English, asked by Zziyad706, 6 months ago

the boy was really thrilled to watch the fight between the mangoos and the cobra he watched every movement of the skillful mangoos and the venomous cobra very carefully. latter he narrated the fight to his grand father in detail. write the likely narrative of the boy. in his own words ​

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Answered by 1716aryansingh
10

Answer:

Grand Father , Oh can you imagine the seen I watched ? Yo it wasa breathtaking fight, The fight between the venomous cobra and your dearest mongoose. As you know Grandfather the warm breezes of approaching  summer had sent everyone, including  the gardener, into the house.I was  feeling drowsy myself, wondering if I  should go to the pond and have a swim  with Ramu and the buffaloes, when I  saw a huge black cobra gliding out of a  clump of cactus. At the same time a

mongoose emerged from the bushes and  went straight for the cobra.

In a clearing beneath the banyan  tree, in bright sunshine, they came  face to face. The cobra knew only too  well that the grey mongoose, three  feet long, was a superb fighter, clever  and aggressive. But the cobra, too,  was a skilful and experienced fighter.  He could move swiftly and strike with  the speed of light; and the sacs  behind his long sharp fangs were full  of deadly poison. It was to be a battle  of champions.

Hissing defiance, his forked tongue  darting in and out, the cobra raised  three of his six feet off the ground, and  spread his broad, spectacled hood. The  mongoose bushed his tail. The long hair  on his spine stood up.

Though the combatants were  unaware of my presence in the tree, they  were soon made aware of the arrival of  two other spectators. One was a myna,  the other a jungle crow. They had seen  these preparations for battle, and had  settled on the cactus to watch the  outcome. Had they been content only  to watch, all would have been well with  both of them.

The cobra stood on the defensive,  swaying slowly from side to side, trying  to mesmerise the mongoose into making  a false move. But the mongoose knew  the power of his opponent’s glassy,  unwinking eyes, and refused to meet  them. Instead he fixed his gaze at a point  just below the cobra’s hood, and opened  the attack.

Moving forward quickly until he was  just within the cobra’s reach, the  mongoose made a pretended move to  one side. Immediately the cobra struck.  His great hood came down so swiftly  that I thought nothing could save the  mongoose. But the little fellow jumped  neatly to one side, and darted in as  swiftly as the cobra, biting the snake  on the back and darting away again  out of reach.

At the same moment that the cobra  struck, the crow and the myna hurled  themselves at him, only to collide heavily  in mid-air. Shrieking insults at each  other they returned to the cactus plant.  A few drops of blood glistened on the  cobra’s back.

The cobra struck and missed. Again  the mongoose sprang aside, jumped in  and bit. Again the birds dived at the  snake, bumped into each other instead,  and returned shrieking to the safety of  the cactus.

The third round followed the same  course as the first but with one dramatic  difference. The crow and the myna, still  determined to take part in the  proceedings, dived at the cobra; but this  time they missed each other as well as  their mark. The myna flew on and  reached its perch, but the crow tried to  pull up in mid-air and turn back. In the  second that it took the bird to do this  the cobra whipped his head back and  struck with great force, his snout  thudding against the crow’s body.

I saw the bird flung nearly twenty feet  across the garden. It fluttered about for  a while, then lay still. The myna  remained on the cactus plant, and when the snake and the mongoose returned  to the fight, very wisely decided not to  inter fere again! The cobra was  weakening, and the mongoose, walking  fearlessly up to it, raised himself on his  short legs and with a lightning snap had  the big snake by the snout. The cobra  writhed and lashed about in a  frightening manner, and even coiled  itself about the mongoose, but to no  avail. The little fellow hung grimly on,  until the snake had ceased to struggle.  He then smelt along its quivering length,  gripped it round the hood, and dragged  it into the bushes.

The myna dropped cautiously to  the ground, hopped about, peered  into the bushes from a safe distance,  and then, with a shrill cry of  congratulation, flew away.

It was just thirilling grandpa. Now you can imagine how fascinating was it in watching.

Answered by jatinJG
3

This is my Answer to your questions

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