바카라Words are easy like a wind, faithful friends are hard to find,바카라 says Shakespeare. In literature, we keep seeing friends everywhere, and faithful friends are not that hard to find. But excepting a well-known few, the rest remain in the mist of our memory, reluctant to come to the fore. I바카라m reminded of a story about Mirza Ghalib. He had a very close friend with whom he shared many things바카라except mangoes. The friend did not care for mangoes. One day, he was seated in the veranda of Ghalib바카라s house, and Ghalib was there as well. A driver drove his donkey-pulled cart through the lane. Some mango peels were lying there; the donkey took a sniff but left them. The friend said, 바카라Look바카라even the donkey [gadhā bhī] doesn바카라t eat mangoes!바카라 Ghalib said, 바카라Exactly, a donkey doesn바카라t eat it.바카라 This story, apart from being a fine example of Ghalib바카라s biting wit, says one more thing바카라only with close friends could one take such liberties. The funny thing was that I couldn바카라t remember the friend바카라s name. I had to search online for long before I could find it바카라Hakim Razi ud-Din Khan. There are several such people lurking in the pages of literature.