Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Even This Will Pass Away

Monday, 7th April, 2014

Once in Persia reigned a king, Who upon his signet ring,
Carved a maxim strange and wise, When held before his eyes,
Gave him counsel at a glance, Fit for every change and chance:
Solemn words, and these were they: “EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.”

Trains of camel through the sand Brought him gems from Samarcand;
Fleets of galleys over the seas Brought him pearls to rival these,
But he counted little gain, Treasures of the mine or main;
“What is wealth?” the king would say, “EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.”

Mid the pleasures of his court At the zenith of their sport,
When the palms of all his guests Burned with clapping at his jests,
Seated midst the figs and wine, Said the king, “Ah, friends of mine.
Pleasure comes but not to stay, “EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.”

Woman, fairest ever seen Was the bride he crowned as queen,
Pillowed on the marriage-bed Whispering to his soul, he said,
“Though no monarch ever pressed Fairer bosom to his breast,
Mortal flesh is only clay! “EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.”

Fighting on the furious field, Once a javelin pierced his shield,
Soldiers with a loud lament Bore him bleeding to his tent,
Groaning from his tortured side, “Pain is hard to bear;” he cried.
“But with patience, day by day, EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.”

Towering in a public square Forty cubits in this air,
Stood his statue carved in stone, And the king disguised, unknown,
Gazed upon his sculptured name. And he pondered, “What is fame?”
“Fame is but a slow decay! “EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.”

Struck with palsy, sore and old, Waiting at the gates of gold,
Said he with his dying breath “Life is done, but what is Death?”
Then as answer to the king Fell a sunbeam on his ring;
Showing by a heavenly ray. EVEN THIS WILL PASS AWAY.”

A poem by Theodore Tilton (October 2, 1835 – May 29, 1907)
He was an American newspaper editor, poet and abolitionist. (In Western Europe and the Americas, abolitionism was a historical movement to end the African slave trade and set slaves free.)
The rock singer Robert Plant has put Tilton's poem "Even This Shall Pass Away" to music in a song of the same name, a recording of which is featured on the singer's Band of Joy album (2010).

SPIRITUALITY - Consider it patiently


Monday, 07th April 2014

SPIRITUALITY: Have you ever patiently tried to understand the actual meaning of this word?

We hear this word very often in various situations. What does spirituality stand for?

Spirituality refers to the NATURAL urge in human being to find out/realize/overcome his/her NATURAL limitations in all aspects of existence.

Man takes birth with a lot of limitations. He/she can't hear sound beyond a limited frequency. His/her eyes are useless beyond a limited distance. His/her physical strength is very limited and conditional. His memory, imagination and thought power are highly limited. Moreover, man is influenced/enchanted by a lot of things in the world. Man forgets that his/her life is very very short and believes that he/she is eternal. His/her false pride and pretensions make him/her more and more limited.

By the grace of Nature, selected men/women realize these limitations in them, and that very moment, they get the glimpses of the unlimited entity existing extended from their limited beings. The awareness of the existence of an unlimited NATURAL behavior is called GOD. God can see anything. He has no limitation with His eyes. He has no limitation with His ears. He can hear anything. He can imagine anything. He has no limitation with imagination. He can see the Truth, for He is the Truth. He can do anything. He has no limitations with action.. See, how unlimited HE is!

This unlimited entity appeared in our thought because we realized the limitations in our existence. This is the important point.

Observe/Realize our own limitation in each and every aspect of our being is the only way to understand the unlimited entity, which is GOD. Internal awareness leads to the realization of our limitations and internal management leads us go beyond them.