Answer:
No. Animals kept in captivity can be able to still mate with another. It might change their approach on humans though.
Explanation:
The promises of retirement, presented during the beginning of the animal revolution, is something that has become obscure in the animals' memory.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- In Chapter 9, the animals are already hopeless about the revolution they caused.
- This is because they continue to live oppressively, do not have access to the rights they were promised, and feel they are being exploited by the pigs.
- A proof of this is that the promises of retirement, which everyone received, were never fulfilled and are just a dark memory in everyone's mind.
This shows that the animal revolution took away an oppressive system to create another oppressive system, showing that whenever a single group is in power, oppression operates.
More information:
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Answer:
Azbell held up a flier announcing a boycott of city buses on Monday-the same day Rosa Parks was scheduled to be tried for violating an ordinance calling for segregated seating.“Joe showed the flier to me and said, ‘This is going to be in the paper tomorrow,'” Ingram recalled. “Sometime later, Dr. Martin Luther King told me that ‘Joe and the Advertiser printing that on the front page on Sunday morning was a greater impetus for the success of the boycott than anything before.'”
Explanation:
Answer:
Summary of Cormandel Fishers -
<u>Stanza 1</u>
In stanza 1, the poet asks the fishermen to “Rise” as the day is about to appear. She uses some symbols to tell this. First, she says that the wakening skies pray to the morning light which means that the sky which was sleeping in the night has woken up and is welcoming the light. Here the poet uses personification by using wakening for the sky.
The wind lies asleep in the arms of the dawn like a child that has cried all night refers to the atrocities that the land of India and the people of India had suffered in the hands by British during their cruel rule. With the independence, it will vanish away.
Come, let us gather our nets from the shore and set our catamarans free. In this line, the poet asks the freedom fighters of India to take their weapons (nets) To capture the leaping wealth of the tide, i.e. the freedom of India because they are the kings of the sea! which refers to India.
<u>Stanza 2</u>
In the second stanza, the poet urges the freedom fighters not to delay and at once start fighting as the leaders (sea-gulls) have declared a war against the British and they should follow their leader’s path.
According to the poet, The sea is our mother, the cloud is our brother, the waves are our comrades all i.e. the land theirs and everything in it is their family and hence they (the freedom fighters) need not fear.
The land which is mother-god will protect them from the wind or the foreign rulers and protect them (the freedom fighters).
<u>Stanza 3</u>
In the final stanza, the poet says that the comforts and the joys that the Indians enjoy under the might be sweet but the fragrance of independence and the feeling of being free is quite sweeter and hence the freedom fighters should wage a final war on the British.
Explanation:
There you go....
GOOD LUCK !!!