Dear Dr Kumar,
Thank you for your help. Can you tell me where to look to find out why the tree is called "Eyes of Lord Shiva"? Does it refer to a part of the tree? Max (just Mr, I'm afraid) Novels by Max and/or Ariana Overton http://www.maxoverton.com The Lion of Scythia Trilogy (Lion of Scythia, The Golden King, Funeral in Babylon); The Glass House Trilogy (Glass House, A Glass Darkly, Looking Glass); A Cry of Shadows, The Devil is in the Details, Trapdoor, Tapestry, Scarab - Akhenaten (Book 1 of the Amarnan Kings), Scarab - Smenkhkare (Book 2 of the Amarnan Kings), Scarab - Tutankhamen (Book 3 of the Amarnan Kings), Scarab - Ay (Book 4 of the Amarnan Kings), Rakshasa (Book 1 of the Demon series), Djinn (Book 2 of the Demon series), Glass Continuum, Ascension Works in Progress: Sequestered, Scarab - Horemheb (Book 5 of the Amarnan Kings), Succubus (Book 3 of the Demon series) Also check out http://julesphotographiccreations.blogspot.com/ > Date: Wed, 13 Jan 2010 05:08:49 -0800 > Subject: [efloraofindia:26354] Re: Is this Rudraksha? > From: [email protected] > To: [email protected] > > Respected Dr. Overton, > Rudraksha is made of two sanskrit words, RUDRA meaning "lord shiva" > and AKSHA means "eyes". So it basically means, eyes of lord Shiva. It > is related to Hindu mythology. > Regards > Pankaj >--
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