Bhagawhandi’s hallucinations act as a kind of pleasant anesthetic, calming her in anticipation for her death. Sacks alludes to E.M. Forster’s famous novel
A Passage to India, suggesting that, perhaps, Bhagawhandi returns to her family and her village in the afterlife—another reminder of 1) Sacks’s literary erudition and 2) the philosophical, even religious character of his book.