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Māṇḍakarṇi (Sanskrit माण्डकर्णि) is a sage mentioned in book III (Aranya Kanda) of the Ramayana.His story is told to Rama by Sage Dharmabhrit during the prince's journey through the Dandaka forest, when Rama, standing on the bank of the forest lake, asks about the origin of wondrous music coming from an unknown source.
Jim Bambra reviewed The Book of Wondrous Inventions for Dragon magazine #136 (August 1988). [2] Bambra described The Book of Wondrous Inventions as "a real treat for lovers of wacky magical items," including such "zany labor-saving devices and weird war machines" as Melrond's Foolproof Dishwasher and Brandon's Bard-in-a-Box". [2]
Still constant in a wondrous excellence; Therefore my verse to constancy confin’d, One thing expressing, leaves out difference. “Fair, kind and true,” is all my argument, “Fair, kind, and true,” varying to other words; And in this change is my invention spent, Three themes in one, which wondrous scope affords.
The assortment of the items in the piece points to the works title- Ole Worm's Cabinet of Wonder: Natural Specimens and Wondrous Monsters, as they are mostly natural specimens. This print displays a method of scientific inquiry called ‘proto-empiricism', a type of study of specific items grounded in sensory experience. [1]
The Agusan image (commonly referred to in the Philippines as the Golden Tara in allusion to its supposed, but disputed, [1] identity as an image of a Buddhist Tara) is a 2 kg (4.4 lb), [2] 21-karat gold statuette, found in 1917 on the banks of the Wawa River near Esperanza, Agusan del Sur, Mindanao in the Philippines, [3] dating to the 9th–10th centuries.
The size and base of the figurines is the same as the regular figurines while the DC Comics logo on the base is replaced by the various Corps logos. Issue 1: Black Hand; Issue 2: Atrocitus; Issue 3: Larfleeze; Issue 4: Saint Walker; Issue 5: Star Sapphire (Carol Ferris) Issue 6: Parallax ; Issue 7: Indigo-1; Issue 8: White Lantern Sinestro
The Three Golden Children refers to a series of folktales related to the motif of the calumniated wife, numbered K2110.1 in the Motif-Index of Folk-Literature.The name refers to a cycle of tales wherein a woman gives birth to children of wondrous aspect, but her children are taken from her by jealous relatives or by her mother-in-law, and her husband punishes her in some harsh way.
Billboard said the song "is the singer's personal acknowledgement of the wondrous transcendental power and sweep of music". [3] Abba - Uncensored on the Record says the song "suggest[s] that after all the good times and bad times, music will never let you down".