TikaTi
@kwentika active 8 years, 5 months ago-
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@suny So far nothing of the sort has happened in our garden which has several fruit trees. I do have two or three though look healthy have not yielded so far.
Your comparison to this situation to our politicians is apt.
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I never liked snakes when they see one immediately lose my temper, my fear is hard, I think are the most dangerous, especially when you cannot see them and attacking.
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The symbols that you are using in this parable or analogy like the snakes, the tree, and the roots may be interpreted in various ways not only in the political point of view, but also to any situation like the business, the organization, the education, and anything which involves interaction.
In the business for example, it (tree) has been put up for the purpose of making profits through the proper use of financing or credits (roots), but the management (the snakes) has abused their authorities which yield to the natural death of the business. The business doesn’t grow. It doesn’t progress so to speak.
Another example is the education, the pupils/students (tree) are too ambitious to finish their education based on their desire to be a professional and to have a legitimate job someday. The system of education (the roots) has provided all the needs of the students from instructional materials, books, and the laboratory equipment. But their parents (the snakes) have their children stop schooling to help them to work for a living and it is also aggravated by the incompetent teachers (another snake) who are unproductive and haven’t contributed anything worthwhile to the students. So everything goes to waste. No success has attained by the student in so doing.
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Wonderful analysis of the post in each of your own ways. Great reading you all guys. Thank you so much.
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Great information about this topic.
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I’m going to be a party pooper and say that I don’t really care, one way or the other. The Olympics have long since ceased to hold any spark of their original meaning. There are now too many professionals competing, too many corporate sponsors, the event has become too much about money and winning at all costs…
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Great information on this topic, I hope it still continues it is always exciting to watch.
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Roman art and architecture both are famous all over the world because they mater of making statues of stone and lime looks like real but no soul otherwise real human being. Keats the English poet has also written an Ode to Grecian Urn. The mater piece poem of Keats on Roman art in the history of English Literature.
actually, Roman art refers to the visual arts made in Ancient Rome and in the territories of the Roman Empire. Roman art includes architecture, painting, sculpture and mosaic work.
Augustus and the Julio-Claudian dynasty were particularly fond of adapting Classical elements into their art. The Augustus of Primaporta was made at the end of Augustus’s life, yet he is represented as youthful, idealized and strikingly handsome like a young athlete; all hallmarks of Classical art. The emperor Hadrian was known as a philhellene, or lover of all things Greek.
The emperor himself began sporting a Greek “philosopher’s beard” in his official portraiture, unheard of before this time. Décor at his rambling Villa at Tivoli included mosaic copies of famous Greek paintings, such as Battle of the Centaurs and Wild Beasts by the legendary ancient Greek painter Zeuxis.
No body knows who invented the Roman Art but We don’t know much about who made Roman art. Artists certainly existed in antiquity but we know very little about them, especially during the Roman period, because of a lack of documentary evidence such as contracts or letters. What evidence we do have, such as Pliny the Elder’s Natural History, pays little attention to contemporary artists and often focuses more on the Greek artists of the past. As a result, scholars do not refer to specific artists but consider them generally, as a largely anonymous group.
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Hope they will get approval soon. Best of luck.