The story reminds us that real generosity often comes quietly from ordinary people, and that we should value human kindness instead of being blinded by either suspicion or unrealistic expectation.
Word meanings
| Word | English meaning | Hindi meaning |
|---|---|---|
| crest | top of a hill | बुलंदी / शिखर |
| downpour | a heavy fall of rain | मूसलाधार बारिश |
| intimately | very closely / thoroughly | घनिष्ठता से |
| resemble | to look like | समान दिखना |
| hailstones | small balls of ice that fall like rain | ओले / बर्फीले टुकड़े |
| draped | covered (with cloth) | ࣺका हुआ |
| plague | a large-scale calamity / swarm | महामारी / आपदा |
| locusts | insects that fly in swarms and destroy crops | टिड्डियाँ / सलाब |
| sorrowful | full of sadness | दुखद / शोकपूर्ण |
| solitary | lonely, single | एकांत / अकेला |
| conscience | an inner sense of right and wrong | अंतरात्मा / विवेक |
| peso | the currency of several Latin American countries | पेसो (मुद्रा) |
| amiable | friendly and pleasant | मिलनसार / सुशील |
| heartily | in a loud, hearty manner | खुलकर / दिल खोलकर |
| correspondence | exchange of letters | पत्र-व्यवहार |
| resolution | a firm decision | दृढ़ संकल्प |
| charity | kindness; giving help to the needy | दान / परोपकार |
| contentment | satisfaction | संतोष |
| affixed | stuck / attached | चिपकाया |
| crooks | dishonest people; cheats | बेईमान / ठग |
Oral Comprehension Check
(Page 1 – up to the first hope of help)
1. What did Lencho hope for?
2. Why did Lencho say the raindrops were like ‘new coins’?
3. How did the rain change? What happened to Lencho’s fields?
4. What were Lencho’s feelings when the hail stopped?
(Page 2 – after the letter is written and read)
1. Who or what did Lencho have faith in? What did he do?
2. Who read the letter?
3. What did the postmaster do then?
(Page 3 – after Lencho receives the money)
1. Was Lencho surprised to find a letter for him with money in it?
2. What made him angry?
Thinking about the Text
1. Who does Lencho have complete faith in? Which sentences in the story tell you this?
2. Why does the postmaster send money to Lencho? Why does he sign the letter ‘God’?
3. Did Lencho try to find out who had sent the money to him? Why/Why not?
4. Who does Lencho think has taken the rest of the money? What is the irony in the situation? (Remember that the irony of a situation is an unexpected aspect of it. An ironic situation is strange or amusing because it is the opposite of what is expected.)
5. Are there people like Lencho in the real world? What kind of a person would you say he is? You may select appropriate words from the box to answer the question.
greedy naive stupid ungrateful selfish comical unquestioning
6. There are two kinds of conflict in the story: between humans and nature, and between humans themselves. How are these conflicts illustrated?
Thinking about Language
I. Names of storms – match the names with their descriptions
II. The word ‘hope’ – match Column A with the meanings in Column B
III. Relative Clauses – join the sentences using who, whom, whose, which
IV. Using Negatives for Emphasis – find sentences from the story
V. Metaphors – complete the table from the story
| Object | Metaphor | Quality or Feature Compared |
|---|---|---|
| Cloud | Huge mountains of clouds | The mass or ‘hugeness’ of mountains |
| Raindrops | New coins (ten-cent and five-cent pieces) | The value / preciousness of the rain, like fresh money |
| Hailstones | New silver coins / frozen pearls | Their bright, round, silvery appearance and (deceptive) preciousness |
| Locusts | A plague of locusts | An epidemic (a disease) that spreads very rapidly and leaves many people dead – here, total destruction of the crop |
| Man (Lencho) | An ox of a man | His great physical strength and tireless capacity for hard work, like an ox |
Talk about it
Have you ever been in great difficulty, and felt that only a miracle could help you? How was your problem solved? Speak about this in class with your teacher.
Extra questions
Short answer (30–40 words)
1. Where was Lencho’s house situated?
2. Why did Lencho need exactly a hundred pesos?
3. Why did the postman laugh on seeing the letter?
4. How did Lencho react when he counted the money?
5. What did Lencho write in his second letter to God?
Long answer (100–120 words)
6. Describe the character of the postmaster. How do his actions reveal his goodness?
7. ‘A Letter to God’ is built on irony. Discuss the various ironies in the story.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Where was Lencho’s house located?
(a) In a busy town (b) On the crest of a low hill (c) Beside the post office (d) On the sea coast
2. The only thing Lencho’s earth needed was:
(a) better seeds (b) a downpour or a shower (c) more workers (d) sunshine
3. Lencho compared the big raindrops to:
(a) silver coins (b) ten-cent pieces (c) pearls (d) seeds
4. How long did the hail rain on the valley?
(a) a few minutes (b) half a day (c) for an hour (d) all night
5. After the storm, the field looked as if it were covered with:
(a) snow (b) salt (c) sand (d) ash
6. How much money did Lencho ask God for?
(a) fifty pesos (b) seventy pesos (c) a hundred pesos (d) two hundred pesos
7. Who first read Lencho’s letter to God?
(a) the postmaster (b) a postman (c) Lencho’s son (d) a priest
8. How much money did the postmaster manage to send Lencho?
(a) a hundred pesos (b) seventy pesos (c) thirty pesos (d) fifty pesos
9. How did the postmaster sign the reply to Lencho?
(a) Postmaster (b) A friend (c) God (d) Anonymous
10. In his second letter, whom did Lencho call ‘a bunch of crooks’?
(a) his neighbours (b) the post-office employees (c) his sons (d) the farmers
Assertion–Reason – choose: (a) A and R true, R explains A; (b) A and R true, R does not explain A; (c) A true, R false; (d) A false, R true.
1. Assertion (A): Lencho was happy when the rain first began to fall.
Reason (R): He believed the rain would water his ripe corn and ensure a good harvest.
2. Assertion (A): Lencho was not surprised to receive money in reply to his letter.
Reason (R): He had complete confidence that God would answer his prayer.
3. Assertion (A): The postmaster sent Lencho the money to make fun of him.
Reason (R): The postmaster was deeply moved by Lencho’s faith and wished to protect it.
4. Assertion (A): Lencho accused the post-office employees of being crooks.
Reason (R): He was sure God could not have made a mistake or denied his request.
5. Assertion (A): The hailstorm proved a blessing for Lencho’s family.
Reason (R): The hail destroyed the entire corn crop and left the family fearing hunger.
Exam tips
Score better in this chapter
1. Remember the central irony – the ‘crooks’ Lencho blames are the very people who helped him. Long-answer and value-based questions almost always test this.
2. Learn key facts precisely: a hundred pesos asked for, seventy pesos received, the hail fell for an hour, the field looked ‘covered with salt’.
3. Be ready to write character sketches of Lencho (faithful, hardworking, naive, unquestioning) and the postmaster (kind, generous, sensitive).
4. For theme questions, link faith, human goodness and irony together rather than treating them separately.
FAQs
Who wrote ‘A Letter to God’ and who is its main character?
The story was written by the Mexican author G.L. Fuentes (Gregorio López y Fuentes). Its main character is Lencho, a poor but deeply faithful farmer.
Why did Lencho write a letter to God?
A hailstorm destroyed his entire corn crop, leaving his family facing hunger. Out of complete faith, Lencho wrote to God asking for a hundred pesos to sow his field again and survive until the next harvest.
What is the irony in ‘A Letter to God’?
The postmaster and his employees kindly collected money to help Lencho, yet Lencho calls them ‘a bunch of crooks’ and accuses them of stealing part of his money – the opposite of what they deserved.
Questions are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT First Flight textbook; the summary and all answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
