Actual excerpts from your own Life Prediction Report
Tiwari rameshwar nath
Date of birth : 13 January 1959 Time of birth : 1:5:00 Place of Birth : Gorakhpur, INDIA
Dear Tiwari,
Please find our analysis for your Complete Life Prediction. We thank you for giving us this opportunity to analyse your birth chart. The accuracy of the predictions depends on the accuracy of the time of birth given to us by you. Kindly note that as per Vedic Astrology the stars will control only 75% of your life and the critical 25% will be your own efforts. We wish you luck and pray to God that you overcome all obstacles in your life. Best Regards Team Cyber Astro April 2, 2013 According to Vedic Astrology calculation your ascendant is Libra Sign, your Moon Sign is Aquarius and your Vedic Sun Sign is Sagittarius. However, as per Western Astrology calculation your ascendant is in Scorpio Sign, your Moon Sign is Pisces and your Zodiac Sun Sign is Capricorn. Effort to Reward ratio There are 3 kinds of people in this world. The first group are very lucky that whatever efforts they make they actually get greater rewards and recognition for their efforts compared to other people. This means they are lucky to reap more than what they sow. There are second group of people, they reap in exact proportion to what they sow. Finally the third group is somewhat unlucky , in spite of best efforts, the reward and recognition they get are not commensurate with their efforts. They reap less than what they sow. We call this reward to effort ratio in the chart and is computed by dividing the 11th house ashtakbarga strength with the ashtakbarga strength of 10th house. Your 10th House Score is : 31 Your 11th House Score is : 30 Reward to Effert ratio in your chart is 0.968 Therefore, the Karmic indication in your chart is you will have to work very hard and put an extra effort if you want to keep going. Hence, you should always be consistent in your efforts and you must give more than 100% to be able to achieve your goal. Best Part of your Life According to the analysis of your chart the First phase of your life will be the best phase of your life. During this phase you will enjoy your days and will gain happiness from different areas of your life. According to the analysis of your chart the Middle and Final phase of your life will be okay and will have normal ups and downs. During this phase you will enjoy your life but may also face some obstacles. These problems may be related to different aspects of your life. Best Direction in your Life According to the analysis of your chart the direction West would be most beneficial for you to pursue your vocation or take any opportunity that knocks the door of your destiny. According to the analysis of your chart the direction South would be most challenging for you. So, it is best to avoid this direction. Your effort in this direction may not provide you fruitful result. |
03 अप्रैल, 2013
Karmic Indicators
29 मार्च, 2013
George Gordon Byron
George
Gordon Byron
George Gordon Byron was born on January 22, 1788 in Aberdeen,
Scotland, and inherited his family's English title at the age of ten, becoming
Baron Byron of Rochdale. Abandoned by his father at an early age and resentful
of his mother, who he blamed for his being born with a deformed foot, Byron
isolated himself during his youth and was deeply unhappy. Though he was the
heir to an idyllic estate, the property was run down and his family had no
assets with which to care for it. As a teenager, Byron discovered that he was
attracted to men as well as women, which made him all the more remote and
secretive.
He studied at Aberdeen Grammar School and then Trinity College
in Cambridge. During this time Byron collected and published his first volumes
of poetry. The first, published anonymously and titled Fugitive Pieces,
was printed in 1806 and contained a miscellany of poems, some of which were
written when Byron was only fourteen. As a whole, the collection was considered
obscene, in part because it ridiculed specific teachers by name, and in part
because it contained frank, erotic verses. At the request of a friend, Byron recalled
and burned all but four copies of the book, then immediately began compiling a
revised version—though it was not published during his lifetime. The next year,
however, Byron published his second collection, Hours of Idleness, which
contained many of his early poems, as well as significant additions, including
poems addressed to John Edelston, a younger boy whom Byron had befriended and
deeply loved.
By Byron's twentieth birthday, he faced overwhelming debt.
Though his second collection received an initially favorable response, a
disturbingly negative review was printed in January of 1808, followed by even
more scathing criticism a few months later. His response was a satire, English
Bards and Scotch Reviewers, which received mixed attention. Publicly
humiliated and with nowhere else to turn, Byron set out on a tour of the
Mediterranean, traveling with a friend to Portugal, Spain, Albania, Turkey, and
finally Athens. Enjoying his new-found sexual freedom, Byron decided to stay in
Greece after his friend returned to England, studying the language and working
on a poem loosely based on his adventures. Inspired by the culture and climate
around him, he later wrote to his sister, "If I am a poet ... the air of
Greece has made me one."
Byron returned to England in the summer of 1811 having completed
the opening cantos of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, a poem which tells the
story of a world-weary young man looking for meaning in the world. When the
first two cantos were published in March of 1812, the expensive first printing
sold out in three days. Byron reportedly said, "I awoke one morning and
found myself famous."
His fame, however, was among the aristocratic intellectual
class, at a time when only cultivated people read and discussed literature. The
significant rise in a middle-class reading public, and with it the dominance of
the novel, was still a few years away. At 24, Byron was invited to the homes of
the most prestigious families and received hundreds of fan letters, many of
them asking for the remaining cantos of his great poem—which eventually
appeared in 1818.
An outspoken politician in the House of Lords, Byron used his
popularity for public good, speaking in favor of workers' rights and social
reform. He also continued to publish romantic tales in verse. His personal
life, however, remained rocky. He was married and divorced, his wife Anne
Isabella Milbanke having accused him of everything from incest to sodomy. A
number of love affairs also followed, including one with Claire Clairmont, the
poet Percy
Bysshe Shelley's sister in law. By 1816, Byron was afraid for his
life, warned that a crowd might lynch him if he were seen in public.
Forced to flee England, Byron settled in Italy and began writing
his masterpiece, Don Juan, an epic-satire novel-in-verse loosely based
on a legendary hero. He also spent much of his time engaged in the Greek fight
for independence and planned to join a battle against a Turkish-held fortress
when he fell ill, becoming increasingly sick with persistent colds and fevers.
When he died on April 19, 1824, at the age of 36, Don Juan
was yet to be finished, though 17 cantos had been written. A memoir, which also
hadn't been published, was burned by Byron's friends who were either afraid of
being implicated in scandal or protective of his reputation.
John Keats
John
Keats
English
Romantic poet John Keats was born on October 31, 1795, in London. The oldest of
four children, he lost both his parents at a young age. His father, a
livery-stable keeper, died when Keats was eight; his mother died of
tuberculosis six years later. After his mother's death, Keats's maternal
grandmother appointed two London merchants, Richard Abbey and John Rowland
Sandell, as guardians. Abbey, a prosperous tea broker, assumed the bulk of this
responsibility, while Sandell played only a minor role. When Keats was fifteen,
Abbey withdrew him from the Clarke School, Enfield, to apprentice with an
apothecary-surgeon and study medicine in a London hospital. In 1816 Keats
became a licensed apothecary, but he never practiced his profession, deciding
instead to write poetry.
"A poem needs understanding through the senses. The point of diving in a lake is not immediately to swim to the shore..." |
Around
this time, Keats met Leigh Hunt, an influential editor of the Examiner,
who published his sonnets "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer" and
"O Solitude." Hunt also introduced Keats to a circle of literary men,
including the poets Percy Bysshe Shelley and William Wordsworth.
The group's influence enabled Keats to see his first volume, Poems by John
Keats, published in 1817. Shelley, who was fond of Keats, had advised him
to develop a more substantial body of work before publishing it. Keats, who was
not as fond of Shelley, did not follow his advice. Endymion, a
four-thousand-line erotic/allegorical romance based on the Greek myth of the
same name, appeared the following year. Two of the most influential critical
magazines of the time, the Quarterly Review and Blackwood's Magazine,
attacked the collection. Calling the romantic verse of Hunt's literary circle
"the Cockney school of poetry," Blackwood's declared Endymion
to be nonsense and recommended that Keats give up poetry. Shelley, who
privately disliked Endymion but recognized Keats's genius, wrote a more
favorable review, but it was never published. Shelley also exaggerated the
effect that the criticism had on Keats, attributing his declining health over
the following years to a spirit broken by the negative reviews.
Keats
spent the summer of 1818 on a walking tour in Northern England and Scotland,
returning home to care for his brother, Tom, who suffered from tuberculosis.
While nursing his brother, Keats met and fell in love with a woman named Fanny
Brawne. Writing some of his finest poetry between 1818 and 1819, Keats mainly
worked on "Hyperion," a Miltonic blank-verse epic of the Greek
creation myth. He stopped writing "Hyperion" upon the death of his
brother, after completing only a small portion, but in late 1819 he returned to
the piece and rewrote it as "The Fall of Hyperion" (unpublished until
1856). That same autumn Keats contracted tuberculosis, and by the following
February he felt that death was already upon him, referring to the present as
his "posthumous existence."
In
July 1820, he published his third and best volume of poetry, Lamia,
Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems. The three title poems,
dealing with mythical and legendary themes of ancient, medieval, and
Renaissance times, are rich in imagery and phrasing. The volume also contains
the unfinished "Hyperion," and three poems considered among the
finest in the English language, "Ode on a Grecian Urn," "Ode on
Melancholy," and "Ode to a Nightingale." The book received
enthusiastic praise from Hunt, Shelley, Charles Lamb, and others, and in
August, Frances Jeffrey, influential editor of the Edinburgh Review,
wrote a review praising both the new book and Endymion.
The
fragment "Hyperion" was considered by Keats's contemporaries to be
his greatest achievement, but by that time he had reached an advanced stage of
his disease and was too ill to be encouraged. He continued a correspondence
with Fanny Brawne and—when he could no longer bear to write to her directly—her
mother, but his failing health and his literary ambitions prevented their
getting married. Under his doctor's orders to seek a warm climate for the
winter, Keats went to Rome with his friend, the painter Joseph Severn. He died
there on February 23, 1821, at the age of twenty-five, and was buried in the
Protestant cemetery.
A
Selected Bibliography
Poetry
Poems
(1817)Endymion: A Poetic Romance (1818)
Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems (1820)
P.B.Shelly
Percy Bysshe Shelley
(1792-1822 / Horsham / England)
Shelley, born the heir to rich estates and the son of an Member of
Parliament, went to University College, Oxford in 1810, but in March of the
following year he and a friend, Thomas Jefferson Hogg, were both expelled for
the suspected authorship of a pamphlet entitled The Necessity of Atheism.
In 1811 he met and eloped to Edinburgh with Harriet Westbrook and, one year later, went with her and her older sister first to Dublin, then to Devon and North Wales, where they stayed for six months into 1813. However, by 1814, and with the birth of two children, their marriage had collapsed and Shelley eloped once again, this time with Mary Godwin.
Along with Mary's step-sister, the couple travelled to France, Switzerland and Germany before returning to London where he took a house with Mary on the edge of Great Windsor Park and wrote Alastor (1816), the poem that first brought him fame.
In 1816 Shelley spent the summer on Lake Geneva with Byron and Mary who had begun work on her Frankenstein. In the autumn of that year Harriet drowned herself in the Serpentine in Hyde Park and Shelley then married Mary and settled with her, in 1817, at Great Marlow, on the Thames. They later travelled to Italy, where Shelley wrote the sonnet Ozymandias (written 1818) and translated Plato's Symposium from the Greek. Shelley himself drowned in a sailing accident in 1822.
In 1811 he met and eloped to Edinburgh with Harriet Westbrook and, one year later, went with her and her older sister first to Dublin, then to Devon and North Wales, where they stayed for six months into 1813. However, by 1814, and with the birth of two children, their marriage had collapsed and Shelley eloped once again, this time with Mary Godwin.
Along with Mary's step-sister, the couple travelled to France, Switzerland and Germany before returning to London where he took a house with Mary on the edge of Great Windsor Park and wrote Alastor (1816), the poem that first brought him fame.
In 1816 Shelley spent the summer on Lake Geneva with Byron and Mary who had begun work on her Frankenstein. In the autumn of that year Harriet drowned herself in the Serpentine in Hyde Park and Shelley then married Mary and settled with her, in 1817, at Great Marlow, on the Thames. They later travelled to Italy, where Shelley wrote the sonnet Ozymandias (written 1818) and translated Plato's Symposium from the Greek. Shelley himself drowned in a sailing accident in 1822.
Alas! This Is Not What I Thought Life Was
Alas! this is not
what I thought life was.
I knew that there were crimes and evil men,
Misery and hate; nor did I hope to pass
Untouched by suffering, through the rugged glen.
In mine own heart I saw as in a glass
The hearts of others ... And when
I went among my kind, with triple brass
Of calm endurance my weak breast I armed,
To bear scorn, fear, and hate, a woful mass!
I knew that there were crimes and evil men,
Misery and hate; nor did I hope to pass
Untouched by suffering, through the rugged glen.
In mine own heart I saw as in a glass
The hearts of others ... And when
I went among my kind, with triple brass
Of calm endurance my weak breast I armed,
To bear scorn, fear, and hate, a woful mass!
Percy Bysshe Shelley
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