Class 9 English Beehive Chapter 8 Kathmandu

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SEBA Class 9 English Beehive Chapter 8 Kathmandu, is a textbook prescribed by the Assam SEBA Board Class 9 English Question Answer in English Medium Students will find the solutions very useful for exam preparation. Class 9 English Beehive Chapter 8 Kathmandu The experts of The Roy Library provide solutions for every textbook question Answer to help students understand and learn the language quickly. Class 9 English Beehive Chapter 8 Kathmandu are free to use and easily accessible.

SEBA Class 9 English Beehive Chapter 8 Kathmandu

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Kathmandu

TEXTUAL QUESTION ANSWER

Thinking About The Text:

I. Answer these questions in one or two words or in short phrases.

1. Name the two temples the author visited in Kathmandu.

Ans: Pashupatinath temple and Boudhanath stupa.

2. The writer says, “All this I wash down with Coca Cola.” What does ‘all this’ refer to?

Ans: Here, ‘all this’ refers to a bar of marzipan, a corn-on-the-cob rubbed with salt, chili, and lemon roasted in a charcoal stove and reading a few love story comics and a reader’s digest.

3. What does Vikram Seth compare to the quills of a porcupine?

Ans: To the bansuri’s protruding in all directions from the pole attachment.

4. Name five kinds of flutes.

Ans: The reed neh, the recorder, the Japanese shakuhachi, the bansuri of Hindustani classical music, the breathy flutes of South America and the high pitched Chinese flute.

II. Answer each question in a short paragraph.

1. What difference does the author note between the flute seller and the other hawkers?

Ans: The flute seller played different tunes with his flutes. The author felt that the seller was standing out in front of other such flute sellers only because he was playing his tunes thoughtfully. He kept playing his instruments without screaming for customers. This got the author attracted, making him think about the commonness of flutes. 

2. What is the belief at Pashupatinath about the end of Kaliyug?

Ans: There is the mythology that when a small shrine will come up fully, then goddess Durga will appear and will end the period of evil. 

3. The author has drawn powerful images and pictures. Pick out three examples of each: 

(i) The atmosphere of ‘febrile confusion’ outside the temple of Pashupatinath (for example: some people trying to get the priest’s attention aside…)

Ans: It was a huge white coloured dome surrounded by an outer road. The place was quiet and calm. There was a Tibetan market outside the temple where Tibetan refugees were selling bags, garments and jewelry.

(ii) The things he sees.

Ans: The scene at the Boudhanath temple was opposite to that at the Pashupatinath temple. It was a huge white coloured dome surrounded by an outer road. The place was quiet and calm. 

(iii) The sounds he hears.

Ans: A variety of sounds could be heard in the streets. The music blaring out of the radios, honking of the car horns, ringing of the bicycle bells, moo sounds of the cows as they obstructed the motorcycles passing by and the screaming vendors selling their wares.

III. Answer the following questions in not more than 100-150 words each.

1. Compare and contrast the atmosphere in and around the Boudhanath shrine with the Pashupatinath temple.

Ans: He visited two temples there – one was the Pashupatinath temple which is a pilgrimage for the Hindus and the other was the Boudhanath temple which is a holy place for the Buddhists. At the Pashupatinath temple, entry was restricted to Hindus. There was a lot of chaos with priests, tourists, pilgrims and animals flocking the place. The scene at the Boudhanath temple was opposite to that at the Pashupatinath temple. It was a huge white coloured dome surrounded by an outer road. The place was quiet and calm. 

2. How does the author describe Kathmandu’s busiest streets?

Ans: Kathmandu is a crowded place. There are deities in the busiest streets. These streets are  crowded with fruit sellers, flute sellers, hawkers of postcards etc. The shops sell “ Western cosmetics, film rolls and chocolate. Film songs can be heard. Car horns play. Cycle bells ring. Stray cows low at people. In the  market place, the author indulges himself mindlessly. Then, he plans to go back home.

3. “To hear any flute is to be drawn into the commonality of all mankind.” Why does the author say this?

Ans: In a corner of the square near the hotel a flute seller catches his attention.  He doesn’t sell his flutes like others. In fact, flute music always attracts him.

Different flutes and flute music There is no culture that does not have its flute. The deep bansuri is of Hindustani classical music. The flutes of South America are clear and breathy. The Chinese ones are high pitched. The music of the flutes is universal. 

About The Poem:

A Slumber Did My Spirit Seal


TEXTUAL QUESTION ANSWER

Thinking About The Poem:

1. “A slumber did my spirit seal,” says the poet. That is, a deep sleep ‘closed off his soul (or mind). How does the poet react to his loved one’s death? Does he feel bitter grief? Or does he feel a great peace?

Ans: The poet feels a great peace of mind. His satisfaction is that in his mind, his beloved will remain forever young as after her death. 

2. The passing of time will no longer affect her, says the poet. Which lines of the poem say this?

Ans: She seemed a thing that could not feel.

The touch of early years.

The above line of the poem say this.

3. How does the poet imagine her to be, after death? Does he think of her as a person living in a very happy state (a ‘heaven’)? Or does he see her now as a part of nature? In which lines of the poem do you find your answer?

Ans: The poet imagines his loved ones living as a part of nature. No, he didn’t think her to be in heaven. 

This interpretation is supported by the following lines:

A slumber did my spirit seal;

I had no human fears:

She seemed a thing that could not feel

The touch of earthly years.

No motion has she now, no force.

She neither heard nor sees.

Rolled round in earth’s durnal course.

With rocks and stones and trees.

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