English, asked by muwelpradeep, 9 months ago

How can the “tireless striving” achieve perfection?

Answers

Answered by Sahil3459
0

Answer:

The poet uses the word "tireless strive" to exhort his countrymen to abandon laziness and inaction.

Explanation:

What is meant by tireless striving?

It signifies that the poet wants everyone to put in a lot of effort to achieve their goals and, in the end, to become perfect. They shouldn't be worn out from working, in his opinion. People shouldn't be idle and neglect their duties. The poet exhorts his compatriots to work relentlessly toward perfection in all that they undertake. The poet understood that if people wasted their time and were slothful, they would never succeed in life. Even though they achieved political independence, they were unable to completely enjoy it. The characteristics the poet wishes to see in his fellow citizens are self-respect, knowledge, honesty, diligence, reason, and a broad outlook.

Thus, the poem mentions two mental qualities: fearlessness and breadth.

Answered by mindfulmaisel
0
  • Some people strive for perfection that isn’t perfect.
  • However, the state of perfection is never actually attained.
  • Perfection is a hard thing to achieve, but, if reached, it can produce the greatest of good results as would be expected of a deity.
  • Perfection is a moving target.
  • It is not like achieving something close to it where you can point to the slight deviations from perfection, and say, “I succeeded,” because it is truly perfect even if you miss it entirely.
  • It is not like climbing Everest, where you can say you have summited and be able to look back and say, “I made it.”
  • It is, rather, not finishing that summit until you can point to the volcanic cone you have just made and say, “I have conquered that!”
  • The search for perfection, the demand for perfectionism on the part of society, and the temperament of perfectionism itself are culturally bound patterns.
  • Rather, perfection is an abstraction.
  • Perfection is not an absolute state but an idealized one.

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