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The Hitopadesa
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
11 posts | 2 read | 6 to read
Composed between 800 and 950 AD, Narayana's Hitopadesa is one of the best-known of all works in Sanskrit literature. A fascinating collection of fables, maxims and sayings in verse, it combines a wide variety of writings from earlier authors in one volume - a 'garden of pleasing stories' created to provide guidance, wisdom and political advice to the reader. With elegance and great humour, Narayana weaves a framework for the classic tales, here narrated by animals who quote from and reflect on stories from the Pancatantra and other traditional sources. At once an anthology of folk wisdom and an original and satirical work in its own right, the Hitopadesa has been deeply admired and widely read for more than a thousand years for its humorous and profound reflections on human lives, loves, follies and philosophies.
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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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This is a book of contraries and complimentary opposites. Divided into four sections (2x2): Gaining Friends-Splitting Partners; War-Peace. It is a story told by the wise to the foolish, it's most often form being a dialogue in which friends or adversaries debate a moral point using verse aphorisms and fables, the point being often conceded, but rarely won, and frequently contradicted in another part of the book. 👇🏻👇🏻

Bookwomble I've come to the conclusion that it's principle message is that you can always find an excuse for doing this or that, and all you can do is your best. Being kind, trusting and truthful won't necessarily protect you from people of Ill-intent, but it's still the best way to be for one's own soul. 6y
Tiyas7 @Bookwomble Great Pov👍👍 6y
Bookwomble @Tiyas7 Thank you 😊 As you've said it's a book you grew up with, can you say how it's viewed in Bengali culture? I'm interested to know how it's regarded today - a historical whimsy, or a living piece of literature? 6y
10 likes3 comments
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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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"This is mine, and this is not" -
Thus do the small-minded see.
The large-hearted have always thought
The world itself a family.

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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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It's pleasant to come unexpectedly upon old friends: The Hitopadeśa tale of the "The Hasty Priest and the Loyal Mongoose" is identical with the Welsh legend of "Llewelyn and the Dog Gelert". In both, the loyal pet guards its owner's baby while he goes out. Upon return, the pet is found, its mouth dripping with blood and is killed in a rage, too late to discover the baby well and a dead snake (Hitopadeśa) or wolf (Welsh) by the overturned cradle.

Weaponxgirl I read the Welsh version when I was a kid and I cried so much 6y
Bookwomble @Weaponxgirl The Gelert story has a lot more detail to it than the version in this book, so it does tug on the heartstrings a bit more 🐺🐕👶🐕😱🗡❣☠😭 6y
Weaponxgirl @Bookwomble it was in a children's book of animal stories so I can't say I've read it properly but I just remember being heartbroken as a child. 6y
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Bookwomble @Weaponxgirl Children seem to have a greater degree of empathy with animals, don't they? 6y
Weaponxgirl @Bookwomble yes, and I was bought up in a house with pets and a wildlife documentary obsession 😂 6y
14 likes6 comments
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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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Man is not of man a slave -
He's money's slave.

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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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The fool may even look distinguished
If dressed well, in Council Hall;
And this impression's not extinguished
As long as he does not speak at all.

TrishB 😂😂 great matching pic ... 6y
Bookwomble @TrishB It's entirely random, Trish. I just searched on the word "twit" and this image came up ? ?? 6y
TrishB There are some good things left in the world 😁 (he isn‘t one of them though) 6y
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Bookwomble @TrishB He sure does give privilege, entitlement and inherited wealth a bad name! 6y
TrishB Most definitely 😁 6y
quietlycuriouskate Ugh, of all the people I wasn't expecting to run into on Litsy! 6y
Bookwomble @River_Voice I do apologise - I should have posted s trigger warning 🤢 6y
12 likes7 comments
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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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I do like nested stories, and the Hitopadeśa is a cool example of one. I'm five levels in at this point: i) the unidentified general narrator tells of, ii) Viśņu Śarma and the Princes, which is the frame story for, iii) The Crow and the Pigeon, which tells of, iv) The Deer, the Crow and the Jackal, which tells of, v) The Cat and the Vulture. There was also a short digression into the story of The Traveller and the Tiger. I'm only on page 36!

Tiyas7 This is one of my childhood reads!! Obviously in bengali, my mother tongue😊 It's always good to see your rather offbeat choices of books👍 6y
Bookwomble @Tiyas7 I'm pleased to have evoked a good feeling in you via my reading choice ? I take "offbeat" as the compliment you intended, though I'm often surprised when others say my reading is unusual. My unconscious assumption is that I'm fairly mainstream. I was shocked to find at my last workplace that I was the *only* person to have read all of Lewis's Narnia series! 6y
Tiyas7 @Bookwomble I totally get it😂 & Yes, I obviously said it as a compliment😁. I guess, the 'Mainstream' & 'Offbeat' terminologies are always subjective. Credit goes to you, I've stacked a lot of books, that I would have not read generally😀 6y
Tiyas7 @Bookwomble btw, are you enjoying 'The Hitopadesa' ??? 6y
Bookwomble Yes, I am. After more than 1000 years, there's still much that is relevant. Human nature is what it is, though things do change. The patriarchal attitudes evident in places don't do anything for me, but are nonetheless instructional as points for reflection. 6y
9 likes5 comments
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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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“As your life to you is dear,
So is his to every creature.
The good have compassion for all,
By comparison and analogy with their own nature.”

- Hitopadeśa
#veggie #vegetarian #vegan #davinci

Two quotes for the price of one ☺

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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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There lived an extremely wealthy merchant... He was in the evening of his life, but lust filled his thoughts and, with the arrogance of riches, he married a merchant's daughter called Līlāvati. She was in the flush of youth, a veritable victory banner of the God of Love. The old husband gave her no satisfaction. For,

As sun and moon give no respite
To those troubled by heat and cold
So women's hearts do not delight
In husbands decrepit and old.

Leftcoastzen Yay! 6y
Tiyas7 @Bookwomble have you read the Hitopadesa ? 6y
Bookwomble It's next on my list - I've read the introduction by way of introduction. 6y
11 likes3 comments
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Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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Of what use are words of wisdom to the man who is unwise?
Of what use is a lamp to a man who is blind?
Hear the essence of thousands of sacred books: to help others is virtue:to hurt others is sin
A man rises or goes down by his own actions like the builder of a wall or the digger of a well
The narrow-minded man thinks and says:This man is one of us; this one is not, he is a stranger. To the man of noble soul the whole of mankind is but one family

saresmoore I love this! Hadn‘t ever heard of this before. 7y
Bookwomble @saresmoore It sounds interesting, doesn't it? I'll get a copy eventually. 7y
14 likes1 stack add2 comments
quote
Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
post image

As your life to you is dear,
So is his to every creature.
The good have compassion for all,
By comparison and analogy with their own nature.

blurb
Bookwomble
The Hitopadesa | Narayana
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I felt something of a thrill about ordering an edition of this book from India, which was rather dampened by its not arriving. I've got a refund, so I guess that's ok, but the prospect of buying a boring copy from the UK is... well, boring! Reminding myself that the content is the important thing 😑

saresmoore I suppose that‘s true about content, but, but... (I‘m not helping, am I?) 7y
Bookwomble Ha, ha! No!! 😂 7y
14 likes1 stack add2 comments