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A (too short) term break is over. Over the past 17 days, I've travelled across 17 degrees of latitude, about the same degrees of temperature, and back again. I've started to love the romance of long train journeys, as opposed to the rushed, storyless experience of local air travel. On rails, you get to meet so many interesting people, see so many shades of India, and get the chance for unbridled sleep and novel reading, both of which have become rare commodities lately.
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| Term papers November 5, 2009 03:28 PM PST These pic s are fantastic !!! your blog is great, i really enjoyed to read all this stuff . . . . . | ||
| flash papers October 28, 2009 01:25 PM PDT i love and like red fort because it is nice and mind blowing and i also like to see chaandni chowk. <a href="http://www.flashpapers.com/">Term papers</a> | ||
| Raj March 20, 2009 02:23 AM PDT I love red fort. because it give me the beautiful memory of my love neetu muwal. i love u neetu | ||
| GWBE August 16, 2007 08:03 PM PDT Oye! If you liked Mrityunjay you should surely read The second Turn by M. T. Vasudevan Nair. The original - Randhaamoozham - won him the highest literary award (Jnanpith) in India in 1995. The translation is not as great as the original (I've had the pleasure of reading both), but it's still good! It is Mahabharatha through the eyes of Bhim. Another read is The Great Indian Novel by Shashi Tharoor. Not comparable to the The Second Turn, but makes for an interesting read with the parallels he draws between Mahabharatha and India during the Indepdence struglle. | ||
| nikhil gupta September 8, 2006 12:59 AM PDT look guys i m search of poem "satpura ke ghane jungle",it was in our ninth class hindi syllabus, anyone having that plz mail me at chinu_30201@yahoo.com, those who still have hindi books preserved with them, can surely help me.. | ||
| Neha January 9, 2006 11:33 PM PST ul make a good lawyer..lol.. i think after experiance with ppl like u they printed it on their instructions book , cause when i went theyhad it there :P the moot is on 12th, the internals.. im not takin part..ur sis is na.. i met her today. | ||
| Solo January 9, 2006 06:49 PM PST [lucy] I didn't much care for exam scores, but still took down the notes, coz I love language. Yes, it is a pleasant surprise to read what our past selves have written (for us). [Neha] Your place | ||
| Neha January 7, 2006 01:40 AM PST hey vishal! so ur back now.. i just have to say this again n aain..awesome pics!delhi from a new angle :) hey how did u take those pics from the plane.. i thought they dont let u tk pics on flight.. u noe iv never been to nai sarak.. hv been to chandni chowk only once in my life.. lol.. its tooooooooo full of ppl!i went to the red fort recently though..just like tht, had never seen it.. u shud'v put one of the pics of the new arts fac also, this one looks like it'll fall down any minute! i dont like those posters on the statute.. y cant ppl let things b clean.. anyways keep writing!! cya arnd :) was nice meetin ya! | ||
| lucy January 6, 2006 12:02 PM PST I had Swati and Parag too...still have them. Occassionally go through them...and the commentary by the teacher noted faithfully on the books' margins in sincere want of a good score in the boards makes for highly intriguing reading now. Can't believe I understood stuff *that* deeply way back in 10th... | ||
| Solo January 6, 2006 03:50 AM PST [blokes] I'd call it a nice coincidence. As I also observed in Australian NRIs, you're more Indian than Indians are in India! Guess we need to be distant from something to realize its value. [lucy] Yep, even I have saved my Hindi books from school (I had Parag & Swati, Hindi Course A, CBSE). But I don't really get the occasion to read them. Thanks a lot for the appreciation, though I don't think I deserve this much. I realized the value of Delhi much more after I came here as a traveller. Your Yahoo link isn't working. [Observer] At your place | ||
| The Observer January 6, 2006 12:48 AM PST nice pics.. atleast dispelled (temporarily) the blues i get whenever i set foot on delhi... ive heard a lot abt Mritynjaya... is it available in english? btw.. u dont need to comment with ur blogger signature.. a mere anon comment with a SOLO at the end of the comment will do.. happy new year... | ||
| lucy January 5, 2006 10:26 PM PST I always felt our Hindi syllabus was the most fabulous collection of the best of Hindi literature, and enjoyed it quite a bit...still do... And I thought I knew my city, but not until I saw these pictures. Prosaic sights,yet presented in that -touch-thy-heart manner. It is strange how we overlook these sights in the daily grind of life. Is brilliant an appropriate word? Nay...a bit more than that. | ||
| blokes January 5, 2006 11:28 AM PST hey Vishal- Now I cant wait until I get to Dilli next month! Chaandni Chowk and Nai Sadak! it is funny that u went in search of mrityunjay. I am an active member of Epic India a group of readers of Ashok Banker's Ramayana series and we recently had several members read that book and mention its validity in Indian historical writing. | ||
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