NCERT Solutions for Class 12 English (Vistas) Chapter 1: The Third Level (Jack Finney)
Complete solutions for Class 12 English Vistas Chapter 1 – “The Third Level” by Jack Finney: an original summary, theme and message, key word meanings and every textbook exercise (the marginal read-and-find-out questions and the full Reading with Insight set) answered in detail. Questions are reproduced exactly as in the NCERT book; all answers are written originally in CBSE exam-ready style.
About the author
Jack Finney (1911–1995) was an American author best known for his science-fiction and fantasy writing. Born Walter Braden Finney in Milwaukee, USA, he is most famous for the novel The Body Snatchers (filmed as Invasion of the Body Snatchers) and for Time and Again, a celebrated time-travel story. His work often blends ordinary, everyday American life with strange, fantastical situations, and frequently expresses a longing for a gentler, less anxious past. “The Third Level” is a classic example of this style, mixing realistic detail with an imaginative escape into the year 1894.
Summary
The narrator, Charley, is an ordinary thirty-one-year-old New Yorker who insists that Grand Central Station has not two levels but three – even though everyone says only two exist. His psychiatrist friend dismisses the claim as a “waking-dream wish fulfilment,” arguing that Charley, like everyone living in a modern world full of insecurity, fear and worry, simply wants to escape reality. Even Charley’s hobby of stamp collecting is labelled a “temporary refuge.”
One night, hurrying home, Charley takes a wrong turn while looking for the subway and wanders through an unfamiliar corridor that slopes downward. He emerges onto a third level where everything belongs to the 1890s: dim, flickering gaslights, brass spittoons, a wooden information booth, small old-fashioned locomotives, and people in old-style clothes with beards and handlebar moustaches. A newspaper, The World, is dated June 11, 1894.
Excited, Charley decides to buy two tickets to the peaceful old town of Galesburg, Illinois, for himself and his wife Louisa. But the clerk refuses his modern currency as fake, so Charley flees. The next day he converts three hundred dollars into old-style bills, yet he can never find the third level again.
Later, while sorting his stamp collection, Charley discovers an old first-day cover addressed to his grandfather, dated July 18, 1894. Inside is a letter from his missing friend Sam Weiner – actually his psychiatrist – who writes that he has found the third level and is now happily settled in Galesburg, urging Charley and Louisa to keep looking. The story thus leaves the line between fantasy and reality teasingly blurred.
Theme & message
The central theme of “The Third Level” is the human desire to escape the stress, insecurity and fear of the modern world by retreating into a safer, more peaceful past. The “third level” works as a symbol of this longing – an imagined doorway to 1894, a time before two World Wars. The story also explores the intersection of time and space and the thin boundary between fantasy and reality: what seems like illusion (the first-day cover, Sam’s letter) is given the texture of proof. Finney suggests that everyone, even a rational psychiatrist, secretly yearns for escape, and that the mind may use memory, hobbies and imagination as a refuge from a troubled present.
Word meanings
| Word / Phrase | Meaning |
|---|---|
| waking-dream wish fulfilment | a daydream in which one’s secret wishes seem to come true |
| insecurity | feeling of being unsafe or uncertain |
| temporary refuge | a short-lived shelter or escape |
| gabardine | a tightly woven cloth used for suits and coats |
| arched doorway | a curved, rounded entrance |
| corridor | a long passage inside a building |
| hollow roar | a deep echoing sound (of open space and crowds) |
| eyeshade | a curved shield worn over the eyes to block light |
| sleeve protectors | cloth covers worn over shirt-sleeves to keep them clean |
| open-flame gaslights | old lamps lit by burning gas |
| spittoons | metal pots used for spitting into |
| derby hat | a hard, round-topped felt hat (bowler) |
| handlebar mustache | a long, curving moustache with upturned ends |
| leg-of-mutton sleeves | sleeves wide and puffed at the shoulder, narrow at the wrist |
| locomotive | a railway engine that pulls trains |
| funnel-shaped stack | a wide cone-shaped chimney of an old engine |
| premium | an extra amount paid above the normal price |
| first-day cover | an envelope mailed on the first day a new stamp is sold, kept by collectors |
| postmark | an official mark stamped on mail showing date and place |
| philately | the hobby of collecting and studying postage stamps |
Read and find out (marginal questions)
These are the short “read-and-find-out” questions printed in the margins of the NCERT text.
1. What does the third level refer to?
2. Would Charley ever go back to the ticket-counter on the third level to buy tickets to Galesburg for himself and his wife?
Reading with Insight
1. Do you think that the third level was a medium of escape for Charley? Why?
2. What do you infer from Sam’s letter to Charley?
3. ‘The modern world is full of insecurity, fear, war, worry and stress.’ What are the ways in which we attempt to overcome them?
4. Do you see an intersection of time and space in the story?
5. Apparent illogicality sometimes turns out to be a futuristic projection? Discuss.
6. Philately helps keep the past alive. Discuss other ways in which this is done. What do you think of the human tendency to constantly move between the past, the present and the future?
7. You have read ‘Adventure’ by Jayant Narlikar in Hornbill Class XI. Compare the interweaving of fantasy and reality in the two stories.
Extra questions
Short answer (30–40 words)
1. Who is Charley and what is unusual about his claim?
2. How did Charley reach the third level?
3. What signs told Charley he was in 1894?
4. Why did the ticket clerk refuse Charley’s money?
5. What proof does Charley find that the third level exists?
Long answer (100–120 words)
6. ‘The Third Level’ is essentially a story about escapism. Discuss.
7. How does Jack Finney blur the line between fantasy and reality in the story?
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Who is the author of ‘The Third Level’?
(a) Jayant Narlikar (b) Jack Finney (c) Tishani Doshi (d) Kurt Vonnegut
2. How many levels does Charley claim Grand Central Station has?
(a) Two (b) Three (c) Four (d) One
3. What is Charley’s age in the story?
(a) Twenty-one (b) Forty (c) Thirty-one (d) Twenty-five
4. The newspaper Charley saw on the third level was dated:
(a) July 18, 1894 (b) June 11, 1894 (c) June 11, 1984 (d) July 11, 1894
5. Where did Charley want to buy two tickets to?
(a) Galesburg, Illinois (b) Times Square (c) Central Park (d) Roosevelt Hotel
6. According to the psychiatrist, Charley’s belief was a:
(a) genuine discovery (b) waking-dream wish fulfilment (c) clever lie (d) scientific theory
7. What hobby of Charley’s is called a ‘temporary refuge from reality’?
(a) Coin collecting (b) Photography (c) Stamp collecting (d) Painting
8. Why did the ticket clerk refuse Charley’s money?
(a) It was torn (b) It looked fake / different (c) It was too little (d) It was foreign
9. Who was Sam Weiner?
(a) A ticket clerk (b) Charley’s grandfather (c) Charley’s psychiatrist friend (d) A newsboy
10. Where did Charley find Sam’s letter?
(a) In a newspaper (b) In an old first-day cover (c) At the ticket-counter (d) In the bank
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): Charley wanted to buy two tickets to Galesburg, Illinois.
Reason (R): Galesburg in 1894 was a peaceful town, untouched by the World Wars.
2. Assertion (A): The ticket clerk happily accepted Charley’s money.
Reason (R): Charley’s modern currency looked different from the old-style 1894 bills.
3. Assertion (A): The third level was a medium of escape for Charley.
Reason (R): The modern world was full of insecurity, fear, war and worry.
4. Assertion (A): Sam’s letter served as proof that the third level exists.
Reason (R): The letter was found in a first-day cover postmarked July 18, 1894.
5. Assertion (A): Charley could easily return to the third level whenever he wished.
Reason (R): He bought old-style currency to make the clerk accept his money.
Note: In 2, A is false (the clerk refused the money) while R is true. In 5, A is false (he never found the corridor again) while R is true.
Exam tips
How to score full marks
• Remember the key dates and facts: Charley is 31; the newspaper The World is dated June 11, 1894; Sam’s letter is postmarked July 18, 1894; the destination is Galesburg, Illinois.
• For long answers, always link the third level to the theme of escapism and the intersection of time and space, and mention how fantasy and reality are blurred by Sam’s letter.
• Quote sparingly – short phrases like “waking-dream wish fulfilment” and “temporary refuge from reality” earn marks when used correctly.
• Keep 30–40 words for short answers and 100–120 words for long answers, and end long answers with a clear concluding line about the message.
FAQs
What does the third level symbolise in the story?
It symbolises a medium of escape from the insecurity, fear and stress of the modern world into the peaceful, happier world of 1894.
Why couldn’t Charley find the third level again?
Although he searched often and even bought old-style currency, he could never again find the corridor leading to the third level – suggesting it may be an imaginary escape of the mind.
How does Sam’s letter connect to the theme?
Sam, a rational psychiatrist, also escapes to 1894 Galesburg, showing that everyone secretly wishes to flee modern anxieties; the letter also blurs the line between fantasy and reality.
Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT Vistas textbook; the summary and all answers are written originally by ClearStudy. No copyrighted lesson text is reproduced.
