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Married Dream Lady Kural married my dream lady love mojo working The Kural is an ancient verse form from southern India and Sri Lanka. The structure consists of only two lines, with four words in the first line and three words in the second line, as described and demonstrated in the following links: https://www.poetrymagnumopus.com/topic/1856-sri-lanka-kural/ Sri Lanka or the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, is an island country in the northern Indian Ocean off the southern coast of India. The earliest literary influences came from Hinduism and Buddhism. The poetic form I was able to find originated in the ancient Tamil language of the area. Tamil is one of the oldest written languages dating back to 300 BC, the grammar of which is very rigid. It is said to be one of the last classical language, defined as, its origins are ancient, it has independent traditions and it has a "considerable" body of ancient literature. The Kural, meaning "short, concise, and abridged", is an ancient Tamil verse form of southern India and Sri Lanka. It was first recognized in 1330 couplets in the Tamil language by the Vedic poet, Valluvar. "Considered one of the greatest works ever written on ethics and morality, chiefly secular ethics, it is known for its universality and non-denominational nature." Wikipedia. The Kural is written in only 2 lines and unlike many Eastern verse forms the lines are measured by "words" rather than syllables. The couplets are referred to as "literary proverbs". First found at Kaleidoscope. The couplet is named from the original series of 1330 couplets, each a stand alone poem , recorded in a series and contributory to a larger whole. Therefore, at the poet's discretion, a poem could consist of any number of kurals, as long as the couplets could stand alone. The elements of the Kural are: 1. a complete couplet, a distich, a poem in 2 lines. Can be written in a series or any number of kurals as long as each could stand alone. 2. composed with 4 words in L1 and 3 words in L2. 3. unmetered and unrhymed 4. the lines parallel or juxtapose one another. 5. pitch pattern is language specific and impossible to emulate in English. (But we try anyway. A substitute in English would be particular attention paid to the sound and texture of the words chosen. ) 6. titled or untitled at the poet's discretion. |