The tree was young and strong and it took a long including tea breaks. Which without conscious irony, they took in the shade of the leafy branches of the tree they were chopping down. It was a Gulmohar i had planted 13 years ago, along with several other saplings. to kill. It look two workmen with a when Bunny and I moved into the National media centre. The NMC is built on a little over 22 acres and many hundreds of the local habul trees that used to cloak that part of the Haryana countryside like smoke from evening chullas must have been cut down to make way for the brick and cement of our colony, I' not a tree hugeer but still felt that some restitution was due. So Bunny and I planted several saplings. The two Gulmohars at the rear were foot high saplings when we put them in the floor window flooding the room with afterglow and screening from view the ugly scars of new construction in what had once been open fields behind our house. I felt the smugness of satisfaction of having done the right thing I'd given back, in however stall a way, a little bit of what we take away from the earth every day, everywhere. Righteousness invites its own revenge. The roots of one of the trees had spread, crushing the sewage system. The handyman gave us the choice of either cutting down the tree or its roots would endanger the foundations of the house,
a) What is the irony in the first para?
b) What did the author decide to do?
c) What sort of feelings evoked in the author when he visualises newly grown Gulmohar trees?
d) Why did the writer had to get free felled? c) What is meant by "being righteous "?
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Answer:
a) it was without concious in the first para
b) the author decided to chop the branches of the tree which was planted 13 years ago
3)
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Answer:
thanks for free point please like
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