Joke of the day… ” How Did this Ball get in here … ” ?

A little boy knocks at the door and tells the owner that something of his had found its way into her garage, and he wanted it back. The homeowner opened the garage and noticed two additions; a baseball and broken window sporting a baseball-sized hole.

“How do you suppose this ball got in here?” she asked the child. Taking one look at the ball, one look at the window, and one look at the homeowner, the little boy exclaimed, “Wow lady! I must have thrown it right through that hole!”

Source::::joke a day.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…”Welcome Fame and Blame with same Mind Frame …”

You must welcome both summer and winter, for they are both essential for the process of living. The alternation of seasons toughens and sweetens us. Birth and death are both natural events. We cannot discover the reason for either birth or death. They simply happen. Hence we must learn to welcome the field of natural ups and downs (Prakrithika). The second is the field of social equanimity: We often try to blame some person or some incident for the injury or loss we suffer but the real reason is our own karma (action). When the background of the event is known, the impact can be lessened or even negated. Hence you must welcome with equal-mindedness fame and blame, respect and ridicule, profit and loss, and such other responses and reactions from the society in which one has to grow and struggle.

Sathya Sai Baba

 

Image of the Day… Great Venus and Jupiter Conjunction…

Venus and Jupiter are the brightest planets! Look east before dawn … closest planet-planet conjunction of 2014 August 18. Dazzling near moon August 22 and 23.

Venus and Jupiter as captured by EarthSky Facebook friend Stefano De Rosa on Isola d'Elba in Italy.

View larger. | Venus and Jupiter as captured by EarthSky Facebook friend Stefano De Rosa on Isola d’Elba in Italy.

The sky’s two brightest planets – Venus and Jupiter – staged 2014′s closest planet-planet conjunction before dawn on August 18. Central Europe had the best view of these two bright worlds less than a moon diameter apart, but they have beautiful from around the world for many days … and will stay beautiful for many days more. Don’t miss the planets onAugust 22 and August 23, when the waning crescent moon will be nearby.

Abhinav Singhai in Haryana, India caught the planets at their closest on August 18.  Thank you, Abhinav.

Abhinav Singhai in Haryana, India caught the planets at their closest on August 18.

Source::::Earth sky news

Natarajan

NASA and The BallPoint Pen ….

NASA and the Pen

ballpoint-penThe humble ballpoint pen is an item so ubiquitous the chances of you not having one near you right now are so low E.T could probably give you the percentage on his right hand. Few people realize just how much technology, craftsmanship and effort goes into creating a single pen- probably because you can buy 30 of them for a few dollars, only to mysteriously have them all disappear within a week.

As the name would suggest, ballpoint pens work by utilizing tiny metal ball bearings. In the case of the most famous ballpoint pens of all, Bic, the ball is commonly made from tungsten carbide, which is notably the same material often used to make armour piercing bullets. After the material has been shaped, it’s then highly polished in a machine that uses a paste made from diamonds. Yes, we’re still talking about those pens banks give away for free and you’ve lost three of already today.

The polished ball is then loaded into a  socket. Due to the fact that the space available between these two parts is supposed to be virtually, but not quite, nil, they need to be accurate to within a thousandth of a centimetre on the ball. If any flaws whatsoever are discovered in the ball bearings during production, it’s not uncommon for thousands of others of these balls that were created alongside the flawed one to be destroyed as well. In fact, to see any imperfections on a ballpoint pen’s ball bearing that makes it to market, you need an electron microscope.

So how does the ink even get out? Well, it works mostly via gravity. Gravity pulls the ink down onto the ball which transfers ink as it is dragged along or pressed against paper or a comparable surface. However, the ball bearing also creates a pressurised seal that prevents excess ink from escaping. The mechanism allows for a continuous flow of ink to be used, without risking the ink inside being exposed to air, and in turn drying out. This allows ballpoint pens to write around 100,000 words each. The long and short of it is, without gravity (or some sort of internal pressure source as in “space pens”), the ink won’t flow properly.

So this brings us to these space pens. As the story goes, when the space race was heating up, NASA invested millions (sometimes stated as billions) into developing a pen that would work in orbit. However, when the Russians went into space they just took pencils. It’s a famous story that is mostly false.

Although Soviet cosmonauts did use pencils in space for a time, so did the Americans.  However, it quickly became clear that pencils were  a very bad idea since they had a habit of breaking and sending tiny eye-seeking fragments of pencil lead and wood bits into the air. There were also some concerns over these fragments potentially damaging equipment, even perhaps causing a fire.

So there was a need for pens that could work in space. But, in fact, neither NASA nor the Russian’s invested any money into such a space device. Where NASA did waste money was, funny enough, on specially designed pencils, which further spurred the need to find a good alternative.  In 1965, they paid a whopping $4,382.50 ($31,949 today) for just 34 pencils made by Tycam Engineering Manufacturing Inc.  Needless to say, the public was not happy with the way their tax dollars were being spent in this instance. (And, in truth, contrary to what many seem to think today, investing tax dollars into the space race at all had tenuous public support at best in the U.S.)

At this point, you might be wondering, “If neither the Soviets nor NASA invested any money into the creation of a pen that could work in space, who did?”  Like Tang and Velcro (often incorrectly credited with having been invented by NASA, see: The Invention of Tang and The Accidental Invention of Velcro), the “space pen” was invented in the private sector and was simply popularized by NASA.

Specifically, the development of the space pen was undertaken solely by Paul C. Fisher and co. of the Fisher Pen Company. After investing over a million dollars of his own money in creating a pen that utilised pressurised nitrogen (35 psi) to force out a specialized unique gel-like ink Fisher formulated, by 1965 he was in possession of a patent and a pen that could work upside down,  underwater, at temperatures from -50 to 400 degrees Fahrenheit (-45 C to 204 C), and even, you guessed it, in space.

When Fisher brought his “AG-7″ pen to the attention of NASA, they tested it thoroughly and then thanked Fisher by buying four hundred pens from him. But he didn’t get the Tycam Engineering rate of $128.90 per writing device.  Rather, they asked for a bulk discount and Fisher ended up selling them the pens for just under $2.39 a piece ($17.42 today), approximately 40% off the normal consumer price at the time of $3.98. Then again, having NASA (and by 1969 the Soviet Union) use his product in space was great advertising; so he did OK and versions of the Fisher space pen are still available today (and write awesome, I might add).

This price of $2.39 for a pressurised space pen is not only notable for being 40% off the consumer price, but also notable because a mere two decades before, a standard ballpoint pen would cost you at its cheapest 5-10 times that, well over $100 when adjusting for inflation. This all changed thanks to one Marcel Bich in the mid-1950s.

But before we get to Bich, we must discuss a newspaper editor named László Bíró. While in Hungary in 1931, Bíró observed that the ink used in a printing press dried almost instantly.  He, like so many others, was also frustrated by the fact that fountain pen ink often smudged, among other annoyances. Thus, he attempted to create a pen that worked with this type of newspaper quick drying ink.  His early efforts using fountain pens with this ink failed, which led him to attempt a ballpoint style pen. But the ink still wasn’t quite working. Fast-forward to 1938- after working with his chemist brother, György, the two developed an ink that would dry near instantly, but still flow well. Bíró also perfected a semi-new system that would deliver that ink effectively. So it was that on June 15, 1938, Bíró patented the first commercially viable ballpoint pen.

As with most inventions, the system he came up with, the one involving a small precisely made ball and socket, wasn’t entirely unique. For instance, a near identical invention had been developed and patented some 50 years earlier in 1888 by John J. Loud. However, Loud developed the device as a means of marking and writing on leather (something fountain pens couldn’t do well). A lack of interest in his invention, as well as poor performance of the device due to flaws in the design, prevented it from becoming commercially successful and he never renewed his patent.  Many others came along in between Loud and Bíró with similar devices that were similarly failures for various reasons such as uneven ink-flow, clogging, and leakage.

In the end, Bíró’s pens were the first commercially viable ballpoint writing devices. Because of this, not only is he generally given credit for inventing the ballpoint pen, but the name by which many ballpoint pens are still known by in many parts of the world today is “biro”.

Of course, Bíró’s pens were ludicrously expensive compared to the ballpoint pens we can buy today. Despite this, they were considered hugely superior to other types of pens, mainly due to the fact that they required no external ink and that they worked in a variety of conditions. The British air force, in particular, were fond of biros produced by the Miles Martin Pen Company due to the fact they worked at varying pressures and altitudes. (Fountain pens were giving the British air force fits at high altitude.)

This all brings us back to Bich and how ballpoint pens finally became not only extremely popular, but ridiculously cheap given the precision required in their making.  Bich saved his money until he could afford to buy a rundown factory in France- a factory that would soon become the centre of his massive pen empire.  After acquiring the factory, Bich bought the rights to Bíró’s ballpoint pen patent and perfected the means of mass-production while maintaining quality.  He then started creating as many pens as he possibly could.

As he mass produced millions upon millions of them, Bich was able to undercut his biggest rivals and sell pens that were as much as one three hundredth of the then normal price. In addition, due to his exacting mass production methods, along with being hundreds of times cheaper, his pens were also better quality in terms of their utility- “Writes the first time, every time,” as the 1960s company advertising slogan went. Needless to say, sales, and the popularity of the ballpoint., skyrocketed and by the time Bich entered the American market, he was able to sell pens for mere pennies, instead of dollars. And the rest, as they say, is history.

Source::::Today i foundout.com

Natarajan

An Intriguing Connection ….

A painting in the manner of Indian calendar art on the wall of a Yazidi temple in Lalesh, Northern Iraq. The Yazidis, facing attacks by IS militants, are a Kurdish-speaking minority in Iraq. Their religion is said to have similarities with Hinduism. They worship Melek Tawwus, or the Peacock Angel. Photo: Eric Lafforgue

A painting in the manner of Indian calendar art on the wall of a Yazidi temple in Lalesh, Northern Iraq. The Yazidis, facing attacks by IS militants, are a Kurdish-speaking minority in Iraq. Their religion is said to have similarities with Hinduism. They worship Melek Tawwus, or the Peacock Angel. Photo: Eric Lafforgue

Source::::The Hindu

Natarajan

The Amazing Success Story of Kudumbashree, Kerala….!!!


Image: The Kudumbashree initiative has turned around the lives of lakhs of women in Kerala like Bindu, pictured above, who once could not afford even one meal a day.

Kudumbashree, the largest network of women in India, is a revolution worth copying wherever there are women in need of help.

Shobha Warrier/Rediff.com travelled to Thrissur, Kerala, to encounter the amazing success story of women who once lived in dire straits, but who now own homes, cars and make enough money to change their lives forever. All thanks to Kudumbashree.

Bindu’s story is as inspiring as it is astounding.

Bindu lives in Mullassery, a village near Thrissur.

There was a time in her life when she could not afford even a single meal a day. Today she can stock up rice for a year!

She didn’t own an inch of land. Today, she owns 22 acres of land!

She didn’t have a home of her own. Today, she has a two storey home!

She used to walk to the farm when she started, but today, she has bought herself a car and a scooter, and she uses the scooter to travel to her farm.

Because of poverty, she couldn’t study beyond Class 7, but today, her son is an engineering student studying computer science.

Bindu belonged to a large family of five brothers and three sisters. While her father toiled hard as a landless labourer, her mother sold tea. But the money they brought home was so little that the family didn’t even have one proper meal on most days.

“Though I was the 6th child, I knew how tough it was for my mother to give us at least one meal a day,” she recalls.

As her parents could not afford to send all eight of their children to school, she had to stop her schooling despite being a good student who had dreams of studying further. It was young Bindu’s duty to do the housework when her parents and elder brothers went outside to work.

Life went on thus until she was married off to Sathyan, who lived nearby, at the age of 18.

“From one poor house to another, that was my journey. With my husband making just Rs 800 a month polishing diamonds, two children, and his family on top of that to take care of, do I even need to tell you how difficult the days were? With both my children suffering from epilepsy, most of my days were spent visiting the hospital.”

In 1998, Kudumbashree started a group in her area, but Bindu could hardly find the ten rupees a week she needed in order to join the group.

“All of us were in such dire straits financially that it was not just me, but the other women too found it difficult to save ten rupees. If we didn’t pay the money for two weeks in a row, we faced eviction from the group. Somehow, I managed to continue with the group.”

Bindu and her friends used to listen to the block officers talk about starting farming but they never thought they would be able to do it.

“It was by accident that we became farmers. In 2000, we had gone to a studio to take a photo of ourselves together. The studio owner told us that he had some land that he wished to lease out for farming. He wanted us to tell some of our Kudumbashree members. We came home with the thought running through our minds. After a lot of deliberation, we decided to try our hand at collective farming.”

It was a major decision for Bindu and her friends — Sheeba, Sreeja and Mallika.

They decided to join hands and lease 8 acres of land that was overgrown with weeds.

The idea was to cultivate paddy.

Though they bought seeds at a discounted price from Krishi Bhavan, they had to take a loan of Rs 10,000 each from Kudumbashree’s informal bank, Rs 25,000 from its revolving fund, and some more from a normal bank.

There was no machinery to cut the weeds; so they used their sickles. When other workers went to their farms at 8 am, they started as early as 6 am.

Leaving their small children at home, these four women worked from morning till evening and yet couldn’t clear the land of weeds. So, they had to employ people. Again, the entire paddy cultivation was done by hand.

As they had no previous experience in farming, they had to take advice and help from others at every step. But they learnt well and fast.

Altogether, they spent Rs 200,000 on their first effort.

Once the harvest was ready, what they did first was not to sell the rice to make a profit. None of them had forgotten the days when they could not afford even a meal a day. All four of them decided to store some rice at home to last the entire year.

They sold the rice that remained, and used it to clear all the debts.

Bindu won the Best Farmer award from the Grama Panchayat that year!

After that, we didn’t feel like coming out of the paddy field,” says Bindu. “The result was beyond our wildest dreams. We started dreaming of owning our own land, and somehow we felt that was achievable.”

Full of confidence, they were ready for a bigger attempt next year; this time they leased 15 acres of land.

Again, they made a good profit from the produce.

Every year, they started making more than a lakh (Rs 100,000) of rupees in profit. Last year, they made Rs 20 lakh (Rs 2 million) from paddy cultivation, with a profit of Rs 150,000 for each of them.

In between, they also cultivated vegetables on another plot, with Krishi Bhavan helping them once again with seeds and fertilisers. Once the vegetables were harvested, they hired a vehicle, drove the veggies to the market, and sold them at a profit of Rs 4,000.

In 2002, Bindu bought her first piece of land — 1 acre for Rs 22,000. The next year, all three of them together bought another 3 acres of land. Now that they turn over profits in lakhs of rupees, they cultivate paddy on 30 acres of leased land.

With the agricultural department promoting mechanised cultivation, this year, they had a bumper crop.

With the profit she made last year, Bindu bought herself a scooter, and her family a car.

There has never been any problems between the friends; no clashes either on money or ego.

The reason, they say, is this” “We make it a point to write down each and every paisa spent and saved. We also minute every visit and discussion we have. After the sales, all the four of us sit down to calculate how much we spent and how much profit we made. Not a single paisa is unaccounted for. That is how we have worked together for 14 years.”

When Bindu was made chairperson of her local Kudumbashree unit, she decided to complete her schooling, and passed the Class 10 exam with flying colours.

“I am not sure whether I should do it at this advanced age, but I want to get through my Plus 2 exams too!” she says.

Bindu also learnt to drive the tiller machine and also climb coconut trees.

The biggest change in the lives of these four women is the freedom they enjoy.

“There was a time when we were shouted at if we were a bit late coming back home. With the kind of success we have achieved, nobody questions us any more. Our lives have changed beyond all recognition. We never ever thought that we would have three proper meals to eat, a two storey house, a car, a motorbike, a scooter, jewellery, and above all, our children studying to become engineers.”

“But there is no life without farming for us. This is our livelihood, our life. We can only thank Kudumbashree for this miraculous transformation,” they say.

As the chairperson of 164 NHGs of Kudumbashree at the Panchayat level, Bindu goes out on her scooter to meet other women and motivate them to come out of their homes and be independent!
“That is one motto of mine; inspire more women,” she says.

Bindu’s is just one success story; there are thousands of Bindus out there in Kerala now; all because of an idea called Kudumbashree.

Source:::: Shobha Warrier  in /Rediff.com  

Related News: Kudumbashree , Bindu , Krishi Bhavan , Kerala

Natarajan

 

Message For the Day….” How to Develop and Nurture Love For God … “

All have faith in the power of love. But how is this love to be fostered and developed? This question may arise in the minds of many. When people ask, “How can we develop our love for the Lord?” The answer is: “There is only one way. When you put into practice the love in which you have faith, that love will grow.” Because you do not practise what you profess, your faith gets weakened. A plant will grow only when it is watered regularly. When you have planted the seed of love, you can make it grow only by watering it with love every day. The tree of love will grow and yield the fruits of love. Often people today do not perform those acts which will promote love. When you wish to develop love for the Lord, you must continually practice loving devotion to the Lord.

Sathya Sai Baba

” Sri Krishna Ashtakam “….

 

Sri Krishna Ashtakam by Bhagavatpada Jagadguru Adi

Shankaracharya 

 

This melodious hymn is also composed by Adi Shankaracharya. His complete works (in Sanskrit) are available at:http://www.samatabooks.com/
The words of this hymn in Devnaagri script and English transliteration alongwith the English translation is available athttp://www.stutimandal.com/new/poemge… andhttp://www.celextel.org/adisankara/kr…

To understand Sanskrit better, visit:http://sanskritdocuments.org/learning…

The audio recording is taken from the Cd Shyam Smaranam: A musical offering to the Eternal Lord Krishna, produced by Sri Aurbindo Society, Pondicherry, under the supervision of Dr.Sampadananda Mishra.

The Cd has two parts, with the same hymns. Part 1 is with the accompaniment of musical instruments and the second one is the traditional rendition, without the musical instruments, except one. The female voices in the Cd belong to Ujjvala Haldar, Chandrima Haldar, Durba Bhattacharya and Binita Shah.

The photos are random downloads from the web.

 

Source::::You Tube .com

Natarajan

” படித்ததில் மனதை தொட்டது …”

உ.வே.சாமிநாதய்யர், ‘நான் கண்டதும் கேட்டதும்…’ நூலிலிருந்து:

மிதிலைப்பட்டி என்னும் ஊரை நான், எந்தக் காலத்திலும் மறக்க முடியாது; மணிமேகலையின் முகவுரையில், ‘இவற்றுள் மிகப் பழமையானதும், பரிசோதனைக்கு இன்றியமையாததாக இருந்ததும், மற்றப் பிரதிகளில் குறைந்தும், பிறழ்ந்தும், திரிந்தும் போன பாகங்களையெல்லாம் ஒழுங்குப்படச் செய்ததும், கோப்புச் சிதைந்து அழகு கெட்டு, மாசு பொதிந்து கிடந்த செந்தமிழ்ச் செல்வியின் மணிமேகலையை, அவள் அணிந்து கொள்ளும் வண்ணம் செவ்வனே செய்து கொடுத்ததும், மிதிலைப்பட்டி பிரதியே…’ என்று எழுதினேன்.
அது சிவகங்கை சமஸ்தானத்தைச் சேர்ந்தது; புதுக்கோட்டையைச் சார்ந்த திருமெய்யம் என்னும் இடத்திலிருந்து சில மைல் தூரத்தில் இருக்கிறது. அங்கிருந்த ஏட்டுச் சுவடிகளில் சிலவற்றை எனக்கு கொடுத்து உதவியவர் அழகிய சிற்றம்பலக் கவிராயர் என்னும் ஓர் அன்பர்.
அழகிய சிற்றம்பலக் கவிராயர் ஒரு செல்வந்தர். அவரோடு பழகிய காலத்தில், அவருடைய முன்னோர்களைப் பற்றி, பல வரலாறுகளை எனக்குச் சொல்லியிருக்கிறார். தம் முடைய சொந்த அனுபவங்கள் பலவற்றையும் சொன்னது உண்டு. அவற்றுள் ஒன்று வருமாறு:
ஒரு நாள், எங்கோ நெடுந்தூர முள்ள ஒரு ஊருக்கு கல்யாணத்திற்கு அவர் போயிருந்தார். மீண்டும் ஊருக்குத் திரும்ப எண்ணி, ஒரு வண்டிக்காரனிடம் வண்டி பேசி, அமர்த்திக் கொண்டார். இரவு முழுவதும், பயணம் செய்ய வேண்டி இருந்தது; வண்டிக்காரன் மூன்று ரூபாய் வாடகை கேட்டான். அன்றியும், ஊருக்குப் போகையிற் பொழுது விடிந்து விடும் என்பதால், காலையில் சாப்பாடு போட்டு அனுப்ப வேண்டும் என்றும் தெரிவித்துக் கொண்டான்.
ராத்திரியில் வண்டி புறப்பட்டது; கவிராயர் அதில் படுத்துக் கொண்டார். நல்ல நிலா வெளிச்சம் இருந்தது; வண்டிக்காரன் ஆனந்தமாக, தெம்மாங்கு பாடல் பாடிக்கொண்டே வண்டியை ஓட்டினான்.
பின், வண்டிக்காரன் மெல்ல அவருடைய குடும்ப நிலையைப் பற்றி விசாரித்தான்; கவிராயர் சொல்ல ஆரம்பித்தார்…
‘நான் இருப்பது மிதிலைப்பட்டி; எங்கள் முன்னோர்கள் எல்லாம் பெரிய வித்துவான்கள். எவ்வளவோ நூல்களைச் செய்திருக்கின்றனர்; பல இடங்களில் பரிசுகள் பெற்றிருக்கின்றனர். அவர்களில் ஒருவராகிய அழகிய சிற்றம்பலக் கவிராயருக்கு, இந்த மிதிலைப்பட்டி கிராமமானது, அக்காலத்தில் இந்தப் பக்கத்தில் ஜமீன்தாரராக இருந்த வெங்களப்ப நாயக்கர் என்பவரால் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது. அது சம்பந்தமான சாசனம் எங்கள் வீட்டில் இருக்கிறது.
எங்களுக்கு இப்போது ஜீவாதாரமாக இருப்பதும், எங்கள் குடும்பத்தில் லட்சுமி கடாட்சம் குறையாமல் இருக்கும்படி செய்வதும், அந்த வெங்களப்ப நாயக்கர் கொடுத்த கிராமமே! அவருடைய அன்னத்தை தான், இப்போது நாங்கள் சாப்பிட்டு வருகிறோம்.
‘வெங்களப்பர் செய்த தானங்களாலும், தர்மங்களாலும் அவருடைய புகழ் இன்றும் நிலைத்திருக்கிறது. அவரால் ஆதரிக்கப்பெற்ற நாங்களும், நல்ல நிலையில் இருக்கிறோம். ஆனால், அவருடைய பரம்பரையோ இருந்த இடம் தெரியாமல் போய்விட்டது. வெங்களப்ப நாயக்கருடைய பரம்பரையினர் யாரேனும் இப்போது இருக்கின்றனரோ, இல்லையோ தெரியவில்லை…’ என்று சொல்லிக் கொண்டே வந்தவர், அயர்ச்சியால் தூங்கி விட்டார்.
விடியற்காலையில் வண்டி மிதிலைப்பட்டி வந்து சேர்ந்தது; வீட்டை அடைந்த கவிராயர், தம்முடைய வேலைக்காரனை அழைத்து, வண்டிக்காரனுக்கு பழையது போடும்படி சொன்னார்.
அப்போது வண்டிக்காரன், ‘எனக்கு சாப்பாடு வேண்டாம்; நான் போய் வருகிறேன், உத்தரவு கொடுங்கள்…’ என்று சொன்னான்.
‘நீ ஊர் போய் சேருவதற்கு, அதிக நாழிகை ஆகுமே… சாப்பிட்டு விட்டுப் போ…’ என்று வற்புறுத்தினார்.
‘இல்லை; போகும் வழியில் தெரிந்தவர் வீட்டில் சாப்பிட்டுக் கொள்வேன்…’ என்றான் வண்டிக்காரன்.
‘சரி; வாடகை ரூபாயை வாங்கிக் கொண்டு போ…’
‘அது கிடக்கட்டும் ஐயா; நான் போய் வருகிறேன்…’என்றான்.
‘ஏனப்பா பணத்தை வேண்டாம்ன்னு சொல்றே… எனக்கு ஒன்றும் விளங்கவில்லையே…’ என்று கேட்டார்.
‘நேற்று ராத்திரி உங்கள் முன்னோர் கதையைச் சொன்னீர்களே… அவர்களை ஆதரித்த வெங்களப்ப நாயக்கர் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவன் நான்; ஏதோ தலைவிதி, இப்படி என்னை வண்டியோட்டச் செய்து விட்டது. கொடுத்துவிட்ட பின், அவர்களிடம் பெறுவது கவுரவமாகாது; மன்னிக்க வேண்டும்…’ என்று கூறி, வேகமாக வண்டியை ஓட்டிக்கொண்டு போய் விட்டான். சிற்றம்பலக் கவிராயர், இதைச் சொல்லுகையில், அவர் கண்களில் நீர் தளும்பி விட்டது.

Source:::: Dinamalar.com….varamalar
Natarajan