English, asked by aalianasir8088, 7 months ago

Two kinds of conflicts are shown in the story between humans and nature, and between humans themselves. explain how these conflicts are illustrated?

Answers

Answered by Tanaysinha10
4

Explanation:

Between human and nature it is shown how nature may cause damage to human activities in the chapter letter to God we saw how the hailstorm had destroyed the lencho's cornfield. Between humans the conflicts are caused due to distrust we saw when lencho received 70 pesos he thought the post office employees had taken 30 pesos out of 100 pesos.Unknown of the reality that the same post office employees had helped him and called them bunch of crooks. It is extremely ironical and tragic that good intentions of the post office employees came to nothing. Hope it helps.

Answered by georgehannahmar
2

Answer:

The story referred to here is 'The Letter to God' written by G. L. Fuentes which talks about a poor farmer named Lencho who with his unwavering faith addressed a letter to God himself during his hardships.

The story portrays two different kind of conflicts. The first is of course the hailstorm which destroyed Lencho's crop and left him nothing. The farmer was heartbroken as his family would have to go hungry that year without another source of income.

This situation prompted Lencho to address a letter to God asking for a hundred pesos which brings us to the second conflict between humans themselves. The postmaster who finds the letter does not want to shake the man's faith and decides to reply to the letter. He collects money from many of his colleagues and gives away a part of his salary too. However, even then he wasn't able to collect the whole amount. Lencho upon finding this letter, instead of becoming happy which was the desired result becomes furious. He replies to 'God' complaining about how he only received sixty pesos and even calls the post office employees, who ironically sent him the money, a bunch of crooks. This clearly portrays Lencho's lack of faith in humanity. He was so firm in his faith that he did not even think of the possibility of humans having helped him.

HOPE IT HELPS! PLEASE MARK AS BRAINLIEST!! I TOOK A LOT OF EFFORT FOR THIS!!

Similar questions