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Which natural element plays a crucial role in the end of the story There Will Come Soft Rains? - English Literature

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Question

Which natural element plays a crucial role in the end of the story There Will Come Soft Rains?

Options

  • Hail

  • Wind

  • Heat

  • Rain

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Solution

Wind

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2. I was no mere image cut in granite.
3. The arm was beginning to be drained of strength.
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5. I didn’t tremble. I didn’t cry out.
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10. Was it trying to make an important decision about growing a moustache or using eye
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Paralysed with fear, the boy faced his abductors.


What do Prashant and other volunteers resist the plan to set up institutions for orphans and widows? What alternatives do they consider?


Some are like fields of sunlit corn,
Meet for a bride on her bridal morn,
Some, like the flame of her marriage fire,
Or, rich with the hue of her heart's desire,
Tinkling,luminous,tender, and clear,
Like her bridal laughter and bridal tear.

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Some, like the flame of her marriage fire,
Or, rich with the hue of her heart’s desire,


A free bird leaps on the back
Of the wind and floats downstream
Till the current ends and dips his wing
In the orange suns rays
And dares to claim the sky.

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The blocks were all lined up for those who would use them
The hundred-yard dash and the race to be run
These were nine resolved athletes in  back of the starting line
Poised for the sound of the gun.
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And so did the runners all charging ahead
But the smallest among them,he stumbled and staggered
And fell to the asphalt instead.
He gave out a cry in frustration and anguish
His dreams ands his efforts all dashed in the dirt
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How many competitors were there for the events?


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“You think so?”
“Why not,” I said, watching the far bank where now there were no carts.
“But what will they do under the artillery when I was told to leave because of the artillery?”
“Did you leave the dove cage unlocked?” I asked.
“Yes.”
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Name the village in which Muni lived.


Of the seven hundred villages dotting the map of India, in which the majority of India’s five hundred million live, flourish and die, Kritam was probably the tiniest, indicated on the district survey map by a microscopic dot, the map being meant more for the revenue official out to collect tax than for the guidance of the motorist, who in any case could not hope to reach it since it sprawled far from the highway at the end of a rough track furrowed up by the iron-hooped wheels of bullock carts. But its size did not prevent its giving itself the grandiose name Kritam, which meant in Tamil coronet or crown on the brow of the subcontinent. The village consisted of fewer than thirty houses, only one of them built from brick and cement and painted a brilliant yellow and blue all over with

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What is it, Sahib? Asked the watchman, has there been an accident? Why are you running?

I saw something, something horrible, a boy weeping in the forest and he had no face.
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