NCERT Solutions for Class 10 English (First Flight) Chapter 8: The Sermon at Benares
Complete solutions for Class 10 English First Flight Chapter 8 – “The Sermon at Benares” by Betty Renshaw: an original summary, theme and message, word meanings, and every textbook exercise (Thinking about the Text, Thinking about Language, Talk about it) answered in full. We keep each question exactly as printed in the NCERT book and add extra questions, MCQs and Assertion–Reason practice for exams.
About the author
“The Sermon at Benares” is an extract introduced by Betty Renshaw, an American teacher and writer, in her well-known college textbook Values and Voices: A College Reader (1975). Renshaw frames the ancient teaching of Gautama Buddha for modern readers. The Buddha himself (563 B.C. – 483 B.C.) was born a prince named Siddhartha Gautama in northern India; after seeing sickness, old age, death and a begging monk, he renounced palace life, sought enlightenment under the Bodhi (peepal) tree, and preached his first sermon at Benares (Varanasi) on the banks of the Ganga.
Summary
The lesson opens with a short life-sketch of Gautama Buddha. Born a prince and shielded from suffering, Siddhartha was shaken at about twenty-five when he chanced upon a sick man, an old man, a funeral procession and a begging monk. Moved by these sights, he left his kingdom to find the meaning of human sorrow. He wandered for seven years and finally attained enlightenment under a peepal tree, which he renamed the Bodhi Tree. He then became the Buddha – “the Enlightened One” – and delivered his first sermon at the holy city of Benares.
The central story is that of Kisa Gotami, a woman whose only son had died. Mad with grief, she carried the dead child from house to house begging for medicine to bring him back. People thought she had lost her senses. At last a man directed her to the Buddha. The Buddha did not refuse her; instead he asked her to fetch a handful of mustard-seed – but only from a house where no one had ever lost a child, husband, parent or friend.
Kisa Gotami went from door to door, but in every home someone dear had died: “the living are few, but the dead are many.” Weary and hopeless, she sat by the wayside watching the city lights flicker up and die out, and understood that death is common to all. She realised how selfish her private grief had been. Returning, she heard the Buddha teach that mortal life is troubled and brief, that no one – young or old, wise or foolish – can escape death, and that weeping brings only more pain. The wise, knowing the nature of the world, do not grieve; only the one who draws out the arrow of grief and becomes composed wins true peace of mind.
Theme & message
The central theme is the universality of death and the futility of unending grief. Through Kisa Gotami’s search for the impossible mustard-seed, the Buddha gently teaches that loss is not personal but shared by all of humanity. Real peace comes not from denial or weeping but from acceptance and detachment – from “drawing out the arrow of lamentation.” The lesson urges the reader to overcome sorrow through wisdom, compassion and inner composure rather than through false hope.
Word meanings
| Word / Phrase | English meaning | Hindi meaning |
|---|---|---|
| sermon | a religious or moral talk | धर्मोपदेश |
| heretofore | until now; before this | इससे पहले |
| chanced upon | came across by chance | संयोगवश मिल गया |
| alms | money or food given to the poor | भिक्षा, दान |
| enlightenment | a state of high spiritual knowledge | ज्ञान / बोधि |
| vowed | made a solemn promise | प्रण लिया |
| dipping places | bathing ghats on a holy river | स्नान घाट |
| inscrutable | something which cannot be understood | अबोध्य / रहस्यमय |
| grief | deep sorrow | शोक, दुंख |
| physician | a doctor | चिकित्सक |
| repaired (to) | (stylistic) went to | चली गई / पहुँची |
| procure | to obtain or get | प्राप्त करना |
| pitied | felt sorrow or sympathy for | दया की |
| weary | very tired and exhausted | थका हुआ |
| flickered | burned unsteadily; shone faintly | टिमटिमाना |
| extinguished | put out; ended | बुझ गया |
| desolation | an area filled with deep sorrow | विरानी / शून्यता |
| immortality | the state of living forever | अमरत्व |
| mortals | those bound to die; human beings | नश्वर प्राणी |
| kinsmen | members of one’s family; relatives | सगे-संबंधी |
| afflicted with | affected by suffering, disease or pain | ग्रस्त / पीड़ित |
| lamentation | expression of sorrow; weeping aloud | विलाप / शोक प्रकट करना |
| composed | calm and in control of oneself | शांत / धीर |
Thinking about the Text
1. When her son dies, Kisa Gotami goes from house to house. What does she ask for? Does she get it? Why not?
2. Kisa Gotami again goes from house to house after she speaks with the Buddha. What does she ask for, the second time around? Does she get it? Why not?
3. What does Kisa Gotami understand the second time that she failed to understand the first time? Was this what the Buddha wanted her to understand?
4. Why do you think Kisa Gotami understood this only the second time? In what way did the Buddha change her understanding?
5. How do you usually understand the idea of ‘selfishness’? Do you agree with Kisa Gotami that she was being ‘selfish in her grief’?
Thinking about Language
I. This text is written in an old-fashioned style, for it reports an incident more than two millennia old. Look for the following words and phrases in the text, and try to rephrase them in more current language, based on how you understand them.
| Old-fashioned expression | In current language |
|---|---|
| give thee medicine for thy child | give you medicine for your child |
| Pray tell me | Please tell me |
| Kisa repaired to the Buddha | Kisa went to the Buddha |
| there was no house but someone had died in it | there was no house in which someone had not died |
| kinsmen | relatives / family members |
| Mark! | Listen carefully! / Note this! |
II. You know that we can combine sentences using words like and, or, but, yet and then. But sometimes no such word seems appropriate. In such a case we can use a semicolon (;) or a dash ( — ) to combine two clauses. … Here is a sentence from the text that uses semicolons to combine clauses. Break up the sentence into three simple sentences. Can you then say which has a better rhythm when you read it, the single sentence using semicolons, or the three simple sentences?
Talk about it
The Buddha’s sermon is over 2500 years old. Given below are two recent texts on the topic of grief [‘A Guide to Coping with the Death of a Loved One’ and Amitai Etzioni’s ‘Good Grief’]. Read the texts, comparing them with each other and with the Buddha’s sermon. Do you think the Buddha’s ideas and way of teaching continue to hold meaning for us? Or have we found better ways to deal with grief? Discuss this in groups or in class.
Extra questions
Short answer (30–40 words)
1. Who was Gautama Buddha before he gained enlightenment?
2. What four sights changed the Prince’s life?
3. Why did the Buddha ask for mustard-seed from a particular kind of house?
4. What did Kisa Gotami realise as she watched the city lights?
5. According to the Buddha, how can a person gain true peace of mind?
Long answer (100–120 words)
6. How does the Buddha teach Kisa Gotami the truth about death without preaching to her directly?
7. “The Sermon at Benares teaches acceptance rather than escape from sorrow.” Discuss with reference to the Buddha’s words.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. What was Gautama Buddha’s name as a prince?
(a) Sakyamuni (b) Siddhartha Gautama (c) Kisa Gotami (d) Ananda
2. At what age did the Prince first encounter the sufferings of the world?
(a) About twelve (b) About sixteen (c) About twenty-five (d) About forty
3. Under which tree did the Buddha attain enlightenment?
(a) A banyan tree (b) A peepal tree (c) A mango tree (d) A neem tree
4. The Buddha preached his first sermon at:
(a) Bodh Gaya (b) Lumbini (c) Benares (d) Kapilavastu
5. The word ‘Buddha’ means:
(a) the King (b) the Awakened or Enlightened (c) the Healer (d) the Wanderer
6. What did Kisa Gotami carry from house to house at first?
(a) Mustard-seed (b) Her dead son (c) A lamp (d) Medicine
7. The Buddha asked Kisa Gotami to bring a handful of:
(a) rice (b) gold (c) mustard-seed (d) flowers
8. The mustard-seed had to come from a house where:
(a) no one had lost a loved one (b) a king lived (c) a physician lived (d) no one was poor
9. What did Kisa Gotami finally understand?
(a) Mustard-seed is rare (b) Death is common to all (c) Her son was alive (d) The Buddha was a doctor
10. According to the Buddha, peace of mind is gained by:
(a) weeping for the dead (b) drawing out the arrow of grief and becoming composed (c) searching for medicine (d) leaving the city
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): Kisa Gotami could not find the mustard-seed the Buddha asked for.
Reason (R): Every house she visited had lost some loved one to death.
2. Assertion (A): The Buddha asked Kisa Gotami to fetch a handful of mustard-seed.
Reason (R): The mustard-seed itself was the medicine that could bring her son back to life.
3. Assertion (A): The Buddha taught that weeping cannot save the dead.
Reason (R): He said grief only makes a person sick and pale without bringing back the lost one.
4. Assertion (A): The Prince left his royal life to seek enlightenment.
Reason (R): The sights of a sick man, an old man, a funeral and a monk moved him deeply.
5. Assertion (A): Kisa Gotami realised that her grief was selfish.
Reason (R): She understood that death is common to all and not her loss alone.
Exam tips
• Remember the four sights (sick man, old man, funeral, begging monk) that led Siddhartha to renounce his kingdom – this is a frequent short-answer question.
• The mustard-seed condition (“from a house where no one has ever died”) is the heart of the story – learn it word-for-word in meaning.
• Quote the Buddha’s key idea – “draw out the arrow of lamentation” – to score full marks in long answers on grief and acceptance.
• In value-based answers, link the theme to acceptance, compassion and the universality of death.
FAQs
Who is the author of ‘The Sermon at Benares’?
The extract is introduced by Betty Renshaw in her textbook Values and Voices: A College Reader (1975). It presents the first sermon of Gautama Buddha.
Why did Kisa Gotami go from house to house?
First she went begging for medicine to revive her dead son; later, on the Buddha’s advice, she went seeking mustard-seed from a home that had never known death.
What is the main message of the chapter?
Death is common to all living beings, and endless grief only adds to pain. True peace comes from accepting loss and overcoming sorrow with composure.
Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT First Flight textbook; the summary, word meanings and all answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
