Latest Updates
-
Is Your Mango Safe To Eat? Seven Warning Signs To Check Before You Bite -
Your Quick Energy Drink: The Ultimate Banana Shake Recipe -
Horoscope for Today May 20, 2026 - Calm Energy, Steady Progress for All Signs -
Spicy Home Style Chicken Masala Recipe: Your New Favorite Dinner -
Who Is Abhijeet Dipke? The Man Behind India's Viral Cockroach Janta Party -
BC Khanduri, Former Uttarakhand CM and Army Veteran, Passes Away at 91 -
"Maa, Mujhe Yahan Se Lene Aa Jao": She Begged To Come Home, Nobody Came -
Nachos Recipe: Your Go-To Crunchy Party Snack -
Hacks 101: How To Save Your Makeup When It Starts to Melt -
Always Online, Always Exhausted: Expert Explains The Mental Wellness Cost Of Digital Work Culture
Thirukkural-On Wealth-On Ignorance-Kural-407

Manmaan punaipaavai yatru.
Where the human intellect is not developed by incisive learning
Such a man would be only a colourfully-painted clay doll.
The apparent grandeur of a man"s personality on the outside is no measure of his intellect, which has to be cultivated by systematic learning. After all, even well-moulded and colourfully painted clay images present a grand appearance.
Learning alone makes all the difference. The expression of Valluvar in just four words,' Nunman nulaipulam' is remarkably telling. As Rajaji explains, the office of learning is to make the mind, 'pulan' penetrating 'nun' lofty 'maan' and rich with information 'nulai'
One is reminded in this context of the four lines of Naladiar as follows:
“Kunji azakum kodundhaanaik koatazakum
manjal azakum azakalla-Nenjathu
Nallamyaam yennum naduvu nilaimaiyaal
kalvi azahe azahu"
Reinforcing this is the quotation form Eladhi ditec by K V J in his Research edition of Thirukural whose effective last line is:
“Yenoadu yeluthin vanape vanapu" (Yelaathi, 74)



Click it and Unblock the Notifications