A Passage To India Activities CH 4 and 5 Plus Summaries
A Passage To India Activities CH 4 and 5 Plus Summaries
A Passage To India Activities CH 4 and 5 Plus Summaries
CHAPTER 4: CAVES
This chapter is the beginning of the most important part of the story. The Marabar caves is the
setting for the main action in the novel, that is, Adela Questeds supposed attack and later
accusation of Dr Aziz of that attack.
At the beginning of the chapter there is a geographical description of the caves. Aziz is the host of
the excursion, and he has invited Mrs Moore, Adela Quested, Professor Godbole and Fielding to
the caves. The ladies were accompanied by their servant, Antony, who goes back home because
Aziz and Adela ask him to. He doesnt accept at first, but Mohamed Latif, a friend of Azizs, bribes
him with some money to go.
Fielding and Godbole are late, so Aziz and the ladies take the train on their own. When they arrive
to the Marabar station, there is an elephant waiting for them.
They come into the first cave followed by a crowd of people. Mrs Moore doesnt enjoy that and she
is terrified by an echo inside the cave.
Aziz says that the best cave was higher up the hills but Mrs Moore isnt interested, so only Aziz,
Adela and the guide go up. Adela is thinking about whether to marry Ronny or not. She asks Aziz
how many wives he has, as he is a Muslim, and he is quite offended by that.
Aziz loses track of Adela, the guide tells him that she has come into a cave but they dont know
which one. The guide runs away so Aziz is left alone looking for Adela. She then appears down the
hill and he sees her binoculars lying on the ground outside a cave.
When Aziz goes down, the others tell him that Adela has gone back to town with Miss Derek.
When Aziz returns to the town, he is arrested by the police.
CHAPTER 5
Fielding goes to see the Collector, Mr Turton (a judicial officer) to find about Azizs arrest and he is
told that Adela accuses Aziz of attacking her in the caves.
The collector thinks that this is one of the consequences of the English and the Indians mixing up.
Mr McBryde, the superintendent of police, has a theory to explain happenings like this: it was due
to the climate of India: all natives are innately criminals because of the latitude they live in.
Fielding cant believe Aziz is guilty but the police officer tells him that theyve found a letter by Aziz
arranging to meet prostitutes in Calcutta
photo of his wife, it was a way of going beyond the purdah. Strictly speaking, only a brother could
go beyond the purdah, but for Aziz, if deep understanding existed, then anybody could become a
brother.
Bearing this in mind, we can see that for Aziz being Moslems together meant being real friends,
or staying with people who truly understood you. Aziz probably told Adela to send her servant away
because Antony was a servant who was hired by Ronny, and was therefore an intruder. He was a
representative of the hostile English who would have ruined the understanding between Aziz and
his real friends.
Page 64 exercise 3
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
PAGE 65 EXERCISE 5
A) Common sense and goodwill
B) Because love was missing: she and Ronny did not love each other.
C) (Open answer)
Page 66 exercise 7
a-6 b-4 c-7 d-1 e-5 f-3 g-2
Page 66 exercise 8
a) It is circular and about six metres in diameter with smooth walls
b) Hope spirituality; politeness social life; and the blowing of a nose the physical
existence of individuals
c) Possible answer: Aziz his loss of honour; Mrs Moore- her loss of spiritual certainty; Adelaher loss of sentimental certainty
CHAPTER 5
PAGE 75 EXERCISE 1
A) Because he realized that the collector was mad as well, and so could not possibly
understand.
B) Disaster
C) They forgot their differences and began to act as single, united community
D) Because he thought that all Indians, sooner or later, became criminals.
E) Aziz followed Adela into a cave and made some insulting remark. She tried to hit him with
her binoculars and then escaped down the gully.
F) Because Fielding knew Indians when they were at their best, i.e. when they were boys, and
not when they had grown up and become, as was inevitable in his opinion, criminals.
G) Because Amritrao was a Hindu and so Azizs case would become an Indian issue.
H) That if an evil action was performed at the Marabar Caves then everybody, Aziz included,
was responsible.
PAGE 75 EXERCISE 2
Because it would cease to be a tragedy and become a difficult legal matter. Here, the tragedy is
not that Miss Quested hurt herself running down the gully but that a young English woman was
attacked by an Indian man.
Page 75 exercise 3
a) (Open answer)
b) He believed that Aziz, a criminal at heart like all Indians, made insulting remarks to Miss
Quested in one of the caves
c) That if evil was done it was done by all, and if good was done it was done by all.
d) (Open answer)
Page 76 exercise 4
1-H 2-D 3-3 4-c 5-a 6-G