View allAll Photos Tagged Wise

I dont know why but I thought my cat looked quite old and wise in this picture. lol

 

Wise people learn not to dread but actually to welcome problems because it is in this whole process of meeting and solving problems that life has its meaning.

 

-M. Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled

Leica SL (Typ 601)

Vario-Elmarit-SL 24-90mm ƒ/2.8-4 ASPH

Portrait Photography in Yangon, Myanmar

Troglodyte church in the Gheralta mountains. Tigray [ትግራይ]. Ethiopia [ኢትዮጵያ]. Africa [አፍሪቃ].

 

You can see where the church stands in this other photo www.flickr.com/photos/danielvirella/16115097085/in/album-...

Here's the rescue elephant we met in Thailand at the beach while at Phulay Bay. The girls got to feed Coco and she was very gentle. I've grown to really love elephants more and more. I always kinda “liked” them from television, but the more time I spend up close to them… I can really sense something. Or, at least, I think I can.

 

- Trey Ratcliff

 

Click here to read the rest of this post at the Stuck in Customs blog.

Poor little owl! he was so wise.

The French (Froggy) version of the three wise Monkeys !!!

More sexy, isnt'it ?

Storedisplay (on the window outside) of an Antiquary & Curiosity Shop .

Shot in Azay le Rideau - Indre & Loire - France -

10.4.2009: Cathédrale Notre Dame, Strasbourg. See Matthew 25:1-13.

Das Ärgerlichste in dieser Welt ist, daß die Dummen todsicher und die Intelligenten voller Zweifel sind./

The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts. -

- Bertrand Russell

 

HMM!

London Underground

Giant Owls adorning the Croatian National Archive

The clownfish yawned, but I wasn't quite ready for it setup-wise. Managed to salvage this.

Wishing you health, joy and prosperity this Holiday season!

 

May the God of Abraham and Sarah bless you and make his face to shine upon you. The peace of the Lord be always with you!

 

Merry Christmas!

  

©Kingsley Davis

Please do not use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

looks like he/she has seen it all before somehow ,on the Isle of May.

Casting photo for the Fashion Teller Animal inside concept. The final shoot can be seen in this months LTD magazine. issuu.com/ltdmagazinesl/docs/ltd_magazine_march_april16

Big Bear: Here I am all ready to help the Three Kings to distribute presents around the world (well at least my little bit of it). January 6th is known in much of the Christian World as Epiphany, marking the day when according to tradition the Three Wise Men (aka The Magi or the Kings from the East)) arrived in Bethlehem after following the Star bringing presents for the Baby Jesus. And in Spain the night of January 5th , the Three Kings, Gaspar, Melchor and Balthasar, bring presents to the Spanish children: They need a a lot of help this year so I have volunteered to be one of their pages! Happy Teddy Bear Tuesday and a much much better Happy New Year for 2021!!

PS Dilys, the Lovely Linda and the little plushies also wish you all the best in these complex days ahead!

 

But afterwards, finding her words were true, they wondered at her knowledge and deemed her to be the wisest of birds. Hence it is that when she appears they look to her as knowing all things, while she no longer gives them advice, but in solitude laments their past folly.

 

From Aesop's Fables: The Owl and the Birds

Translated by George Fyler Townsend

This picture is about finding peace and freedom when you finally reach wisdom.

 

And it's a shot of my cute grandma though!

 

Follow me on IG: www.instagram.com/neilantondumas

Taken at the book market, Kolkata, India.

A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool

William Shakespeare

Three wise men of Saltaire.

May I introduce my band - WISE MEN SING

See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil! The three wise squirrels of Hanningfield Reservoir Nature Reserve!

Macro Mondays 19/03/18 theme Once Upon A Time

For this theme I choose a Tibetan story from a book of Tibetan Folk Tales, by A.L. Shelton, [1925]

 

www.sacred-texts.com/asia/tft/tft04.htm

 

If you are a parable unto yourself--there exists no evil.

Tibetan Proverb.

 

The Wise Bat

 

A LONG time ago, a very long time ago, when men and animals spoke to each other and understood the languages of one another, there lived a very powerful king. He lived far off in a corner of the world and alone ruled all the animals and men in his jurisdiction. Around his grounds and palace were great forests and in these forests many birds and animals lived. Every one seemed happy, except the king's wife, and she said that so many birds singing at the same time made such frightful discord that it worried her. One day she asked the king to call them all in and cut off their bills so they couldn't sing any more.

 

"All right," the king said. "We will do that in a few days."

 

Now, hanging under the eaves of the palace, close to the queen's room, was a little bat, and though he seemed to be asleep, he heard and understood everything the queen had said. He said to himself, "This is very bad indeed. I wonder what I can do to help all the birds."

 

The next day the king sent letters by runners into every corner of the kingdom, telling all the birds that by the third day at noon--and it mustn't be forgotten, so put this word down in the center of their hearts--that all of them were to assemble at the palace.

 

The bat heard the order, but because he was very wise and understood everything he sat very still thinking and thinking about what the queen had said and didn't go to the king's audience on the third day, but waited until the fourth. When he entered, the king said angrily:

 

"What do you mean by coming on the fourth day when I ordered every one to be here on the third day!" Oh, he was very angry indeed.

 

The bat replied, "All these birds have no business and can come whenever the king calls, but I have many affairs to look after. My father worked and I too must work. My duty is to keep the death rate from ever exceeding what it should be, in order to govern the sex question, by keeping the men and women of equal numbers."

 

The king, much surprised, said, "I never heard of all this business before. How does it come that you can do this?"

 

The bat answered, "I have to keep the day and night equal as well."

 

The king, more surprised, asked, "How do you do that? You must be a very busy and powerful subject to attend to all these matters. Please explain how you do it."

 

"Well," the bat replied, "when the nights are short I take a little off the morning, and when the nights are long I take a little off the evening and so keep the day and night equal. Besides, the people don't die fast enough. I have to make the lame and the blind to die at the proper time in order to keep the birth and death rate in proportion. Then sometimes there are more men than women, and some of these men say, 'Yes, yes,' to everything a woman asks them to do and think they must do everything a woman says. These men I just turn into women and so keep the sexes even."

 

The king understood very well what the bat meant, but didn't allow him to know it. He was very angry with himself because he had agreed to do so quickly what the queen had asked, and thought perhaps the bat might change him into a woman.

 

"I am not a good king," he thought, "when I listen to a woman's words and yield so easily, and I am terribly ashamed to have given this order. I'll just not do what my wife asks, but send these birds all back home and not cut off their bills."

 

So he called the birds all to him and said, "Heretofore, men haven't known how to mete out punishment and laws for you, but now I am going to make the Cuckoo your king, and what I called you up to-day for is this: I wanted to ask your King and the prime minister, the Hoopoe, to rule wisely, judge justly, and not oppress the people. If big or little come to you in a law-suit you must judge rightly between them and not favor either rich or poor. Now, you may all return to your homes."

 

But the king in his heart was still angry at the bat because he hadn't obeyed him and came the fourth day instead of the third, and to show him he was the ruler and to be instantly obeyed he gave him a light spanking for his disobedience and then turned him loose.

  

Wise beyond his years. Member of Who's Who.

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