NCERT Solutions for Class 11 English (Snapshots) Chapter 1: The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse
Complete solutions for Class 11 English Snapshots Chapter 1 – “The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse” by William Saroyan: an original summary, theme and message, word meanings, and every textbook exercise question (the four “Reading with Insight” questions and the “Try This Out” activity) reproduced exactly as in the NCERT book and answered in full, exam-ready prose. We also add extra short and long questions, MCQs, Assertion–Reason items and FAQs for thorough revision.
About the author
William Saroyan (1908–1981) was an American novelist, playwright and short-story writer of Armenian descent. Born in Fresno, California, he drew heavily on his Armenian immigrant background and the lives of ordinary, often poor, people he knew in the San Joaquin Valley. His writing is warm, humorous and optimistic, celebrating innocence, kindness and the human spirit. Saroyan won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for his play The Time of Your Life (1940), which he famously declined, and an Academy Award for the story behind the film The Human Comedy. “The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse” comes from his collection My Name Is Aram (1940), a series of linked stories narrated by the boy Aram about his Armenian relatives.
Summary
The story is narrated by Aram, looking back fondly on a summer when he was nine years old. One morning at four o’clock, his cousin Mourad – considered crazy by everyone except Aram – taps on his window, sitting astride a beautiful white horse. Aram is thrilled, for his deepest longing has always been to ride a horse, yet he is troubled too: the boys belong to the Garoghlanian tribe, a poor Armenian family famous for eleven centuries of honesty. He cannot believe Mourad would steal, but knows the horse must be stolen.
Aram persuades himself that riding a stolen horse is not real stealing, since they never intend to sell it. The cousins ride joyfully through the countryside, with Mourad singing and racing the horse. They hide the animal in the barn of a deserted vineyard and take secret early-morning rides for some time. We learn that Mourad has, in fact, had the horse for about a month.
That afternoon, the farmer John Byro visits Aram’s house and complains that his white horse, stolen a month ago, is still missing. Aram realises the truth and begs Mourad not to return the horse until he himself learns to ride. Mourad, however, insists the horse must go back to its rightful owner. Weeks later the boys meet John Byro on the road; he studies the horse closely, admits it is the twin of his own, but says the family’s reputation for honesty makes him trust his heart over his eyes. Moved, the boys quietly return the horse the next morning. John Byro is amazed to find it stronger and better-tempered than before. The story gently celebrates innocence, trust and the moral code of a poor but proud people.
Theme & message
The central theme is the triumph of honesty, trust and family pride over temptation. Though Aram and Mourad love the horse and dread parting with it, their inherited code – the Garoghlanian fame for honesty “for something like eleven centuries” – finally wins. John Byro’s decision to believe his heart rather than his eyes shows the power of mutual trust within a close community. The story also celebrates the innocence and joy of childhood, the beauty of nature and freedom, and the idea that a person’s spirit (Mourad’s wild, horse-loving streak) need not match that of his practical father. Saroyan suggests that good values, once deeply rooted, guide people even when the temptation to do wrong is great.
Word meanings
| Word / Phrase | Meaning |
|---|---|
| magnificence | great beauty and splendour |
| hallmark | a distinctive feature or quality |
| poverty-stricken | extremely poor |
| comical | amusing, funny |
| pious | devout; here, deeply sincere and gentle |
| stillness | calm; absence of movement |
| longings | strong desires or yearnings |
| trot | (of a horse) move at a moderate steady pace |
| roar | to make or utter a loud deep sound; here, to sing loudly |
| crazy streak | an eccentric, wild trait in one’s nature |
| natural descendant | one who inherits a quality by nature |
| furious in temper | quick to become very angry |
| irritable | easily annoyed |
| capricious | unpredictable; changing suddenly |
| vagrant | wandering; without a fixed pattern |
| snorted | (of a horse) forced air noisily through the nose |
| reared | (of a horse) rose up on its hind legs |
| irrigation ditch | a channel that carries water to fields |
| deserted | abandoned; empty of people |
| surrey | a light, four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage |
| conscience-stricken | troubled by feelings of guilt |
| suspicious | inclined to doubt or mistrust |
Textbook exercise solutions
The following questions are reproduced exactly as printed in the NCERT Snapshots textbook and answered in full.
1. You will probably agree that this story does not have breathless adventure and exciting action. Then what in your opinion makes it interesting?
2. Did the boys return the horse because they were conscience-stricken or because they were afraid?
3. “One day back there in the good old days when I was nine and the world was full of every imaginable kind of magnificence, and life was still a delightful and mysterious dream…” The story begins in a mood of nostalgia. Can you narrate some incident from your childhood that might make an interesting story?
4. The story revolves around characters who belong to a tribe in Armenia. Mourad and Aram are members of the Garoghlanian family. Now locate Armenia and Assyria on the atlas and prepare a write-up on the Garoghlanian tribes. You may write about people, their names, traits, geographical and economic features as suggested in the story.
Try This Out
“The horse stood on its hind legs, snorted, and burst into a fury of speed that was the loveliest thing I had ever seen.” These lines could be an artist’s delight. Try to draw a picture as depicted in the above lines.
Extra questions
Short answer
1. Who narrates the story, and how old was he at the time of the events?
2. Why was Aram unable to believe that Mourad had a horse?
3. How did Aram justify the riding of the stolen horse to himself?
4. What was Uncle Khosrove’s favourite saying, and what did it reveal about him?
5. Why did John Byro not accuse the boys despite recognising his horse?
Long answer
6. Write a character sketch of Mourad as presented in the story.
7. How does the story bring out the values and code of conduct of the Garoghlanian family?
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Who wrote “The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse”?
(a) Ruskin Bond (b) William Saroyan (c) O. Henry (d) Mark Twain
2. To which tribe do Aram and Mourad belong?
(a) Assyrian (b) Garoghlanian (c) Halabian (d) Fetvajian
3. The Garoghlanian family was most famous for its:
(a) wealth (b) horses (c) honesty (d) farming
4. At what time did Mourad come to Aram’s window with the horse?
(a) Midnight (b) Four in the morning (c) Noon (d) Sunset
5. Who was the real owner of the white horse?
(a) Uncle Khosrove (b) Zorab (c) John Byro (d) Dikran Halabian
6. What was Uncle Khosrove’s constant refrain?
(a) “Make it quick” (b) “It is no harm; pay no attention to it” (c) “I spit on money” (d) “Get down”
7. Where did the boys hide the horse?
(a) In Aram’s yard (b) In John Byro’s barn (c) In the barn of Fetvajian’s deserted vineyard (d) On Olive Avenue
8. What name did Mourad give the horse when speaking to John Byro?
(a) Vazire (b) My Heart (c) Snowflake (d) Beauty
9. How long had Mourad actually had the horse before returning it?
(a) A day (b) A week (c) About a month (d) A year
10. Why did John Byro not accuse the boys of stealing his horse?
(a) He did not recognise the horse (b) He trusted the family’s reputation for honesty (c) He was afraid of them (d) He had already found his horse
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): Aram found it hard to believe that Mourad had a horse.
Reason (R): The family was poor and famous for its honesty, so a member could not have bought or stolen one.
2. Assertion (A): Aram convinced himself that riding the horse was not really stealing.
Reason (R): He believed it would become stealing only if they tried to sell the horse.
3. Assertion (A): John Byro openly accused the boys of stealing his horse.
Reason (R): He recognised the horse as his own by looking into its mouth.
4. Assertion (A): Mourad refused to keep the horse for a whole year.
Reason (R): He felt that keeping it longer would amount to stealing, which no Garoghlanian could do.
5. Assertion (A): After the horse was returned, John Byro found it weaker and worse-tempered.
Reason (R): The boys had ridden the horse roughly every morning for many days.
Exam tips
- Remember the key names and details: narrator Aram (aged nine), cousin Mourad, the Garoghlanian tribe, owner John Byro, and Uncle Khosrove’s refrain.
- For value-based questions, stress the theme of honesty, trust and family pride; quote that the family was famous for honesty “for something like eleven centuries.”
- Note the distinction the boys draw: riding is not “real” stealing because they never mean to sell the horse—this often appears in extract questions.
- For John Byro, highlight that he trusts his heart over his eyes—a favourite line for short-answer and inference questions.
- Support character sketches of Mourad with evidence: taming the horse, soothing dogs, healing the robin, and his refusal to keep the horse.
FAQs
What is the main theme of “The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse”?
The main theme is the triumph of honesty, trust and family pride over temptation, set against the innocence and joy of childhood in a poor but proud Armenian family.
Why did Aram and Mourad finally return the horse?
They returned it because they were conscience-stricken. Their family’s long reputation for honesty, and John Byro’s decision to trust that reputation over the evidence of his eyes, made them feel morally bound to return the horse to its true owner.
Why was Mourad considered “crazy” by his family?
Mourad was full of wild energy, joy and a love of adventure—the “natural descendant” of the family’s eccentric streak (like Uncle Khosrove)—rather than being practical like his father Zorab, so the family called him crazy.
Questions are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT Snapshots textbook; the summary and all answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
