A Little Cloud

He wrote the story A Little Cloud the story was print in 1905. A Little Cloud takes position in Dublin. This is recognized to be a dirty town. Little Chandler is a thirty-two year old marital man with one son who is not fairly one year old in the story. He is called little Chandler because of his look. He is somewhat under height, which is he, under one hundred and eighty-five centimeters. He has little white hands, babyish teeth and excellent nail care. Little Chandler has a delicate frame, silken hair and body hair; he has a quiet voice and superior manners.
Little Chandler is a sober man, meaning he is sparing in consumption and drinking. Little Chandler blushes very simply at more or less anything. He appears to have a good-looking life; he moving parts at the Kings Inn at a desk. He likes to read poetry and sometime would like to write it. Little Chandler has never been in a great deal of problem before in his life. He frequently thinks about his friend Ignatius Gallagher while at job, and how he has become a shining man in the Press. Little Chandler regularly thinks of his life, which makes him sad.

Color

It is the visual perceptual property corresponding in humans to the categories called red, yellow, white, etc. Color derives from the spectrum of light distribution of light energy versus wavelength interacting in the eye with the spectral sensitivities of the light receptors. Color categories and physical specifications of color are also associated with objects, materials, light sources, etc., based on their physical properties such as light absorption, reflection, or emission spectra.

Typically, only features of the composition of light that are detectable by humans wavelength spectrum from 400 nm to 700 nm, roughly are included, thereby objectively relating the psychological phenomenon of color to its physical specification. Since perception of color stems from the varying sensitivity of different types of cone cells in the retina to different parts of the spectrum, colors may be defined and quantified by the degree to which they stimulate these cells. These physical or physiological quantifications of color, however, do not fully explain the psychophysical perception of color appearance.

The science of color is sometimes called chromatics. It includes the perception of color by the human eye and brain, the origin of color in materials, color theory in art, and the physics of electromagnetic radiation in the visible range that is, what we commonly refer to simply as light.

Orgin of Dance

Unlike some early human activities such as the production of stone tools, hunting, cave painting, etc., dance does not leave behind physical artifacts. Thus, it is impossible to say with any certainty when dance became part of human culture. However, dance has certainly been an important part of ceremony, rituals, celebrations and entertainment since the birth of the earliest human civilizations. Archaeology delivers traces of dance from prehistoric times such as Egyptian tomb paintings depicting dancing figures from circa 3300 BC and the Bhimbetka rock-shelter paintings in India.
One of the earliest structured uses of dance may have been in the performative retelling of mythological stories. Indeed, before the introduction of written languages, dance was one of the primary methods of passing these stories down from generation to generation.