The woman in the Control Centre looked at the
narrator strangely because the narrator asked him about the black aeroplane and she saw no one except the narrator’s in the sky during the storm. Even the radar showed only the narrator’s plane that night in the sky.
Two Stories about Flying – Comprehensive Web Content
This is an expanded study resource for Two Stories about Flying by O’Flaherty / Forsyth (First Flight). Use this alongside the chapter notes for complete board exam preparation.
Detailed Summary
His First Flight: A young seagull, last to learn flying, is paralysed by fear. His mother tempts him with fish; hunger overcomes fear, and he discovers he can fly. Black Aeroplane: A pilot in a storm is guided to safety by a mysterious black plane that vanishes without trace. Neither story fully explains its mystery — one about inner courage, the other about unexplained help.
Theme Analysis
Overcoming Fear
The seagull’s fear was self-imposed. Once he leapt, the ability was always there. Fear of failure stops us more than actual inability.
Mystery and Faith
The black aeroplane remains unexplained — suggesting that help can come from unknown sources.
The Push We Need
External circumstances (hunger, storm) force action when internal motivation fails.
Character Study
Fearful, hungry, ultimately brave
Strategic, uses tough love
Experienced pilot, calm, curious
Unknown, helpful, vanishing
Literary Devices & Techniques
- Imagery: Vast sea below, dark storm clouds
- Suspense: Black aeroplane appearing and disappearing
- Symbolism: First flight = overcoming fear; black plane = unexplained help
- Contrast: Realism of seagull story vs mystery of pilot story
Board Exam Questions with Model Answers
Q: How did the seagull’s family help him? (3 marks)
Model Answer: They flew around him, taunted him, and eventually his mother flew past with a piece of fish just out of reach. Driven by hunger, the seagull dove off the ledge and discovered he could fly. The family used tough love and necessity as motivation.
Q: Describe the mystery in Black Aeroplane. (3 marks)
Model Answer: The narrator, lost in a storm with failing instruments, was guided by a mysterious black plane to safety. After landing, the control tower confirmed no other aircraft was on radar. The helping pilot’s identity was never established, leaving an open mystery about faith and the unexplained.
Key Vocabulary
Refer to the chapter notes and teacher aid for a complete vocabulary list. Focus on understanding words in context rather than memorising definitions in isolation.
Revision Checklist
- Can you summarise the text in 80 words?
- Can you name all major characters and their traits?
- Can you identify at least 3 literary devices with examples?
- Can you write a 5-mark answer on the main theme?
- Have you practised all textbook exercise questions?