STORY-WRITING
1.
do that the
Use the following outlines to write complete stories.
Cold winter day - Akbar and Birbal take a walk along the lake - Birbal remarks a man
would do anything for money - Akbar disagrees - says no one would spend a whole
night in cold water for money - Birbal accepts challenge - finds a poor man who will
attention fixed on a street lamp - Akbar refuses reward to the poor man because he
poor man spends the night in water - Akbar asks how - he had kept his
managed to stay in water by the warmth of the street lamp - poor man asks Birbal
to help him - next day, Birbal not present in the court - Akbar sends a messenger
messenger informs that Birbal is cooking khichri - Akbar waits for several hours - no
sign of Birbal – Akbar goes to Birbal's house - khichri bowl hanging five feet above
fire - Birbal says his khichri will cook the same way the poor man received heat from
the street lamp
Answers
good boy nice ggggggggggggggg
Answer:
Birbal (IPA: [biːrbəl]; born Mahesh Das; 1528 – 16 February 1586[1]), or Raja Birbal, was a Hindu advisor and main commander (Mukhya Senapati) of army in the court of the Mughal emperor, Akbar. He is mostly known in the Indian subcontinent for the folk tales which focus on his wit. Birbal was appointed by Akbar as a Minister (Mantri) and used to be a Poet and Singer in around 1556–1562. He had a close association with Emperor Akbar and was one of his most important courtiers, part of a group called the navaratnas (nine jewels). In February 1586, Birbal led an army to crush an unrest in the north-west Indian subcontinent where he was killed along with many troops in an ambush by the rebel tribe. He was the only Hindu to adopt Din-i Ilahi, the religion founded by Akbar. Birbal was one of the first officers to join Akbar's court, possibly as early as 1556, when he was twenty-eight years old. He also had a naturally generous nature and all these traits combined—elegant repartee, largesse, and poetical talent—made Birbal the ideal Mughal courtier.