Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember they have eyes like ours that wake
Or sleep, and strength that can be won
By love. In every land is common life
That all can recognise and understand.
Q. How can we understand common life on every land?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember they have eyes like ours that wake
Or sleep, and strength that can be won
By love. In every land is common life
That all can recognise and understand.
Q. What things are common in all the people?
1 Crore+ students have signed up on EduRev. Have you? Download the App |
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember they have eyes like ours that wake
Or sleep, and strength that can be won
By love. In every land is common life
That all can recognise and understand.
Q. What does ‘common’ mean?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember they have eyes like ours that wake
Or sleep, and strength that can be won
By love. In every land is common life
That all can recognise and understand.
Q. How can strength be won?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember they have eyes like ours that wake
Or sleep, and strength that can be won
By love. In every land is common life
That all can recognise and understand.
Q. Who is the poet of this poem?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember, no men are strange, no countries foreign
Beneath all uniforms, a single body breathes
Like ours: the land our brothers walk upon
Is earth like this, in which we all shall lie.
Q. In the end, we all shall lie in
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember, no men are strange, no countries foreign
Beneath all uniforms, a single body breathes
Like ours: the land our brothers walk upon
Is earth like this, in which we all shall lie.
Q. What are the above lines emphasizing?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember, no men are strange, no countries foreign
Beneath all uniforms, a single body breathes
Like ours: the land our brothers walk upon
Is earth like this, in which we all shall lie
Q. What should we remember?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember, no men are strange, no countries foreign
Beneath all uniforms, a single body breathes
Like ours: the land our brothers walk upon
Is earth like this, in which we all shall lie
Q. A single body breathes beneath all __________.
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
Remember, no men are strange, no countries foreign
Beneath all uniforms, a single body breathes
Like ours: the land our brothers walk upon
Is earth like this, in which we all shall lie
Q. What massage does the poet want to convey in the above lines?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
It is the human earth that we defile.
Our hells of fire and dust outrage the innocence
Of air that is everywhere our own,
Remember, no men are foreign, and no countries strange.
Q. What does the phrase ‘hells of fire’ stand for?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
It is the human earth that we defile.
Our hells of fire and dust outrage the innocence
Of air that is everywhere our own,
Remember, no men are foreign, and no countries strange.
Q. What are we doing to the human earth?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
It is the human earth that we defile.
Our hells of fire and dust outrage the innocence
Of air that is everywhere our own,
Remember, no men are foreign, and no countries strange.
Q. When is the earth defiled?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
It is the human earth that we defile.
Our hells of fire and dust outrage the innocence
Of air that is everywhere our own,
Remember, no men are foreign, and no countries strange.
Q. How do we pollute the earth according to the poet?
Read the extract given below and answer the question that follow:
It is the human earth that we defile.
Our hells of fire and dust outrage the innocence
Of air that is everywhere our own,
Remember, no men are foreign, and no countries strange.
Q. How do we humiliate the Mother Earth?