Directions: The passage given below is followed by a set of six questions. Choose the most appropriate answer to each question.
“Myth has two main functions,” the poet and scholar Robert Graves wrote in 1955. “The first is to answer the sort of awkward questions that children ask, such as ‘Who made the world? How will it end? Who was the first man? Where do souls go after death?’…The second function of myth is to justify an existing social system and account for traditional rites and customs.” In ancient Greece, stories about gods and goddesses and heroes and monsters were an important part of everyday life. They explained everything from religious rituals to the weather, and they gave meaning to the world people saw around them.
In Greek mythology, there is no single original text like the Christian Bible or the Hindu Vedas that introduces all of the myths’ characters and stories. Instead, the earliest Greek myths were part of an oral tradition that began in the Bronze Age, and their plots and themes unfolded gradually in the written literature of the archaic and classical periods. The poet Homer’s 8th-century BC epics the Iliad and the Odyssey, for example, tell the story of the (mythical) Trojan War as a divine conflict as well as a human one. They do not, however, bother to introduce the gods and goddesses who are their main characters, since readers and listeners would already have been familiar with them.
Around 700 BC, the poet Hesiod’s Theogony offered the first written cosmogony, or origin story, of Greek mythology. The Theogony tells the story of the universe’s journey from nothingness (Chaos, a primeval void) to being, and details an elaborate family tree of elements, gods and goddesses who evolved from Chaos and descended from Gaia (Earth), Ouranos (Sky), Pontos (Sea) and Tartaros (the Underworld).
Later Greek writers and artists used and elaborated upon these sources in their own work. For instance, mythological figures and events appear in the 5th-century plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides and the lyric poems of Pindar. Writers such as the 2nd-century BC Greek mythographer Apollodorus of Athens and the 1st-century BC Roman historian Gaius Julius Hyginus compiled the ancient myths and legends for contemporary audiences.
At the center of Greek mythology is the pantheon of deities who were said to live on Mount Olympus, the highest mountain in Greece. From their perch, they ruled every aspect of human life. Olympian gods and goddesses looked like men and women (though they could change themselves into animals and other things) and were–as many myths recounted–vulnerable to human foibles and passions.
Q1: Which of the following is one of the main functions of Myth?
(a) To answer questions that are yet unexplained by science
(b) To satisfy the curiosity of children about our world
(c) To explain the rationale behind everyday rituals
(d) To answer the unanswerable questions
Ans: (c)
Sol: According to the passage, one of the main functions of myth is to "justify an existing social system and account for traditional rites and customs." Therefore, option (c) is the most appropriate answer.
Q2: What is the difference between Hindu and Greek Mythology?
(a) There are texts explaining Hindu Mythology but no such texts exist about Greek mythology.
(b) In Hindu mythology all stories and characters can be explained by a single text (or collection) but this is not true of Greek mythology.
(c) Hindu mythology was passed on through written text but Greek mythology was passed on through oral recitation.
(d) In Greek mythology the main characters of a story are not as well explained as in Hindu mythology.
Ans: (b)
Sol: The passage mentions that in Greek mythology, there is no single original text like the Hindu Vedas or the Christian Bible that introduces all the myths' characters and stories. Therefore, option (b) is correct.
Q3: Who created the first story of Greek Mythology?
(a) Homer
(b) Hesiod
(c) Apollodorus
(d) Cannot be determined from the passage
Ans: (b)
Sol: The passage states that around 700 BC, the poet Hesiod's Theogony offered the first written cosmogony or origin story of Greek mythology. Therefore, option (b) is the correct answer.
Q4: What is the role played by Theogony in Greek mythology?
(a) It tells the story of how the world began.
(b) It introduces the four main characters of Greek Mythology.
(c) It helps explain the myth of Chaos.
(d) It tells the story of the Earth and the Sky.
Ans: (a)
Sol: The passage mentions that Theogony tells the story of the universe's journey from nothingness to being, detailing the family tree of elements, gods, and goddesses. Therefore, option (a) is the correct answer.
Q5: What does the author mean by ‘pantheon of deities’?
(a) Temple of all gods
(b) The realm of the heroes
(c) Place of worship
(d) Group of gods
Ans: (d)
Sol: The passage mentions that at the center of Greek mythology is the pantheon of deities, who were said to live on Mount Olympus. The term "pantheon" refers to a group of gods. Therefore, option (d) is the correct answer.
Q6: What were the similarities between Olympian Gods and Human Beings?
A. These Gods looked like humans.
B. They had weaknesses like humans.
C. They were as passionate as humans.
(a) A and B
(b) B and C
(c) C and A
(d) A, B and C
Ans: (d)
Sol: The passage states that Olympian gods and goddesses looked like men and women, were vulnerable to human foibles and passions, indicating weaknesses, and were, as many myths recounted, passionate like humans. Therefore, options (A), (B), and (C) are all correct, making option (d) the correct answer.
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