Some of Aesop's fables were about snakes. One of them is as follows : -A farmer walked through his field one cold winter morning. On the ground lay a snake, stiff and frozen with the cold. The farmer knew how deadly the snake could be, and yet he picked it up and put it in his bosom to warm it back to life. The snake soon revived, and when it had enough strength, bit the man who had been so kind to it. The bite was fatal and the farmer felt he must be dying. As he drew his last breath, he said to those standing around him, “Learn from my fate not to take pity on a scoundrel." 3. What does the farmer in this fable mean to say? Do you agree with the farmer's opinion? Why or why not? Give reasons to support your answer.
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Yeach
Explanation:
The Calcutta Chromosome is a 1995 English-language novel by Indian author Amitav Ghosh. The book, set in Calcutta and New York City at some unspecified time in the future, is a medical thriller that dramatizes the adventures of people who are brought together by a mysterious turn of events.
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Markhor, Pakistan's national animal, is a distinctive species of wild goat identified by its long hair and spiralled horns. It is a protected species in Pakistan unless permitted by the government to kill it under trophy hunting programmes
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