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Thirukkural-On Wealth-On Kingship-Kural 389

Kavikaik keelthangum ulahu
A
king
of
quality,
who
accepts
well-meant,
though
bitter
criticism,
with
patience
and
forbearance,
Will
find
all
the
world
rallying
to
his
banner.
Most rulers resent criticism. They only like to hear pleasing falsehoods and flattery. In fact, this is the bane of most intelligence services of all countries of the world at all times. They feed their masters with only things, which they want to hear and not with the unpleasant truths. A good king should accept, in the larger interests of his realm, the home truths, which will enable him to set matters right, even before things go wrong with his administration.
Parimel Azhagar mentions that such criticisms may be made by the king"s wise advisers, when he does wrong, but Parithi goes one step further and envisages even the public telling the king what is going wrong, in his Durbars or public interviews. This kind of thing was obviously practiced by the Tamils, centuries before Magna Carta (1215 AD).
One such classic example happened when Kannagi appeared before the Pandyam king Nedunchezhiyan, who had the quality envisioned in this Kural of Valluvar to a supreme degree.
“Maeyir
podium
virindha
karungulalum
Kaiyirsilambum
kanneerum
Kandalavae
thoatraan"
He is believed to have realized his fatal mistake of sentencing Kovalan to death with a shock at once and fallen down dead on the spot.
A biblical parallel to this Kural, we have in Proverbs, which says,
“He
is
the
way
of
life
that
keepeth
instruction
But
he
that
refuses
reproof
erreth"
Proverbs
(10:17)



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