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acta deos numquam mortalia fallunt: mortal actions never deceive the gods: Derived from Ovid, Tristia, I.ii, 97: si tamen acta deos numquam mortalia fallunt, / a culpa facinus scitis abesse mea. ("Yet if mortal actions never deceive the gods, / you know that crime was absent from my fault.") acta est fabula plaudite: The play has been performed ...
acta deos numquam mortalia fallunt: mortal actions never deceive the gods: Derived from Ovid, Tristia, I.ii, 97: si tamen acta deos numquam mortalia fallunt, / a culpa facinus scitis abesse mea. ("Yet if mortal actions never deceive the gods, / you know that crime was absent from my fault.") acta est fabula plaudite: The play has been performed ...
Ornamented version of the royal coat of arms of the Kings of Spain from Carlos III to Alfonso XIII, where the motto can be seen.. A solis ortu usque ad occasum is a Latin heraldic motto roughly meaning "From sunrise to sunset".
Below is the text of A solis ortus cardine with the eleven verses translated into English by John Mason Neale in the nineteenth century. Since it was written, there have been many translations of the two hymns extracted from the text, A solis ortus cardine and Hostis Herodes impie, including Anglo-Saxon translations, Martin Luther's German translation and John Dryden's versification.
Si comprehendis [,] non est Deus: if you understand [something], it is not God: Augustine of Hippo, Sermo 117.3.5; PL 38, 663 si dormiam capiar: If I sleep, I may be caught: Motto of HMS Wakeful (H88) Si monumentum requiris circumspice: If you seek (his) monument, look around you: from the epitaph on Christopher Wren's tomb in St Paul's Cathedral.
ne puero gladium: do not give a sword to a boy: Never give dangerous tools to someone who is untrained to use them or too immature to understand the damage they can do. ne supra crepidam sutor iudicaret: a shoemaker should not judge beyond the shoe: see Sutor, ne ultra crepidam: ne te quaesiveris extra: do not seek outside yourself
Narayan Phadke was born to Sitaram Phadke and his wife in the town of Karjat, Ahmadnagar district in 1894. He had a Master of Arts degree from Bombay University.In later years as a writer, Phadke was commonly known by his first and middle initials in Marathi, 'Na Si'.
Regarding the book, Muhiuddin Khan said, The seven-volume book, Karwan-e-Zindagi, is a special mirror of the Muslim Ummah. In writing his autobiography, Hazrat Maulana has not only painted an accurate picture of the contemporary Muslim Ummah, but also an outline of the life to be imitated and followed.