Imagine that the narrator shared his story with friends and family once he got home. One of them, a spiritual leader, decided to incorporate the story as part of his weekly sermon to the congregation. Another friend, a psychologist, worked the story into his next lecture on survival instinct and crisis management. Do you think the two interpretations of the story would be different? If so, how? What insights might the narrator get about his mysterious experience, if he were to attend both the sessions? Answer in the context of the lesson Two Stories about Flying
Class 10 English Two Stories about Flying
ANSWER –

Yes, the two interpretations of the story The Black Aeroplane would be different.
The spiritual leader might say that the black aeroplane was a divine sign or guardian angel who helped the pilot in danger. He could use it to teach about faith, miracles, and unseen forces that guide people in difficult times.
The psychologist would focus on the pilot’s survival instinct and decision-making under stress. He might explain that the black aeroplane was a hallucination created by the pilot’s mind to give him hope and confidence to land safely.
If the narrator attended both sessions, he would see his experience in two ways—one as a mysterious miracle and the other as the power of the human mind in crisis.
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