COMICS:- # "Two Rogues" # "Sly Servant" # "Tit For Tat" # "Compliment" # "Stupid Robbers" # "Greedy Miser" # "Mistake" STORIES:- # "Clever" # "Demon" # "Gift" # "Monkeys" # "Shelter" # "Daydreamer" # "Modesty" # "Dogs/Cats" # "Wind/Sun" # "Wish" # "Gifts" # "Smart" # "Pig's Life" # "Miser" # "Drum" # "Grateful Deer" # "Two Sons" # "Two Frogs" # "Elephant's Nose" # "Playful Monkey" # "Talkative Turtle" # "Donkey Fell Into A Well" # "Their Master's Voice" # "The Game" # "Outsmarted!"

Friday, November 9, 2007

Best wishes on the occasion of Diwali - the Festival of Lights...

Today, India celebrates Diwali - the Festival of Lights...



On this auspicious day, may you be blessed with peace and prosperity...



Sunday, November 4, 2007

Smart daughter...smart wife...smart woman!

"Help me," the old man begged. "My neighbor has stolen from me."

The king gladly listened. It pleased him that others recognized his wisdom. "What exactly is the problem?" questioned the king.

"My neighbor stole my goats. I'm a poor man, too poor to replace them."

"And what do you have to say?" the king asked the complainant's neighbor.

"I don't know what he is talking about," answered the neighbor. "I have many goats but none of them belong to this man."

This would not be an easy problem to settle. The king would have to rely on his wisdom. It was the kind of problem he enjoyed the most.

"I have a test for you," announced the king. "Whoever passes the test will own the goats. Go home until you can answer this for me. I want to know what is the fastest thing in the world. Do not return until you have my answer."

The two men left shaking their heads. Who could answer that question?

The old man repeated the question to his daughter. She was as beautiful as she was wise. Right away, she whispered the answer that would please the king. The old man returned to the king the following morning.

The king was surprised. "You already have an answer for my question?"

"Yes," replied the old man, "it was not difficult."

"And what is the fastest thing in the world?"

"Time," answered the old man. "We never have enough of it. It always goes too fast. There is never enough time to do all that we want to do."

The answer amazed the king. He wasn't sure if he himself could have answered the question as well. "Who helped you? Who gave you these words?" demanded the king.

"They are my own words, my own thoughts," lied the old man. "There is no one else who helped me."

"If you are not telling the truth, I will punish you," warned the king.

The old man was too afraid to continue the lie. "It was my daughter, who gave me the words," he confessed. "She is a very wise girl."

"She must be!" thought the king. "I would like to meet your daughter," he told the old man.

Not long after that the old man presented his daughter to the king. If the king was amazed with her wisdom, he was captivated by her beauty. "You are indeed a wise and lovely girl. I would be honored to have you as my wife. Will you marry me?"

"The honor is mine," smiled the girl.

Although the king was pleased, he was also concerned about having such a wise wife. He did not want her to interfere with the problems brought before him. He didn't want to share this honor with anyone, not even his wife.

"Everything in my house is yours," declared the king. "I only have one rule for you. You must never involve yourself with the problems brought before me. This is your only warning. If you break this rule, I will send you from my palace."

The king's new wife only smiled at his command.

Things went well for quite some time. The king continued to hear people's problems while his new wife kept herself busy without becoming involved. Usually she agreed with his decisions.

One day, however, the king gave one of his puzzles to two boys who argued over a sheep. The king's new wife knew she shouldn't help the boy who really owned the sheep, but he was so upset. She finally asked him to explain his problem.

"The king has asked for the impossible," he sighed. "He gave us an egg and said that whoever could hatch the egg by tomorrow would own the sheep."

The girl knew she shouldn't help but the solution was so obvious. "Take some rice to the king," she instructed. "Tell him to plant it today so that in the morning you will have rice to feed your chicken. He will know that it is just as impossible to grow rice in one day as it is to hatch an egg that quickly."

The boy ran to the king with the rice. He said exactly the words he was told. The king was not impressed; he was angry! "Who told you this? Who gave you the rice?" he ordered. "These words are too wise for one so young."

"They are my own words, my own thoughts," said the boy too afraid to speak the truth. "There is no one else who helped me."

"If you are not speaking the truth, I will punish you," warned the king.

"It was your wife!" cried the boy. "She knew you'd understand the wisdom."

The king, furious his wife had broken his only rule for her, called her before him and scolded, "Didn't you know all that I have is yours? You have broken the only rule I had for you. Now, go back to your father's home."

"Before I go, may I fix you one final meal?" asked the girl. "Then, I will take what is mine and go."

"Yes," answered the king. "Make whatever you want. Take whatever you want. Just be sure that you do not remain here tonight!"

The king's wife prepared the king's favorite meal. She served it with a generous amount of his favorite wine. Before the meal was finished, the king became very drunk and quietly fell asleep. His wife's plans worked exactly as she had hoped.

With her family's help, she carried the king to her father's home. They placed him on a bed and he slept soundly through the night. In the morning the king's voice boomed throughout the house. "Where am I? What am I doing here?" he demanded.

His wife entered the room and grinned. "You said I could take whatever I wanted from your house. I wanted you and so I took you."

"You are certainly a wise woman," smiled the king. "Come return with me to our home. Only a fool would send away such a woman."

"And you, my husband, are no fool," whispered the clever wife.

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Hello! I'm Joygopal Podder...

Hello! I'm Joygopal Podder...

About Me

I head fundraising in India for a leading international anti poverty development agency. Prior to this assignment, I worked for a leading child welfare organisation. Prior to this, I worked for an NGO looking after the elderly (type Joygopal Podder on Google search and you can view newspaper reports of various activites I have organised for the causes I work for). I moved to the "not-for-profit" sector after 15 years in industry. I am a freelance writer (my stories are used in text books of schools like Delhi Public School) and a Gold Medalist Law Graduate. I have a lovely family consisting of two talented and beautiful daughters and an interior designer-turned-marketing professional wife. I was born in London, worked for some time in the Middle East and now work in Delhi and live in the suburbs. I travel 15 days a month in India and abroad - and watch movies every weekend. I am maintaining the following blogs: http://compiledbyjoygopalpodder.blogspot.com http://mysteriesaroundus.blogspot.com http://noticeboardonanythingand everything.blogspot.com http://storiesbyjoygopalpodder.blogspot.com http://grandmothertales.blogspot.com http://stockmarketswithjoygopalpodder.blogspot.com