Kings, Fools and Scoundrels!(Post No. 2574)

Scan_India120

Compiled  by London swaminathan

 

Date: 25 February 2016

 

Post No. 2574

 

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victoria

Hello! you old fool!

 

Late King George the Fifth and the Princess Victoria, his sister, were accustomed to have a brief chat on the telephone at the same hour every morning. Their conversations were of a personal, highly informal, and often joking sort. One morning when her phone rang at the accustomed time, the Princess picked up the instrument and said, Hello, you old fool.

 

The voice of the operator broke in saying,

I beg your pardon, Your Royal Highness, His Majesty is not yet on the line.

 

Xxxx

peter

 Peter the Great 

 

Peter the Great was so much affected by the death of Peter, his son by Catherine I, that he shut himself at Peterhof, intending to starve himself to death, and forbade every person, of whatever description under pain of death, to disturb his retirement.

 

The senate assembled on this desperate resolution of the prince, and Dolgorouki undertook to drive him from it.  He went and knocked at the door of the room where Peter was shut up.

Whoever you be, cried the Czar with a terrible voice,

Fly off, I will open the door and knock out your brains

 

Open, I say, replied, Dolgorouki in a firm tone, it is a deputy from the senate come to ask you whom you wish to have named as emperor in your room , since you have resigned.

 

Peter, struck with the courageous zeal of Dolgorouki, opened, embraced his faithful courtier, yielded to his councils, and resumed the reins of government.

 

Xxx

 

 Infernal Scoundrel 

 

At a dinner during the First Word War the German Kaiser was being discussed. Opinions differed about him. Some of the diners attacked him savagely. Others insisted he was a fine man despite his shortcomings. J M Barrie, the playwright, listened in silence, then without looking up from his plate, remarked dryly,

He is an infernal scoundrel but that is his only fault.

 

Xxx

tennis

War and Tennis

 

Nicholas II at the moment was playing tennis at Peterhof. When the Emperor was handed a telegram he had two tennis balls in his left hand, the racket raised , ready to  serve, in his right. He took the telegram with the right hand raising racket and telegram to his eyes, reading

Russian fleet annihilated at Shushima. Nearly all our ships sunk.

 

The Czar shoved the telegram into his trouser pocket.

Thirty-fifteen, he said and served.

 

–Subham–

Judge’s Sweet Revenge on a Teacher! (Post No 2571)

[1]judge

Compiled  by London swaminathan

 

Date: 24 February 2016

 

Post No. 2571

 

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Judges

 

The late Max Steuer, the prominent lawyer, was compelled to apologise to the court one day.  With stately dignity he rose in his place and, bowling to the judge, said

 

Your Honour is right and I am wrong, as your Honour generally is.

 

There was a dazed look in the judge’s eyes. He hardly knew whether to feel pleased or fine the lawyer for content of court.

 

Xxx

 

Judge’s daughter in the court!

 

This hurts me more than it does you, remarked the Magistrate, as he fined his daughter ten dollars for speeding and three dollars for running past a red light, and the dug into his pocket for the fines.

 

Xxx

judges with hammer coloring sheet

Judge  Jeffries of notorious memory, pointing with his cane to a man who was about to  be tried, said,

“There is a rogue at the end of my cane”

 

The man to whom he pointed, looking at him said

“At which end, my lord?”

 

Xxx

 

Soundrel

 

Judge Jeffries, reprimanding a criminal, called him a scoundrel. The prisoner hotly retorted,

“Sir I am not as big a scoundrel as your honour……………..

 

Here the culprit stopped to look at the apoplectic judge, but hurriedly added,

“takes me to be.”

 

“Put your words close together”, muttered the judge.

 

 

Xxx

lawyer

Witch Woman

 

Lord Mansfield chanced to be in one of the countries on the circuit when one poor woman was indicted for witchcraft. The inhabitants of the place was exasperated against her. Some witness deposed that they had seen her walk in the air and her feet upward and her head downward.

 

Lord Mansfield heard the evidence with great tranquillity, and perceiving the temper of the people, whom it would not have been prudent to irritate, he thus addressed them

 

I do not doubt that this woman has walked in the air with her feet upward, since you have all seen it. But she has the honour to be born in England as well as you and I, and consequently cannot be judged but by the laws of the country, nor punished but in proportion as she has violated them. Now I know not one law that forbids walking in the air with feet upward. We all have a right to it with impunity. I see no reason, therefore, for this prosecution, and this poor woman may return home when she pleases.

 

Xxx

 

Unfortunate lawyer

 

 

Nobody was wittier or bitterer than Lord Ellenborough. A young lawyer, trembling with fear, rose to make his first speech, and began, “My Lord, my unfortunate client …..  My Lord my unfortunate client …. My Lord, my unfortunate client…..”

 

“Go on, sir, go on”, said Lord Ellenborough,

 

“As far as you have proceeded hitherto, the court is entirely with you”.

 

 

Xxxx

 

Teacher and the judge

 

In the traffic court of one of the large Mid-Western cities ,USA, a young lady was brought before the judge to answer a ticket given her for driving through a red light. She explained to his Honour that she was a school teacher and requested an immediate disposal of her case in order that she might hasten away to her classes.

 

A wild gleam came into the judge’s eye.

 

You are a school teacher, eh ?, said he.

 

“Madam, I shall realise my lifelong ambition. I have waited years to have a school teacher in this court. Sit down at that table and write

“I went through a red light”, five hundred times

 

Xxxx

 

When angry, count a hundred! (Post No 2565)

angry-status

Compiled  by London swaminathan

 

Date: 22 February 2016

 

Post No. 2565

 

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This is the first part on Anger; in the second part,  I will give Tamil and Sanskrit quotations on ANGER.

Fight-Scenes-290x300

1.He that is angry is seldom at ease.

2.An angry man never wants woe

3.Anger makes a rich man hated, and poor man scorned

4.Anger and haste hinder good counsel

5.Anger punishes itself

 

(My comments: Many angry people refuse to take food; refuse to attend important family or social events. This is how anger punishes one)

 

6.Wrath killeth the foolish man (Job 5:2)

7.Wrath often consumes that goodness husbands (Icelandic proverb)

8.Anger ends in cruelty.

 

(My comments: If you divide all the Crime stories in the newspapers about husband killing wife or wife poisoning husband or killing children, you will know what havoc anger can do. Lt of ignorant farmers kill others just for water or animals grazing in their fields. In Western countries, people divert their anger on pet cats and dogs)

 

9.Take heed of the wrath of a mighty man, and the tumult of the people.

10.From a choleric man withdraw a little; from him that says nothing for ever.

angry babay

11.Anger has no eyes (Hindi Proverb)

(My comments: Another saying about anger is “When a man is angry he opens his mouth and closes his eyes)

 

12.When a man grows angry, his reason rides out.

13.When wrath speaks , wisdom veils her face

14.Anger begins with folly, and ends with repentance

15.When a man is angry, he cannot be in the right (Chinese Proverb)

 

16.As fire is kindled by bellows, so is anger by words

(Fire- Anger simile is very popular in Tamil and Sanskrit literature; we will see it in the second part)

17.A hungry man is an angry man

(Great revolutions such as the French revolution happened because people became hungry and there was no food. French queen Marie Antoinette said this when people complained that they had no bread to eat; she was killed by the guillotine)

 

18.Patience provoked turns to fury

19.Short folk are soon angry

20.Anger dies quickly with a good man

(This is said by Hindu poets which will see in the second part)

 

angry-woman

 

21.Anger is a short madness

22.The anger is not warrantable that has seen two suns

23.He who slowly gets angry keeps his anger longer.

24.When angry, count a hundred

(This is a good exercise. The next proverb also says that delay is the best solution. Never ever send an e mail or a letter in haste. Write it and keep it abeyance for a day or two. When you read it again after 48 hours, you will soften your stand/language or completely tear the letter to pieces and throw it into the dust bin)

25.Delay is the antidote of anger

26.If you be angry, you may turn the buckle of your belt behind you (to provide a harmless outlet for one’s anger)

27.When meat is in, anger is out

28.A soft answer turneth away wrath (Proverbs 15:1)

29.Anger restrained is wisdom gained

30.When you enter into a house, leave the anger ever at the door.

 

-young-angry-man-52068682

31.He has wisdom at will, that with an angry heart can hold him still

32.Let not the sun go down upon your wrath (Ephesians 4:26)

 

33.Two things a man should never be angry at; what he can help, and what he cannot help.

34.He that is angry without a cause, shall be pleased wthout amends.

 

Contd……………………………..

 

Who will shut the door? Husband and Wife Quarrel! (Post No 2562)

Joke - Quarrel Using Husband & Wife Analogy

Compiled  by London swaminathan

 

Date: 21 February 2016

 

Post No. 2562

 

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husbad wife quarrel

Once upon a time a poor farmer and his wife, having finished their day’s labour and eaten their frugal supper, were sitting by the fire, when a dispute arose between them as to who should shut the door, which had been blown open by a gust of wind.

‘Wife shut the door!’ said the man.

‘Husband, shut it yourself’ said the woman.

‘I will not shut it, and you shall not shut it’, said the husband, ‘but let the one who speaks the first word shut it.’

This proposal pleased the wife exceedingly, and so the old couple, well satisfied, retired in silence to bed.

 

In the middle of the night they heard a noise, and, peering out, they perceived a wild dog had entered the room and that he was busy devouring their little store of food. Not a word, however, would either of these silly people utter, and the dog, having sniffed at everything, and having eaten as much as he wanted, went out of the house.

 

The next morning the woman took out some grain to the house of a neighbour in order to have it ground in to flour. In her absence the barber entered and said to the husband: ‘How is it that you are sitting here al alone?’

The farmer answered never a word.

The barber then shaved his head, but still he did not speak; and then he shaved off half his beard and half his moustache, but even then the man refrained from uttering a syllable. Then the barber covered him all over with a hideous coating of lamp black, but the solid farmer remained as dumb as a mute. ‘The man is bewitched’, cried the barber, and he hastily quitted the house.

 

He had hardly gone, when the wife returned from the mill. She, seeing her husband in such a ghastly plight, began to tremble, and exclaimed:

‘Ah! Wretch, what have you been doing?’

‘You spoke the first word’, said the farmer, ‘so be gone, woman, and shut the door.’

husband wife bed

–Persian story

 

Hindu Science: Four Types of Speech (‘Vak’)- Post No 2559

saras big

Research Article  by London swaminathan

 

Date: 20 February 2016

 

Post No. 2559

 

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saras bommai

Four Types

1.Paraa

2.Pasyantii

3.Madhyamaa

4.Vaikharii

Chathvaari vaak parimitaa padaani taani vidurbrahmanaa ye maniishinah

Rik Veda 1-164-45

Saayanaa in his commentary mentioned that the four types mentioned by the seers are Paraa, Pasyantii, Madhyamaa and Vaikharii.

 

Modes of Speech (Manu Smrti)

1.Paarushyam = harsh

2.An rtam = untruth

3.Paisuunyam = tale bearing

4.Asambaddha pralaapah = talking of unrelated things.

Parushyamanrtam chaiva paisuunyam chaapi sarvasah

Asambaddha pralaapascha vaangmayamsyaa chaturvidham

–Manu12-6

 

All meanings, ideas, intentions, desires, emotions, items of knowledge are embodied in speech, are rooted in it and branch out of it. He who misappropriates, misapplies and mismanages speech, mismanages everything.

–Manu

 sarasthanjavur

Harsh Speech

If one answers harshly, for instance a father, or a mother, or a brother, or a sister, or a teacher, or a Brahman, people say to him:’ Shame on you’,

Verily, you are a slayer of your father

Verily, you are a slayer of your mother

Verily, you are a slayer of your brother

Verily, you are a slayer of your sister

Verily, you are a slayer of your teacher

Verily, you are a slayer of a Brahman

–Chandogya Upanishad

 

Speech in Mahabharata

Darts, barbed arrow, iron-headed spears,

However deep they may penetrate the flesh,

May be extracted, but a cutting speech,

That pierces, like a javelin, to the heart

None can remove; it lies and rankles thee

 

Tamil poet Tiruvalluvar in his Tirukkural says:–

Couplet/Kural 127

Guard your tongue, whatever else you may not guard, otherwise you will come to grief through wrong utterance

Couplet/Kural 128

One harm resulting from one foul utterance is enough to nullify all the good done by a man

Couplet/Kural 129

A burn caused by fire may heal; but a scar caused by a fiery tongue will never heal.

In forty more couplets under four different headings he talks about eloquence, sweet talk, listening, slander etc.

 

Hindu poets from Kanyakumari to Kashmir thought in the same way and wrote in the same way.

sarasvathy

Hindus – Great Scientists!

 

Following materials show that the Hindus were great scientists and advanced in human speech research to a highest level. They talk about so many things about speech around 1000 BCE. No religious book or literature appeared at that time in the world. Moses and Homer came later. Their writings or sayings were put into writing still later.

 

Vedic Index by Keith Macdonell gives the following:

Speech plays a great part in Vedic speculation, but only few points are of other than mythological significance.  Speech is in the Satapatha Brahmana divided into four kinds – that of men , of animals, of birds and of small creeping things. The discrimination or making articulate of speech is ascribed to Indra by the Samhitas. The speech of the following musical instruments – Tuunava, Viinaa, Dundubhi – is mentioned, and in one Samhita also that of the axle of a chariot.

 

The speech of the Kuru Pancalas was especially renowned as well that of northern country, according to the Kausitaki Brahmana so that men went there to study the language. On the other hand barbarians in speech were known, and were to be avoided. Demons/ Asuras are described as saying he’lavah.

 

((I guess this is Hallelujah of the Semitic religions. ))

One division of speech referred to is that of the divine (daivi) and the human (manusi), of which some specimens are given, such as OM, the divine counterpart of tathaa, and so forth.

The Brahmin is said to know both; it seems best to regard the distinction not as between Sanskrit and Apabrahmsa, as Sayana suggests, but as between the Sanskrit of the ritual and the hymns and that of ordinary life

 

The Vratyas are described as speaking the language of the initiated (Dikshita Vac), though themselves are not initiated (a-diksita), but as calling that which  is easy to utter (a-durukta), difficult to utter”.

((Vratyas may be foreigners or those who gave up the Vedic way of life.))

SARASVATI BENGALI

 

My previous article written in 2014 is given below:–

 

What Hindus know that Scientists don’t know!

 

Written by London Swaminathan
Post No. 967 Date 9th April 2014.

Whenever some discovery is made or invention is announced, Hindus boast that it is already in their scriptures! Whenever some catastrophe happens, immediately some people write that it is already forecast by Nostradamus. I used to laugh at them. If Nostradamus has predicted everything that is going to happen in the next fifty years, let us have it straight on the table in black and white. The same applies to Hindus as well. So I wrote to some scholars and saints and they are yet to reply. But I have started to work in this direction by writing two posts: Hindus Future Predictions (Part 1 and Part 2) in this blog. I have interpreted some passages in the Hindu scriptures that which may be discovered in future. I have also written about the concept of TIME as Hindus see it. Now I want to draw your attention to what Kanchi Parmacharya Swami (1894-1994) said about SOUND and VIBRATIONS.

 

speech 1

“If the mantras are the life breadth of the Vedas, the life breadth of the mantras themselves is the purity or clarity of the sound, their proper intonation. I have spoken about how by altering the sound or tone of the mantras the vibration in space as well as our ‘nadis’ will change and how the fruit yielded by the chanting will not be what is desired. The Siksa sastra deals in a scientific manner with how the sound of syllables originating in different parts of the body is revealed.

 

The sound we hear with our ears is called ‘Vaikhari ‘and its source is within us and called ‘Para’. Vaikhari originates in the lips and Para is the sound present in the Muladhara below the navel. Before it is revealed as Vaikhari through the mouth it goes through two stages, Pasyanti and Madhyama. It is only when we go higher and higher on the path of Yogic perfection that we shall be able to hear the sounds Pasyanti, Madhyama and Para. The seers who are masters of Yoga are capable of hearing the Para sounds. There are certain ‘Para’ sounds originating in the Muladhara which on being transformed into Vaikhari, can be heard by men. Such sounds please the deities, create good to the world and bring Atmic uplift. It is such ‘Para’ sounds that the seers have grasped from the transcendent space and given us as the Veda mantras. That the Tamil work Tolkappiyam mentions these truths and a clear understanding of them came to light recently.

speech 2

 

Tolkappaiyam about Mysterious Sounds

It had been known for some time that the words Para and Pasyanti occur in old Tamil works as parai and paisanti. But it came to our knowledge only recently that the very first Tamil work – extant – , the Tolkappiyam, mentions profound matters like , for instance, the fact that the sounds of Muladhara are created by the upward passage of Udana, one of the five vital breadths. Apart from containing references to mantra yoga, the ancient Tamil work also reveals knowledge of Vedic intonation.

Recently, there was a controversy as to why the mantras recited in temples must be Sanskrit and not Tamil. Tamil scholars themselves gave the reasons: “It is totally wrong to raise questions about language in which mantras are couched. The language and meaning are of secondary importance. The special quality or the special significance of mantras, is their sound and fruits they yield. Tolkappiyar has himself stated that the Veda mantras have a special quality and power arising from their sound’’.
***
The vibrations of the sound of the Vedic language are beneficial to all orders of creation including bipeds and quadrupeds; so too the language n which all mantras belonging to the mantra sastra are couched. This is not a language in the sense we understand the term in ordinary usage and is not the property of one caste or of one race, but of the entire world.

***

Tolkappiyar stated that he would not deal with the Vedic sounds since they had their source in Para and were of great import. “I will deal with the sounds that are within the reach of ordinary people, Vaikhari, he said. The other sounds belong to the inner mysterious world…. Tamil scholars have pointed out that there is the authority of the Tolkappiyam itself for not changing the mantras used in temples.

Page 739-740 of Hindu Dharma , Voice of Guru Pujyasri Candrasekarendra Sarasvati Svami, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Mumbai-400 007, Year 2000.

 

speech 3

Sound of Music
“ Not all mantras that create benign vibrations are necessarily meaningful. Inn this context we have the example of music. During the research conducted by a university team, it was discovered that the vibrations created by instrumental music quickened the growth of plants and resulted in a higher yield of fruits and vegetables. Here is a proof that sound has the power of creation.
Page 167 of the above book

 

Some people are at a loss to understand why the sound of the Vedas is given so much importance. How does sound originate or how is it caused? Where there is vibrartin, where there is movement or motion, there is sound. This is strictly according to rational science. Speech is constituted of vibrations of many kinds. We hear sounds with our eras. But there are sounds that are converted into electric waves and these we cannot hear. We know this from the working of the radio and the telephone. All that we hear or perceive otherwise are indeed electric waves. Science has come to the point of recognising all to be electric waves — the man who sees and listens, his brain, all are electric waves.

Sound and vibration go together. The vibrations produce either a gross object or a mental state. We come to the conclusion that creation is a product of sound. This ancient concept is substantiated by science itself.
The mantras of the Vedas are sounds that have the power to inspire good thoughts in people.
Rainfall depends on the production of particular sounds which, in turn, create particular vibrations the same applies to all our needs in life.

 

speech 4

 

The Vedas are sounds emanating from the vibrations of Great Intelligence, the Great Gnosis. That is why believe that the mantras of the Vedas originate from the Paramatman (supreme god ) himself. We must take special care of such sounds to ensure the good of the world. Yes , the Vedic mantras are sequences of sounds that are meant for the good of the world.
Page 82-83 of the above book.

Please read my earlier posts:
1.Hindu Wisdom: Copper Kills Bacteria
2.Scientific Proof for Samudrika Lakshana
3.Is Brahmastra a Nuclear Weapon?
4.How did Rama fly his Pushpaka Vimana/plane?
5.Power of Holy Durva Grass
6.Science behind Swayambu Lingams
7.Hindus’ Magic Numbers 18,108,1008
8.Amazing Power of Human Mind
9.107 Herbs in Rig Veda
10.Hindus Future Predictions Part 1 (posted 20 May 2012)
11.Hindus Future Predictions Part 2 (Posted on 20 May 2012)
12.Science behind Deepavali (Two parts)
13.Amazing Tamil Mathematics

Over 2500 articles are available in Tamil and English.

Contact swami_48@yahoo.co

by TAMIL AND VEDAS on APRIL 9, 2014  •

Posted in SCIENCE & RELIGION

Tagged HINDU PHYSICSHINDUISM AND SCIENCEPARAMACHARYA ABOUT MYSTERIOUS SOUNDS

–Subham–

 

 

Grace will last, Beauty will blast! (Post No 2555)

Monroe

Compiled  by London swaminathan

 

Date: 19  February 2016

 

Post No. 2555

 

Time uploaded in London :–  9-37 AM

 

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There are umpteen proverbs and sayings about BEAUTY. Some are in favour of it and some are against it; some about its bad influence and some about its positive effect. Let us look at these sayings with my comments:-

 

I have compiled  59 beautiful quotations on Beauty!

bebin

Its superficiality

 

1.Beauty is only skin deep

2.Beauty is only one layer (Japanese Proverb)

3.Beauty may have fair leaves, yet bitter fruit

4.Fair face, foul heart

5.The peacock has fair feathers, but foul feet

( I don’t agree; who looks at its foul feet; In Tamil we say same thing about Rose: Rose has thorns in it!)

6.There is many a fair thing full false

7.Fair without, false within

8.Beauty and honesty seldom agree

9.Beauty and folly go often in company

10.White silver draws black lines

 

Some of the above comments are not fair; they are subjective. When one is adversely affected by a beautiful woman, then one criticizes. But Hindu saints like Adi Shankara and Pattinathar also criticised beauty of a woman, but with a philosophical view. They not only criticized woman and her beauty but also wealth and other pleasures.

 

dan moore

Influence of Beauty

11.Beauty draws more than oxen

12.Beauty opens locked doors

13.Beauty is eloquent even when silent

14.A good face is a letter of recommendation

15.A fair face is half a portion

 

We very often come across complaints that a woman get promoted or given higher salary in many institutions, because she was beautiful and favoured by x, y,z.

 

Even a famous BBC broadcaster criticized BBC for its choice of women broadcasters with beautiful face sans brain. A famous quotation says “A woman’s geography is more important than a woman’s history”.

nargis_600x450

Its unimportance

16.The fair and the foul, by dark are like store.

17.All cats are grey in the dark

18.Goodness is better than Beauty

19.Good fame is better than a good face

20.Handsome is handsome does

I don’t find anything wrong with the above statements.

 

 

madhubala-stamp

Its inadequacy

21.Beauty without bounty avails nought

22.A fair woman without virtue is like palled wine

(Everyone will agree)

23.Beauty won’t make the pot boil

24.No one can live on Beauty, but they can die for it.

(Taj Mahal is an example; legendary lovers like Romeo and Juliet, Ambikapathy and Amaravathy, Attanathy and Athimanthi of Sangam Tamil literature are some more examples)

25.Prettiness makes no pottage

26.A poor beauty finds more lovers than husbands

(very true; they are misused and abused; but nowadays they sue the abusers 10 or 20 years after the relationship and get a fat compensation in western countries)

 

27.Beauty is no inheritance

(very true; even a fisherwoman/ Beauty  changed Indian history according to Mahabharata)

28.Beauty is potent but money is omnipotent

ivory coast

 

Its ephemerality

29.Beauty is but a blossom

30.The fairest flowers soonest fade

31.The fairest rose is at last withered

32.Grace will last, beauty will blast

33.Prettiness dies first

(This is a popular theme of Hindu poets; this is the condition of a person’s life, according to Hindu saints; they warn men and women that youthfulness won’t last long)

 

Carole-Joan-Crawford

Its subjectivity

34.Beauty is in the eye of the beholder

(My teacher Professor S Ramakrishnan –SRK of Madurai—remarked very often that “the eternal hope of every woman is that she is beautiful to someone in the world”. Very true; I see many lovers as mismatch; but they live together happily. In London white women marry black men; Love is blind or Beauty is in the eye of the beholder)

 

35.A ship under sail

A man in complete armour

A woman with a great belly

Are three of the handsomest sights.

 

36.Beauty fades like a flower

37.Fair is not fair, but that which pleases

 

38.If Jack is in love, he is no judge of Jill’s beauty

39.The owl thinks her own young fairest

(yes, we have a similar proverb in Tamil; a crow thinks that its own young is a golden one)

 

 

Giselle-La-Ronde-Miss-World-1986

Is sources

40.Health and gaiety foster beauty

41.Health and wealth create beauty

42.A blithe heart makes a blooming visage

43.The joy of the heart makes the face fair

 

 

grenada_1971_miss_world_ss

Its disadvantages

44.The fairest silk is soonest soonest stained

45.In an ermine spots are soon discovered

46.The fairer the paper, the fouler the blot (beauty shows up by contrast even the smallest fault)

47.The smaller the peas, the more to the pot; the fairer the woman  the more the giglot (Giglot means wanton)

48.Who has a fair wife need more than two eyes

49.Please your eye and plague your heart

 

50.A fair wife and a frontier castle breed quarrels

51.Pretty face, poor fate (Chinese Proverb)

52.Beauty’s sister is vanity, and its daughter lust

53.A woman and a cherry are painted for their own harm

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Its value

54.A bonny bride is soon buskit and

A short horse is soon weskit

(Buskit means adorned; wispit means rubbed down)

55.A thing of beauty is a joy for ever (John Keats in Endymion; 1795-1821)

 

56.A good face needs no band, and a bad one deserves none (band means adornment)

57.Who is born fair born married

58.A fair face cannot have a crabbed heart

59.An enemy to beauty is a foe to nature

miss world1

miss world2

–Subham–

 

 

 

Why do you praise me without knowing past and present? – Buddha (Post No.2549)

buddha

Compiled  by London swaminathan

 

Date: 17  February 2016

 

Post No. 2549

 

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The venerable Sariputta came to the place where the Exalted One (Buddha), and having saluted him, took his seat respectfully at his side, and said:

“Lord, such faith I have in the Exalted One that methinks tere never has been, nor will there be, nor is there now, any other, whether Wanderer or Brahman, who is greater and wiser than the Exalted One … as regards the higher wisdom.

 

Grand and bold are the words of thy mouth, Sariputta, (answered the Master)

‘verily, thou hast burst forth into a song of ecstasy! Of course then thou hast known all the Exalted Ones of the past … comprehending their minds with yours, and aware what their conduct was, what their wisdom, …… and what the emancipation they attained to?

 

Not so, O Lord!

Of course, then thou hast perceived all the Exalted Ones  of the future, ……comprehending their whole mind with yours

Not so, O Lord!

But at least, then, O Sariputta, thou knowest me  … and hast penetrated my  mind?

Not even, O Lord!

You see ,then, Sariputta that you know not the hearts of the Able, Awakened Ones of the past and of the future. Why, therefore, are your words so grand and bold? Why do you burst forth into such a song of ecstasy?

–Dialogues of The Buddha

Xxx

 

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Founder of Taoism (Picture)

Can anyone have Tao?

SHUN asked Cheng, saying, can one get Tao so as to have it for himself?

(Tao means Road, Path, Principle in Chinese)

Your very body, replied Cheng, is not your own. How should Tao be?

If my body, said Shun, is not my own, pray who is it?

 

It is the delegated image of God, replied Cheng. Your life is not your own. It is the delegated harmony of God. Your individuality is not your own. It is the delegated adaptability of God. Your posterity is not your own. It is the delegated exuviate of God. You move, but know not how. You are at rest, but know not why. You taste, but know not the cause.  These are the operations of God’s laws. How then should you get Tao so as to have it for your own?

 

–Cheng Tzu (China)

Never Lose Hope! (Post No.2543)

two pillars

Compiled by London swaminathan

 

Date: 15  February 2016

 

Post No. 2543

 

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Escape may lie between this pillar and that!

 

An innocent man was condemned to death by an unjust governor, and when the executioner had bound him to a pillar and was about to cut off his head, the victim begged he might be bound to the next pillar instead.

 

The executioner laughed at him, saying “what can you hope to gain so brief an interval? You might just as well let me finish my job.”

But eventually he gave way to the man’s entreaties; and while he was engaged in untying him and fastening him to the next pillar, the king chanced to pass by and asked the meaning of the large crowd that had gathered. On being told, he sent for the condemned man, who was able to convince him of his innocence, and so escaped death.

 

Xxx

cow

May God always bless us with such evil!

A pious man bought a cow in the market and set out for his home. He was followed by a thief who planned to steal his cow. On the way the thief fell in another man who revealed himself as a demon who planned to take the pious man’s life.

 

As they drew near to the latter’s house, where the cow was now tied up, it occurred to the thief that if the demon killed the pious man first, his family may be aroused, and it would be impossible to steal the cow. At the same time the demon thought that, f the thief stole the cow first, the pious man would be awakened by the bellowing, and so would escape death.

 

Each began to ask the other to wait and take the second place, and eventually they came to blows. The thief began to shout, ‘O Pious man, here is a demon who has come to take your life!’ while the demon shouted back ‘O Pious man, here is a thief who has come to steal your cow!’

 

In the end the man and his family were aroused, the thief and the demon took to their heels, and the pious man prayed, “May God always bless us with such evil” for the benefit of his family.

–Subham–

Priest and the Emperor (Post No.2540)

chinese

Compiled by london swaminathan

Post No. 2540

Date: 14th February 2016

 

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Story from China

An old, lame priest was so renowned for his self-denying liberality that the Emperor Chien Lung himself paid him a visit. After some conversation the emperor presented him with a valuable pearl which the old man immediately bestowed on a beggar in the crowd.

 

His Majesty was somewhat taken aback at this act of rudeness and asked it was his habit to give everything away in the same manner. On receiving a reply in the affirmative, the Emperor added, “Even down to the crutch you lean upon”.

 

“Ah”, said the priest, “it is written that the superior man does not covet what his friend cannot spare”.

“But supposing”, said the Emperor, “he was not a superior man?”

“In that case”, answered the priest, “you could not expect me to be his friends.”

 

Xxx

Cheese-Bread

God is the Provider, but he needs a nudge (story from Persia)

 

In other words, God helps those help themselves. Two friends were disputing, one of them maintaining that God would provide all one’s needs, the other arguing that one had to work for one’s living. At length to settle the matter, the first man went and sat in a corner of the mosque to wait his sustenance from god. Two days passed, and then three, and still nothing came from heaven or earth.

 

But on the evening of third day three villagers came into the mosque to eat their bread and cheese. As they were packing up the reminder of the food before leaving, our friend, seeing his last chance about to disappear, coughed gently. The villagers noticed him and taking pity on his haggard appearance, gave him the remains of their food. The man went back to his friend in all humility “God is indeed the Provider”, he admitted, “but he needs a nudge.”

 

Xxx

 

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World is God (Story from India)

 

A man living in this world was disgusted with life, and renouncing it, went to a solitary spot and dwelt in a cave praying God to give His Darshan. He fasted and prayed for a long period and just when he was despairing of seeing God, He appeared before him saying, “Lo, I am here”. What did the man see before him? God had come to him in the form of the world itself which he had renounced in search of Him. On having this vision the man returned to the world and saw God everywhere in it and ever remained filled with bliss and peace.

 

–Subham–

 

Vows made in Storms are forgotten in Calms! (Post No.2537)

india-500-rupee-note

 

Compiled by london swaminathan

 

Post No. 2537

Date: 13th February 2016

 

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1.Promises are like pie-crust, made to be broken

2.Eggs and oaths are easily broken

3.Promises are either broken or kept

4.Vows made in storms are forgotten in calms

5.A man apt to promise, is apt to forget

 

Promise

6.The day obliterates the promise of the night (Arabic Proverb)

7.Men may promise more in a day than they will fulfil in a year

8.Many fair promises in marriage making, but few in tocher paying (tocher means dowry)

9.Words and feathers the wind carries away

10.Words are but wind

 

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11.Promise is debt

12.An ox is taken by the horns, and a man by his word

13.A man that breaks his word, bids others be false to him

14.To him that breaks his trust, let trust be broken

15.He loses his thanks who promises and delays

 

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16.He that promises too much, means nothing

17.To offer much is a kind of denial

18.Who gives to all, denies all

19.Promises may make friends, but it is performances keep them

20.One acre of performance is worth twenty of the land of promise

 

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21.Between promising and performing, a man may marry his daughter

22.A long tongue is a sign of a short hand (meaning is  promises made easily are seldom kept).

–Subham–