English, asked by komu9, 9 months ago

what did aram think about Murad action of riding A stolen horse how did he justify Murad action​

Answers

Answered by gratefuljarette
14

ANSWER:

Stealing was never their cup of tea. When Murad got the horse in the middle of the night, Aram was forced to justify how the animal came in their possession. Aram thought to say that his cousin was not in an intention to steal it, just to ride.

EXPLANATION:

“The Summer of the Beautiful Horse” is a short story by William Saroyan. Aram and Murad are cousins who come from a poor family background but a proud, honest, self-contented people.

They never wanted to sell it, if at all they wanted to sell it, it would cross the line of possessing a stolen animal.

Answered by Anonymous
16

At first, Aram is convinced that his cousin could not possibly have stolen the horse at all, because their family was renowned for their honesty and trustworthiness and would never do such a thing as steal. However, he is also aware that his cousin Mourad is poor and could not have bought the horse, which leads him back to the idea that it is stolen.

Aram justifies the act of stealing the horse to himself by deciding that taking a horse in order to go for a ride on it is not at all the same as stealing other, tangible things, "such as money." Having identified this as a mental justification, Aram goes further, questioning whether stealing a horse is really stealing at all if, like his cousin Mourad and himself, one was "crazy about" horses. He also determines that unless they decided to sell the horse for money—and thereby profit from the act of stealing—it was perfectly justifiable and not a criminal act, because the cousins would not be trading in stolen goods, but simply enjoying a horse for pleasure.

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