answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Nehru felt that he was not alone in the prison, other creatures were present in the small gaol with him. wasp hornets and lizard frequently moved in the prison. sometimes he had to face the anger of some of them but he never shows his agitation against any of them. Little young squirrel fallen from the tree were kept by his prison-mate with proper care. He always flavoured the proximity of the worthily sight of the Nazareth scene outside allured him much. Parrot in Nainee jail entertained him and he enjoyed the good humour of life even being in the prison.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How does Nehru in his essay Animals in Prison describe the monsoon seasons?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Is there a Fifth Season of Prison Break?

No. Cancelled after 4 seasons.


Is there a season 5 of prison break?

Sadly, no. There are only four seasons.


How many prison break episodes are there?

81 in 4 seasons. (wikipedia)


How many season did prison break have?

Prison Break ran for four seasons and had seventy five episodes.acuttualy it is 81 episodes


How does Nehru describe the life in prison?

Nehru felt that he was not alone in the prison, other creatures were present in the small gaol.


How does hamlet describe denmark to rosencrantz and guildenstern?

He says it is a prison.


When will prison break season 5 come on tv?

Never. They only made 4 seasons.


Why are new arrivals in prison called fish?

It comes from the term "Fish out of water". It is used to describe new inmates to a prison.


How long would you go to prison for being cruel to animals?

Up to 1 to 5 years in prison.


Is Micheal scofield or his brother Lincoln in the prison break seasons dead?

Michael died in the last episode...


When is prison break season 5 coming?

It's not. The show ended on May 15, 2009 with four seasons.


Is the drug used to kill prison's the same used on animals to sleep?

NO ...