Which of the following cannot be said about the priest?
(A) He was insensitive.
(B) He put his thoughts into action.
(C) He was compassionate.
Only (B)
Only (C)
Only (A)
Only (B) and (C)
Only (A) and (C)
Which of the following can definitely be said about the elephant-keeper?
(A) He was greedy.
(B) He was insensitive.
(C) He was brave.
Which of the following can definitely be said about the king?
(A) He was compassionate.
(B) He was deceitful.
(C) He loved animals.
Write ‘Ernest’ or ‘Poet’, against each statement below.
(i) There was a gap between his life and his words.
(ii) His words had the power of truth as they agreed with his thoughts.
(iii) His words were as soothing as a heavenly song but only as useful as a vague dream.
(iv) His thoughts were worthy.
(v) Whatever he said was truth itself.
(vi) His poems were noble.
(vii) His life was nobler than all the poems.
(viii) He lacked faith in his own thoughts.
(ix) His thoughts had power as they agreed with the life he lived.
(x) Greatness lies in truth. Truth is best expressed in one’s actions. He was truthful, therefore he was great.
Write ‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of following statements.
(i) Mr Purcell sold birds, cats, dogs and monkeys. ________
(ii) He was very concerned about the well-being of the birds and animals in his shop. _________
(iii) He was impressed by the customer who bought the two doves. __________
(iv) He was a successful shop owner, though insensitive and cold as a person. _________