English, asked by mdakhtaransari712, 8 months ago

'No vice like avarice'. Justify this statement in the light of the story. "The
Kingdom of Foods."

Answers

Answered by SparshaM
2

In the Kingdom of Fools

  • 'In the Kingdom of Fools' is a folktale about fools and their activities. And it was written by A.K Ramanujan. In this story he explains, "No vice like avarice". The title of the tale expresses that how dangerous it is to live among fools because for being fools they will obviously do mistakes. The moral of the story is that both the king and his ministers were died for their foolishness. Such like mistake was done by the disciple but luckily he was rescued by his honourable guru.
  • When the guru first enters the fools land he realizes the fact and says to his disciple that "they are all fools. This won’t last very long, and you can’t tell what they’ll do to you next". Everything is cheap here so the disciple doesn't want to leave this land and refuses the guru's wisdom. And finally the guru leaves the place and his follower stays on. Somehow he finally falls into problem. It is the royal decree that the servants should find a man fat enough to fit the stake. So they brings him to execution place. Next he is rescued by the guru's intellectual words to the foolish king and his minister. The disciple understands that there is no vice like avarice. Finally they becomes the next king and minister of the kingdom of fools.
Answered by wajahatkincsem
0

Answer:

"No vice like avarice" is a famous quote that means " Greed is bad for everyone."

Explanation:

  • The Kingdom of fools is a story about a king, his ministers, and the public who were all foolish.
  • The land of the Kingdom produced so much food but the people of the land were foolish.
  • They were greedy and didn't believe in hard work.
  • They used to sleep during the day and wake up at night.  

Similar questions