By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Trace the changing relationship between the narrator and his grandmother across 5 phases
  • 2Analyse the grandmother's character — her serenity, faith, and dignity
  • 3Explain the symbolism of the sparrows and their significance at the end
  • 4Discuss themes: generation gap, old age, faith, love, nature, death
  • 5Appreciate Khushwant Singh's nostalgic and tender narrative tone
💡
Why this chapter matters
Khushwant Singh's masterpiece. Grandmother portrait + sparrows symbolism is a guaranteed question. Themes of generation gap, old age, and faith. Beautiful prose — frequently used for extract-based and long-answer questions.

The Portrait of a Lady — Khushwant Singh

"She was like the winter landscape in the mountains — an expanse of pure white serenity breathing peace and contentment."

1. About the Story

'The Portrait of a Lady' is the opening chapter of Hornbill — Khushwant Singh's deeply personal account of his GRANDMOTHER. It traces their relationship from his childhood in a Punjab village to her death in the city. The story is a meditation on AGING, LOVE, FAITH, and the DISTANCE that modernity creates between generations.

Why This Story

  • By Khushwant Singh — one of India's most celebrated English writers
  • Beautifully observed: the grandmother-son relationship
  • Contrast between VILLAGE LIFE (connected) and CITY LIFE (alienated)
  • The grandmother's portrait is symbolic of OLD INDIA
  • Rich with imagery, symbolism, and quiet emotion

2. About the Author

Khushwant Singh (1915–2014)

  • Indian novelist, journalist, lawyer, and historian
  • Editor of 'The Illustrated Weekly of India'
  • Served as Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha, 1980–1986)
  • Famous works: 'Train to Pakistan' (Partition novel), 'A History of the Sikhs'
  • Known for: sharp wit, secular outlook, profound humanism
  • The grandmother in this story is HIS REAL GRANDMOTHER

3. Characters

The Grandmother

  • Physical appearance: "She was SHORT, FAT and a little BENT" — silver locks scattered untidily over her pale face; dressed always in spotless white
  • OLD — ancient, wrinkled; 'like the winter landscape in the mountains — an expanse of pure white serenity'
  • Deeply RELIGIOUS — constant prayer, rosary beads
  • Village life: active, connected — walked the narrator to school, fed village dogs
  • City life: isolated, disconnected — 'the music teacher was not like the village priest'
  • After narrator goes abroad: withdraws into SILENCE and PRAYER
  • Last days: feeds SPARROWS; they become her new 'audience'
  • Dies: with rosary beads, silent, at peace

The Narrator (Young Khushwant)

  • Child in the village: close to grandmother
  • Adolescent in the city: grows distant — modern education, English school, university
  • Goes ABROAD for 5 years — grandmother grows even more isolated
  • Returns: briefly reunited before grandmother dies
  • Narrates the story FROM MEMORY — as an adult looking back

4. Plot Summary

Phase 1: Village Life (Close Bond)

  • Grandmother and the boy lived TOGETHER — she got him ready for school
  • Walked to the village school; grandmother fed DOGS on the way
  • She sat inside the temple while he studied at the priest's school
  • There was TOGETHERNESS — their lives overlapped completely
  • 'She was beautiful' (at that time, in that place)

Phase 2: City Life (Growing Distance)

  • Family moved to the CITY
  • Grandmother's role REDUCED — English school (no saints/scriptures), science, music lessons
  • She hated the MUSIC lessons — 'music was for beggars and courtesans'
  • She could NOT help him with homework — she was ILLITERATE
  • The distance grew — they shared the ROOM but not a WORLD

Phase 3: University (Further Apart)

  • Narrator went to university — got a SEPARATE ROOM
  • The 'common link of friendship' was BROKEN
  • Grandmother retreated into SPINNING AND PRAYER
  • She fed SPARROWS in the afternoon — replacing the companionship she'd lost

Phase 4: Going Abroad (Final Separation)

  • Narrator went abroad for 5 YEARS
  • Grandmother came to see him off at the railway station
  • Silent, praying, showing NO EMOTION
  • He thought her prayers would be for HIM — but she was absorbed in her OWN spiritual world now
  • He 'cherished' the moist kiss on his forehead as a 'last sign of physical contact'

Phase 5: Return and Death

  • Narrator returned after 5 years
  • Grandmother received him at the station
  • That evening: she gathered women in the neighbourhood, sang songs, played a drum — a RARE display of joy
  • NEXT MORNING: she fell ill (mild fever)
  • She said: her end was near — 'I am going to die. I don't want to waste time talking.'
  • She died — with rosary beads, lips MOVING IN PRAYER
  • THE SPARROWS: Thousands gathered. They sat in SILENCE. When her body was taken, they FLEW AWAY — never to return.
  • The sparrows' silence was their MOURNING

5. Themes

1. Generation Gap

The widening distance between grandmother and grandson — not from anger but from CHANGING WORLDS. Modern education, city life, going abroad — each step took him FURTHER from her world.

2. Old Age and Loneliness

The grandmother's SLOW WITHDRAWAL from the world. In the village: she was needed. In the city: she was REDUNDANT. In old age: she found solace in spirituality and sparrows.

3. Love Across Distance

The love between them NEVER DIED. It just changed FORM — from physical closeness (village) to silent prayer (city) to the kiss at the station (departure).

4. Faith and Spirituality

The grandmother's CONSTANT PRAYER — rosary, temple, scriptures. Her faith was her ANCHOR. When she lost all else, she still had her GOD.

5. Nature and Connection

The grandmother's bond with ANIMALS — village dogs, city sparrows. Animals became the companionship humans no longer provided.

6. Death and Acceptance

The grandmother ACCEPTED death calmly. No fear, no drama. She told her family, prayed, and went. The sparrows' silence acknowledged what words could not.


6. Literary Devices

Imagery

  • Grandmother: 'like the winter landscape in the mountains — an expanse of pure white serenity'
  • Sparrows: 'The sparrows took no notice of the bread... they sat scattered on the floor, silent'

Symbolism

  • Rosary beads: faith, continuity, the grandmother's UNCHANGING core
  • Sparrows: nature's connection; they MOURN while humans conduct rituals
  • Village: old India, tradition, closeness, community
  • City/modern education: new India, separation, individualism
  • Music lessons: the fracture point — 'music was for beggars and courtesans' — marks the grandmother's distance from the 'modern' world

Contrast

  • Village (togetherness) vs City (distance)
  • Grandmother's unchanging FAITH vs Grandson's changing WORLD
  • Grandmother's active village life vs passive city life
  • Human neglect vs animal connection (sparrows)

Irony

  • The narrator THOUGHT her prayers at the station were for HIM — she was absorbed in her OWN spiritual world
  • He thought she'd live 'a hundred years' — she died the day after his return
  • The sparrows — tiny, insignificant creatures — gave her the SILENT SEND-OFF that humans couldn't

Tone

  • Nostalgic, tender, quietly grief-stricken
  • The narrator is looking BACK — the 'portrait' is a memory painted in words

7. Key Lines

  • "She was like the winter landscape in the mountains — an expanse of pure white serenity breathing peace and contentment."
  • "The common link of friendship was snapped."
  • "She was not even sentimental."
  • "She was absorbed in her own thoughts — in her own spiritual world."
  • "The sparrows took no notice of the bread."
  • "Next morning the sweeper swept the bread crumbs into the dustbin."

8. Common Mistakes

  1. The grandmother is senile or weak-minded — NO. She is WISE and ACCEPTING. Her withdrawal is a CHOICE, not incapacity. She is deeply religious, not confused.

  2. The story is sad and depressing — It is MOVING, but also CELEBRATORY. The grandmother lived a FULL life of faith and dignity. Her death is PEACEFUL. The sparrows' silence is BEAUTIFUL.

  3. The narrator abandoned his grandmother — He grew up. He went to school, university, abroad. This is NORMAL. The story doesn't BLAME the narrator — it simply SHOWS the inevitable distance that modernity creates. Khushwant Singh's tone is loving, not guilty.

  4. The sparrows are just a nice detail — They are CENTRAL to the meaning. When humans drifted away, nature stayed. The sparrows' silence is the PUREST mourning in the story.


9. Worked Examples

Example 1: Character

Describe the grandmother as portrayed by Khushwant Singh.

  • The grandmother is presented as an ANCIENT, deeply RELIGIOUS woman — 'like the winter landscape.' In the village: active, connected, walking the narrator to school, feeding dogs. In the city: increasingly isolated — can't help with English homework, disapproves of music lessons, retreats into spinning and prayer. Her CONSTANT is faith — the rosary beads are always moving. Her BEAUTY is in her serenity and acceptance. She accepts death as she accepted life — with calm dignity. The sparrows that attend her death — and their silence — are her final testimony: a woman who belonged to a gentler, older world.

Example 2: Theme

How does the story portray the generation gap?

  • The gap grows GRADUALLY. In the village: there is NO gap — they share a world (home, school, temple, dogs). In the city: the English school creates a gap — grandmother can't help with homework, can't accept 'western science' or 'music lessons.' University: separate rooms — 'the common link of friendship was snapped.' Abroad: 5 years of absence. The gap is NOT portrayed as anyone's FAULT. It's the INEVITABLE distance that modernity, education, and urbanisation create between generations. The story mourns this distance without assigning blame.

Example 3: The Sparrows

What is the significance of the sparrows in the story?

  • The sparrows represent the grandmother's connection to NATURE and her REPLACEMENT for lost human connection. When her grandson grew distant — she fed the sparrows. They were her NEW daily companions. At her death: THOUSANDS came, sat in ABSOLUTE SILENCE, ignored the bread thrown to them, and FLEW AWAY when her body was removed — never to return. The sparrows' SILENCE is their MOURNING — purer and more profound than the human ritual of grief. They came for HER, not for food. The sparrows' behaviour elevates the grandmother's death into something SACRED.

10. Indian Context

  • Village India: the grandmother represents the OLD, pre-modern India — religious, communal, connected to nature
  • City education: represents the NEW India — English-medium, secular, modern
  • The tension between these two Indias is the story's UNSAID SUBTEXT
  • Khushwant Singh is writing about MORE than his grandmother — he's writing about INDIA'S TRANSITION
  • The grandmother feeding sparrows: reminiscent of the Sikh tradition of seva (selfless service)

11. Conclusion

'The Portrait of a Lady' is not just a story about a grandmother. It's about:

  • LOVE THAT OUTLASTS CLOSENESS
  • The INEVITABLE DISTANCE between generations in a changing world
  • FAITH as an anchor when all else is lost
  • NATURE as the final companion
  • DEATH accepted with dignity

The 'portrait' Khushwant Singh paints is of a woman — and an India — that modernity could not understand, but could deeply, silently mourn.

'The Portrait of a Lady' — a story that leaves you like the sparrows: silent, moved, unable to speak.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Author
Khushwant Singh (1915–2014) — novelist, journalist, historian
Train to Pakistan
Phases
Village (close) → City (distance) → University (apart) → Abroad (5 years) → Return & Death
Grandmother description
"Like the winter landscape in the mountains — an expanse of pure white serenity"
Village life
Together: home, school, temple, feeding dogs. No gap.
City fracture
English school + science + music lessons → grandmother can't relate. "Music was for beggars and courtesans."
Sparrows symbolism
Replace lost human connection. At death: thousands came, SAT IN SILENCE, ignored bread, flew away forever when body removed.
Purest mourning in the story
Themes
Generation gap, old age / loneliness, faith, love across distance, nature, death with dignity
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
The grandmother was senile or confused
She was WISE, deeply religious, and ACCEPTING. Her withdrawal was choice, not incapacity. She understood everything — including her own approaching death.
WATCH OUT
The story is sad and depressing
It is MOVING but CELEBRATORY. The grandmother lived a full, dignified life. Her death is peaceful. The sparrows' silence is BEAUTIFUL, not tragic. The tone is tender nostalgia, not despair.
WATCH OUT
The sparrows are just a nice detail
They are CENTRAL to the story's meaning. The sparrows' SILENT mourning is the PUREST grief in the story — more profound than human ritual. Their departure 'never to return' elevates the grandmother's death into something sacred.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Recall
How did the grandmother's life change when the family moved to the city?
Show solution
✦ Answer: In the city, the grandmother's role REDUCED. She could no longer walk the narrator to school. The English school taught 'western science' and music lessons — she disapproved ('music was for beggars and courtesans'). She couldn't help with homework — she was illiterate. She retreated into spinning and feeding sparrows. The physical and emotional distance from her grandson grew.
Q2MEDIUM· Character
Describe the grandmother's character as revealed through the five phases of the story.
Show solution
✦ Answer: The grandmother is portrayed as deeply RELIGIOUS (constant rosary), SERENE ('like the winter landscape'), and DIGNIFIED. In the village: active, nurturing (walked boy to school, fed dogs). In the city: increasingly isolated but never complaining — withdrawing into prayer and spinning. When the narrator goes abroad: she shows NO overt emotion — her farewell is silent, praying, with a moist kiss. Before death: she announces her end CALMLY — 'I don't want to waste time talking.' She dies with rosary beads, lips moving in prayer. The sparrows' silent mourning confirms her connection to NATURE and the sacred. She is a portrait of old-world Indian womanhood: devout, accepting, dignified.
Q3HARD· Symbolism
Analyse the role and significance of the sparrows in 'The Portrait of a Lady'.
Show solution
✦ Answer: The sparrows serve three functions: COMPANIONSHIP: When the narrator grows distant (city → university → abroad), the grandmother feeds sparrows. They REPLACE the human connection she has lost. The sparrows accept what the modern world cannot offer her: simple, undemanding relationship. SYMBOLISM: The sparrows represent NATURE's connection to the grandmother. Unlike humans (who drift away), nature STAYS. They represent the grandmother's gentleness — she attracts living creatures. THE MOURNING: At her death, thousands of sparrows gather. They sit in ABSOLUTE SILENCE. They IGNORE the bread thrown to them — they came for HER, not food. When her body is removed, they fly away — NEVER TO RETURN. Their silence is the PUREST MOURNING in the story — more profound than human grief rituals. The detail that 'next morning the sweeper swept the bread crumbs into the dustbin' underscores the FINALITY — the grandmother's world has ended, and even evidence of her daily ritual is erased. The sparrows affirm what the whole story suggests: the grandmother belonged to a gentler, older world. Nature recognised her worth when humans could not.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Author: Khushwant Singh (1915–2014). Grandmother = HIS real grandmother.
  • 5 phases: Village (close) → City (distance) → University (apart) → Abroad (5 yrs) → Return & Death
  • Grandmother: ancient, wrinkled, 'like winter landscape', deeply religious (rosary always moving)
  • Village: walked boy to school, temple, fed dogs. City: couldn't help with English homework, hated music lessons, fed sparrows.
  • Fracture: English school + music lessons. 'Music was for beggars and courtesans.'
  • Sparrows: replaced lost human connection. At death: thousands gathered, SILENT, ignored bread, flew away forever.
  • Death: announced calmly, prayed, lips moved till the end. No fear, no drama — acceptance.
  • Themes: generation gap, old age, faith, love across distance, nature as companion, death with dignity.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-7 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ/Short1-22Phases, key details
Long3-51Grandmother portrait or sparrows symbolism
Prep strategy
  • Trace relationship in 5 phases with key details for each
  • Grandmother: serenity + faith + dignity — these three adjectives frame every answer
  • Sparrows: companionship + symbolism + mourning — all three functions

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Elder care and generational loneliness in modern India

Khushwant Singh as a lens for Partition-era India

Nature and human grief — a cross-cultural connection

Writing character through selective detail

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. The five-phases structure is the backbone of EVERY answer: Village (together) → City (distance) → University (apart) → Abroad (five years) → Return and Death. Use this structure even for character analysis questions — it shows temporal thinking.
  2. Three adjectives to frame all grandmother answers: SERENE (like winter landscape), RELIGIOUS (rosary always moving), DIGNIFIED (never complained, accepted death calmly). Open any long answer with these three and you've framed 2 marks before your analysis begins.
  3. Sparrow questions: always address THREE layers — (1) companionship during life (replaced human connection), (2) symbolic meaning (nature's acknowledgment of the grandmother), (3) mourning at death (silence, refused bread, departure). A sparrow question that only covers one layer earns 1 mark; all three earns full marks.
  4. Extract-based questions test vocabulary: 'like the winter landscape in the mountains' — examine the simile (cold, white, serene, timeless). 'An expanse of pure white serenity' — what does 'expanse' add (vast, not contained, spacious peace). Know the figurative language in key passages.
  5. Value-based questions may ask about generation gap or treatment of elderly — connect the story's theme directly to contemporary relevance: nuclear families, urban migration, elder loneliness. This cross-textual thinking earns analysis marks.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Compare Singh's grandmother with Tolstoy's depiction of old age in 'The Death of Ivan Ilyich' — how do both authors use physical decline to reveal spiritual truth? Singh's grandmother chooses active faith; Ilyich's death is more anguished. What does this difference say about the different cultural frameworks for mortality?
  • Read Singh's other writing about his grandmother and family (from 'Train to Pakistan' context, his autobiographical writings). How does the writer's relationship with memory and loss shape his political writing — specifically about Partition? The grandmother represents the 'old India'; Partition destroyed that world. Is this story partly an elegy for pre-Partition Punjab?
  • The concept of 'good death' (ars moriendi — medieval European, samadhi — Hindu, mukti — Buddhist): all traditions have a conception of how one should die. The grandmother announces her death, finishes her tasks, prays till the end, and dies without fear. How does her death compare to these ideals? Is a 'good death' culturally constructed or universal?
  • The story has remarkable structural parallels to elegy poetry (mourning a person through memory, natural imagery, and silence). Compare its structure to Tennyson's 'In Memoriam' or Mary Oliver's nature-grief poetry. What techniques do prose writers use to achieve the emotional effect of elegy?

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 26 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo