Answer these questions in one or two words or
in short phrases.
1. Name the two temples the author visited in
Kathmandu.
Pashupatinath and Baudhnath Stupa.
2. The writer says, “All this I wash down with Coca
Cola.” What does ‘all this’ refer to?
Corn-on-the-cob and marzipan.
3. What does Vikram Seth compare to the quills of
a porcupine?
The flutes tied on the top of the flute seller’s pole.
4. Name five kinds of flutes.
The reed neh, the recorder, the Japanese
shakuhachi, the deep bansuri, the breathy flutes
of South America, the high pitched Chinese
f
lutes.
Answer each question in a short paragraph.
1. What difference does the author note between the flute seller and the other
hawkers?
The author notes that, unlike the other hawkers
who loudly shout to attract customers, the flute
seller remains calm and quiet, simply playing
his flute slowly and thoughtfully without any
noisy display.
2. What is the belief at Pashupatinath about the end of Kaliyug?
At Pashupatinath, people believe that there is a
small shrine in the Bagmati river which is only
partly visible, and when this shrine emerges
fully, the goddess inside it will escape and the
evil period of Kaliyug on earth will come to an
end.
3. The author has drawn powerful images and pictures. Pick out three
examples each of
i. the atmosphere of ‘febrile confusion’ outside the temple of
Pashupatinath (for example: some people trying to get the priest’s
attention are elbowed aside…)
ii. the things he sees
iii. the sounds he hears
i. Priests, hawkers, devotees, tourists,
cows, monkeys, pigeons and dogs all
roam about the temple grounds,
creating a crowded, restless scene.
Some worshippers trying to catch the
priest’s attention are elbowed aside by
others pushing their way to the front.
A party of saffron-clad Westerners
struggles for permission to enter the
temple through the main gate, adding to
the sense of tension and disorder.
ii. The immense white dome of the
Baudhnath Stupa ringed by a road with
small shops selling felt bags, Tibetan
prints and silver jewellery.
Fruit sellers, flute sellers, postcard
hawkers and shops selling cosmetics,
f
ilm rolls, chocolates, copper utensils
and Nepalese antiques on the crowded
streets of Kathmandu.
A flute seller holding a long pole with
about fifty or sixty flutes of different
kinds stuck into it like the branches of a
tree.
iii. Film songs blaring from the radios in the
shops.
The honking of car horns and the
continuous ringing of bicycle bells in the
busy streets.
Vendors shouting out their wares, along
with the soft, continuous music of the
f
lute seller’s many flutes.
Answer the following questions in not more
than 100-150 words each.
1. Compare and contrast the atmosphere in and around the Baudhnath
shrine with the Pashupatinath temple.
In and around the Pashupatinath temple, the
atmosphere is chaotic and restless, marked by
what the author calls “febrile confusion.”
Crowds of priests, hawkers, devotees, tourists,
and even animals push and jostle, creating
noise, disorder and constant movement.
People elbow one another to get closer to the
priest, monkeys fight, and funeral pyres burn on
the Bagmati’s banks, adding to the disturbing
bustle. In contrast, the Baudhnath shrine has a
calm, spiritual and still atmosphere. The huge
white dome stands in serene silence, with only
a few people moving quietly around it, and
small Tibetan shops lining the outer circle
without breaking the sense of peace. The
author experiences Baudhnath as a “haven of
quietness” amid Kathmandu’s busy streets.
2. How does the author describe Kathmandu’s busiest streets?
The author describes Kathmandu’s busiest
streets as narrow, crowded and full of life,
calling them “vivid, mercenary and religious.”
They are lined with small shrines and flower
decked deities, and packed with fruit sellers,
f
lute sellers, postcard hawkers and shops
selling chocolates, film rolls, Western
cosmetics, copper utensils and Nepalese
antiques. Film songs blare from radios, car
horns honk, bicycle bells ring and vendors
shout out their wares, while stray cows bellow
at the sound of motorcycles, creating a
deafening confusion of sounds.
3. “To hear any flute is to be drawn into the commonality of all mankind.” Why
does the author say this?
The author says this because the flute is
a universal instrument that exists in almost
every culture, though in different forms and
names. Whether it is the Indian bansuri, the
Japanese shakuhachi or the Western flute, all
are simple hollow pipes that produce music
through human breath, just like the human
voice. This shared principle makes their music
feel natural and intimate. The sound of any flute
expresses basic human emotions such as
sorrow, longing, peace and joy, which are
common to all people irrespective of country,
religion or language. By listening to a flute, one
is reminded that human experiences and
feelings are fundamentally the same
everywhere, and this draws us into a sense of
kinship with the whole of mankind.