Answer:
A. The writer realizes that fatherhood transcends class structure and societal differences
Step-by-step explanation:
Rabindranath Tagore , the author of Cabuliwallah, notices that fatherhood goes beyond class structure and societal differences. The writer is from upper or middle class for he is the one who wants to pay for the fruits the street vendor, Cabuliwallah, has brought to the writer's daughter as a present. Cabuliwallah is a poor man. This man does not want to charge the narrator for the fruits and justifies his attitude by saying that he also has a daughter as the narrator does. He adds he does not want any money because the narrator may need it for his own daughter, besides he does not want to make any profit from it. These words :"....Cabuli fruit seller, while I was- but no, was I more than he? He was also a father.." show the focus on fatherhood within the unequal societal structure.