Paragraph - A Bus Stand |
A bus stand is a place at some point of
a highway, a road or a street where buses halt. Passengers get on and off a bus
at this place. Some bus stands have ticket counters for buses of a particular
company. Buses of other companies have no ticket counters there. For such buses
passengers have to wait at the bus stand and when a bus comes they struggle,
push and jostle to get on. They want to have seats. The number of passengers is
most at rush hours. Passengers stand in a queue after buying tickets for those
buses which have ticket counters. When the expected bus comes they start
getting on one by one. When the seats are occupied, some passengers remain standing
in queue for the next bus. But some of the passengers may agree to remain
standing in the bus and so they get on. The scene is different for those buses
which have no ticket counters. They do not line up, but wait in a disorderly
manner. When such a bus comes, they jostle and push, and struggle hard to get
in first so that they can have a seat. At some hours when the passengers are
few, the bus conductor of a non-counter bus shouts repeatedly mentioning the
destinations of the bus. He tries to attract attention of the possible
passengers. Some big bus stands have tea stalls, bakery, fruiters, small book
stalls, and news agents. The cries of hawkers, the hooting of horns, the roars
of engine, and the foul smell of petrol or diesel exhaust make a bus stand a
horrible place.
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