Comments on A Tragedy of Reconciliation

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Re: Re: Abanerjee
Thank you!

posted by Wigopa_ on October 21, 2009 at 10:52 AM | link to this | reply

Oh, isiSEyes turning into mermaid myrrhage!!!???

posted by anib on October 20, 2009 at 11:49 PM | link to this | reply

Re: Wigopa_
Oh, please go right ahead without ever having to ask for permissions. In fact, it is an honor for me if I can whet the reading appetite of my readers which I hope I have. Thank you and you are most welcome to my blog any time you are free. Yours too looks astounding

posted by anib on October 20, 2009 at 11:47 PM | link to this | reply

Re: Rockingrector_retd
I am so glad that you liked this version. Actually it was as a stream of thought continuing from vogue's and isiSEyes' writing/commenting.

posted by anib on October 20, 2009 at 11:42 PM | link to this | reply

Re: elysianfields
Oh elyse, why, thank you so so so very much for your encouraging comments. These egg me on to do my best, and I'll do all I can to keep sowing my threads. That pic is so apt .

posted by anib on October 20, 2009 at 11:39 PM | link to this | reply

Re: vogue
Humor keeps me healthy; seriousness sickens. Thank you so much that you liked my comment.

posted by anib on October 20, 2009 at 11:36 PM | link to this | reply

Re: isiSEyes ... Well, whadya know?
Not a coincidence, I agree. No, no, don't be amazed ... all because of my dad and grand dad I received in legacy, I think. Doing garage and callin' you, still figuring out.  ...

posted by anib on October 20, 2009 at 11:34 PM | link to this | reply

This is a very well done work......Please excuse that I did have to print it out to read on my lunch between doing my studies and everything else in between....Yes the love affair of Anthony and Cleopatra was one of hardship and rough choices.....But as there is anything in life there is always change.....The best that we can do is move forward with the bitterness of life and turn them into the sweetest moments or memories we can have. Again this was a very moving and stirring write...Well Done!!!

posted by Wigopa_ on October 20, 2009 at 6:52 PM | link to this | reply

Thanks for this intersting and different perspective. You see things in the story which I would otherwise miss.

posted by Rockingrector_retd on October 20, 2009 at 8:15 AM | link to this | reply

Wonderful review Abanerjee...I think it tragic for such love to be in the after-life. It just makes me so sad ~ plainly.  I can only imagine the ache and pain - the soul wrenching sorrow that comes from such - I am moved by your blogs - they lend poignancy, deep reflection, and levels of ponderance that is so helpful indeed for those aspiring to learn, to write, to reflect in their 'art form' - KUDOS multifold to you dear Abanerjee --- write on!!! Elyse  Keep sowing your threads ~

posted by elysianfields on October 20, 2009 at 7:49 AM | link to this | reply

Thanks for your comment. You have such a great sense of humour.

posted by vogue on October 19, 2009 at 10:55 PM | link to this | reply

Well, whadya know?

I popped in to answer a couple of comments on Blog of Days, happened to see you were about, and here's a post with my name in it.  Coincidence?  I think not!

In any case you have again captured the finer intricacies of the great tragedy most of us would have missed.  How you are able to do this so young (I checked out your profile) astounds me.  I stand amazed.

With that, I must away.  Husband is calling (now that he's done in the garage finally, go figure).

posted by myrrhage_ on October 19, 2009 at 8:14 PM | link to this | reply

Re: shamasehar
That was a lovely comment. What's so great in the ordinary .. loving in life ... Mine is out of the ordinary, cos I'll continue to keep on loving even after I die, and that's special. Wah kya baat kahi hai, Shama.   ho to aisa, Cleo jaisa.

posted by anib on October 19, 2009 at 10:56 AM | link to this | reply

Log zindagi mein hi mohabaat kiya kartein hain main to mar kar bhi meri jaan tujhe chahoonga.............love takes you beyond barriers! 

posted by shamasehar on October 19, 2009 at 10:48 AM | link to this | reply

Re: shobana
There are more of the different dimensions of love in As You Like It, and very discursiveas also appealing. Yes, with lots of firecrackers.

posted by anib on October 18, 2009 at 8:05 PM | link to this | reply

Re: sam
Yes, what's to pity?

posted by anib on October 18, 2009 at 8:02 PM | link to this | reply

Excellent Abanerjee - a very clear picture of love in different dimensions. Thank you and hope you had a lovely Deepavali.

posted by shobana on October 18, 2009 at 7:57 PM | link to this | reply

They were both delusional! lol I am teasing! I think it helps to enforce the belief of life, love, happiness in an eternal existence! What's to pity when there is hope to be in their company one day! sam

posted by sam444 on October 18, 2009 at 11:59 AM | link to this | reply

They help me delve deep. Thank you so much, Nita.

posted by anib on October 18, 2009 at 10:11 AM | link to this | reply

This is a very good perspective!

posted by Nita09 on October 18, 2009 at 8:10 AM | link to this | reply

Re: vogue

Yes, one connect and then it is all flood. God was alone and He thought "let me be many", and that is how all manifestation came into being according to the Hindu scriptures. Similarly, when we tire of being many, we retrace our steps to being One, our Source. Yes, emphasis is important. The Sindhis back home pronounce washer in their typical way, so when I asked a shopkeeper to give me one, he wouldn't understand. I gestured through signs etc. to make him get it. Suddenly he exploded, oh "wai-sher?" and reprimanded me for not getting it straight. Anyway, like I was saying for Sanskrit, there are metres, and the emphasis are to be caught with a little practice.

posted by anib on October 17, 2009 at 11:00 PM | link to this | reply

Isn't it just incredible how one idea expressed here links to another? That's the beauty of blogit and why I will never leave. Thanks for your comments on my Arabic endeavour. I don't find the pronounciation all that difficult, nor the alphabet, it's just a case of learning it. What I have problems with it where to put the emphasis on a word. I have the same difficulty with Turkish. Of course, if you don't get it right, the word means nothing to the listener. An example: yumurta means egg in Turkish. I said yumurta and the guy in the supermarket didn't have a clue what I wanted. Then I tried yumurta and loo and behold I ws immediately shown where the eggs are.

posted by vogue on October 17, 2009 at 10:39 PM | link to this | reply

Re: Nileangel
The conviction in the hope of meeting in the other world is so reassuring in reconciliation. Thank you and wishing you and yours the very best of Diwali.

posted by anib on October 17, 2009 at 6:11 PM | link to this | reply

Re: SO WELL WRITTEN AGAIN A VERY GOOD SYNOPSIS.
Thank you so much ma'am. This time it was an expoloration from a different angle. The previous one in Redemption and this one in Reconciliation. The beauty of classics is that everytime you read, you find something you didn't know earlier.

posted by anib on October 17, 2009 at 6:06 PM | link to this | reply

Re: Captivating, intriguing...
You fully deserve the compliments of everyone here on your now being a published author. Hope the book does well, Ash.

posted by anib on October 17, 2009 at 5:59 PM | link to this | reply

SO WELL WRITTEN AGAIN A VERY GOOD SYNOPSIS.

posted by Kabu on October 17, 2009 at 4:20 PM | link to this | reply

So nicely put, really enjoyed this. To meet again on thee other side, makes death not so tragic. Happy Diwali! Blessed Be.

posted by Nileangel on October 17, 2009 at 9:14 AM | link to this | reply

Captivating, intriguing...

Thank you so much for your wonderful comments on my blog.

Happy Diwali to you & yours! - Ash

posted by ash_pradhan on October 17, 2009 at 8:51 AM | link to this | reply