From: Inertial on 29 Mar 2010 21:34 "Arindam Banerjee" <adda1234(a)bigpond.com> wrote in message news:272ae3ef-4130-450a-8dd3-f169cd95f75a(a)x11g2000prb.googlegroups.com... > On Mar 30, 1:08 am, Marshall <marshall.spi...(a)gmail.com> wrote: >> On Mar 29, 5:19 am, Arindam Banerjee <adda1...(a)bigpond.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> > Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum >> > How the choicest of the net scum >> > Blasts the stink from its tum >> > So that none may near it come? >> > None good, that is; some >> > Are fools, to heed that bum. >> > Too much rot, that's the sum >> > Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum. >> >> I like your poetry every bit as much as I like you science! >> It's just as good! >> >> Marshall > > Wow, thanks a lot! Great to have appreciation! Now, shall we throw > out the wrong notions of relativity from the textbooks? Please, > please... If you had even a gram of proof, then maybe it would beconsidered .. But you don't > As for my poetry, I have only had few opportunities to recite them in > public. My friend and partner Ilya (the well-known poet, philosopher > and translator) has been most eager, but distances here are too great. > Cheers, > Arindam Banerjee Bahaha. . you're a clown
From: Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times on 30 Mar 2010 02:03 On Mar 29, 5:25 pm, "Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu" <KalluMallu...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > On 3/29/2010 5:19 AM, Arindam Banerjee wrote: > > > > > No need, rhyming is so easy. > > > Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum > > How the choicest of the net scum > > Blasts the stink from its tum > > So that none may near it come? > > None good, that is; some > > Are fools, to heed that bum. > > Too much rot, that's the sum > > Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum. > > Indeed rhyming is easy, dear Arindam > Your poem is the standard minimum. > It'd be funny if recited in helium, > After you'd taken your dose of lithium, > And your readers were in a fog of opium > Or perhaps on its tincture in laudanum. > For all your 'new physics' summum bonum, > Alas, there's the actinide Einsteinium, > And no element named Poincarium, > Or Newtonium, or Maxwellium, or Arindium. Superb poetry from both ! Congratulations ! ( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? )
From: harmony on 30 Mar 2010 12:02 "Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times" <australia.mining-pioneer(a)neuf.fr> wrote in message news:98c434e5-a543-4a7d-bd92-f0e83f5606e3(a)z4g2000yqa.googlegroups.com... On Mar 29, 5:25 pm, "Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu" <KalluMallu...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > On 3/29/2010 5:19 AM, Arindam Banerjee wrote: > > > > > No need, rhyming is so easy. > > > Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum > > How the choicest of the net scum > > Blasts the stink from its tum > > So that none may near it come? > > None good, that is; some > > Are fools, to heed that bum. > > Too much rot, that's the sum > > Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum. > > Indeed rhyming is easy, dear Arindam > Your poem is the standard minimum. > It'd be funny if recited in helium, > After you'd taken your dose of lithium, > And your readers were in a fog of opium > Or perhaps on its tincture in laudanum. > For all your 'new physics' summum bonum, > Alas, there's the actinide Einsteinium, > And no element named Poincarium, > Or Newtonium, or Maxwellium, or Arindium. Superb poetry from both ! Congratulations ! ( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? ) my research shows that there indeed is such a thing as arindium in hindu, however. it is some kinda of a plant-berry used in ayurvedic medicine that is known for its extreme bitterness - but it has usefulness in cures. also, a hindu proverb has it that this arindium plant is said to be the king of a barren place - like most oz is.
From: Romanise on 31 Mar 2010 07:19 This has to be your only creative post since you climbed Usenet as Pradip Parekh in 1997 (it looks). And of course confirms you as Gujarati and in all probability a Shvetambar Jain. On Mar 30, 5:02 pm, "harmony" <a...(a)hotmail.com> wrote: > ( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? ) > > my research shows that there indeed is such a thing as arindium in hindu, > however. it is some kinda of a plant-berry used in ayurvedic medicine that > is known for its extreme bitterness - but it has usefulness in cures. > also, a hindu proverb has it that this arindium plant is said to be the king > of a barren place - like most oz is.
From: Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu on 31 Mar 2010 09:06 On 3/29/2010 11:03 PM, Greatest Mining Pioneer of Australia of all Times wrote: > On Mar 29, 5:25 pm, "Myself,PresentContinuouslyTenseMallu" > <KalluMallu...(a)gmail.com> wrote: >> On 3/29/2010 5:19 AM, Arindam Banerjee wrote: >> >> >> >>> No need, rhyming is so easy. >> >>> Tell me, dear doggie, ain't it rum >>> How the choicest of the net scum >>> Blasts the stink from its tum >>> So that none may near it come? >>> None good, that is; some >>> Are fools, to heed that bum. >>> Too much rot, that's the sum >>> Of the jBm's keyboard's thrum. >> >> Indeed rhyming is easy, dear Arindam >> Your poem is the standard minimum. >> It'd be funny if recited in helium, >> After you'd taken your dose of lithium, >> And your readers were in a fog of opium >> Or perhaps on its tincture in laudanum. >> For all your 'new physics' summum bonum, >> Alas, there's the actinide Einsteinium, >> And no element named Poincarium, >> Or Newtonium, or Maxwellium, or Arindium. > > Superb poetry from both ! > Congratulations ! > Merci beaucoup. > ( may be the Arindium might exist one day, as an isotope say ? ) Hah. Pour cela, il doit obtenir ses papiers publies dans des revues scientifiques, et non pas des journaux ou magazines. Hope that made sense.
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