Answer: What story or text are we referring to here?
Explanation:
When your text states that communication is unavoidable, it means that people will probably associate meaning to your actions, even when you don not intend to speak of something.
The central theme of Kamala Markandaya's Nectar in Sieve is the religion. Religion is presented from secular point of view amidst in all the tragic consequences family faces and in all the moral and physical pains they suffer from. Therefore, it is rather paradoxical to find that the religion has been used from positive aspect. The use of theme amidst the tragic events shows author's cynic approach towards religion. For example, when Rukmani visits her mother, the author narrates her thoughts as:
"...and together we would pray and pray before deity, imploring for help until we were giddy. But the Gods have other things to do; they cannot attend to the pleas of every suppliant who dares to raise his cares to heaven..."
Later in the novel, Rukmani describes Gods as not remote, not unheedful because they heard her son Kuti's cries and made her calm. However, it is not the praise of Gods because she later learns that Kuti's improvement was due to Ira's earning from prostitution.
Answer:
One owns the young offspring if he owns the mother.
Explanation:
The given line represents the doctrine which was created in ancient times. The sentence is, "Legal evil lives where the brood follows the dam."
Here, the word 'dam' means the mother while 'brood' means their off springs.
This doctrine determines the ownership of the animals and cattle such as bull, horses, etc.
It means that if anybody owns the mother that is the 'dam', he also owns the offspring, the 'broods'.
In the year 1842, the US Supreme court also extended this doctrine to humans saying that any slave born to slaves will also be a slave for life even if slavery is banned in that state.
He is disgusted and shocked by the identical lower caste people.