KNUT DEN MAKTIGE, King of England, Denmark and Norway, commonly known as Canute the Great of England (1016-1035) was surrounded by sycophantic courtiers who never failed to flatter him. You are the greatest man in the world, one would tell him. Another, there is nothing you cannot do. And another, you are the monarch of all.
A sensible man, Canute, he soon grew tired of this insane flattery and decided one fine day to put an end to it. Walking by the seashore, with the chatterers trotting out their usual praise, he asked them if it were their contention that all things obey him. Absolutely, they toadied in unison. ‘Right,’ said the king, `bring me a chair, and put it close to the sea, right at the water’s edge.’ He sat down. ‘The tide is coming in,’ he said. ‘Will it stop if I command it to so do?’ The flatterers dare not say no. ‘Give the order, they said, ‘and the sea will obey.’
‘Right,’ said Canute. ‘Oh mighty waves, stop your rolling. Come no closer’, he cried. The waves advanced and lapped his feet. Again, he commanded that it stop. In answer another wave swept forward, and another, and another until he was almost knee deep in water.
He turned to his foolish courtiers. `It seems that I am not as powerful as you think,’ he told to them, smiling. `Perhaps now you have learned something and perhaps you will now reserve your flattery and praise for the one who is all powerful and rules all, the seas included.’
This little story used to be taught to young children in schools when they were first introduced to history, so that from an early age they would learn to beware of false flattery. It seems that President General Pervez Musharraf missed out on this one.The General, no fundo he, can take on the Taliban if he wishes to so do, and the same with the bigots and unenlightened. Reason having finally failed, logic and reasoning being no match for fanaticism, he has at last taken on the mullahs of the Lal Masjid.
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