First Recorded public version in Gramophone Plate….First Sloga of Rig Veda in Sanskrit

 

‘His Masters Voice’ (HMV) had once published a pamphlet giving the history of gramophone record.

Gramophone was invented by Thomas Alva Edison in the 19th century.

Edison, who had invented many other gadgets like electric light and the motion picture camera, had become a legend even in his own time.

When he invented the gramophone record, which could record human voice for posterity, he wanted to record the voice of an eminent scholar on his first piece.

For that he chose Prof. Max Muller of England (a German by ethnicity), another great personality of the 19th century.

He wrote to Max Muller saying,

“I want to meet you and record your voice. When should I come?”

Max Muller who had great respect for Edison asked him to come on a suitable time when most of the scholars of the Europe would be gathering in England.

Accordingly, Edison took a ship and went to England. He was introduced to the audience. All cheered Edison’s presence.

Later at the request of Edison, Max Muller came on the stage and spoke in front of the instrument.

Then Edison went back to his laboratory and by afternoon came back with a disc & played it on the gramophone.

The audience was thrilled to hear the voice of Max Muller from the instrument.

They were glad that voices of great persons like Max Muller could be stored for the benefit of posterity.

After several rounds of applause and congratulations to Thomas Edison, Max Muller came to the stage and addressed the scholars and asked them,

“You heard my original voice in the morning. Then you heard the same voice coming out from this instrument in the afternoon. Do you understand what I said in the morning or what you heard in the afternoon?”

The audience fell silent because they could not understand the language in which Max Muller had spoken.

It was ‘Greek and Latin’ to them as they say.

But had it been Greek or Latin, they would have definitely understood because they were from various parts of Europe.

It was in a language which the European scholars had never heard.

Max Muller then explained what he had spoken.

He said that the language he spoke was Sanskrit and it was the first sloka of Rig Veda, which says “Agni Meele Purohitam”

This was the first recorded public version on the gramophone plate.

अग्निमीळे पुरोहितं यज्ञस्य देवं रत्वीजम।
होतारं रत्नधातमम।।
(Rig Veda 1.001.01)

Why did Max Muller choose this?

Addressing the audience he said,

“Vedas are the oldest text of the human race. And “Agni Meele Purohitam” is the first verse of Rig Veda.

In the most primordial time, when the people did not know how even to cover their bodies and lived by hunting and housed in caves, Indians had attained high civilization and they gave the world universal philosophies in the form of the Vedas.”

When “Agni Meele Purohitam” was replayed, the entire audience stood up in silence as a mark of respect.

The verse means :

“Oh Agni, You who gleam in the darkness, to You we come day by day, with devotion and bearing homage. So be of easy access to us, Agni, as a father to his son, abide with us for our well being.”

Source….Input from a friend of mine
Natarajan

Do You Know that Glass takes one million years to decompose …? !!!

 

Do You Know ….?

Glass takes one million years to decompose, which means it never wears out and can be recycled an infinite amount of times!

Gold is the only metal that doesn’t rust, even if it’s buried in the ground for thousands of years.

Your tongue is the only muscle in your body that is attached at only one end.

If you stop getting thirstyyou need to drink more water.
When a human body is dehydrated, its thirst mechanism shuts off.

Zero is the only number that cannot be represented by Roman numerals.

Kites were used in the American Civil War to deliver letters and newspapers.

The song Auld Lang Syne is sung at the stroke of midnight in almost every English-speaking country in the world to bring in the new year.

Drinking water after eating
reduces the acid in your mouth by 61 percent. Drinking a glass of water before you eat may help digestion and curb appetite.

Peanut oil is used for cooking in submarines because it doesn’t smoke unless it’s heated above 450F.

The roar that we hear when we place a seashell next to our ear is not the ocean, but rather the sound of blood surging through the veins in the ear.

Nine out of every 10living things live in the ocean.

The banana cannot reproduce itself. It can be propagated only by the hand of man.

Airports at higher altitudes require a longer airstrip due to lower air density.

The University of Alaska spans four time zones.

The tooth is the only part of the human body that cannot heal itself.

In ancient Greece ,tossing an apple to a girl was a traditional proposal of marriage.
Catching it meant she accepted.

Warner Communications paid 28 million for the copyright to the song Happy Birthday, which was written in 1935!

Intelligent peoplehave more zinc and copper in their hair.

A comet’s tail always points away from the sun.

The Swine Fluvaccine in 1976 caused more death and illness than the disease it was intended to prevent.

Caffeine increases the power of aspirin and other painkillers, that is why it is found in some medicines.

The military salute is a motion that evolved from medieval times, when knights in armor raised their visors to reveal their identity.

If you get into the bottom of a well or a tall chimney and look up,
you can see stars, even in the middle of the day.

When a person dies,hearing is the last sense to go. The first sense lost is sight.

In ancient timesstrangers shook hands to show that they were unarmed.

Strawberries and cashews are the only fruits whose seeds grow on the outside.

Avocados have the highest calories of any fruit at 167 calories per hundred grams.

The moon moves about two inches away from the Earth each year.

The Earth gets 100 tons heavier every day due to falling space dust.

Due to earth’s gravity it is impossible for mountains to be higher than 15,000 meters.

Mickey Mouse is known as “Topolino” in Italy.

Soldiers do not march in step when going across bridges because they could set up a vibration which could be sufficient to knock the bridge down.

Everything weighs one percent less at the equator.

For every extra kilogram carried on a space flight, 530 kg of excess fuel are needed at lift-off.

The letter J does not appear anywhere on the periodic table of the elements.

Source….Input from one of my friends…

Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை …” நிலா விடும் தூது “

 

நிலா  விடும்  தூது
——————
நிலா சோறு சாப்பிட்ட நீ கால் பதித்தாய் என் மண்ணில்
ஒரு நாள் … நிலவு எனக்கு அன்று ஒரே பெருமை !
 பூமித்தாயின் பிள்ளைகள் வருவார்கள் என் வீட்டுக்கு !
 ஆட்டமும் பாட்டமும் இருக்கும் என் வீட்டிலும் ! நான் அவருக்கு
ஊட்ட வேண்டும் சோறு பூமி காட்டி என் நிலவு வீட்டில்!
இந்த நிலவின் கனவு அது !இலவு காத்த கிளி போல ஆனதே
இந்த நிலவின் கனவு !நானும்  தூது விட்டுப் பார்க்கிறேன்
என்னைத் தாண்டி செல்லும்  விண்கலத்தில் எல்லாம்!
வழி மேல் விழி வைத்து தேடுகிறேன் உன்னை
மனிதா  என் மேலே வட்டமிடும் விண்கலத்தில் ! இரக்கமே
இல்லையா உனக்கு ? என் மண்ணில்  இறங்க மறுப்பது ஏன் ?
உயர உயர பறப்பதுதான் உன்  இலக்கா ? புதுப்புது
மண்ணை விண்ணிலும் தொட்டு முத்தமிட்டு உன் வீட்டுக்கே
திரும்பி செல்வது மட்டும்  உன் அறிவியல் விளையாட்டா ?
உன் மண்ணில் நீ விளையாட இடம் இல்லாமல் இந்த
விண்ணில் நீ விளையாட நானும் இந்த விண்மண்டலமும்
ஒரு விளையாட்டு திடல் மட்டுமா  உனக்கு ?
புதுப்புது அறிவியல் செய்தி உன் வசம் கொண்டு  சேர்க்கும்
உன் விண்கலம்  இந்த நிலா விடும் தூதை மட்டும் உன்னிடம்
கொண்டு சேர்க்காத காரணம் என்ன சொல்லு மனிதா?
நிலா நான்  காத்திருக்கிறேன் உன் கால் என் மண்ணை
மீண்டும் முத்தமிட்டு  என் மண்ணில் நீ ஓடி ஆடும்
அந்த நல்ல நாளுக்காக !
Natarajan  in http://www.dinamani.com dated 27th Feb 2017
Natarajan

THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN BRITISH AND AMERICAN ENGLISH….

 

 What are some key differences between the UK English and US English?

British-American-FlagMost people are well aware of some of the more obvious differences between British and American English. For instance, American English omits the “u” in colour, neighbour, honour, etc. Most people also know that a lot of words mean different things: a boot is the trunk of your car, a jumper is a sweater, and thongs are flip-flops. But there are some subtle differences between the two dialects that you might not have noticed at first glance.

This is by no means a comprehensive list of every grammatical quirk between the two versions of English, just a selection of differences that I thought were fun or interesting based on my experiences as an American living abroad where British English is the dominant language. I think I should also point out that with British TV shows on American screens and vice versa, not to mention the interaction we’re able to enjoy on forums across the internet, it’s possible some British or American English has slipped into your vocabulary, so some differences are starting to disappear.

First, speakers of British and American English have different preposition preferences. These little words are so small you might not have noticed the differences when talking to your British/American friends. Each example is grammatically correct, but one or the other might sound a little strange to you depending on where you’re from:

British English: I will come home at the weekend.
American English: I will see her on the weekend.

BE: He studied history at university.
AE: She studied biology in college.

In terms of past-time adverbs such as yet, just, or already, Brits usually use the present perfect verb tense and Americans use the past simple verb tense. Again, both forms are correct, and you can get the same meaning across either way:

BE: Have you phoned her yet?
AE: Did you call her yet?

BE: Have you already been to the library?
AE: Did you already go to the bank?

British English speakers will also use the word “got” more than American English speakers. Where Brits will say “have got,” Americans will typically say “have.” Like this:

BE: I’ve got to go now.
AE: I have to go now.

BE: I’ve got five siblings.
AE: I have five siblings.

Even when asking a question, the “do” form of “have” is much more common in American English, while British English typically uses “got” for specific situations:

BE: Have you got a sister?
AE: Do you have a sister?

BE: Have you got time to write this down?
AE: Do you have time to write this down?

Interestingly, when Americans do use “got,” the “have” and “do” forms are often mixed up between the question and answer, while in British English they are more consistent. Take this example from the BBC:

BE: We’ve got a new car! – You have?
AE: We’ve got a new car! – You do?

There are a lot of differences in regular and irregular verbs in British and American English. That means that we tack on various endings on some verbs in one dialect that we don’t in others. A couple of the verbs that are irregular in British English are burn, learn, and smell. These words are all regular in American English. For example:

BE: She burnt the toast.
AE: She burned the toast.

BE: The garden smelt of roses.
AE: The garden smelled of roses.

There are also a couple of verbs that are irregular in American English that are regular in British English, including dive, fit, and wet.

BE: She dived into the lake.
AE: She dove into the lake.

BE: He wetted the paintbrush.
AE: He wet the paintbrush.

The use of the verbs “have” and “take” are also a little different. In British English, they prefer “have,” while in American English, they prefer “take.” For instance:

BE: I’m going to have a nap.
AE: I’m going to take a nap.

BE: She is having a bath.
AE: She is taking a bath.

In addition to cutting out letters, sometimes Americans cut out entire words—at least when their sentences are compared to British sentences. In this case, I’m talking about “can” and “could.” When using perception verbs like see, hear, and smell, British English often calls for “can” and “could,” while American English ignores them entirely, like this:

BE: I could hear Jane talking in the other room.
AE: I heard Jane making breakfast in the kitchen.

BE: She can see a rainbow in the sky.
AE: She sees a rainbow in the sky.

Then there are those words that are left with an “s” or not depending on which dialect you speak. One such word is the shortened form of mathematics, which is “maths” in British English and “math” in American English. The reasoning for this one is that “mathematics” is plural, so the shortened “maths” in British English should be too. In American English, it’s shortened, but cutting off the “s” as well. Another example of this is toward vs. towards, which is one of the most common mix-ups:

BE: She walked towards the light.
AE: He moved toward the door.

There are even a few differences in punctuation between British and American English. First, it is more common to use the single quotation mark in British English, whereas in American English it is more common to use the double quotation mark. Second, in American English, people include punctuation inside quotation marks, while in British English the punctuation goes outside of the quotation marks (unless it’s part of the quote.) For instance:

BE: ‘She went to the park’, said John.
AE: “She went to the park,” said John.

BE: John said, ‘She went to the park.’ (this is part of the quote so it stays inside the quotation marks)
AE: John said, “She went to the park.”

Then, of course, there are the multitude of words that are used differently in each dialect, along with a few different phrases. One I found particularly interesting while polling a few of my friends was the phrase for asking if someone would like you to take them in your car to a different location:

British/Australian English: Would you like a lift?
American English: Would you like a ride?
Some Parts of Canada: Would you like a drive?

Beyond grammatical quirks, here are some words and their corresponding meanings depending on which side of the pond you’re on:

British English

American English

Nappy Diaper
Trolley Shopping cart
Torch Flashlight
Boot Trunk
Thongs Flip-flops
Pants Underwear
Trousers Pants
Rubber Eraser
Biscuit Cookie
Lift Elevator
Bumbag Fanny pack
Car park Parking lot
Candyfloss (Fairyfloss in Australia) Cotton candy
Chemist Drugstore
Cot Crib
Drink-driving Drunk driving
Fish finger Fish stick
Fringe Bangs
Holiday Vacation
Lorry Truck
Pavement Sidewalk
Postcode Zip code
Pram Stroller
Queue Line
Touch wood Knock on wood
Z (zed) Z (zee)

 

Source….www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

இந்த வாரக் கவிதை ….” அரியாசனம் “

 

அரியாசனம்
————–
அரியாசனம்  கொள்ளவேண்டும் பெருமை தன்
மேல் அமரும் தலைவன் முகம் பார்த்து !
தலைவன் அவனும்  சிந்திக்கவேண்டும் இந்த
அரியாசனத்துக்கு  தானும் பெருமை
சேர்க்க வேண்டும் தன் நன்னடத்தையால் என்று !
தலைவனுக்கு அரியாசனம் தரும் பொது சனம்
ஏதும் அறியா சனம் அல்ல ! ஒரு ஜடமும் அல்ல !
அரியாசனம் ஒரு தலைவனுக்கே  நிரந்தரமும் இல்லை !
புரிய வேண்டும் ஒரு உண்மை தலைவனுக்கு ..
அவனை அரியாசனத்தில் அமர்த்துவதும்  பொது ஜனம்
அரியாசனம் அவனுக்கு சரியாசனம் இல்லை என்றால்
சரியான தருணத்தில் தலைவன் அவனை கீழே
இறக்கி விரட்டி அடிப்பதும் அதே பொது ஜனம்தான் என்று !
இதை மறக்காமல் இருந்தால் சிறக்கும் ஒரு தலைவனின்
நல்லாட்சி !
K.Natarajan  in http://www.dinamani.com
Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை…” எதிர் காலம் ” !!!

 

எதிர்காலம்
————-
நெருநெல் உளனொருவன் இன்றில்லை என்னும்
பெருமை  படைத்து இவ்வுலகு …சொன்னான்
வள்ளுவன் !  வள்ளுவன் வாக்கையும் வென்று
நான் காண்பேன் கதிரவனை நாளை காலை
என்னும்  நம்பிக்கை நம் எதிர்கால கனவுக்கு
நாம் போடும் அடித்தளம் …இன்று இல்லாவிட்டால்
என்ன …”நாளை  நமதே” என்னும் நம்  நம்பிக்கை
மாற்றும் நம் எதிர்காலத்தை ஒரு வசந்த காலமாக !
புரியாத புதிர் அல்ல நம் எதிர்காலம் …ராசி
பலன் சொல்வதும்  அல்ல நம் எதிர்காலம் !
நம் எதிர்காலம் நம் கையில்தான் ..கை ரேகையில் அல்ல !
“நாளை நமதே ” என்னும் நம்பிக்கை  நனவாக
தேவை இன்று நம் கடின உழைப்பு …
உழைப்பு …விடா முயற்சி ..தன்னம்பிக்கை
இம்மூன்றும்  அருமையான  வித்தாகும்  ஒரு
முத்தான எதிர் கால மலர் பூங்கா  பூத்துக் குலுங்க!
எதிர்காலம் நமக்கு ஒரு வசந்த காலமாக மலரட்டும் !
எதிர் மறை நினைவும் உணர்வும் நம்மை விட்டு விலகட்டும் !
Natarajan

New Year Greetings and Wishes …

 

da8d8-baba2

God does not have an iPhone or Android Mobile…No iPad with  Him either..
But HE is the  favourite contact to all of us !
HE does not have any account in FaceBook ..But HE is our Best friend !
HE does not have any handle in Twitter…but we all follow HIM !
HE does not have internet with Wifi…but we are all connected to HIM !
We can call HIM at any time  and HIS customer Service never puts us on ” Hold” !
HE loves all of us equally without any bias or discrimination ..and no conditions apply.!
 We  pray to HIM that HE continues to remain in our  contact and shower HIS Blessings upon
all of us in the Year 2017 too as HE was doing all these years !
Let this request be the only Prayer to God from all of us on this Day !
Best wishes for a Happy , Healthy and  Prosperous New Year to you and your loved ones .
Natarajan
28th Dec 2016

Hoover and Their Disastrous Free Flight Promotion…

world-travelGiving away free stuff with a purchase is a good way to bolster sales and can result in a tidy increase in profits, provided you follow the general rule of making sure the long term projected profit from the promotion is greater than the cost of the giveaway. Appliance giant Hoover learned this seemingly obvious lesson first hand in 1992 when they inexplicably decided to give away free flights worth several times more than most of the products they were selling as part of what has become known as Hoovergate- one of the most disastrous marketing campaigns of all time, today taught in marketing text books the world over.

Though Hoover sells a multitude of appliances and domestic goods, the company is known mostly for its vacuum cleaners. (And if you’re curious, see: Who Invented the Vacuum Cleaner?) So much so in fact that over in Blighty the word “hoover” is an accepted synonym for the device, much to the annoyance of Hoover who, like other companies, fought hard not to have their brand become genericized like Aspirin and Thermos. This generalizing of their brand name largely rose from the near total monopoly Hoover had over vacuum sales in the UK throughout much of the 1950s to 1970s. However, as the end of the 20th century approached, the British arm of Hoover found that sales were beginning to lag considerably from their heyday, with their marketing share steadily declining and warehouses slowly filling with old stock nobody wanted to buy.

In the early 1990s, Hoover’s British arm was approached by a now-defunct travel agent called JSI Travel with a rather intriguing offer to help shift some of this old stock out of the warehouses and into the hands of customers. The idea was to offer two free return flights to Europe with every purchase of any Hoover product worth more than £100 (about £190 today or $235), all arranged through this travel agency. Beyond revenue from sales, much of the cost for the tickets themselves from those who jumped through the many, many hoops to actually get the tickets would be subsidized by JSI Travel selling additional services like travel insurance and hotel packages. JSI Travel also thought it would provide a long term benefit for their small company as it would introduce tens of thousands of people to their travel agency’s services.

Hoover liked the sound of the arrangement and in 1992 launched their free flights campaign, advertising it on TV and in papers across the country with the simple caption: “Two Return Flight Tickets. Unbelievable.”

The offer saw sales of Hoover product explode because, hey, free flights. Slowly, but surely, Hoover’s warehouses began to empty.

Now, if Hoover had chosen to quit here, we wouldn’t really have much to say other than kudos to them on a smart business decision. (And if you’re wondering, see What’s a Kudo?) Unfortunately for them, they got too greedy and hilarity ensued.

After examining the numbers linked to the campaign and realising that only a fraction of the people who’d bought a qualifying product as part of the campaign actually jumped through all the hoops to redeem for the tickets, Hoover decided to extend the promotion and get a little more international, hoping to boost sales even further in the process.

This was despite Hoover having approached various risk management companies to evaluate the promotion and being summarily told it was a horrible idea. For instance, risk management advisor Mark Kimber from PIMS-SCA would late note,

“I advised Hoover of the potential pitfalls of the promotion. Having looked at the details of the promotion along with attempting to calculate how it could actually work I declined to even offer risk management coverage based upon the information presented. With such a high value offer for only a relatively small cost to the consumer, to me it made no logical sense.

…nevertheless Hoover chose to completely ignore both mine and the industry’s advice and continue on its calamitous crusade without considering the potential cost or consequences…”

Head firmly in the sand, Hoover approached three of the biggest airlines of the day, British Airways, Virgin Atlantic and American Airlines, along with various travel agencies, and entered into negotiations to offer a similar deal as they had previously, only this time offering free flights to either New York or Florida from the UK.

After terms were set and contracts signed, Hoover once again launched a massive ad campaign to tell the public about the promotion, which still inexplicably offered the free flights if the customer spent a minimum of just £100. This is an important fact because, at the time, a flight to either destination would have set you back on average about £600 (nearly £1,200 or $1,500 today) making the promotion infinitely more desirable than a pair of free flights to a European destination that cost a fraction of that.

According to news reports after the fact, its purported that Hoover expected that the value of the flights to America would encourage people to perhaps buy a more expensive product. Whether that’s true or not, customers flocked to stores and predictably bought the absolute cheapest qualifying product possible (the Turbopower Total System which clocked in at a reasonable £119.99)  before sending off for their free tickets to the land of freedom and cheese that comes in a can.

This resulted in massive backlogs in Hoover’s offices as they only anticipated about a tenth of the eventual response. Thanks to their status as a trusted, well-established brand known for their quality, Hoover’s reputation wasn’t initially hurt by the delays that resulted until a reporter for the Daily Record claimed that not a single airline had received a booking to America from a Hoover voucher holder. Whether accurate or not, this story raised the hackles of the customers who up to this point had been waiting patiently.

Along with being one of the most popular articles the Daily Record ever published, it had the side-effect of alerting millions of people that the promotion existed, resulting in tens of thousands of additional sales.

It was soon after reported that local travel agencies wanting to avoid the loss of income from their part of the deal began trying to dissuade customers by abusing the offer’s small print- doing things like offering flights from airports that were across the country from the person trying to fly. According to a contemporary BBC report, one agency, Free Flights Europe, seemed to require customers to buy about £300 of add-ons to their “free” tickets before they’d stop hassling them and finally give them their tickets.

During the ensuing media firestorm, Hoover blamed the delays on the airlines and travel agencies they’d contracted with for being unable to meet the demand. Whoever’s fault it was, their customers weren’t happy.

One particularly irate customer was one Harry Cichy who decided that he was going to get his flight no matter what, organising a group of likeminded customers who doggedly pursued their tickets from Hoover in and out of court. The aptly named Hoover Holiday Pressure Group, spearheaded by Cichy, refused to allow Hoover to worm their way out of their obligation, with Cichy himself going as far as travelling to the company’s American headquarters (a trip that was ironically paid for by Hoover) to argue his case in front of their executives.

Despite Cichy’s best efforts, it’s estimated that only 220,000 of the half million or so (Hoover never released the official figures) people who applied for the promotion were able to ever claim their free flights, with those who didn’t either suing for the value of the flights in small claims court or moving on and swearing off the brand forever. This latter point turned out to be the heaviest blow to the company.

As to that aftermath, three top executives, director of marketing services Michael Gilbey, vice president of marketing Brian Webb, and Hoover’s European president William Foust, were summarily fired by the company’s American owners, Maytag.

Beyond the major firings, the company spent about £50 million (around £100 million today or $125 million) for the tickets for the free flights compared to about £30 million in gross revenue generated from sales during the promotion. But the ultimate cost was far greater.

To begin with, hundreds of thousands of people in the UK now had Hoover products that in many cases they didn’t actually want or need. The result from this was a massive sell off of these items on the second-hand market, meaning potential future customers could easily buy brand new Hoover products for a fraction of the price Hoover was selling them for in the stores.

On top of that, the company took a major hit to their reputation, meaning even those customers who might have still purchased something from Hoover were now avoiding the brand. To try to fix this, Hoover launched an advertising campaign costing about £7 million to help restore their image, with little affect.

Unsurprisingly, the Hoover brand in the UK took a major hit, with their market share dropping from about 50% in 1992 to just 20% in 1995. Cutting their losses, the entire European arm of Hoover was sold by Maytag to an Italian manufacturer called Candy at a significant loss from what they’d paid for it just six years before in 1989.

Source….www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை…” சுனாமி சுவடுகள் ” …

 

ஆழிப்  பேரலை  இங்கு பதித்த சுவடுகள் என்றும் 
அழியாத வடுக்கள் அன்றோ ! ஆண்டு பன்னிரண்டு 
ஆனாலும் மறக்க முடியுமா  அந்த நாளை இன்றும் ?
சுனாமியின் சுவடுகளில் கால் பதித்து  மரம் பல பலி 
கொண்டு ஒரு நகரின் வாழ்வு  முடக்கி " வார்தா "
ஆடிய ஆட்டம் ஆழிப் பேரலையின் மற்றுமொரு 
அவதாரமா ?  பஞ்ச பூதங்கள் வரிசை கட்டி கொஞ்சமும் 
இரக்கம் இல்லாமல் ஒன்றன் பின் ஒன்றாக   அசுர ஆட்டம் போடுவது  
ஏன்  இந்த இசை  விழா மாதத்தில் மீண்டும்  மீண்டும் ?
வசை பாடவில்லை நான் உங்களை பஞ்ச  பூதங்களே! 
அசைக்க முடியாத நம்பிக்கை எனக்கு உங்கள் மீது !
எங்களைக் காக்கும் தாய் அல்லவா நீங்க ...பிள்ளைகள் 
எங்களை நீங்க தண்டித்தது போதும் ...உங்க அடிகளின் 
வடுக்கள் கட்டாயம் தடுக்கும் எங்களை உங்கள் கண்டிப்பான 
நெறி முறை  விதி முறை  மீறாமல் இனிமேல் ! நம்புங்க எங்க வாக்கை !
நம்பி எங்களை வழி நடத்துங்க ஒரு தடங்கல்  இல்லா 
பாதையில் நாங்கள்   எங்கள் பாத  சுவடு பதிக்க

Natarajan

www.dinamani.com ---26th Dec2016

 

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை …” வேலி தாண்டிய காற்று “

 

வேலி தாண்டிய காற்று
——————–
கடலுக்கு  கரையே எல்லை …காற்றுக்கும் அந்த  கரைதான்
எல்லைக் கோடா ? … இல்லை  அதுவே  காற்றுக்கு
வேலியா ?  கரை கடக்கும் காற்று சூறைக் காற்றாவது  ஏன் ?
இளம்  தென்றல்  காற்றாக  ,  கடல் கரை காற்றாக
பயணிக்கும்  காற்று , சூறைக் காற்றாக உரு மாறி
ஒரு நகரையே  புரட்டிபோடுவது  ஏன் ? அந்த காற்று
தன் வேலியைத்  தாண்டுவதாலா ?  இல்லை
மனிதன் இயற்கையின் நியதியை நாளும்  மீறுவதாலா ?
வேலி தாண்டுவது காற்றா …இல்லை  மனிதனா ?
Natarajan