, Devkota moves away from the romanticism of his poetry and uses: Sharp Dialogue:

The drama work ruthlessly deconstructs the idea that external rituals (ochre robes, chanting, beads) equate to internal purity. Gopinath is not evil; he is worse—he is delusional. He genuinely believes he is holy while actively deceiving his wife. The play argues that celibacy forced upon a householder is not virtue but violence.