Tirukural

CHAPTER 89

Internal Enmity

881

Even shade and water are unpleasant if they breed disease. So, too, may relatives be unpleasant if they cause harm.§

882

Fear not the foe who is like a drawn sword; rather fear the friendship of an enemy who poses as kin.§

883

Dread hatred from within and defend yourself against it. In calamitous times it will cut deeper than a potter’s knife.§

884

Hidden hatreds may lurk only in the mind, yet among kin they can manifest many miseries.§

885

Hate hidden in a kinsman’s heart will cause many miseries, and more—it will kill a man.§

886

When hatred arises, dissension destroys unity, and men fall inescapably toward ever-ready death.§

887

A house that harbors hatred will never be a united whole, though, like a vessel and its lid, it may appear to be one.§

888

As iron is worn away by frequent filing, a family’s strength is eroded by incessant inner frictions.§

889

Internal dissension may seem as small as a split sesame seed, yet there is enough power in it to destroy.§

890

Living with those who cannot dwell in harmony is like living in a hut with a deadly cobra.§