Miser or Philanthropist? 5 Anecdotes (Post No. 2534)

Last-Will3

Compiled by london swaminathan

 

Post No. 2534

Date: 12th February 2016

 

Time uploaded in London:- 13-48

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

 

Wills and Testaments Anecdotes

1.Miser or Philanthropist?

The merchant Guyot lived and died in the town of Marseilles in France. He amassed a large fortune by the most laborious industry and by habits of severest abstinence and privation. His neighbours considered him a miser and thought he was hoarding up money from mean and avaricious motives.

 

The populace whenever he appeared, pursued him with hooting and execrations, and the boys sometimes threw stones at him. At length he died and in his will were found the following words:

 

“Having observed from my infancy that the poor of Marseilles are badly supplied with water which they can purchase at a higher price. I have cheerfully laboured the whole of my life to procure for them this great blessing, and I direct that the whole of my property be laid out in building an aqueduct for their use.”

 

Xxx

2.Hell, No, Heaven, yes you can enter!

The will of Stephen Girard, endowing Girard College in Philadelphia, prohibits clergymen from coming onto the premises. Horace Greely one day approached the campus in his customary, somewhat clerical-looking garb. The gatekeeper challenged him, calling out, “You can’t enter here.”

“The hell I can’t!” retorted Greely.

“I beg your pardon, sir”, replied the guard, “Pass right in.”

Xxx

bankruptcy-attorney-rancho-6

3.Bankruptcy Anecdotes

The following note was found among the effects of a businessman after his death. He had been long known for his frequent lapses into bankruptcy.

 

“I hereby name the following six bankers to be my pall bearers. Since they have carried me for so long during my lifetime, they might as well finish the job now”.

 

Xxxx

4.“Out of my own pocket”

Forced into bankruptcy for the fifth time, the merchant was going over his accounts with his lawyer ad accountant.

 

“It looks pretty bad this time,” said the accountant, “can’t see how you will be able to pay more than four cents on a dollar.”

 

“What”, retorted the merchant, “I have always paid ten cents on the dollar. And I am going to do this time too. Yes, sir, even if I have to take it out of my own pocket.”

 

Xxx

5.Mankind would cease to die!

Abraham Ibn Ezra was an old Hebrew scholar who lived centuries ago. He was known far and wide as a most unlucky man. Everything he did seemed doomed to failure. In fact, so perverse was his fortune, he once remarked jestingly that should he go into the shroud business, mankind would suddenly cease to die.

 

–Subham–

 

Let them Enjoy or You Speak! Eleven Anecdotes (Post No. 2527)

josephchamberlain02

Picture of Joseph Chamberlain

Compiled by london swaminathan

Post No. 2527

Date: 10th February 2016

Time uploaded in London  16-28

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

1.Let them enjoy or You speak!

Joseph Chamberlain, Prime Minister of England, told this story about himself. He was guest of honour at a banquet. The mayor of the city presided and when coffee was being served he leaned over and touched Mr Chamberlain saying, “Shall we let them enjoy themselves a little longer or had we better have your speech now?”

 

Xxx

2.Continued talk after a year!

 

Eamon de Valera was once arrested in Ennis in the middle of a political speech. A year later he was released.  He went forthwith to Ennis, and began to speak again with the words, “As I was saying when I was interrupted…”

 

Xxxx

3.Envy a Waiter!

 

When Lyon Phelps tells, “Having to speak at a public dinner in Chicago, I found my place at the pillory of torment, the speakers’ table: and there, seeing a magnificent man in evening dress, I gave him my name and grasped his hand with what cordiality I could command.

“I am the headwaiter, sir”, he replied.

“Shake hands again, old man” I cried. “You don’t know how I envy you.”

Xxx

IMG_9329

4.If you say something…..

 

When Dr Walter Williams spoke in a Chinese university, an interpreter translated into Chinese symbols on a black board. Dr Williams noted that the interpreter stopped writing during most of the speech and at the conclusion he asked why. “We only write when the speaker says something,” was the blithe reply.

Xxx

5.Latin, please!

 

Andrew Jackson, before he became President, was making once a stump speech in a small village. Just as he was finishing, a friend who sat near him whispered, “Tip them a little Latin, General; they won’t be contented without it.”

 

The man of iron will instantly thought upon the few phrases he knew, and in a voice of thunder wound up with “E pluribus unum (from many one), sine qua non (necessary), ne plus ultra (no more beyond), multum in parvo (small but significant).” The effect was tremendous, and the shouts of the Hoosiers could be heard for miles.

(just bluffed by saying some Latin phrases he knew)

 

latin

Xxx

6.Shortest speech!

 

At a banquet in connection with the war effort, the toast master opened the speaking with the assurance that all the guests had promised to make brief addresses. It chanced that the first to be called upon was the heavy weight champion, Private Joe Louis, who rose to his feet and said, “The toastmaster must have known my speed,” and sat down.

 

XxxXxx

7.Letting steam off

During a parliamentary discussion on curtailing debate Sir Campbell Bannerman remarked that, “it was reasonable that Members should wish to let off a certain amount of intellectual steam.”

“is that a polite way of describing debate in this House?” interposed Balfour.

 

“I thought steam was a motive power,” replied Bannerman.

“Not when it is let off,” retorted Balfour amidst the laughter of the House.

 

Xxx

 

pm-winston-churchill-high-res-stamp

8.Churchill’s Speech!

Some years ago Winston Churchill highly amused his fellow Members in the House by distributing among them printed copies of his recent speeches. A Liberal Member for one of the Devonshire constituencies acknowledged the gift in the following manner:

“Dear Mr Churchill, Thanks for the copy of your speeches lately delivered in the House of Commons. To quote the late Lord Beaconsfield: ‘I shall lose no time in reading them.’

 

XXX

9.Likee soup? Likee speech?

 

At a banquet at Princeton University (USA), the great Chinese diplomat, Dr Wellington Koo, was the guest of honour and main speaker. As one of a number of representatives of the student body on this occasion, a burly member of the football team found himself seated next to Dr.Koo. Very embarrassed by the formality of the occasion and utterly at a loss for conversation, the young man turned to Dr.Koo during the soup course and said, “Likee Soup?”

 

Dr Koo urbanely bowed his head and grinned. Later he arose and delivered a polished, thoughtful and witty address. Sitting down amid applause, Dr Koo turned to the chagrined student and said smiling, “Likee speech?”

 

Xxx

10.Unvarnished speech!

Dean Briggs was once one of the speakers at the formal banquet at Radcliffe college, in preparation for the event, among other things, the chairs been given a new coat of varnish. The evening was hot and humid and, as the speakers rose to deliver their remarks, it was with some difficulty.

 

The dean was more than equal to the occasion. “Ladies and Gentlemen”, he said, “with a cruel backward glance, “I had expected to bring you this evening a plain and unvarnished tale, but circumstances make it impossible to fulfil my intentions.”

(unvarnished= plain, simple)

Xxx

1000 girls

11.Talking to 1000 girls

 

When J M Barrie addressed an audience of one thousand girls at Smith College during his American visit, a friend asked him how he had found the experience.

“Well”, replied Mr Barries, “to tell you the truth, I would much rather talk one thousand times to one girl, than to talk one time to a thousand girls.”

 

–Subham–

‘An inch of Gold will not buy an inch of Time’ (65 Sayings on TIME) – Post No 2524

IMG_2205

Compiled by london swaminathan

Post No. 2524

Date: 9th February 2016

Time uploaded in London 13-37

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

IMG_2332

Time cures all things.

Time is a great healer.

Nature, time and patience are the three great physicians.

Time tames the strongest grief.

Time works wonders.

Time is money.

Patience, time and money accommodate all things.

An inch of gold will not buy an inch of time (Chinese Proverb)

He that has time has life.

Gain time, gain life. (10)

IMG_1565

The crutch of time does more than the club of Hercules.

With time and art, the leaf of the mulberry-tree becomes satin.

Time and straw make medlars ripe.

Time devours all things.

Time is a file that wears and makes no noise.

Time undermines us.

Time is the rider that breaks the youth.

Time tries all things.

Time will tell.

Time tries truth. (20)

 

IMG_2716

Time is the father of truth.

Truth is time’s daughter.

Time flies (tempus fugit in Latin)

Time flees away without delay.

Time has wings.

Time is, time was and time is past.

For the busy man time passes quickly (Chinese Proverb)

Time and tide wait for no man.

The sun has stood still, but time never did.

Time stays not the fool’s leisure. (30)

 

IMG_2833

What greater crime than loss of time?

Time spent in vice or folly is doubly lost.

Lose an hour in the morning and you will be all day burning for it.

If you lose your time, you cannot get money or gain.

Time lost cannot be recalled.

Take time when time comes, lest time steal away.

There is a time and place for everything.

Everything is good in its season.

Other times, other manners

Now is now, and then was then. (40)

 

IMG_3061

It is too late to call back yesterday.

Things past cannot be recalled.

There are no birds in last year’s nests.

Things present are judged by things past.

Today is the scholar of yesterday.

The golden age was not the present age.

The time to come is no more ours than the time past

None knows what will happen to him before sunset.

This morning knows not this evening’s happenings (Chinese Proverb)

He that would know what shall be, must consider what has been. (50)

 

IMG_3128

History repeats itself

What has been, may be.

Coming events cast their shadows before (Thomas Campbell (1777-1844)

From Tirukkural:-

481.The crow defeats the owl during day-time. The leader seeks the right time to quell the enemy.

  1. Acting at appropriate season is a cord that will immutably bind wealth to a leader.

483.What is difficult for him to achieve who adopts proper means and tact and acts in right time?

484.One can even the world if he chooses the proper place and acts in the right hour.

485.Heroes who want to conquer the world wait patiently for the proper time, gathering strength.

486.The restrain of a strong man is like the step back of a fighting ram before charging.

487.The wise do not straightaway fly into a passion, but smoulder inwardly biding their time. (60)

 

IMG_9011

488.Bow to your foe when you see him; for when the time of his end is seen, his fall would headlong.

489.When a rare opportunity offers itself, accomplish forthwith the design that is difficult.

490.In adverse time feign peace and wait like a heron. Strike like its peck when the time is opportune.

(all the above numbered are from Tamil book Tirukkural)

I am Time (kalosmi) – (Bhagavd Gita 11-32)

The Master of the Past, Future and Present (Bhuta Bhavya Bhavat Prabhuh) – Vishnu Sahasranama (65)

IMG_9165

–subham–

 

Absent minded Professor (Post No 2511)

220px-Dwight_Morrow

Picture of Dwight Morrow

Written by london swaminathan

Date: 5 February 2016

 

Post No. 2511

 

Time uploaded in London :– 14-59

 

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

The late Dwight Morrow (US diplomat, politician and businessman), who was very absent-minded, was once reading earnestly on a train when the conductor asked for his ticket. Frantically Mr Morrow searched for it.

 

Never mind Mr Morrow, the conductor said. When you find it mail it to the company I am certain you have it.

 

I know I have it, exploded Mr Morrow. But what I wanted to is, wherein the world am I going!

 

Xxx

lessing

German Author forgot his home!

 

In his old age, Lessing, the German author became very absent minded. Coming home one night with his mind on some work he intended to finish, he found the locked, and discovered that he had not taken his key with him. In answer to his knock, a servant looked out of an upstairs window, and mistaking his master for a stranger, called out

The professor isn’t at Home

 

Very well, Lessing answered meekly as he turned Away

 

Tell him that I will call him another time.

 

Xxx

Forgot his Lunch

J David Stern, former publisher of the New York post was sometimes accused of absentmindedness. Once, as he hastened down the street, he was accosted by a friend, who said, “Come, have lunch with me.
“All right”, said Stern, “f we go to some place nearby. I am already late.”

They entered a restaurant close at hand, and as he ordered, Stern wondered what could be the matter with him for he said, “I am not a bit hungry”

“I beg pardon, sir” the waiter said, “but you just finished lunch five minutes ago”.

 

Xxx

 

NY map

Another story about Dwight Morrow’s notorious absentmindedness. Getting off the train in New York, he hastened into the telegraph office and wired to his secretary: “Why am I in New York? What am I supposed to do?”

He received a prompt answer: that he was on his way to Princeton to deliver a lecture.

 

–subham-

Eating Habits of Famous Authors (Post No 2505)

shelley

Written by london swaminathan

Date: 3 February 2016

 

Post No. 2505

 

Time uploaded in London :– 18-12

 

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

 

Shelley, a vegetarian 

 

Shelley had all the sensualities of the table…….an ineffable contempt, and, like Newton, used sometimes to inquire if he had dined. He was a vegetarian, believing that abstinence from animal food stabilises and clears the intellect. Bread was his staff of life.

 

When he felt hungry he would rush into a bakery, emerge with a loaf under his arm, and stride on, rapidly breaking off pieces and swallowing them greedily.

 

While visiting Shelley, his friend Hogg once ventured to say something about a pudding. “A pudding, said Shelley, is a prejudice”. He did sometimes permit Harriet or Mary to supply a “murdered chicken” for a guest.

 

Xxx

 coffee-tea_2

Coffee or Tea

 

John Randolph, the American statesman, said to a waiter, at the same time handing him his cup and saucer, “Take that away, change it”.

 

“What do you want, Mr Randolph” asked the waiter,

“Do you want coffee or tea?”

 

“If that stuff is tea, said he, bring me coffee, if it is coffee, bring me tea. I want a change”.

 

Xxx

 thackeray

Thackeray’s longing for Oysters!

 

One of the chief reasons for Thackeray’s visit to America was his great desire to eat Massachusetts oysters. The publisher James T Fields knew of the novelist’s secret longing, and as soon as he could get Thackeray in his possession he carried him off to a magnificent oyster spread.

 

Thackeray gazed in delight at the six colossal specimens set before him. Not knowing How to begin the attack he asked his companion in a troubled voice,

“How do I do it?”

 

“This way”, said Fields promptly, and proceeded to dispatch his first oyster. Then in the midst of a profound silence Thackeray did likewise. After a moment Fields anxiously asked him how he felt. Drawing a deep breath, Thackeray replied, “As if I had swallowed a baby”.

 

Xxx

swift

Swift and Pie

 

Jonathan Swift, in travelling, called at hospitable house. The lady of the mansion, rejoiced to have so distinguished a guest, with great eagerness and flippancy asked him what he would have for dinner.

Will you have an apple- pie, sir?

Will you have a gooseberry pie, Sir?

Will you have a cherry pie, Sir?

Will you have A currant pie, Sir?

Will you have A plum pie, Sir?

Will you have A pigeon pie, sir?

 

Any pie, Madam, but a mag-pie? said Swift.

 

—–Subham——

 

 

 

Better go to Heaven in rags than to Hell in embroidery! (Post No. 2495)

birds, gopuram

Compiled by london swaminathan

Date: 31 January 2016

 

Post No. 2495

 

Time uploaded in London :–  15-06

 

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

 

February 2016 Good Thoughts Calendar

Festivals in February:

8-Thai Amavasya and Chinese New Year, 22- Maasi Maham and Mahaa Maham held once in 12 years;14 Valentine Day and Ratha Saptami

 

 

Auspicious Days: 3,5,10, 12,17,19,26

Full Moon 22 Masi Makam, Maha Maham and Float Festival in several temples

New Moon 8 Thai Amavasya

Ekadasi Fasting Days: 4, 18

 

29 Golden Sayings on Religion are in this month’s calendar.

bhuvaeswari, mysore

February 1 Monday

A man without a religion is a horse without a bridle.

February 2 Tuesday

One may live without father or mother, but one cannot live without God.

February 3 Wednesday

Have God and have all.

February 4 Thursday

He loses nothing who keeps God for his friend.

February 5 Friday

The best way to travel is towards Heaven.

 

cave temple, HP

February 6 Saturday

Put your trust in God, but keep your powder dry (Advice given by Oliver Cromwell to his troops while crossing a river)

February 7 Sunday

Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition (First said by a Chaplain at Pearl Harbour in 1941)

February 8 Monday

The man of God is better for having his bows and arrows about him.

February 9 Tuesday

St. Luke was a saint and physician and yet he died.

February 10 Wednesday

Jest not with the religion or eye.

 

chamundi3

February 11 Thursday

King Harry robbed the church, and died a beggar (A reference to Henry VIII and the Reformation)

February 12 Friday

Better go to heaven in rags than to hell in embroidery.

February 13 Saturday

Heaven and hell are within the heart (Chinese proverb)

February 14 Sunday

He that will enter into Paradise must have a good key.

February 15 Monday

A man must go old to the court, and young to a cloister, that would go from thence to heaven.

 

 

cheranmadevi appan

February 16 Tuesday

Gold goes in at any gate except heaven’s.

February 17 Wednesday

Who fasts and does no other good, spares his bread and goes to hell

Poor men go to heaven as soon as rich.

February 18 Thursday

Hell is always open.

February 19 Friday

Danger makes men devout.

February 20 Saturday

Some are atheists only in fair weather.

 

darasuram

February 21 Sunday

The porter calls upon God only when he is under the load (Arabic Proverb)

February 22 Monday

An atheist is one point beyond the devil.

February 23 Tuesday

A complete Christian must have the works of a Papist, the words of a Puritan, and the faith of a Protestant.

February 24 Wednesday

The Jews spend at Easter, the Moors at marriages, the Christians in suits (suits here refers to lawsuits)

February 25 Thursday

Henry the Eighth pulled down monks and their cells, Henry the Ninth should pull down bishops and their bells (A reference to the Reformation).

 

IMG_0534

February 26 Friday

There is no rain – the Christians are the cause ( A popular proverb in ancient Rome)

February 27 Saturday

Clergymen’s sons always turn out badly.

February 28 Sunday

A Pope by voice, a king by birth, an emperor by force.

February 29 Monday

A short prayer penetrates the heaven. The fewer the words, the better the prayer.

 

-Subham-

வாழிய செந்தமிழ்! வாழ்க நற்றமிழர்! (Post No. 2494)

IMG_9761

பிப்ரவரி 2016 (மன்மத தை-மாசி) காலண்டர்

Compiled by london swaminathan

Date: 31 January 2016

 

Post No. 2494

 

Time uploaded in London :–  12-31

 

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

 

இந்த மாதக் காலண்டரில் தமிழ் பற்றிய 29 மேற்கோள்கள் இடம்பெறுகின்றன.

 

திருவிழா நாட்கள்: 8-தை அமாவாசை, சீனப்புத்தாண்டு, 14-ரத சப்தமி, காதலர் தினம், 15-பீஷ்மாஷ்டமி, 22-மாசிமகம், கும்பகோணத்தில் மஹாமகம், பல கோவில்களில் தெப்பத் திருவிழா

அமாவாசை:8

பவுர்ணமி- 22

ஏகாதசி: 4, 18

சுபமுஹூர்த்த நாட்கள்- 3,5, 10, 12, 17, 19, 26.

IMG_9765

பிப்ரவரி 1 திங்கட் கிழமை

மாண்ட வரதன் சரண் வணங்க எதிர்வந்தான்

நீண்ட தமிழால் உலகை நேமியில் அளந்தான் (கம்பன்)

பிப்ரவரி 2 செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

நிழல் பொலி கணிச்சி மணி நெற்றி உமிழ் செங்கண்

தழல் புரை சுடர்க் கடவுள் தந்த தமிழ் தந்தான் (கம்பன்)

பிப்ரவரி 3 புதன் கிழமை

நன்று வரவு என்று பல நல் உரை பகர்ந்தான்

என்றும் உள தென் தமிழ் இயம்பி இசைகொண்டான் (கம்பன்)

 

பிப்ரவரி 4 வியாழக் கிழமை

வடவேங்கடம் தென் குமரி ஆயிடைத் தமிழ்கூறு நல்லுலகம்- தொல்காப்பிய பாயிரம்-பன்பாரனார்

 

பிப்ரவரி 5 வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

சாதி இரண்டொழிய வேறில்லை யென்றே

தமிழ்மகள் சொல்லிய சொல் அமிழ்தமென்போம் – பாரதியார்

 

 

IMG_9814

பிப்ரவரி 6 சனிக் கிழமை

ஆதிசிவன் பெற்றுவிட்டான் – என்னை

ஆரிய மைந்தன் அகத்தியன் என்றோர் வேதியன் கண்டு மகிழ்ந்தே – நிறை

மேவும் இலக்கணம் செய்து கொடுத்தான்- பாரதியார்

 

பிப்ரவரி 7 ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

யாமறிந்த மொழிகளிலே தமிழ்மொழிபோல்

இனிதாவது எங்கும் காணோம்- பாரதியார்

பிப்ரவரி 8 திங்கட் கிழமை

சூழ்கலி நீங்கத் தமிழ்மொழி ஓங்கத்

துலங்குக வையகமே — பாரதியார்

பிப்ரவரி 9 செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

தேமதுரத் தமிழோசை உலகமெலாம்

பரவும்வகை செய்தல் வேண்டும்.

சேமமுற வேண்டுமெனில் தெருவெல்லாம் தமிழ் முழக்கம் செழிக்கச் செய்வீர்- பாரதியார்

பிப்ரவரி 10 புதன் கிழமை

தெள்ளுற்ற தமிழமுதின் சுவை கண்டார்

இங்கமரர் சிறப்புக் கண்டார்

 

 

IMG_9816

பிப்ரவரி 11 வியாழக் கிழமை

வாழிய செந்தமிழ்! வாழ்க நற்றமிழர்!

வாழிய பாரத மணித்திருநாடு– பாரதியார்

 

பிப்ரவரி 12 வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

சொல்லில் உயர்வு தமிழ்ச் சொல்லே- அதைத்

தொழுது படித்திடடி பாப்பா- – பாரதியார்

 

பிப்ரவரி 13 சனிக் கிழமை

இறவாய் தமிழோடிருப்பாய் நீ (பாரதியார்)

 

பிப்ரவரி 14 ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

தமிழுக்கும் அமுதென்று பேர்- அந்தத் தமிழ் இன்பதமிழ் எங்கள் உயிருக்கு நேர் –பாரதிதாசன்

 

பிப்ரவரி 15 திங்கட் கிழமை

சென்றணைந்து மதுரையினில் திருந்திய நூற் சங்கத்துள்

அன்றிருந்து தமிழ் ஆராய்ந்து அருளிய அங்கணர் கோயில் – – பெரியபுராணம்

 

 

IMG_9776

பிப்ரவரி 16 செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

தெள்ளித் தெளிக்கும் தமிழ்க் கடலின் அன்பினைந்திணை என எடுத்த இறைநூல்—மீனாட்சியம்மை பிள்ளைத் தமிழ்

பிப்ரவரி 17 புதன் கிழமை

சந்நிதியில் வீழ்ந்து எழுந்து தமிழறியும் பெருமாளே! தன்னைச் சேர்ந்தோர் நன்னிதியே! திருவாலவாயுடைய நாயகனே!—திருவிளையாடல் புராணம்

 

பிப்ரவரி 18 வியாழக் கிழமை

அறைகடல் வரைப்பில் பாடை அனைத்தும் வென்று ஆரியத்தொடு

உறழ்தரு தமிழ் தெய்வத்தை உள்நினைந்து ஏத்தல் செய்வாம்- சீகாளத்திப் புராணம்

 

 

பிப்ரவரி 19 வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

கடல் அமுது எடுத்துக் கரையில் வைத்ததுபோல்

பரப்பின் தமிழ்ச் சுவை திரட்டி மற்றவர்க்குத்

தெளிதரக் கொடுத்த தெந்தமிழ்க் கடவுள்- கல்லாடம்

 

பிப்ரவரி 20 சனிக் கிழமை

உலகு அளித்தனை தமிழ் தெளித்தனை

ஒன்றும் ஆயினை, பலவும் ஆயினை – காசிக் கலம்பகம்

 

 

IMG_9820

பிப்ரவரி 21 ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

தமிழால் வைதாரையும் வாழவைப்போன் – கந்தரலங்காரம்

 

பிப்ரவரி 22 திங்கட் கிழமை

பொழிந்து ஒழுகு முதுமறையின் சுவை கண்டும் புத்தமுதம்

வழிந்து ஒழுகும் தீந்தமிழின் மழலை செவி மடுத்தனையே – மதுரைக் கலம்பகம்

பிப்ரவரி 23 செவ்வாய்க் கிழமை

செந்தமிழோடு ஆரியனைச் சீரியானை

முத்தமிழும் நான் மறையும் ஆனான்  — தேவாரம்

பிப்ரவரி 24 புதன் கிழமை

தண்ணார் தமிழ் அளிக்கும் தண்பாண்டி நாட்டானை—திருவாசகம்

 

பிப்ரவரி 25 வியாழக் கிழமை

சாறு சுவைஎனக் கூறநின்று இட்ட

ஆரியம் தீந்தமிழ் என்மனார் அவையே

ஓரிருமகாரின் பேறுகண்டு அவற்றுள்

கன்னியந்தமிழின் செவ்வியைப் புணர்ந்தோய் – பொய்கையார்

 

IMG_9764

 

பிப்ரவரி 26 வெள்ளிக் கிழமை

ஓங்கல் இடைவந்து உயர்ந்தோர் தொழவிளங்கி

ஏங்கொலி நீர் ஞாலத்து இருள் அகற்றும் – ஆங்கவற்றுள்

மின்னேர் தனி ஆழி வெங்கதிர் ஒன்று ஏணையது

தன்னேர் இலாத தமிழ் – தொல்லியல்

 

பிப்ரவரி 27 சனிக் கிழமை

இனிமையும் நீர்மையும் தமிழ் எனலாகும்- பிங்கலந்தை

 

பிப்ரவரி 28 ஞாயிற்றுக் கிழமை

தமிழ் தழிய சாயலவர் – சிந்தாமணி

 

பிப்ரவரி 29 திங்கட் கிழமை

பட்டர் பிரான் கோதை சொன்ன சங்கத் தமிழ் மாலை முப்பதும் தப்பாமே இங்கு பரிசுரைப்பார்…………..திருமாலால் எங்கும் திருவருள் பெற்று இன்புறுவர்—ஆண்டாள்

 

–சுபம்–

Put Fire in the Poem or Poem in the Fire! (Post No. 2492)

fire1

Compiled by london swaminathan

Date: 30 January 2016

Post No. 2492

Time uploaded in London :–  15-27

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

 

In his later years a lady called upon Mark Twain to express her enthusiasm for his work. She wanted to kiss his hand. He accepted it with dignity and serious ness.

 

“How God must love you!”, said the lady.

 

“I hope so”, said Mark Twain gently.

 

After she had gone he observed as gently without a smile, “I guess she has not heard of our strained relations”.

 

Xxxx

 

Burning-book-001

An author was reading some bad verses in his poem to his friend in a very cold apartment. The critic cried out in a shaking fit

 

“My friend, either put fire into your verses or verses into the fire or I shall not be able to stand here any longer” .

 

Xxxx

 

Author with a Cyanide Packet!

 

After coming out of jail Frank Harris decided he would rather commit suicide than go in again, and as he always had a contempt for court order s and ignore d everything, he felt liable for arrest at any moment. So that he might not again suffer indignity, he carried with him a small packet of cyanide of potassium, which he proposed to swallow before the land of law could touch him.

 

On his last trip to New York he was packing up at quarantine when a steward came along and told him that he was wanted by the captain. Harris heart fell. Here it was. He concealed the packet of poison in his right hand and followed the steward, and when he saw the captain talking to a tall, smooth, well fed man he knew it could only be the worst.

 

220px-Frankhar

“You wanted me”, gulped Frank

The captain inclined his head toward the third man, who was eyeing Frank keenly.

 

“Mr Frank Harris?”, asked the American

 

Frank wished he was not, but admitted the stigma.

 

“Pleased to meet you, Mr Harris”, said the large man, extending his hand.

“I am the mayor.  l have come right off the tug boat to tell you….. That we are honoured to offer you the freedom of our great city.”

 

Hastily Frank changed the poison packet into his left hand and greeted the mayor.

 

 

Xxxxx

 

Reward for Pornography!

 

Shortly after the sensational reception accorded the publication of his marvellous translation of The Arabian Nights Sir Richard Burton made the following statement

 

For thirty years I served Her Majesty at home and abroad without acknowledgment or reward.  I publish a pornographic book, and at once earn 10000 pounds and fame. I begin at last to understand the public and what it wants.

waroftheworlds_layout

–SUBHAM–

 

 

Pen is mightier than sword! (Post No. 2489)

pen sword2

Compiled by london swaminathan

Date: 29 January 2016

 

Post No. 2489

 

Time uploaded in London :–  15-41

 

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

euripides

Words are more powerful than Swords!

 

The power of pen is excellently illustrated by an incident in the war between the ancient Greeks and Romans. A group of Athenians were seized and held captive at Syracuse. To help pass the time they enacted many scenes from the plays of Euripides (480 BCE) . Their captors were so favourably impressed by the beauty of the verses that instead of treating their prisoners cruelly as was their custom, they persuaded them to continue their play acting and held them as their as honorary guests.

 

Upon their return to Athens, the former captives went to the home of Euripides and informed him of the effect of his plays upon the supposedly heartless men of Syracuse. So great was their gratitude toward the great dramatist they treated him as though he had actually rescued them in combat on the field of the battle.

 

Xxxxx

 

Sophocles Freed!

 

sophocles

Sophocles (406 BCE) wrote tragedies to the end of his long life. On account of this zeal for writing he seemed to be neglecting his business affairs so his sons summoned him to court that a jury may pronounce him as incompetent to manage his estate on the ground of senility. Then the old man is said to have recited to his judges a play which he has just finished and had in his hands, the Oedipus at Colonous and to have asked whether the poem seemed the work of a man

In his dotage (old and weak period).  After his recitation he was freed by the vote of the jurors.

 

Lincoln-cent-sword-pen-2010-design

Xxx

–Subham-

 

Conversation teaches more than Meditation (Post No. 2485)

 

netaji gandhiji

COMPILED BY LONDON SWAMINATHAN

 

Date: 13 January 2016

 

Post No. 2485

 

Time uploaded in London :– 7-19 AM

 

( Thanks for the Pictures  ) 

 

DON’T REBLOG IT AT LEAST FOR A WEEK!  DON’T USE THE PICTURES; THEY ARE COPYRIGHTED BY SOMEONE.

 

(for old articles go to tamilandvedas.com OR swamiindology.blogspot.com; contact 

 

swami_48@yahoo.com)

 

 

SPEACH PROVERBS: PART 4 (LAST PART)

swamijis

Conversation

104.Conversation makes one what he is.

105.Conversation teaches more than Meditation.

107.Education begins a gentleman, conversation completes him.

108.He that converses not, knows nothing.

109.Sweet discourse makes short days and nights.

110.Talk of the devil, and he is bound to appear (a remark made when a person mentioned in conversation unexpectedly arrives on the scene.)

 

111.Many speak much who cannot speak well.

112.He cannot speak well, that cannot hold his tongue

113.Flow of words is not always flow of wisdom.

114.Empty vessels make the most sound.

115.Great talkers fire too fast to take aim.

116.The mill that is always going grinds coarse and fine Those who talk constantly will often say what is better left unsaid).

Jawaharlal-Nehru-Mahatma-Gandhi-and-Sardar-

117.Great talkers are like leaky pitchers, everything runs out of them.

118.He must have leave to speak who cannot hold his tongue.

119.The eternal talker neither hears nor learns.

120.The tongue of idle person is never still.

 

Slander

120.A man act unrighteous and not even make mention virtue, but if he would refrain from slander behind others back it would be creditable to him – Tirukkural 181

121.Greeting a friend with false smile but speaking ill of him behind his back, is conduct more despicable than denouncing righteousness and doing evil. – Tirukkural 182

 

122.Death after a virtuous life is preferable to a life sustained by lies and slander. – Tirukkural 183

 

SPEECH IS SILVER, SILENCE IS GOLDEN

123.Silence is golden.

124.Silence is of the gods (Chinese Proverb)

125.Silence is the sweet medicine of the heart (Chinese Proverb)

126.A good bestill is worth a groat (Bestill is a command to be silent.

127.A close mouth catches no flies.

128.It is good to have a hatch before the door (Meaning: one should be able to keep silent when necessary)

129.Good that teeth guard the tongue.

130.A still tongue makes a wise head.

patel, r prasad

First Governor General Mr. C. Rajagopalachari with Dr. Rajendra Prasad (centre) and Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (right), 1948.

131.No wisdom to silence

  1. A wise head makes a close mouth.

133.Silence never makes mistakes (Hindi Proverb).

134.If you keep your tongue prisoner, your body may go free.

135.He knows enough that knows nothing f he knows how to hold his peace.

136.Neglect will kill an injury sooner than revenge (It is more effective to remain silent than retaliate when insulted).

137.No reply is best.

138.Silence is a woman’s best garment

Quietness is a great treasure.

139.Silence catches a mouse.

140.Sorrow makes silence her best orator.

 

141.Silence means consent

142.Silence and thinking can no man offend.

143.Silence does seldom harm.

speak not

144.Speech is silver, Silence is golden.

145.Talking comes by nature, Silence by understanding.

146.Wise men silent, fools talk.

147.He that speaks sows, and he that holds his peace gathers.

148.There is a time to speak and a time to be silent.

149.More have repented speech than silence.

150.Better say nothing, than not to the purpose.

151.Speak fitly, or be silent wisely.

 

152.He that is silent, gather tones.

153.Still waters run deep.

154.Beware of a silent man and still water.

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

156.Dumb dogs are dangerous.

(I will give Sanskrit Proverbs on Speech and Silence separately:swami_48@yaoo.com)

 

-Subham-