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The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5

🎓 Class 11 English CBSE Theory Ch 5 — The Adventure ⏱ ~35 min
🌐 Language: [gtranslate]

This CBSE English Passage Assessment will be based on: The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5

Assessment Format:
• 2 Short Answer Questions (2 marks each) = 4 marks
• 2 Fill in the Blanks Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Short Answer Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Multiple Choice Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
Total: 8 Questions, 10 Marks

This CBSE English Grammar Assessment will be based on: The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5

Assessment Format:
• 10 Randomized Grammar Questions (1 mark each)
• Question Types: Fill in the Blanks, MCQs, Error Identification, Reported Speech, Sentence Completion
Total: 10 Questions, 10 Marks

This English Vocabulary assessment will be based on: The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.

📖 Before You Read — The Adventure

1. Have you ever wondered what the world might look like if a key historical event had turned out differently? Give one example of such a turning point in Indian history.

The Battle of Panipat (1761) is a pivotal example. The Maratha defeat against Abdali led to their weakening and eventually paved the way for British dominance. If the Marathas had won, India's colonial history might have been entirely different.

2. What do you understand by the term "parallel universe"? Have you encountered this idea in any film, book, or game?

A parallel universe is the idea that alongside our own reality, there exist other versions of the world where different events occurred. Quantum physics provides a theoretical basis for this — the "many-worlds interpretation." Films like Interstellar and novels like Philip K. Dick's work explore similar ideas.

3. Match the expressions to their contextual meanings — an exercise to warm up before reading:

blow-by-blow account · morale booster · gave vent to · political acumen · de facto · doctored accounts
Meanings: falsified records | expressed freely | detailed description | effective in practice | political wisdom | something that raises spirits

blow-by-blow account → detailed description  |  morale booster → something that raises spirits  |  gave vent to → expressed freely  |  political acumen → political wisdom  |  de facto → effective in practice  |  doctored accounts → falsified records
JN
Jayant Narlikar
Indian Born 1938 Astrophysicist & Author Science Fiction
Jayant Vishnu Narlikar is one of India's most celebrated astrophysicists and a former professor at Cambridge and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR). He is renowned for his collaboration with Sir Fred Hoyle on the Hoyle–Narlikar theory of gravity. In addition to groundbreaking scientific work, Narlikar has authored numerous science fiction novels and stories in Marathi and English, making complex scientific ideas accessible and imaginative for general readers. "The Adventure" exemplifies his unique ability to weave real physics — catastrophe theory, quantum mechanics, many-worlds interpretation — into a gripping narrative set against the backdrop of India's history.

The Story — The Adventure

¶1The Jijamata Express sped along the Pune–Bombay route with remarkable swiftness — far faster than the Deccan Queen. No industrial towns appeared near Pune. The first halt, Lonavala, arrived within forty minutes. The ghat section that followed seemed identical to the one Professor Gangadharpant Gaitonde was familiar with. The train paused briefly at Karjat before accelerating further, roaring through Kalyan without stopping.
¶2Meanwhile, Professor Gaitonde's racing mind had settled on a plan. As a historian, he felt he should have arrived at it sooner — he would head to a major library in Bombay and browse through history books. That would be the most reliable way to understand how the present state of affairs in this unfamiliar India had come to be. He also intended, eventually, to return to Pune for a conversation with Rajendra Deshpande, who would surely help him make sense of everything — assuming such a person existed in this world.
¶3At a small station called Sarhad, an Anglo-Indian in uniform moved through the train checking permits. "This is where the British Raj begins," Khan Sahib informed him. "You are going for the first time, I presume?" Gangadharpant confirmed that he had not visited this Bombay before. He asked how Khan Sahib planned to reach Peshawar. The train, apparently, went to Victoria Terminus, from where Khan Sahib would board the Frontier Mail to Delhi, Lahore, and then Peshawar. Imagery
¶4Through their conversation, Gangadharpant absorbed the flavour of this alternate India. The suburban carriages bore the initials "GBMR" — Greater Bombay Metropolitan Railway — each carriage painted with a tiny Union Jack, a subtle reminder that this was British territory. The train eventually halted at its terminus: Victoria Terminus, neat and clean, staffed predominantly by Anglo-Indians, Parsees, and a handful of British officers.
¶5Emerging from the station, the professor encountered a grand building whose signboard announced — in imposing capital letters — the EAST INDIA COMPANY HEADQUARTERS. Irony History, as Gangadharpant knew it, recorded that the East India Company had been dissolved in the aftermath of 1857. Yet here it stood, not merely surviving but flourishing. Clearly, history had branched off at some point before 1857. He needed to discover exactly when and how.
¶6Walking along Hornby Road, he noticed a different commercial landscape — Boots and Woolworth departmental stores, offices of Lloyds, Barclays and other British banks, precisely as one would encounter in an English high street. There was no Handloom House. He entered Forbes building seeking his son, Vinay Gaitonde, but the English receptionist could locate no one by that name. This was a blow, not entirely unexpected. If the professor himself were dead in this world, why would his son exist at all? Symbolism
¶7Undeterred, Gangadharpant made his way to the Asiatic Society library in the Town Hall. His five volumes of history arrived on the table. He read through them methodically. The first four volumes — covering Ashoka to the death of Aurangzeb — matched the history he knew. The divergence lay in the fifth volume's account of the Battle of Panipat.
¶8In this parallel history, the Marathas had achieved a decisive victory at Panipat. Abdali was driven back to Kabul by the triumphant Maratha forces under Sadashivrao Bhau and the young Vishwasrao. This win became a tremendous morale booster and cemented Maratha supremacy across northern India. Alarmed, the East India Company shelved its expansionist ambitions and retreated to its pockets of influence around Bombay, Calcutta and Madras — reduced to the status of its European rivals, the Portuguese and the French.
¶9Vishwasrao and his brother Madhavrao combined political acumen with military courage, systematically extending Maratha influence nationwide. For political purposes, the Peshwas maintained the Mughal regime in Delhi as a puppet. By the twentieth century, India had evolved into a democracy, the Sultanate in Delhi reduced to a ceremonial figurehead. Most significantly, India in this world had never been colonised — it had grown to know self-respect and independence organically. Metaphor
¶10But the professor's investigation was incomplete. How had the Marathas won the battle? He combed through Bakhars — traditional Maratha chronicles — and found the answer in three lines of Bhausahebanchi Bakhar: Vishwasrao had guided his horse into the thick of battle, and a bullet had merely grazed his ear. That near-miss, interpreted by the troops as divine favour, had turned the tide. Symbolism
¶11At eight in the evening, the librarian reminded the professor that the library was closing. Gangadharpant gathered his notes and — absent-mindedly — slipped the Bakhar into his pocket alongside them. He found a guest house, had a simple meal, then wandered toward Azad Maidan where a public lecture was in progress. The presidential chair on the platform stood unoccupied. Symbolism
¶12The sight of an empty chair disturbed the professor deeply — he had presided over 999 public meetings and considered an unchaired lecture an act of cultural sacrilege. Like iron drawn to a magnet, he moved toward the chair and took his seat. Simile The audience erupted. They shouted him down. They threw tomatoes and eggs. Finally, the crowd swarmed the stage and ejected him bodily — and, in the chaos, Gangadharpant vanished entirely from that world.
¶13When the professor narrated his entire experience to Rajendra Deshpande — back in the world he knew — Rajendra listened in stunned silence. He grew even more astonished when the professor produced material evidence: a torn page from the Bakhar. Rajendra read it: Vishwasrao had survived the bullet. But the professor's own copy of the same Bakhar recorded that Vishwasrao had been hit and killed. Two worlds. Two outcomes from one bullet.
¶14Rajendra then offered two scientific frameworks to explain the experience. First, catastrophe theory — developed by French mathematician René Thom — holds that systems can shift dramatically from small changes at critical junctures. The Battle of Panipat was precisely such a juncture: a bullet that missed Vishwasrao versus one that killed him — two radically different outcomes from an almost infinitesimal difference.
¶15Second, quantum theory suggests that reality at the sub-atomic level is not deterministic — an electron can be in any number of positions simultaneously, and all alternative states may exist as distinct worlds. Rajendra proposed that Gangadharpant, during his truck collision while deeply absorbed in catastrophe theory, had made a "transition" — like an electron jumping between energy states — from one version of the world to another. Metaphor
¶16As for why the transition happened, Rajendra could only guess: the professor had been pondering what course history would have taken had Panipat's result gone the other way — the very topic of his one-thousandth presidential address. The neurons in his brain, Rajendra speculated, may have acted as a trigger for the quantum transition. Gangadharpant concluded with characteristic gravity: the thousandth address had already been delivered, on the platform of the Azad Maidan, interrupted by a hostile crowd — and he would never preside at a public meeting again. Irony

Notice These Expressions

blow-by-blow account
A detailed, step-by-step description of something as it happened
"The Bakhar gave a blow-by-blow account of the battle's decisive moments."
de facto
Existing or operating in fact, even if not formally or legally recognised
"The Peshwas were the de facto rulers of India, though the Mughal emperor remained on the throne."
morale booster
Something that significantly raises the confidence and spirit of a person or group
"Vishwasrao's survival was an enormous morale booster for the Maratha troops."
astute
Having or showing an ability to accurately assess situations; shrewd and perceptive
"The Peshwas were astute enough to recognise the importance of European technology."
relegated to
Assigned to a lower or less important position or status
"The trouble-maker Dadasaheb was relegated to the background and eventually left state politics."
doctored accounts
Records or reports that have been deliberately altered or falsified
"Although Bakhars often contained doctored accounts, Gangadharpant could sometimes detect a kernel of truth buried within them."
political acumen
Keen, practical understanding of political situations and strategy
"Vishwasrao and Madhavrao combined political acumen with military valour."
gave vent to
Expressed a strong feeling or opinion freely and forcefully
"The professor went to the microphone and gave vent to his views on the importance of a presiding dignitary."

Word Power — Key Vocabulary

catastrophe theory
noun phrase
A branch of mathematics studying sudden, large shifts in system behaviour caused by small changes in conditions. Developed by René Thom (1960s).
"Rajendra explained how catastrophe theory applied to the moment Vishwasrao was — or was not — struck by the bullet."
Collocations: apply catastrophe theory · bifurcation point · critical juncture
quantum theory
noun phrase
The branch of physics dealing with behaviour of matter and energy at the level of atoms and sub-atomic particles; emphasises probability over certainty.
"The lack of determinism in quantum theory is what allowed Rajendra to propose the idea of multiple coexisting worlds."
Collocations: quantum mechanics · many-worlds interpretation · probabilistic
determinism
noun
The philosophical and scientific idea that every event, including human choices, is the necessary result of prior causes; in physics, the ability to predict outcomes exactly.
"The lack of determinism in quantum theory means the future cannot be absolutely predicted."
Etymology: Latin determinare (to determine, set limits)
bifurcation
noun
A division into two branches or parts; in catastrophe theory, the point where a system can proceed in one of two radically different directions.
"The Battle of Panipat was the bifurcation point — after which one world went one way, and another went differently."
Collocations: point of bifurcation · historical bifurcation
transition
noun
A change from one state or condition to another; in quantum physics, the jump of an electron between energy levels.
"Rajendra proposed that the professor had made a transition from one world to another, like an electron changing energy states."
Collocations: quantum transition · macroscopic transition · sudden transition
sacrilege
noun
The act of violating or showing disrespect toward something considered sacred; broadly, treating something of high importance with contempt.
"To Professor Gaitonde, conducting a lecture without a chairperson was nothing short of sacrilege."
Etymology: Latin sacrilegium (robbing a sacred place)
pandal
noun (Indian English)
A temporary structure — typically a tent or canopy — erected for public gatherings, festivals, or events.
"A lecture was being held in a pandal at Azad Maidan, drawing a large crowd."
Register: South Asian English; common in Indian public life
frugal
adjective
Sparing or economical, particularly with food or money; simple and modest.
"After his research at the library, Gangadharpant had a frugal meal at a nearby guest house."
Collocations: frugal meal · frugal lifestyle · frugal habits

Theme Web — The Adventure

Click any theme node to read how it is developed in the story.
Parallel Worlds History & Science Counterfactual History Identity & Reality Colonial vs. Free India Intellectual Curiosity Rajendra's quantum & catastrophe theories explain the transition Maratha win at Panipat creates an entirely different India Who is Gaitonde in this world? Is his son alive? No colonial subjugation; India stands on its own feet
CBQ

Extract-Based Questions — Set A

"Fantastic though it seems, this is the only explanation I can offer. My theory is that catastrophic situations offer radically different alternatives for the world to proceed. It seems that so far as reality is concerned, all alternatives are viable, but the observer can experience only one of them at a time."
1. Who speaks these lines, and in what context are they delivered?
L2 Understand
2 marks
Rajendra Deshpande delivers these lines to Professor Gangadharpant Gaitonde. The context is the conversation after Gaitonde has returned from his two-day experience in the alternate world and shared the material evidence — the torn page from the Bhausahebanchi Bakhar — proving that the alternate world was real. Rajendra is offering his scientific explanation based on quantum theory and catastrophe theory.
2. What does Rajendra mean by "all alternatives are viable"? How does this relate to quantum theory?
L4 Analyse
3 marks
Rajendra draws on the quantum mechanical concept that at the sub-atomic level, systems exist in multiple possible states simultaneously — not in a single, fixed state. The quantum "many-worlds interpretation" suggests that every possible outcome of an event actually occurs in a different branch of reality. So when the bullet at Panipat both missed Vishwasrao (in one world) and struck him (in another), both outcomes created separate, equally real worlds. "All alternatives are viable" means all these branches co-exist; the observer experiences just one at a time.
3. Identify and explain the literary device in "a shot brushed past his ear. Even the difference of a til (sesame) would have led to his death."
L4 Analyse
2 marks
The device is hyperbole combined with imagery. "Even the difference of a til (sesame)" is a hyperbolic expression using the image of a sesame seed — one of the smallest measurable things — to convey just how impossibly close Vishwasrao came to death. The imagery is precise and culturally resonant: the sesame seed is tiny yet loaded with meaning in Indian culture. It dramatises the fragility of history — how an almost imperceptible margin separated two vastly different futures.
4. "Facts can be stranger than fantasies." Evaluate this statement in the context of the story's ending.
L5 Evaluate
4 marks
Rajendra's statement captures the story's central intellectual challenge. The professor's experience — transitioning into a parallel world, spending two days in an India that never experienced British colonial domination, and returning with physical evidence from that world — is so extraordinary that it sounds like fantasy. Yet Rajendra, a scientist, accepts it as a fact once the torn Bakhar page provides material proof. The story suggests that science — particularly quantum mechanics — makes room for realities that far exceed human imagination. The "fantasy" of parallel worlds is not merely speculative fiction but a legitimate scientific proposition. The story uses this idea to challenge our comfortable assumptions about the uniqueness of our world and the finality of history.
CBQ

Extract-Based Questions — Set B

"Like a piece of iron attracted to a magnet, he swiftly moved towards the chair. The speaker stopped in mid-sentence, too shocked to continue. But the audience soon found voice. 'Vacate the chair!' 'This lecture series has no chairperson...' 'Away from the platform, mister!'"
1. What does this scene reveal about the cultural differences between the two worlds?
L4 Analyse
3 marks
In Professor Gaitonde's world, presiding over public lectures is an entrenched social custom — a mark of respect and order. The professor considers an empty chair not merely unusual but sacrilegious. In the alternate world, however, the audience has consciously abolished the tradition of a chairperson, preferring to listen to speakers without the ceremonial structure of a presiding dignitary. This scene reveals that the two worlds have diverged not only in their political histories but also in their social customs and cultural values — suggesting that a different political trajectory produces different social practices and notions of public discourse.
2. Identify the simile used in the extract and comment on its effectiveness.
L4 Analyse
2 marks
The simile is "like a piece of iron attracted to a magnet." It compares the professor's irresistible compulsion to occupy the empty chair to the way iron is automatically and powerfully drawn to a magnet — without choice, without resistance. The comparison is effective because it conveys that the professor's action was not a deliberate decision but an almost reflexive, deeply-conditioned response to a perceived cultural violation. It also subtly suggests that the professor's own intellectual and social identity makes him as susceptible to "empty chairs" as iron is to magnetism.
3. Create a brief diary entry from Professor Gaitonde's perspective on the night after the Azad Maidan incident.
L6 Create
4 marks
Model Answer:
Azad Maidan, Bombay [Alternate World] — Late Evening

What a strange and hostile place this world is. I have spent two days trying to make sense of a history I wrote but never lived, and tonight I tried to restore a small measure of civilised order to a public meeting — and was nearly lynched for my trouble. An unchaired lecture! In my world, such a thing would be unthinkable. Here, they consider it a reform. They pelted me with tomatoes and eggs, and the last thing I recall is the crowd surging toward the platform. I may have made my thousandth presidential address tonight — in the most undignified manner imaginable. I suspect I shall soon be returned to my own world. But I carry something with me: a small torn page that contains a world's worth of evidence. Whether anyone will believe me is another matter entirely.

Understanding the Text — All NCERT Questions

I. Which of the following statements are correct? Briefly justify each answer.
L2 Understand

1. The story is an account of real events.   2. The story hinges on a particular historical event.   3. Rajendra Deshpande was a historian.   4. The places mentioned are all imaginary.   5. The story tries to relate history to science.

1. False — The story is a work of science fiction, not a factual account. While real historical events (Battle of Panipat) and scientific theories (catastrophe theory, quantum mechanics) are referenced, the narrative of Gaitonde transitioning to a parallel world is fictional.

2. True — The entire plot pivots on the Third Battle of Panipat (1761). The divergence between the real world and the alternate world depends on whether Vishwasrao was killed or survived during the battle.

3. False — Rajendra Deshpande is a scientist — specifically a physicist — not a historian. He explains the professor's experience using quantum theory and catastrophe theory.

4. False — Many places are real: Pune, Bombay, Lonavala, Azad Maidan, Victoria Terminus, the Town Hall (Asiatic Society library). The alternate world uses the same geography, just with a different political reality.

5. True — The story's central purpose is to explore how science — specifically catastrophe theory and quantum mechanics — can illuminate and reinterpret the course of history, suggesting that history's outcome is not inevitable but probabilistic.

II.1. Explain: "You neither travelled to the past nor the future. You were in the present experiencing a different world."
L4 Analyse
Rajendra clarifies that Professor Gaitonde's experience was not time travel in the conventional sense. He did not go backwards (to the Mughal era) or forwards (to a future). The time period he visited was the same as the present — the twentieth century — but it was an alternate present, one that had developed from a different historical bifurcation point. The laws of that world operated normally; its present was as real as Gaitonde's own. This distinction is crucial: the story is about parallel worlds in the same temporal moment, not journeys through time.
II.2. Explain: "You have passed through a fantastic experience: or more correctly, a catastrophic experience!"
L4 Analyse
Rajendra uses "catastrophic" not in its everyday sense (meaning disastrous) but in its precise scientific sense — relating to catastrophe theory. He playfully corrects himself: the experience was "fantastic" (incredible, unbelievable) but more accurately it was "catastrophic" because it was triggered by a catastrophic event (the Battle of Panipat as a bifurcation point) and Gaitonde himself underwent a transition that mirrors the kind of sudden, dramatic shift that catastrophe theory describes. The wordplay is characteristic of Narlikar's style — blending literary and scientific registers.
II.3. "Gangadharpant could not help comparing the country he knew with what he was witnessing around him."
L4 Analyse
As a historian, Gaitonde instinctively compares the two Indias: the one he knows — colonised, impoverished by centuries of exploitation — and the alternate one, which grew organically from a position of Maratha power. The alternate India has self-respect, technological initiative, and has never experienced the humiliation of foreign domination. This comparison is the story's most poignant historical commentary: it invites the reader to reflect on what was lost because of colonialism, and to appreciate what India might have been under different circumstances.
II.4. Explain: "The lack of determinism in quantum theory!"
L2 Understand
In classical (Newtonian) physics, if you know all the forces acting on an object, you can predict exactly where it will be at any future time. Quantum theory overturns this: at the sub-atomic level, one can only specify the probability of finding a particle in a particular place. The particle does not have a single definite position until it is observed. This lack of determinism — the inability to predict outcomes with certainty — opens the door to the idea that multiple outcomes, and therefore multiple worlds, may simultaneously exist. Gaitonde's ironic comment ("even an ignoramus historian like me has heard of it") shows both his self-deprecating wit and his genuine familiarity with the concept.
II.5. Explain: "You need some interaction to cause a transition."
L3 Apply
Rajendra borrows the quantum mechanical concept of a "transition" — an electron jumping between energy states when it receives or releases a pulse of energy — and applies it at a macroscopic level to explain Gaitonde's experience. Just as an electron needs an external stimulus (radiation) to jump from one energy state to another, Gaitonde needed an "interaction" — the collision with the truck — to trigger his transition between worlds. Significantly, the collision happened precisely when his mind was deeply focused on catastrophe theory and the Battle of Panipat. Rajendra speculates that the professor's neurons may have acted as the trigger, bridging the gap between cognitive intensity and physical reality.

Grammar Workshop — Conditional Sentences & Word Usage

Conditional Sentences for Unreal & Hypothetical Conditions

The story extensively uses conditional sentences to express unreal or hypothetical situations. Notice three types:

  • Type 1 (Real condition): "If I fire a bullet from a gun in a given direction... I know where it will be." → Present tense in condition; future or simple present in result.
  • Type 2 (Unreal present): "If I knew the answer, I would solve a great problem." → Past tense in condition; would + base verb in result.
  • Type 3 (Unreal past): "What course would history have taken if the battle had gone the other way?" → Past perfect in condition; would have + past participle in result.

Exercise 1: Identify which type of conditional (Type 1, 2, or 3) each sentence below belongs to:

a) "If he himself were dead in this world, what guarantee had he that his son would be alive?"
b) "If there is no snow, there will be no problem on the mountain pass."
c) "If the Marathas had lost the battle, India's history would have been different."

a) Type 2 — Unreal present condition ("if he were dead" — but he is not; uses subjunctive "were").

b) Type 1 — Real/possible condition ("if there is no snow" — genuinely uncertain; present tense + future result).

c) Type 3 — Unreal past condition ("if the Marathas had lost" — they did not, in the alternate world; past perfect + would have + past participle).

Distinguish Between Frequently Confused Word Pairs (from the chapter)

Exercise 2: Explain the difference between each pair and use each word in a sentence:

a) visibly / visually    b) alternately / alternatively    c) respectively / respectfully    d) successfully / successively

a) visibly (in a way that can be seen; clearly, noticeably) vs. visually (relating to sight or the sense of vision).
"Rajendra was visibly moved by the material evidence." | "The film was visually stunning."

b) alternately (in turns; first one, then the other, repeatedly) vs. alternatively (as another possibility; instead).
"The lights flashed alternately red and white." | "You could alternatively go to the Town Hall library."

c) respectively (in the order already mentioned, one by one) vs. respectfully (in a polite and deferential manner).
"Volumes one, two, and three covered Ashoka, Samudragupta, and Mohammad Ghori respectively." | "The librarian spoke respectfully to the professor."

d) successfully (with success; achieving the desired result) vs. successively (following one after another in sequence).
"Tsetan successfully navigated the snow patch." | "The professor had presided over 999 meetings successively."

Working With Words — Phrase Meanings (NCERT Exercise)

Exercise 3: Select the closest meaning for each phrase:

1. to take issue with    2. to give vent to    3. to stand on one's feet    4. to be wound up    5. to meet one's match

1. to take issue with → (iii) to disagree — "I take issue with your conclusion, Rajendra."

2. to give vent to → (i) to express — "The professor gave vent to his strong views on the empty chair."

3. to stand on one's feet → (ii) to be independent — "The alternate India had learnt to stand on its own feet."

4. to be wound up → (ii) to stop operating — "The East India Company was wound up after 1857 — in Gaitonde's world."

5. to meet one's match → (iii) to meet someone equally able — "The East India Company met its match in the new Maratha ruler, Vishwasrao."

Thinking About Language — Multilingualism in the Story

1. In which language do you think Gangadharpant and Khan Sahib conversed? Which language did he use with the English receptionist?
Gangadharpant and Khan Sahib most likely spoke in Hindustani (Hindi-Urdu), the common lingua franca of pre-Partition India, which both communities — Marathas and North Indian Muslims — would have understood. With the English receptionist at Forbes building, Gangadharpant would have used English, since she would not have been expected to know Indian languages. The story subtly highlights how language choice reflects political reality and social hierarchy.
2. In which language was Bhausahebanchi Bakhar written? What does this reveal?
Bhausahebanchi Bakhar was written in Marathi, the language of the Maratha people. The Bakhars (chronicles) were composed in Marathi to document Maratha history from a native perspective. This is significant because it represents indigenous historical documentation — an Indian-language account of Indian events, as opposed to the colonial practice of writing history exclusively in English. The story thus positions Marathi as a language of historical authority.
3. Which languages did the Marathas, Mughals, and Anglo-Indians use within their communities and between each other?
Within their communities: Marathas used Marathi; Mughals used Persian (formal) and Urdu (everyday); Anglo-Indians used English. Between communities: Hindustani (a blend of Hindi and Urdu) served as the common inter-community language, especially in trade and administration. Between Indians and the British, English was used. The story reflects this linguistic plurality, which is characteristic of India's multilingual social fabric.
4. Do you think that the ruled always adopt the language of the ruler? Discuss.
Not always, though there is strong historical pressure to do so. Colonised peoples often adopt the ruler's language for education, employment, and social mobility — as happened with English in British India. However, the alternate India in the story, where the Marathas were never colonised, might have developed differently: Sanskrit, Marathi, or another Indian language might have served as the language of education and prestige. The story invites this reflection: India's widespread use of English today is itself a consequence of colonial history. Had history been different, India might have been a very different linguistic landscape.

Writing Craft — Analytical Essay & Discussion

Talking About the Text — Discussion Points for Group Activity:

Discussion Topic 1: "A single event may change the course of the history of a nation."

For: The story demonstrates exactly this — Vishwasrao's survival at Panipat redirected the entire trajectory of Indian history. Similarly, real history offers examples: Archduke Franz Ferdinand's assassination triggering World War I; Gandhi's Salt March galvanising the independence movement.

Against: Historians debate whether events or underlying forces (economics, social movements, geography) are the true drivers. Even if Vishwasrao had survived, structural forces might have eventually led to British dominance anyway.

Writing Task — Analytical Essay (250–300 words)

Prompt: "The Adventure" uses science fiction to make a serious argument about how science and history are connected. Discuss, with evidence from the story, how Narlikar uses the catastrophe theory and quantum mechanics to reinterpret historical events.

Structure your essay:

  • Introduction: What kind of story is "The Adventure"? State the main argument.
  • Para 1: How catastrophe theory applies to the Battle of Panipat.
  • Para 2: How quantum theory explains the possibility of parallel worlds.
  • Para 3: What the story suggests about the nature of history and reality.
  • Conclusion: What Narlikar's ultimate message is.

Word limit: 250–300 words. Use formal, analytical register.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5 about in NCERT English?

The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5 is a lesson from the NCERT English textbook that covers important literary and language concepts. The lesson includes vocabulary, literary devices, comprehension exercises, and writing tasks aligned to the CBSE curriculum.

What vocabulary is important in The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5?

Key vocabulary words from The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5 are highlighted throughout with contextual meanings, usage examples, and interesting facts. Click any highlighted word to see its full definition and example sentence.

What literary devices are used in The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5?

The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5 uses various literary devices including imagery, symbolism, and figurative language. These are identified with coloured tags throughout the text for easy recognition and understanding by students.

What exercises are included for The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5?

Exercises include extract-based comprehension questions in CBSE board exam format, grammar workshops connected to the passage, vocabulary activities, and creative writing tasks with model answers provided.

How does The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5 help in board exam preparation?

The Adventure — Class 11 Hornbill Chapter 5 includes CBSE-format extract-based questions, long answer practice with model responses, and grammar exercises that mirror board exam patterns. All questions follow Bloom's Taxonomy levels L1-L6.

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