NCERT Solutions for Class 10 English (First Flight) Chapter 5: Glimpses of India (NCERT 2026–27)
Complete solutions for Class 10 English First Flight Chapter 5 – “Glimpses of India”, a set of three travel sketches: A Baker from Goa (Lucio Rodrigues), Coorg (Lokesh Abrol) and Tea from Assam (Arup Kumar Datta). This page gives an original summary, theme, word meanings and every textbook exercise answered in full – all Oral Comprehension Check, Thinking about the Text, Thinking about Language and Talk about it questions, with the headings reproduced exactly as in the NCERT book.
About the chapter & authors
“Glimpses of India” is a travelogue made up of three short pieces, each painting a vivid picture of a different region of our country. A Baker from Goa, by Lucio Rodrigues, is a warm, nostalgic pen-portrait of the traditional Goan village baker (the pader) and the Portuguese influence on Goan life. Coorg, by Lokesh Abrol, describes the misty, coffee-growing hill district of Kodagu in Karnataka, its proud martial people and its adventure tourism. Tea from Assam, by Arup Kumar Datta, follows two boys, Rajvir and Pranjol, on a train journey to a tea estate in Upper Assam and weaves in legends about the discovery of tea.
Summary
A Baker from Goa. The author recalls his childhood in Goa, when elders fondly remembered the Portuguese days and their famous loaves of bread. Even after the Portuguese left, the bakers – known as paders – survived, carrying the family trade from father to son. The baker came twice a day, and the jingling thud of his bamboo woke the children, who ran out not for the loaves but for the bread-bangles and sweet bread. Bread was woven into every Goan occasion – engagements, marriages, Christmas and festivals all needed cakes, sandwiches and the sweet bol. The baker wore a peculiar long frock called the kabai, collected his bills monthly, and his plump physique was proof that baking was a profitable, happy profession.
Coorg. Coorg, or Kodagu, the smallest district of Karnataka, lies between Mysore and Mangalore and is famous for evergreen rainforests, spices and coffee. Its proud, fiercely independent people may be of Greek or Arab descent, and the Coorg Regiment is one of the most decorated in the Indian Army. The river Kaveri rises in these hills, which offer river-rafting, canoeing, rappelling, rock-climbing and trekking, with rich wildlife and Tibetan monasteries at nearby Bylakuppe.
Tea from Assam. Rajvir and Pranjol travel by train to Pranjol’s home, a tea estate in Upper Assam. As endless tea bushes roll past, Rajvir shares legends about the discovery of tea – a Chinese emperor whose water was flavoured by stray leaves, and the Buddhist monk Bodhidharma whose eyelids grew into tea plants. He notes that over eighty crore cups of tea are drunk daily worldwide, and that they have arrived during the second-flush season that yields the finest tea.
Theme & message
The chapter celebrates the rich variety, charm and beauty of India through three very different regions. Each piece blends factual information with personal experience, showing how geography, history, food and tradition shape a place’s identity. Together they remind us that India’s strength lies in its cultural and natural diversity – from the Portuguese-flavoured bakeries of Goa to the martial hills of Coorg and the tea gardens of Assam.
Word meanings
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| reminiscing | thinking fondly about the past |
| nostalgically | with a longing for the past |
| heralding | announcing the arrival of |
| pader | the traditional Goan baker |
| rebuke | a scolding; an expression of disapproval |
| fragrance | a pleasant scent or smell |
| kabai | a single-piece long frock worn by old Goan bakers |
| plump physique | a pleasantly fat body |
| open testimony | a public proof or statement |
| martial | connected with war or fighting |
| drifted from | carried gently along by the air |
| canopies | roof-like coverings that form shelters |
| mainstream | a tradition that most people follow |
| tales of valour | stories of courage and bravery in war |
| laidback | relaxed; not in a hurry |
| rappelling | going down a cliff by sliding down a rope |
| panoramic view | a wide view of a large area of land |
| ardent | very enthusiastic; keen |
| ascetic | a person who lives a simple, strict religious life |
| second-flush | the sprouting period (May–July) that yields the best tea |
| billowing | (of smoke) rising and rolling out in large clouds |
| veered | turned sharply in a different direction |
I. A Baker from Goa – Textbook Exercises
Oral Comprehension Check (Page 64)
1. What are the elders in Goa nostalgic about?
2. Is bread-making still popular in Goa? How do you know?
3. What is the baker called?
4. When would the baker come everyday? Why did the children run to meet him?
Oral Comprehension Check (Page 65)
1. Match the following. What is a must
(i) as marriage gifts? (ii) for a party or a feast? (iii) for a daughter’s engagement? (iv) for Christmas?
2. What did the bakers wear: (i) in the Portuguese days? (ii) when the author was young?
3. Who invites the comment — “he is dressed like a pader”? Why?
4. Where were the monthly accounts of the baker recorded?
5. What does a ‘jackfruit-like appearance’ mean?
Thinking about the Text
1. Which of these statements are correct?
(i) The pader was an important person in the village in old times. (ii) Paders still exist in Goan villages. (iii) The paders went away with the Portuguese. (iv) The paders continue to wear a single-piece long frock. (v) Bread and cakes were an integral part of Goan life in the old days. (vi) Traditional bread-baking is still a very profitable business. (vii) Paders and their families starve in the present times.
2. Is bread an important part of Goan life? How do you know this?
3. Tick the right answer. What is the tone of the author when he says the following?
(i) The thud and the jingle of the traditional baker’s bamboo can still be heard in some places. (nostalgic / hopeful / sad) (ii) Maybe the father is not alive but the son still carries on the family profession. (nostalgic / hopeful / sad) (iii) I still recall the typical fragrance of those loaves. (nostalgic / hopeful / naughty) (iv) The tiger never brushed his teeth. Hot tea could wash and clean up everything so nicely, after all. (naughty / angry / funny) (v) Cakes and bolinhas are a must for Christmas as well as other festivals. (sad / hopeful / matter-of-fact) (vi) The baker and his family never starved. They always looked happy and prosperous. (matter-of-fact / hopeful / sad)
Thinking about Language
I. In this extract, the author talks about traditional bread-baking during his childhood days. Complete the following table with the help of the clues on the left. Then write a paragraph about the author’s childhood days.
| Clues | Author’s childhood days |
|---|---|
| the way bread was baked | in age-old, time-tested furnaces whose fire was never extinguished |
| the way the pader sold bread | door-to-door, twice a day, carrying a basket on his head and announcing his arrival with a jingling bamboo |
| what the pader wore | a single-piece long frock (kabai) in earlier days; later a shirt and knee-length trousers |
| when the pader was paid | at the end of the month, with accounts recorded in pencil on a wall |
| how the pader looked | plump and prosperous, with a jackfruit-like physique |
II. 1. Compare the piece from the text (on the left) with the other piece on Goan bakers (on the right). What makes the two texts so different? Are the facts the same? Do both writers give you a picture of the baker?
II. 2. Now find a travel brochure about a place you have visited. Look at the description in the brochure. Then write your own account, adding details from your own experience, to give the reader a picture of the place, rather than an impersonal, factual description.
Talk about it
1. In groups, collect information on how bakeries bake bread now and how the process has changed over time.
2. There are a number of craft-based professions which are dying out. Pick one of the crafts below. Make a group presentation to the class about the skills required, and the possible reasons for the decline of the craft. Can you think of ways to revive these crafts? (Pottery, Batik work, Dhurri weaving, Embroidery, Carpentry, Bamboo weaving, Making jute products, Handloom)
II. Coorg – Textbook Exercises
Thinking about the Text
1. Where is Coorg?
2. What is the story about the Kodavu people’s descent?
3. What are some of the things you now know about
(i) the people of Coorg? (ii) the main crop of Coorg? (iii) the sports it offers to tourists? (iv) the animals you are likely to see in Coorg? (v) its distance from Bangalore, and how to get there?
Thinking about Language
4. Here are six sentences with some words in italics. Find phrases from the text that have the same meaning. (Look in the paragraphs indicated)
(i) During monsoons it rains so heavily that tourists do not visit Coorg. (para 2) (ii) Some people say that Alexander’s army moved south along the coast and settled there. (para 3) (iii) The Coorg people are always ready to tell stories of their sons’ and fathers’ valour. (para 4) (iv) Even people who normally lead an easy and slow life get smitten by the high-energy adventure sports of Coorg. (para 6) (v) The theory of the Arab origin is supported by the long coat with embroidered waist-belt they wear. (para 3) (vi) Macaques, Malabar squirrels observe you carefully from the tree canopy. (para 7)
Collocations – 1. Here are some nouns from the text (culture, monks, surprise, experience, weather, tradition). Work with a partner and discuss which of the nouns can collocate with which of the adjectives given below (unique, terrible, unforgettable, serious, ancient, wide, sudden). The first one has been done for you.
2. Complete the following phrases from the text. For each phrase, can you find at least one other word that would fit into the blank?
(i) tales of ___ (ii) ___ coastal (iii) a piece of ___ (iv) ___ evergreen (v) ___ plantations (vi) ___ bridge (vii) wild ___
III. Tea from Assam – Textbook Exercises
Thinking about Language
I. 1. Look at these words: upkeep, downpour, undergo, dropout, walk-in. They are built up from a verb (keep, pour, go, drop, walk) and an adverb or a particle (up, down, under, out, in). Use these words appropriately in the sentences below.
(i) A heavy ___ has been forecast due to low pressure in the Bay of Bengal. (ii) Rakesh will ___ major surgery tomorrow morning. (iii) My brother is responsible for the ___ of our family property. (iv) The ___ rate for this accountancy course is very high. (v) She went to the Enterprise Company to attend a ___ interview.
I. 2. Now fill in the blanks in the sentences given below by combining the verb given in brackets with one of the words from the box (over, by, through, out, up, down) as appropriate.
(i) The Army attempted unsuccessfully to ___ the Government. (throw) (ii) Scientists are on the brink of a major ___ in cancer research. (break) (iii) The State Government plans to build a ___ for Bhubaneswar to speed up traffic on the main highway. (pass) (iv) Gautama’s ___ on life changed when he realised that the world is full of sorrow. (look) (v) Rakesh seemed unusually ___ after the game. (cast)
II. 1. Think of suitable -ing or -ed adjectives to answer the following questions. You may also use words from those given above (interesting/interested, exciting/excited, boring/bored).
(i) a good detective serial on television? (ii) a debate on your favourite topic ‘Homework Should Be Banned’? (iii) how you feel when you stay indoors due to incessant rain? (iv) how you feel when you open a present? (v) how you feel when you watch your favourite programme on television? (vi) the look on your mother’s face as you waited in a queue? (vii) how you feel when tracking a tiger in a tiger reserve forest? (viii) the story you have recently read, or a film you have seen?
II. 2. Now use the adjectives in the exercise above, as appropriate, to write a paragraph about Coorg.
Talk about it
1. Read the following passage about tea. Collect information about tea, e.g. its evolution as a drink, its beneficial qualities. You can consult an encyclopedia or visit Internet websites. Then form groups of five and play the following roles: imagine a meeting of a tea planter, a sales agent, a tea lover (consumer), a physician and a tea-shop owner. Each person has to put forward his/her views about tea.
2. You are the sales executive of a famous tea company and you have been asked to draft an advertisement for the product. Draft the advertisement using the information you collected for the role play. You can draw pictures or add photographs and make your advertisement colourful.
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Extra questions
Short answer
1. Why did the children in Goa not mind not brushing their teeth?
2. Which river rises in Coorg, and what fish is found in it?
3. What two legends about the discovery of tea does Rajvir narrate?
4. What is special about the people of Coorg with regard to firearms?
5. What is the ‘second-flush’ period in tea cultivation?
Long answer
6. How does ‘A Baker from Goa’ show that the baker was an important figure in Goan society?
7. Coorg is described as ‘a piece of heaven that must have drifted from the kingdom of god’. Justify this description.
8. Why is ‘Glimpses of India’ an appropriate title for this chapter?
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. In Goa, the traditional baker is known as the:
(a) pader (b) bol (c) kabai (d) bolinha
2. The single-piece long frock worn by old Goan bakers was called the:
(a) kuppia (b) kabai (c) kuffia (d) bol
3. Coorg, or Kodagu, is the smallest district of which state?
(a) Kerala (b) Tamil Nadu (c) Karnataka (d) Assam
4. The people of Coorg are believed to be of which descent?
(a) Greek or Arab (b) Mongol (c) Persian (d) Roman
5. Which river obtains its water from the hills and forests of Coorg?
(a) Godavari (b) Krishna (c) Kaveri (d) Tungabhadra
6. The first Chief of the Indian Army, General Cariappa, was a:
(a) Goan (b) Coorgi (c) Assamese (d) Tibetan
7. According to one legend, tea plants grew out of the eyelids of the Buddhist ascetic:
(a) Bodhidharma (b) Cariappa (c) Alexander (d) Rajvir
8. Tea was first drunk in China as far back as:
(a) 1600 A.D. (b) 2700 B.C. (c) 700 A.D. (d) 1857 A.D.
9. The ‘second-flush’ period, which yields the best tea, lasts from:
(a) January to March (b) May to July (c) September to November (d) October to December
10. The tea garden managed by Pranjol’s father was called:
(a) Mariani Estate (b) Bylakuppe Estate (c) Dhekiabari Tea Estate (d) Madikeri Estate
Assertion–Reason – choose: (a) A and R true, R explains A; (b) A and R true, R does not explain A; (c) A true, R false; (d) A false, R true.
1. Assertion (A): The paders have survived in Goa even after the Portuguese left.
Reason (R): The sons still carry on the family profession of bread-making.
2. Assertion (A): The Kodavus are permitted to carry firearms without a licence.
Reason (R): They are a proud martial race with a strong tradition of valour.
3. Assertion (A): Pranjol did not share Rajvir’s excitement on seeing the tea garden.
Reason (R): Pranjol had been born and brought up on a tea plantation.
4. Assertion (A): During the monsoons, many visitors stay away from Coorg.
Reason (R): It pours so heavily during the monsoons that travel becomes difficult.
5. Assertion (A): Tea came to Europe only in the sixteenth century.
Reason (R): In Europe it was at first drunk more as a medicine than as a beverage.
Exam tips
Score full marks on ‘Glimpses of India’
Remember the chapter is three separate pieces with three authors – A Baker from Goa (Lucio Rodrigues), Coorg (Lokesh Abrol) and Tea from Assam (Arup Kumar Datta). Keep their key facts separate. Learn the special terms exactly: pader, kabai, bol, bolinhas (Goa); Kodavu, kuppia, Mahaseer, Brahmagiri, Bylakuppe (Coorg); Bodhidharma, second-flush, Dhekiabari, Mariani (Assam). In tone-based questions support your answer with a short reason. For value/long answers, always link back to the theme – the diversity and beauty of India.
FAQs
Who are the authors of the three pieces in ‘Glimpses of India’?
‘A Baker from Goa’ is by Lucio Rodrigues, ‘Coorg’ is by Lokesh Abrol, and ‘Tea from Assam’ is by Arup Kumar Datta.
What is a pader?
A pader is the traditional Goan village baker who still bakes and sells bread door-to-door, carrying on a profession brought to Goa by the Portuguese.
Why is Coorg called coffee country?
Coorg is famous for its large coffee plantations, evergreen rainforests and spices; coffee is its main crop and the air is said to breathe of invigorating coffee.
What are the two legends about the discovery of tea?
One is about a Chinese emperor whose boiled water was flavoured by stray burning leaves; the other is the Indian legend of Bodhidharma, whose cut-off eyelids grew into tea plants that banished sleep.
Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT First Flight textbook; summaries and answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
