In the story the children grow up knowing that Holland lies below sea level and that the sea (the "angry waters") is a constant danger. From early childhood they are taught to be watchful of the dikes and to help protect their land from flooding.
They are aware that the sea is always trying to break through the dikes and drown Holland, so they must be vigilant and help keep the dikes safe.
While carrying cakes to a blind neighbour, Peter noticed a leak in the dike. He stopped to plug the hole with his finger and stayed through the night, holding back the water until help arrived, thus saving the dike and preventing a flood.
While carrying cakes to a blind neighbour, Peter noticed a leak in the dike. He stopped to plug the hole with his finger and stayed through the night, holding back the water until help arrived, thus saving the dike and preventing a flood.
This line is the mother instructing Peter to take cakes to the blind man across the dike.
Peter's mother.
In context this remark expresses satisfaction about strength (either of the dikes or of the people/children). The most plausible speaker is Peter's mother, though exact wording placement varies by version.
Likely Peter's mother (expressing relief that the dikes/people are strong).
Peter says this as he resolves to hold the leak in the dike with his finger, showing his determination to prevent Holland from being flooded.
Peter (the little hero).
When the man found Peter sitting with his finger in the dike, he called out to ask what had happened and whether Peter was hurt.
A passerby/watchman who found Peter (the man who discovered him at the dike).
Upon seeing Peter holding the dike, the man called to others to come quickly and help to fill the hole and relieve Peter.
The man who found Peter (calling for help).
Peter's father was employed in maintaining and watching the dikes, which was a common and important job in Holland to keep the sea from flooding the land.
He worked on the dikes—repairing and guarding them against the sea.
Peter's mother asked him to go across the dike to deliver cakes to a blind man who lived nearby.
She called him to take cakes across the dike to their blind neighbour.
Peter visited the blind neighbour, bringing cakes and keeping him company, showing his helpful and caring nature.
He sat and talked with him and brought him cakes; he was a kind companion to the blind man.
The father warned about the sea's strength and its tendency to try to break through the dikes; calling it 'angry waters' emphasizes the ever-present danger.
He used 'angry waters' to describe the dangerous sea that constantly threatened to burst the dikes and flood Holland.
While walking by the dike, Peter noticed a trickle of water seeping through a gap. Realizing it could widen and cause a flood, he tried to stop it.
He saw water leaking through a crack in the dike and a small hole where the muddy water was escaping.
When Peter did not come back, his mother became worried and imagined misfortune, fearing that he might be lost or drowned.
She feared something had happened to him—perhaps that he had fallen into the water or been harmed—and grew anxious.
Despite cold and pain, Peter remained at the dike through the night, plugging the hole with his finger to prevent flooding until someone found him and others came to repair the breach.
He kept his finger in the leaking hole all night, holding back the water until help arrived in the morning.
At dawn a man walking by discovered Peter with his finger in the dike. He ran to get help and others soon came to replace the clay and secure the dike, saving Peter and the land.
A man (a passerby/watchman) found him; he called for help and people came to fill the hole, relieving Peter.
When they reached the dike they packed earth, clay and straw (and used sacks) into the hole. The little boy kept his finger in the leak to hold back the water until the villagers could fill and firmly mend the breach.
They filled the hole with clay/sand and straw (sacks of earth) while the little boy kept his finger in the breach as a plug.
Filled each organiser field concisely from the story: title, brief plot summary, setting, climax, main characters, values and central theme.
Title: The Little Hero of Holland
Plot: A young boy discovers a leak in a dike and plugs it with his finger; he stays through the night until villagers arrive and successfully mend the hole, saving the village.
Setting: A Dutch village by the sea/protected by dikes, on a cold winter night.
Climax: The moment the villagers arrive and fill the breach while the boy continues to hold it with his finger.
Characters: The little Dutch boy (unnamed hero), the villagers (who mend the dike), and the general community.
Values highlighted in the story: Bravery, selflessness, civic responsibility, quick thinking.
Theme: Small acts of courage and responsibility can protect and save an entire community.
'Inquisitive' means curious and eager to learn or understand things.
inquisitive
'Query' is a noun meaning a question or inquiry.
query
'Mental' describes something pertaining to the mind.
mental
A 'detective' investigates crimes and uncovers hidden information needed to solve them.
detective
'Inspect' means to look at something carefully, especially to assess condition or discover problems.
inspect
'Revealed' means made known or disclosed.
revealed
'Perspectives' are different points of view or ways of regarding something.
perspectives
'Infer' means to draw a conclusion from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements.
infer
'Scrutinise' (British spelling) means to examine or inspect closely and thoroughly to find problems or details.
scrutinise
'Inconceivable' means impossible to imagine or grasp; unimaginable.
inconceivable
'Analyse' (British spelling) means to examine in detail the elements or structure of something in order to understand it.
analyse
'Investigate' means to carry out an inquiry or systematic examination into a matter or incident.
investigate
'Link' denotes a connection or a single part in a chain of connected elements.
link
The verb 'observe' means to notice or watch carefully. It fits the clue 'to notice or watch.'
observe
'Deduce' means to arrive at a conclusion by reasoning from known facts, matching the clue.
deduce
'Conclude' means to reach a decision after considering evidence; it also can mean to bring something to an end, matching both parts of the clue.
conclude