Read the passage given below carefully and answer the questions that follow:
1. ‘‘But have you been to Nimtita? Have you been to the palace there?’’ asked the old man in the tea-shop, with the thatched roof. We were in the village of Lalgola, one hundred and fifty miles from Kolkata, and we had just seen our thirteenth nobleman’s palace and found it unsuitable.
2. ‘‘Nimtita? Where is that?’’ we asked without much interest. We had never heard of the place. ‘‘It is sixty miles to the North of here. You drive up the highway. Then you come to a river which you have to cross. A ferry will take your car across. Then up the highway again for
twenty miles. A sign tells you where to branch off... It’s on the river Padma, on the eastern bank. It’s the palace of the Choudharys. I’ve
been listening to your talk, and I feel you ought to see this one before you give up.’’
3. We were not very hopeful. We had had enough trouble taking free advice from people who had no idea of our needs. Anyway, the question was: do we or do we not undertake this last trip? If we did not like the palace, it might mean either giving up making this film altogether, or seriously changing its nature. We tossed a coin to decide whether to go or not. The coin said, ‘Go!’, and we set out on our sixty-mile journey.
4. It was when I was in bed with my right leg in plaster that I had decided the film on Tarasankar Banerji’s famous short story, ‘The
Music Room’ (Jalsaghar). A nasty fall on the stone steps at Banaras had brought about a serious knee injury. I lay in bed and read all the
Bengali books I could lay my hands on. Just then, the film distributors were not too keen to take my film for distribution, and may be this was one of the things that made me choose ‘The Music Room’.
5. Here was a dramatic story which could naturally bring in music and dancing, and distributors loved music and dancing. But here, too, was
a story full of feelings. So, it would be satisfying for me as an artist. I would cast Chabi Biswas, our greatest actor, in the leading role of the
zamindar — the zamindar whose love of the big musical entertainments brings about his ruin. But the most important thing
was to find a palace. As we had a low budget, there was no question of having studio-built sets. I knew that, if we had the money, my art
director could easily build a set which looked like our old palace with the right style. But we just didn’t have the money for it.
6. Nimtita turned out to be everything that the old man had claimed — and more. No one could have described in words the feeling of utter sadness that surrounded the palace. The river Padma had changed its course over the years, so that now there were endless stretches of sand where once had been villages. The palace itself — Greek pillars and all — was a perfect realization of my dream
image. It stood looking out over the stretches of sand with a sad dignity. It had somehow escaped being totally destroyed when the river
changed its course. The river had reached within ten yards of the front of the palace — having swallowed the garden — and then stopped.
Ganendra Narayan Choudhary, who is seventy and owns a British title and the palace, told us how it happened: ‘‘We were having breakfast
one morning when we heard a low rumble. We went out to the verandah and saw a big chunk of our estate — almost a square mile of
it — going under water, disappearing forever. It all happened in a few seconds. Padma’s appetite is legendary.’’
7. ‘‘But aren’t you afraid that the river might encroach further ?’’
8. ‘‘Oh, yes, the rains bring with them the usual fears.’’
9. On returning from our first trip to Nimtita, I telephoned the author, Mr. Banerji. He had been just as anxious about the location as we were.
10. ‘‘We’ve found our palace at last, Mr. Banerji,’’ I said.
11 ‘‘Have you? And where is it?’’
12. ‘‘At a little-known place called Nimtita.’’
13. ‘‘Nimtita? There was a note of recognition in his voice.’’ You don’t mean the palace of the Choudharys, do you?’’
14. ‘‘That’s the one.’’
15. ‘‘But that’s extraordinary! I haven’t been to Nimtita myself, but I have read about the Choudharys in a history of Bengal zamindars, and it was the music-loving Upendra Narayan Choudhary who served as the model for my rajah.’’
1.1 On the basis of your understanding of the above passage, answer each of the questions given below by choosing the most appropriate option.
(a) The writer of the passage is a ________ by profession.
(i) painter
(ii) filmmaker
(iii) photographer
(iv) journalist
(b) What helped the author and his friends to decide whether or not to go to Nimtita?
(i) the suggestion made by the old man at the tea-shop
(ii) their own intuitive feeling
(iii) description of the palace in a travel book
(iv) tossing of a coin
(c) Why was the idea of building a set for shooting given up?
(i) Shooting at a set would not give a real-life effect.
(ii) They didn’t have money for a set.
(iii) Building a set is very time consuming.
(iv) Shooting at the actual palace would be more authentic.
(d) Who is the central character in the story, ‘The Music Room’?
(i) A local raja
(ii) A zamindar
(iii) A British official
(iv) An artist
(e) What did the author like most about the palace?
(i) facilities for the visitors
(ii) wood carvings at the ceiling
(iii) its huge central hall
(iv) its Greeks pillars
1.2 Answer the following questions briefly:
(a) What suggestion did the old man at the tea-shop make to the author and his friends?
(b) Why did the author not like the idea of taking free advice?
(e) Who was Ganendra Narayan Choudhary?
(f) How did Mr. Banerji react to the information about the palace?
(d) What brought about the ruin of the zamindar in the story, ‘The Music Room’?
(c) How did the author sustain a serious injury?
1.3 Answer any three of the following questions in 25 – 30 words each:
(a) Why did the author choose the story, ‘The Music Room’ for his film?
(b) How do you know that reaching Nimtita was not easy?
(c) What havoc did the river Padma cause when it changed its course?
(d) How had the palace escaped being totally destroyed?
1.4 Find words/phrases from the passage which are similar in meaning to each of the following:
(a) main (para 5)
(b) nobility (para 6)
(c) concerned (para 9)
1.1(a) (ii) filmmaker
This can be clearly interpreted from para 3 and 4.
(b) (iv) tossing of a coin
This can be clearly interpreted from para 3.
(c) (ii) they didn’t have money for a set
It is given in para that they did not have enough money to build a set that looked like old palace.
(d) (ii) A zamindar
It is aid in the passage that the author would cast Chabi Biswas, their greatest actor, in the leading role of the zamindar.
(e) (iv) its Greek pillars
The author says that the Greek pillars was a perfect realization of my dream Image.
1.2 (a)
The old man at the tea-shop suggested the author and his friends to visit the palace in Nimitita before their giving up their search for an ideal location for shooting their film, as he had been listening to them talk. He suggested they drive sixty miles to the North up the highway from there until they reach a river. After having crossed that, they would have to drive another twenty miles up the highway. A sign would tell them where to branch off. On the eastern bank of the Padma they would find the palace of the Choudharys.
(b)
The author did not like the idea of taking free advice because that was all they had been receiving. Usually the people who gave such advice didn’t even understand the real needs of the filmmakers, and they had already ended up and being disappointed by thirteen palace visits.
(c)
The author ended up sustaining a serious injury in the knee after falling the stone steps in Banaras. He lay in his bed with his leg plastered for several days, during which time he kept browsing through a number of Bengali books in search of a story for his film.
(d)
The ruin of the zamindar, in the story ‘The Music Room’, was brought about by his very love for the big musical entertainments he was so fond of.
(e)
Ganendra Narayan Choudhary was a seventy-year old man who held a British title as well as the large palace at Nimitita.
(f)
When Mr. Banerji was informed about the palace at Nimitita by the author, which they had chosen as the set of film they were going to make, mr. Banerji sounded really assuring and impressed. There was a tone of recognition is voice when he exclaimed if it was really Nimitita they were talking about. He went on to exclaim that although he hadn’t really been there himself before, he had read about the palace owned by the Choudharys in a book about the history of Bengal zamindars. The then zamindar of the palace, Upendra Narayan Choudhary, was a music-lover himself.
1.3
(a) The author had been finding it really difficult to find a story good enough to encourage distributors to take up his film. Without distributors, there was no point of making a film itself. When the author read the story, ‘The Music Room’, he decided it would be the best for his film, because it was a dramatic story with ample music and dancing as well as a sad feel to it. The music and dancing would work perfectly well with the distributors, and the sad feeling was something he wanted his film to have.
(b) It is evident that reaching Nimitita was not easy by listening to the description meted out by the old man at the tea-shop. They would have to drive up sixty miles to the North from that tea-shop itself, which was located in a village far off from the city of Kolkata. They would then reach a river that they had to cross, followed by driving up for another twenty miles henceforth. This would take them to the eastern banks of the Padma River, where the palace of Nimitita was located.
(c) When the river Padma changed its course, it wreathed a huge havoc. It reached within ten yards of the palace, swallowed about a square mile of the estate which included the garden of the palace, and then stopped. The part of the estate that it swallowed disappeared forever. The palace of the Choudharys lost its charm and went henceforth on a way to decline.
(d) The palace had escaped being totally destroyed because even though the river changed its course and began engulfing the estate, it only reached ten yards within the palace and then stopped. The garden and other outdoor areas of the palace disappeared completely under the river, while the palace remained untouched.
1.4
(a) main
leading (para 5)
(b) nobility
dignity (para 6)
(c) concerned
anxious (para 9)
Couldn't generate an explanation.
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