II. Mahesh wrote only a few lines and couldn’t complete the story he wanted to write. Taking help from the given input, and basing it on the beginning Mahesh made, write a complete story.
A woodcutter was chopping down trees on the bank of a river. His hands were so much wet with his sweat that he lost his grip………..
Outline: Axe fell down into river…….. couldn’t swim….. unhappy at his misfortune and wept…… God of Forests appeared……….. promised to get back his axe……. dived……… came out with an axe of gold… “not mine”……… dived again……… came out with silver axe …….. “not mine” said woodcutter…… dived again……… came out with woodcutter’s axe…….. “this is my axe”……. truly honest…….. rewarded all three axes to the woodcutter.
Answers & Comments
Explanation:
Up we staggered, quite shakily, From the shock, I suppose, a. Who is 'we' in the above line b. Why were they staggering? C. What shock did they receive d. How did the shock affect ea
Verified answer
Answer:
please mark my answer as brainliest if you like it
Explanation:
A woodcutter was chopping down trees on the bank of the river his hands much wet with sweat that he lost his grip of the axe It slipped from his grasp and fell into the river. He couldn't even swim, poor man. He thought he'd lost his axe forever. He was devastated by his misfortune and began sobbing and crying. A flash of light appeared out of nowhere. He was confronted by the God of the Forests. The woodcutter described what had occurred. He comforted him. "Don't be concerned. "I'll get your axe back for you," said the God of Forests. He jumped into the river after saying these words. After a few moments, he reappeared, with an axe. It was crafted from gold. "Is this yours?" he inquired. The only thing the woodcutter said was "No!" Then, he dived back again. He emerged from the river with another axe a few seconds later. It was crafted from silver. "No, no, sir, this is not mine," the woodcutter replied. He dived one more time and emerged with the third axe. Looking at the axe, the woodcutter exclaimed loudly, "Yes, yes, it's mine—the woodcutter's axe with a tin blade." The woodcutter's honesty impressed the God of Forests. "Keep all three axes as you're honest," he said. So, at last, he got the three axes.
Moral: We should always be honest.
hope it helps