One Crowded Hour of Life is Worth an Age Without Name
One Crowded Hour of Life is Worth an Age Without Name
One Crowded Hour of Life is Worth an Age Without Name
The worth of a man’s life is measured not in terms of the years he lives, but by the deeds and works he performs. A man may live for a hundred years or so, but if he does nothing valuable for society then none remembers him. Instead, if a man lives for thirty years or so and does valuable work for the development or welfare of society, then his life is worth praising. We know that John Keats (an English Romantic Poet) and Ramanujan (an Indian mathematician) died before they were thirty but within this short span of life, they rendered valuable and praiseworthy services to their respective fields. There are ample examples of such men who died young but contributed much to the welfare of human society. Such men are remembered by all even long after their death and the rest who live a long span of age without good deeds are soon forgotten. After all, a life full of meaningful work is worth an age without work. 0 0 0
Read More: Tips for Writing Paragraphs
N. B. The article ‘One Crowded Hour of Life is Worth an Age Without Name’ originally belongs to the book ‘Paragraph Writing‘ by Menonim Menonimus.
.
Books of Composition by M. Menonimus:
- Advertisement Writing
- Amplification Writing
- Note Making
- Paragraph Writing
- Notice Writing
- Passage Comprehension
- The Art of Poster Writing
- The Art of Letter Writing
- Report Writing
- Story Writing
- Substance Writing
- School Essays Part-I
- School Essays Part-II
- School English Grammar Part-I
- School English Grammar Part-II..
Related Search:
- One Crowded Hour of Glorious Life