And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core;
To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel shells.
Explanation: These lines have been taken from the poem, 'Ode to Autumn';
Composed by John Keats, in the given lines, the speaker says that in the month of
autumn, all the fruits get ripen to the core, then the gourd becomes fleshy and
tasty by providing energy to them through sun-rays.
next questions
EDUCATION
Precis : Education is a means and its object is to prepare the students for
living the life. It is wrong to think that free education can solve all the chronic
problems of our society. It has rather created more unemployment as the students
getting this education dislike manual work which they take for a low work.
This is a very wrong attitude. We should rather be ready to do any work suited
to our brain and ability.
Example - 6
What is really needed in the world, perhaps more than ever before, is not
some new world shattering discovery in nuclear physics, or some breath-taking
discovery in chemistry or medicine. The advance for which the world is waiting
beyond any doubt, is a small advance-a slight advance in charity, in
understanding forbearance, tolerance, justice and mercy. That is what the world
is waiting for and waiting rather anxiously.
But charity and tolerance and forbearance and understanding of one another
are non-meterial matters. And in non-material things-in the simplest social
things-science has been helpless. It cannot help us to distinguish good from
evil.
May be, this will not always be so. Who knows? It is quite possible that
some day science will effect an improvement in human brain itself. Not a
structural improvement, for in structure the human brain is the greatest miracle
of all. Its understanding will come last. But there might well be a functional
improvement. This is far from fantastic. Already instances are known, like
amphcetamaine, which appear temporarily to increase the power of reasoning,
other chemicals are known which give intellectual stimulation. I should say
there is hope that man will one day improve on natural man, raise his intellectual
status and give him greater power of reasoning and understanding to abolish
war. Whether that will be so, whether he will have a better understanding of his
fellowmen remains to be seen.
There are troubulous times ahead. But those who fear the future are the
craven in spirit; for life is becoming more interesting and exciting.
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