Nissim Ezekiel is the poster boy of modernism in the history of Indian English poetry who together with P.Lal tries to give a dimension to it, but to credit to him merely only will not serve our point and for it, this must go to C.R.Mandy, the then editor of the Illustrated Weekly of India who gave a chance to many a verse-practitioner. At that time Nissim too was a new-comer, unheard of. Nissim had not been so famous as he is today.A Bene-Israeli, I mean a Jew he was outwardly frank, bold and daring, but from his interior within a conservative fellow who stepped not outside, just like a modern hollow man he kept himself to modernity, modernism and hollow urbanity rather than allowing some space to India, Indianism and the theme of Indianness. He had been blind to the treasure trove of the Vedas, the Upanishads, the Puranas and other things philosophical and scriptural. A modern man, he thought of modernity and modernism; city life and culture. The tea party, marriage party, exchange of pleasantries, welcome speeches, greetings, birthdays, new year eves; airports, picnic spots, restaurants, travel destinations, theatres, cinema halls, art exhibitions and journalistic tidbits are the things of his discussion. To joke with and to caricature is the chief property of the poet. The wife under the ghumta (veil) taking not the name of the husband at the modern party is the protagonist of his humour. People trying to learn spoken English too comes under the glare of his jokes. A clear-cut poet, he seeks to employ a clear-cut language for his poetry. He can date, but can never turn up for a consummation. to go to the cinema hall with the beloved and to smile with her is acceptable ti him, but never, never the love marriage going outside the gamut; the ghettos binding upon. As a poet he is Indian as for his bare ground realities, wit, fun, pun and humour, India-connections, not for his relationships. He is a poet of the urban space, not the Indian countryside.
Answer choices are:
1. Peace
2. Fighting
3. War
4. Solitude
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Correct answer choices are:
2. Fighting
3. War
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Explanation:
Persian art has one of the valuable art heritages in world chronicle and has been great in many spiritualists including construction, art, weaving, ceramics, calligraphy, metalworking and carving. At several points, connections from the art of nearby amenities have been very critical, and lately, Persian art gave and gained significant importance as part of the broader techniques of Islamic art. There were basic themes and common influence during the arts. They were interlocked on a frequent task which consumed their utmost, with a surprisingly scarce idea of unique pride and glory.
I’m pretty sure this is called ledger lines, I’m sorry if it’s wrong
Answer:
I think his attitude to the rodent is to make people feel bad for it. He starts off the description of the mouse by saying things like, it has a toothpick for a tail, and cannot run properly. Through the story, the rodent gets abused by the people of the city. for example, it was kicked by the superintendent of the building, which must have hurt especially to such a frail body. The story ends with the rodent as roadkill on the pavement, it never lived a good life, and it didnt have a happy ending.
Explanation: