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1801.

Write a short note on early childhood of Helen Keller.

Answer» http://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/helen-keller-201.phpHelen Keller Biography - Helen Keller Life, Childhood and Timeline
1802.

What is Ozymandias?

Answer»
1803.

What account does Hellen Keller give to her family?

Answer»
1804.

Tenses tenses

Answer»
1805.

The narrator met whom tTwo boys in verona

Answer» NICOLA AND JACCOPO
1806.

The frog was a schemer who killed the nightingale without being blamed for the killing. How?

Answer»
1807.

Do you think the tiger shooting organized by the villagers was a serious issue. Give reason

Answer» no,the tiger shooting organized by the villager was serious issue
1808.

English book question answer no have in mycbseguid

Answer»
1809.

What is Ring o Bell

Answer» It is the shop under the ownership of John Sherlock
1810.

Is the paper pattern given by mycbseguide.com authentic?

Answer»
1811.

When to use till, until and unless?

Answer»
1812.

Character sketch of mrs.sullivan

Answer»
1813.

What were the hardships faced by Nicola and Jacapo?\xa0

Answer» The two boys faced a lot of hardships in their lives. The war devastated their lives completely. They lost everything. To look after their sister and themselves, they had to do all kinds of odd lobs.
1814.

why was the relation in the annex getting worse day by day\xa0

Answer»
1815.

describe the family of helen keller\xa0\xa0

Answer» Ans. Helen Adams Keller was born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Her family lived on a homestead, Ivy Green, that Helen\'s grandfather had built decades earlier.She had two younger siblings, Mildred Campbell and Phillip Brooks Keller, two older half-brothers from her father\'s prior marriage, James and William Simpson Keller.Her father, Arthur H. Keller,spent many years as an editor for the Tuscumbia North Alabamian, and had served as a captain for the Confederate Army.Her paternal grandmother was the second cousin of Robert E. Lee. Her mother, Kate Adams, was the daughter of Charles W. Adams.Though originally from Massachusetts, Charles Adams also fought for the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, earning the rank of colonel (and acting brigadier-general).Her paternal lineage was traced to Casper Keller, a native of Switzerland.One of Helen\'s Swiss ancestors was the first teacher for the deaf in Zurich.
1816.

Why did the two boys bent over shoeshine boxes. ( two gentlemen of Verona).\xa0

Answer» Ans. The two boys, Jacopa and Nicola, did many petty odd jobs to earn money for their livelihood and for the treatment of their ailing sister. That day they had taken up the work of shoe polishing. They were actively busy with their shoe shining work. Hence, they had bent over shoeshine boxes.
1817.

\xa0Chapter 1 two gentlemen of verona (NCERT)

Answer»
1818.

Which text ?

Answer»
1819.

What is the phrase means trade slacken (two gentlemen of verona)

Answer» THE PHRASE MEANS THAT THE TRADE CARRIED BY THE TWO BOYSSLOWED DOWN.Slacken : slowed down.
1820.

Write a letter to the editor \'Increase in the use of English in India\'\xa0

Answer»
1821.

Meaning of the word: Shrill1) rude2)high3)offensive\xa04)terrible.\xa0

Answer» Terrible
1822.

What kind of a person was lavinia?\xa0Anybody kindly answer. Please!

Answer» Ans. She is john\'s wife.She is a domineering person and at the same time she is interested in fashions and fads. She is a spendthrift as she has an alarming tendency to spend money on the latest fads and trends.Her latest craze is Ouija board (this shows that she likes novelty and thrills). She buys one & calls her friends for an Ouija party. Hallock describes his wife as a very sensitive little lady.Hallock says that Lavinia couldn\'t even bare a mouse say boo to her. Like all the wife she is jealous. Lavinia can be easily influenced. She is suspicious and lacks trust in her husband.
1823.

What kind of a person was lavinia?\xa0

Answer»
1824.

Write brief characteristics of Peter.

Answer»
1825.

Will clauses,articles and determiners come in sa2 10th exam?

Answer» \xa0Articles will not come
1826.

Should i learn ncert or sample paper now

Answer» Read the text thoroughly
NCERT are you sleeping before
1827.

Plz define pun.

Answer» Ans. Pun: The usually humorous use of a word in such a way as to suggest two or more of its meanings or the meaning of another word similar in sound.
1828.

what did Caesar ask his servant to tell the priest? What was it result?

Answer» About his that day
1829.

pls tell question that can be made from ch15 to 23rd in novel by Helen Keller (imp ques)

Answer»
1830.

Names of the conspirators in caeser.\xa0mudering.?\xa0

Answer» Decious Brutus,Marcus Brutus,etc.
1831.

How many chapters will come in sa2 from\'the story of my life \'?

Answer» chapters from 15to23
1832.

What happened to Sebastian Shultz ? How was he at present

Answer» Sebastian Shultz was badly injured in a motorway accident.His condition was declared critical though stable. At the time if accident he was using his laptop to play a psycho drive game, and then he bagged his head on the laptop and it stored its memory. After a few hours he was admitted in general hospital his laptop was stolen and it was bought by Michael from the computer fair.At present he is out of deep unconsciousness.
1833.

Why couldn\'t Michael help Sebastian the second time\xa0

Answer»
1834.

On what conditions was antony allowed to speak on\xa0Caesar\'s funeral ?

Answer» Ans. Antony was allowed to speak on Caesar\'s funeral on the following conditions:\tHe would speak on the same pulpit on which Brutus speaks.\tHe would speak after Brutus\' speech.\tHe would not blame the conspirators in his speech and would only speak about Caesar.\tHe would tell the people that whatever he is speaking is by their permission.
1835.

Why did john hallock said that ghost stories specialised in him ?

Answer» john Hallock was not able to write ghost stories.whenever he sat to write the story he didn\'t get any idea in his mind but suddenly he get inspiration to write ghost stories but he didn\'t know who was inspiring him .the reality was that the ghost of hellen was helping him.that\'s why he said these words\xa0
1836.

Why caesar accepted the interpretation of Brutus.?\xa0

Answer»
1837.

Give two example of supernatural in the rime of ancient Marriner\xa0

Answer» Ans. The supernatural element is very prominent in the poem. The supernatural is evident from the very beginning of the poem.The main character, the ancient mariner with his ‘glittering eyes’ casts a spell on a wedding guest and compels him to listen to his story.Another example of the supernatural is the albatross, which the mariner encounters on his journey.The sudden sinking of the ship, a skeleton ship and many other supernatural incidents are there in the poem.
1838.

How did Hallock come to know that Lavinia had decided to leave him ?

Answer» by the letter she dropped to john\'s room.\xa0
He came to know by the servant, in his house.
1839.

Why patol baby lost his first job in Calcutta\xa0

Answer» The Second World War had resulted in Patol Babu being retrenched from his nine-year-old clerical job at Hudson and Kimberley.
1840.

Why does the poet feel fascination and fear, love and revulsion at and for the snake?

Answer» the answer is given below;\xa0
1841.

Article on soaring cut offs\xa0

Answer»
1842.

Why wasn\'t Lavinia scared when she saw Helen ( a ghost)?

Answer» Because lavinia expected that the Helen would be very beautiful like the Helen of troy.
1843.

What is the theme of Shakespeare\'s Sonnet, not marble nor gilded monuments?

Answer» The theme of the poem \'Not marbel nor gilded monument. revolves round the importance of written document. The poet wants to imortalise his friend by praising him through\xa0the powerful lines of his poem. The poem conveys that the monument built by the princes can not face the harsh nature of time and might get destroyed. But nothing can destroy the written document. It can stay fresh till the judgement day .e end of the world .
1844.

Give the character sketch of Mildred.

Answer» Alxender gramwelk
Mildred Keller is Helen\'s younger apply sister .helan felt her as an intruder who divided her mother\'s love and affection . She felt that her mother took more interest on Mildred which earlier Helen used to get .She initially got fired when she used to see her(mildred)sleep on her mother\'s lap at which earlier Helen used to sleep .Helen loved her doll Nancy and feel great elation when she played with it\'s cradle.but one day she observed that Mildred was sleeping in it fondly , so out of range and jealousy she overturned the cradle in which mildred was sleeping,it would have killed the infant hadn\'t her mother saved her.but after this incident there came about a change in Helen which made quite close to mildred. Mildred also helped Helen a lot ,She even when to Cambridge to accompany her.she used to describe her the sceneries around them when they went out.when Helen learned to speak she felt extremely delighted to speak to her sister.they both were perfect foil for each other and helped each other a lot.
Mildred Keller is Helen\'s younger sister as explained in The Story of My Life. There is not a lot of information on Mildred in the autobiography but the reader does learn that, after an event when Helen tips Mildred out of a crib, the two sisters do grow "into each other\'s hearts"(ch 2). Helen is jealous of the attention that Mildred gets from her mother - attention that used to be directed to her. One day she notices that Mildred has been placed in a crib reserved for Helen\'s beloved doll, Nancy, and it is just as well that Helen\'s mother is on hand to avoid catastrophe. One year, whilst spending the summer at the family\'s cottage in Fern Quarry, Mildred tells Helen all about what she sees - the train tracks and cows straying on to them, and the trestle. Helen and Mildred go walking in the woods with Miss Sullivan but unfortunately they get lost. It is Mildred who spots the trestle which allows them to find their way.Mildred Keller is Helen\'s younger sister as explained in The Story of My Life. There is not a lot of information on Mildred in the autobiography but the reader does learn that, after an event when Helen tips Mildred out of a crib, the two sisters do grow "into each other\'s hearts"(ch 2). Helen is jealous of the attention that Mildred gets from her mother - attention that used to be directed to her. One day she notices that Mildred has been placed in a crib reserved for Helen\'s beloved doll, Nancy, and it is just as well that Helen\'s mother is on hand to avoid catastrophe. One year, whilst spending the summer at the family\'s cottage in Fern Quarry, Mildred tells Helen all about what she sees - the train tracks and cows straying on to them, and the trestle. Helen and Mildred go walking in the woods with Miss Sullivan but unfortunately they get lost. It is Mildred who spots the trestle which allows them to find their way.\xa0
midred campbell is younger sister of helen she is vey loving afferctionate .she loved helen very much .she also gone to the same school which helen used to go so that hes sister woud not feel alone.
1845.

enlongate the lesson helen learnt by beauty out in the field. In about 200-250.

Answer»
1846.

What is covered in the chapters of The Story of My Life by Helen Keller?

Answer» The Story of My Life by Helen Keller is an autobiographical account of the life of a young woman who was deaf and blind. It was published in 1903, when Keller was 22 years old, and consists of 23 chapters, covering her life from the period when she lost her ability to see and hear at the age of 19 months due to an illness through the beginning of her studies at Radcliffe University. The main events of the book are as follows.Chapters 1-5: Describes Keller\'s earliest memories of sights and sounds and the illness which caused her to lose her sight and hearing. Next, she describes her initial efforts to communicate through touch and the arrival of her teacher, Anne Sullivan.Chapters 6-10: Covers Keller\'s early studies with Sullivan, including her fond memories of outdoor lessons, her enjoyment of a trip to Boston where she meets other blind children, and her delight at experiencing the ocean at Cape Cod.Chapters 11-15: In these chapters, we discover Keller\'s first attempts at authorship, and more about her travels and experiences of the world, including a trip to Niagara Falls. At this point, she has decided she wants to learn how to speak, and describes in some detail the way in which she starts learning.Chapters 16-20: Keller prepares for university by learning Latin, and working out suitable accommodations for the entrance exams.Chapters 21-23: In the final chapters, Keller describes her enthusiasm for reading and learning, and the opportunities Sullivan\'s unique style of teaching has opened up for her.
1847.

Who was Anne Sullivan in "The Story of My Life"?

Answer» In Helen Keller’s book, The Story of My Life, Anne Sullivan is the woman who overcame her own visual deficiencies to become the teacher, confidant, and dear friend to Helen Keller. As a poor, young girl, Anne Sullivan suffered an eye infection that affected her sight. She was cared for at the Perkins School for the Blind, in Boston, MA. After a series of operations restored much of her sight, she excelled in her studies and became a teacher of blind students. She used a manual alphabet to make associations between items, and the words that named them.After her graduation, she traveled to Alabama where she became the private teacher of Helen Keller. Although, at seven years old, Helen could be a difficult student, Anne Sullivan persevered using the manual alphabet to teach Helen words for simple objects. As Helen’s need for knowledge grew, Anne devised implements to aid her student in writing and speech. Helen became an ardent learner and with Anne Sullivan’s guidance, she went on to graduate from Radcliffe College, and to write The Story of My Life. Sullivan endured a failed marriage. Financial matters became a concern which spurred Anne and Helen to seek a career in Hollywood which was short lived. They eventually performed successfully in a comedy act in Vaudeville shows.
1848.

is there any summary for drama {juliet ceaser}

Answer»
When the play opens, Julius Caesar has just returned to Rome after defeating the sons of Pompey in battle.Before we go any further, let\'s pause for a brief Roman history lesson. Pompey (a.k.a. "Pompey the Great") was a member of the "first triumvirate," and he and Caesar used to share power over Rome. Then Caesar and Pompey got into a big fight. Pompey lost. When he tried to run away to Egypt in 48 B.C., he was assassinated. But Caesar still had a problem: Pompey\'s sons were determined to avenge their father\'s death and overthrow Caesar. So Caesar tracked down Pompey\'s sons in Spain and stomped them out at the Battle of Munda in 45 B.C. Now back to the play.As Caesar parades through the streets of Rome like a rock star, the higher-ups in Rome are nervous about his growing power and his popularity with the commoners, who have abandoned their work to celebrate Caesar\'s triumphant return. Caesar seems headed toward absolute power, which is a big no-no in the Roman Republic.Meanwhile, the festival of the Lupercal (a big party where people run around in goatskin g-strings in the middle of February) is in full swing. Caesar is chilling at the festival with his entourage when a soothsayer runs up and says "beware the Ides of March" (meaning, "hey, watch your back on March 15"). Caesar looks at the soothsayer and is all "whatever man."While Caesar parties with his fans, Brutus and Cassius huddle together and talk trash about him. Cassius is all bent out of shape because he thinks Caesar is running around acting like a king. Without coming right out and saying so directly, Cassius (who has been plotting against Caesar with a group of conspirators) suggests that maybe Brutus should lead Rome. Brutus says he gets what Cassius is saying, but he is also good friends with Caesar, so he needs a little time to think about things before he makes any decisions. (Psst. If you read the play closely, there\'s some evidence that Brutus has already been thinking about getting rid of Caesar, because he confesses that he\'s been "at war" with himself, meaning something\'s been bothering him.)Brutus and Cassius run into Casca, a conspirator, who reports that Antony just offered Caesar the crown three times. Casca is mad, because each time Caesar pretended he didn\'t want the crown, which made the crowd of plebeians (common folk) love him even more. Not only that, but Caesar acted like a total drama queen and fainted (or pretended to) the third time Antony offered him the crown. This made the "stinking" crowd go nuts.A month passes, which means we\'re approaching the "Ides of March." (Cue the ominous music.) Casca and Cicero are running around in a violent thunderstorm and comment on all the crazy stuff that\'s been happening in Rome lately: a lion was roaming around and a bunch of men in flames were spotted walking around the streets. Cassius, who interprets these omens to mean that Caesar must be taken down, continues to plot against Caesar. He sends someone to plant fake letters from Roman commoners urging Brutus to eliminate Caesar, and attends a meeting that night to plot Caesar\'s death.Meanwhile, Brutus has decided to go ahead and kill his friend Caesar because the man might become a complete tyrant if he gains more power. Brutus reasons that, even though he and Caesar are BFFs, killing Caesar is the only way to save the Roman Republic. (Is he right? We don\'t know for sure, but Shakespeare definitely wants us to think about this.) Brutus finally meets with all the conspirators, and they hatch a plan: they\'ll arrange to bring Caesar to the Capitol so they can hack him into a million little pieces.Meanwhile, Caesar has had a rough night, complete with a crying wife (Calphurnia) who wants Caesar to stay at home because she\'s had a bad dream and fears something awful is about to happen to him. But Caesar ultimately decides to go to the Capitol, because Decius (one of the conspirators!) steps in and says something like, "Oh, hey, when Calphurnia dreamed that you were a statue full of holes and spouting blood, that just meant that you\'re going to be the greatest leader Rome has ever seen." Caesar is all, "Yeah, I think you\'re right." Decius promises that Caesar\'s going to be crowned king that day. Caesar goes skipping off to the Senate. On the way to the Capitol, an old man tries to give Caesar a letter warning him about the assassination plot, but Caesar blows him off.At the Capitol, Caesar stands around bragging about how awesome he is. Just as he\'s making a big speech about how he\'s the brightest star in the sky, Cassius, Brutus, and the other plotters surround him and stab him to death – 33 times, just to be sure. Before falling, Caesar looks up and says "Et tu, Brute?" Translation: "Even you, Brutus? What happened to us being best buds forever?"The conspirators wash their hands in Caesar\'s blood (hmm...seems like Calphurnia\'s dream was pretty accurate after all) so they can walk the streets and calmly tell everyone that Rome is free of tyranny. The idea is that they\'ll seem more convincing about their plans for a new dawn of peace if they\'re dripping with Caesar\'s fresh blood. Surprisingly, instead of hailing Brutus and Cassius as saviors, the people of Rome run around declaring that it\'s Doomsday. The situation is not going according to plan.Things really go awry when Antony shows up to weep over Caesar\'s body. While clearly distraught, he promises not to blame the conspirators as long as he\'s allowed to speak at the funeral in praise of Caesar\'s virtues. Of course, we hear in an aside that Antony plans mayhem and murder, so we\'re not surprised when he gets to the funeral pulpit and urges the people of Rome to riot against Julius Caesar\'s murderers. (An "aside," by the way, is when a character says something to the audience that no other characters on stage can hear.)Meanwhile, Brutus and Cassius have fled and chaos has ensued. Even politically unimportant folks like poets are being killed on the street. Antony has met up with Lepidus and Caesar\'s adopted son, Octavius. Together they\'ll form the new triumvirate to lead Rome and battle against Cassius and Brutus.Meanwhile, Cassius and Brutus get into a big argument at their first meeting after the funeral. Cassius has been accepting bribes on the side, which compromises their credibility. (Remember, the only reason Brutus agreed to join the conspiracy was that he believed killing Caesar was for the greater good, not for any self-serving reason. At least, that\'s what Brutus says.) Still, they agree to march and meet the enemy (Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus) at Philippi, despite a visit from Caesar\'s ghost to Brutus to say he\'ll be at Philippi too. It\'s going to be like a family reunion, except this one will mostly end in death. Everyone has steeled himself for this possibility, and Cassius and Brutus implicitly agree to pull a Romeo and Juliet (kill themselves) in case anything goes wrong in the battle.On the battlefield the two enemy factions exchange some rough words, and Brutus claims he\'s not a traitor. Fighting ensues, and Cassius and Brutus set up on different parts of the field. Brutus is having some success in overtaking Octavius\' army, but Cassius\' guys are held fast by Antony\'s, so they\'re at a stalemate.Then Cassius jumps the gun and kills himself over a misunderstanding: he thought his friend Titinius had been overtaken by enemy hordes, when it was really only Brutus\' friends trying to hand a crown to Titinius so he could give it to Cassius. Titinius finds Cassius\' body and kills himself too, so when Brutus arrives, his buddies are already dead. Then Brutus decides to kill himself. He gets his old friend Strato to hold his sword while he runs at it. As he dies, he says he didn\'t kill Caesar with half so strong a will as he kills himself now, so we know he dies willingly.Antony and Octavius know they\'ve won even before they arrive to find Brutus\' body. Antony gives a nice speech over the body in his usual style, saying Brutus was the noblest Roman ever and the only one of the conspirators who killed Caesar for Rome\'s good and not out of envy. Finally, Octavius agrees that Brutus\'s body can stay in his tent for the night, befitting a dead soldier, and they won\'t even have to share a bunk, as Octavius and his friends will be out celebrating all the death and victory. The end.
\tThe play opens on a crowded and noisy street in Rome as Julius Caesar returns from battle, where he stomped Pompey\'s sons into the ground.\tFYI: Pompey is a guy who used to rule Rome with Caesar (they were called "tribunes"). After disagreeing with Caesar about how Rome should be run, Pompey was defeated in battle and assassinated. Just to be sure that Pompey\'s family and supporters couldn\'t come after him, Caesar chased Pompey\'s sons to Spain and defeated them in battle, too.\tMurellus and Flavius, Roman tribunes who are friends of Brutus and Cassius, come upon a group of common people running about the street in their Sunday best when they should be working. The pair asks about the commoners\' professions and what they\'re up to and finds out that they\'re on the way to celebrate and honor Julius Caesar.\tMurellus and Flavius point out that rather than celebrate this victory, the people should get on their knees and pray against whatever evil will come from Caesar. They imply that Caesar will be tyrannical, having outlived the other two men who should share his power.\tBefore parting ways, Murellus and Flavius disperse the crowd and remove the party favors the people have left around Caesar\'s statue. They hope this will slow Caesar\'s roll a little bit as he prepares to overthrow the republic and make himself king.
\tCaesar, Brutus, their wives, and all sorts of other folks are gathered in a public place. They\'re ready to celebrate the feast of the Lupercal, an annual party which involves a bunch of Romans dressed in leather loincloths running around the city lashing whoever they find with a goatskin whip. Seriously.\tCaesar\'s friend Antony will be running in the festival this year, and Caesar tells Antony not to forget to "touch Calphurnia." She is Caesar\'s wife, and the whip is supposed to cure her "barrenness." (Before we forget, this is the same "Antony" who shows up later in Shakespeare\'s steamy play Antony and Cleopatra.)\tAfter broadcasting his wife\'s business in the street, Caesar hears a soothsayer (a prophet or fortuneteller) call out to him in the crowd. Caesar now hears the famous warning to "beware the Ides of March," but he ignores it.\tBrutus and Cassius meet and talk while everyone else moves on to the next event. Cassius says his good friend Brutus hasn\'t seemed very friendly recently. Brutus reassures Cassius that "it\'s not you, it\'s me," claiming that he\'s been preoccupied with some thoughts that he\'d rather keep to himself.\tCassius then starts to suggest things that Brutus\' own humbleness won\'t let him acknowledge. Cassius hints that Brutus has a reputation for being a really honorable guy, and that everybody agrees about this except Caesar. As Brutus begins to catch the whiff of treachery in Cassius\' talk, Cassius assures Brutus he\'s being serious about the whole "noble" thing and not just flattering him. Without saying so, Cassius suggests that a lot of respected Romans think it would be really nice if someone like Brutus led Rome, even though it would mean "disposing" of Caesar.\tTheir conversation is interrupted by shouts, and Brutus ends by pointing out that he loves Caesar but hopes the Roman people haven\'t crowned him king. (Remember, they live in a republic, which has no place for monarchs.)\tBrutus adds that he loves honor more than he fears death, which spurs Cassius to continue suggesting they do something to stop Caesar.\tCassius harps on the fact that Caesar isn\'t any better than them, so they have no reason to be his subjects.\tIn fact, Cassius says, Caesar is a gutless wonder. Cassius tells a story of how Caesar challenged him to a race on the Tiber River, but Caesar got so tired that Cassius had to rescue him from drowning. Cassius describes how Caesar became sick in Spain, had a seizure, and whimpered. Cassius is clearly implying that Caesar is weak and not fit to be a king.\tThere\'s some more shouting that seems to imply that the people are the crowning Caesar, which helps Cassius\' cause.\tCassius drives his point home: Brutus is just as good as Caesar, and they would be cowards if they didn\'t do something to stop Caesar becoming the "first man" of Rome. Cassius then appeals to Brutus\' family history. Apparently one of Brutus\' ancestors helped establish the Roman Republic by fighting the tyrant Tarquin. Cassius is basically calling for Brutus to uphold the family name.\tBrutus promises he\'s not suspicious of Cassius\' motives or flattery but asks him to lay off trying to get him to kill Caesar for a little bit. Brutus will think about whatever Cassius has to say, and he gives Cassius hope with the final thought that he\'d "rather be a villager" than call himself "a son of Rome" if things continue on the current path (meaning, if Rome ceases to be a republic). Which would be fine, except Brutus has no interest in being a villager.\tWhen Caesar returns, Brutus notices he and the rest of his crew look pretty unhappy.\tCaesar spots Cassius giving him the stink eye and calls out instructions to Antony: he\'d like to be surrounded with fat, happy men, because the "lean and hungry look" of Cassius strikes him as dangerous. Antony assures Caesar that Cassius is noble and not dangerous.\tCaesar continues to say mean things about Cassius: that he doesn\'t like music, or smiling, or people who are better than him. (Who is this guy, the Grinch?) Obviously, Caesar has figured out that he should not trust Cassius.\tJust then Brutus and Cassius confer with Casca, who has been at the festivities with Caesar. Brutus asks what has put Caesar in such a bad mood.\tCasca tells him that the crowd was gathered to watch Caesar receive a (symbolic) crown. Antony offered Caesar the crown three times, Caesar refused it all three times, and three times the crowd cheered wildly (presumably because of the humility of their fearless leader).\tCasca thinks the crowd was stupid for not noticing how hard it was for Caesar to resist taking the crown. Each time Caesar refused it a little less wholeheartedly. Apparently the whole thing was so upsetting that it prompted one of Caesar\'s epileptic seizures in the middle of the marketplace. Caesar had fallen down and started foaming at the mouth, unable to speak.\tEven weirder, before Caesar had the seizure, he stood up before the crowd and opened his jacket, offering the crowd his throat to cut. When he came to, he apologized for any weird behavior, blaming it on his sickness, and everyone happily forgave him. Casca is convinced the people would\'ve forgiven him for stabbing their mothers, as they are foolish sheep.\tBrutus asks if Cicero, the great orator, had anything to say about this. Casca says Cicero did speak, but Casca couldn\'t understand it because he was speaking Greek. (Casca, not an orator himself, doesn\'t know Greek.) Hence the phrase, "It\'s all Greek to me." (See, you\'re smarter every day.)\tCasca also notes that Murellus and Flavius (remember them from Scene 1?) have been punished. They\'ve lost their positions after their little adventure stripping the people\'s ornaments off of Caesar\'s statues. Finally, Casca agrees to have dinner at Cassius\' place sometime, though he\'s pretty rude about it.\tAfter Brutus and Cassius part ways, Cassius thinks he\'ll convince Brutus to get on the conspiratorial bandwagon eventually, even though the man is noble, or honorable. Cassius is convinced that Caesar treats Brutus with favoritism, making it harder for Brutus to rebel against him. (It\'s always harder to kill someone who\'s nice to you.)\tStill, Cassius thinks he\'ll sway Brutus by faking some letters and throwing them through his window at night. The letters will supposedly be from citizens praising Brutus, and, between the lines, Cassius will suggest that Caesar is too ambitious and should be put down by someone like Brutus. Cassius is certain he can shake Brutus\' loyalty to Caesar.\tnow study it for urself
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Summary: Julius Caesar was a Roman general and statesman who lived between 100 BC to 44BC. He played an instrumental role in the demise of Roman Republic and rise of the Roman Empire. After winning several wars, Julius Caesar became very popular and powerful. When he was offered the crown by Mark Antony; he refused the crown. Some people were jealous of Caesar’s growing power and feared that he might become a dictator. Cassius hatches a conspiracy to murder Caesar. He wins over Brutus in this conspiracy because Brutus is the most trusted and respected in Rome. After the assassination of Caesar, one of his friends; Antony; succeeds in motivating people to raise a revolt against Cassius and Brutus.Act 1 Scene 1The first scene depicts the argument between Caesar and his wife Calpurnia. Calpurnia tries to stop Caesar from going to the senate because she is apprehensive of some mishap. She explains the bad omens which she saw in her dreams. In response, Caesar claims that a brave man should not be afraid of death because death is the ultimate truth. Calpurnia wants Mark Antony to convey the message that Caesar would not attend the meeting at senate and to give an excuse of Caesar’s sickness. Finally, Decius Brutus tries to convince Caesar by giving a different and positive interpretation of the dreams which Calpurnia had. Thus, Brutus is able to take Caesar alongwith him to the senate.Act 2: Scene 1Various courtiers and members of the senate sing paeans for Caesar. Caesar asks his fellows not to indulge in flattery. The discussion then veers on the banishment of Publius Cimber. Finally, all the men who are with Cassius take out their daggers and kill Caesar. When Brutus stabs Cesar then Caesar is astonished that even Brutus is against him.After the assassination of Caesar, Cassius wants the message conveyed to the people of Rome that they have succeeded in ending the tyranny and in ensuring freedom for the people of Rome.
Mark Antony; a close associate of Caesar arrives on the scene. Cassius and his men convey to Antony that Caesar was murdered for the good of Rome. They also assure Antony his due share in power. But Antony insists on mourning for Caesar’s death. He gets permission for taking the body of Caesar so that he can organize a public mourning. It is also agreed that Cassius would speak to the public to convey the message of protection of Rome’s liberty as a reason for the assassination of Caesar. After that Antony could take his time to speak whatever he wishes to speak about Caesar.Act 2: Scene 2Antony gives a speech to highlight that Caesar was kind to the public and was not ambitious as was claimed by Cassius. By giving many examples; Antony is able to motivate the gathered mass of people. He also reads the will of Caesar which announces many freebies for the people. People then cremate the body of Caesar and begin the revolt against Cassius and Brutus.
1849.

write the character sketch of Patol Babu.\xa0

Answer» Patol Babu was a meticulous man with a lot of perseverance. He was a very talented man who was gifted with the art of acting. He never lost faith in reality and overtook all challenges in life and faced all difficulties. He was offered a part in a movie in this story and he took it up. He was meticulous because he calculated the number of steps he needed to take before crashing into Chanchal Kumar. Similarly, he practised the variation in the dialogues with different tones. He was also a self concerned man because he ordered for a ginger tea with his wife the day before the movie was to be shot so that his voice will be loud and clear on the day of the movie. At last, he was a very grateful man and never gave up the responsibilities that were given to him even though he was a very mixed up man and a confused personality.
1850.

What are term 2 ASL board topics from MCB class 10

Answer» Environment, people, tourism,sports and games, health,etc