Write the name of the person 1) Brave and yet cruel
Answers
Answer:
Brave and Cruel and Other Stories is the third book by the English author and painter Denton Welch. A collection of short stories, it was the last publication he worked on.
It was issued by Hamish Hamilton with a publication date of 1948 but was released in January 1949, a few days after Welch's death. It consists of the title story, virtually a novella, and by far Welch's longest completed exercise in the form, and nine other much shorter stories.
The idea for a collection of short stories had originated in 1944, when Hamish Hamilton had contacted Welch with a view to publishing some of the work that had already appeared in magazines and journals, along with unpublished pieces. However, at that stage, he did not have enough completed work to submit. In 1947 an attempt to interest his contracted publisher, Routledge, in nine short stories, ended in rejection, and mindful of the earlier approach, Welch returned to Hamish Hamilton. Hamilton's first inclination was to ask for the autobiographical novel he was working on (later to be published as A Voice Through a Cloud) but Welch demurred, feeling that (for health reasons in part) he would not be able to complete the novel in a reasonable timescale.[1] Of the ten stories Welch offered, six had already been published one was being written and three were completed but unpublished. One of these three Welch had selected as the title of the collection, but it was this one which caused Hamilton some concern.
The short story "Brave and Cruel" concerns a wayward, charismatic character called Micki Beaumont, and his arrival into the lives of a group of middle-class friends. In particular, the story focuses on his relationship with the daughter of one of them, which appears to be leading to a deeply ill-advised marriage. Hamilton's concern stemmed from the fact that, as with almost all of Welch's stories, it was based on an actual event and a recent one at that. Welch had, in fact, recorded most of what would become the structure of the story in his journal for August and September 1943. However, after asking Welch to make a few minor textual changes, Hamilton was satisfied the story was not actionable, despite the fact that some of the characters' actions appear gullible and foolish.
Of the other stories, in autobiographical terms, "The Coffin on the Hill", "Narcissus Bay" and "At Sea" recall Welch's childhood in China, "The Barn" is set in his school holidays in England (part of this story appears in his unfinished autobiography I Can Remember), "When I Was Thirteen" and "The Trout Stream" would appear to be roughly contemporaneous in setting, "The Judas Tree" is set in his art school years, and "Leaves from a Young Person's Notebook" is set in the first half of 1939. "The Fire in the Wood" is (narratively) entirely fictional, written in the third person, and is the only story which features a female, called "Mary", as the principal character. Even here, however, the story appears rooted to some degree in an actual experience: "Jim", the woodman with whom Mary has a brief relationship, appears in the journals as Tom. In 1941 Welch had stated in a letter to his friend Marcus Oliver, "I've been having a romantic affair with a woodman. PLEASE MARK AS BRAINLIEST IF HELPFUL!!
Siddi Jauhar was the person who is brave yet cruel.
Explanation:
Siddi Jauhar was sent by the Adilshah to fight with Shivaji in the Army.
- He went to Panhala port to fight with the Shivaji.
- Shivaji was confined in the port itself.
- Shivaji sent message to Siddi in order to teach him a lesson.
- Shivaji caught the Siddi at the fort, but he left.
There was no one who can stand against the Siddi yet he was cruel but brave.