Historical Romances

Re: Historical Romances

I read it in a book “Duya key 100 Mashhoor Shakhsiat kay Muaashaqa” :cobra: but those can’t be post here :sunnyboy:

Re: Historical Romances

I think this is from ‘Parliament se Bazar e Husn tak’, a book that I bought from a redhi wala in Empress Market just for Rs 30 and believe it was read by some 30 people. That shows how controvercy attracts people.

Re: Historical Romances

^ye empress market kisi textile mill ki jagah khula hai kya?

Re: Historical Romances

Why can’t be post here. Were they graphical supported by diagrams :faizy:

Anyway, just name here those pairs for refreshing our memory. you know ‘Bhooli bisri yaden’ :slight_smile:

Re: Historical Romances

Now change this to 300,000 :cobra:
I’ve read every type of book of every writer bcoz my reading speed is too good. I finished Shaahb Nama and Ali Poor ka Aili in 2 days :cobra: I’ve read all writer from Manto to Mumtaz Mufti, Mustansar (he was the one who really attracted me thru his Afsanavi Safarnamay :naraz: )

Re: Historical Romances

Nahin, yeh Main Sadar main British dor ka purana market hai. Textile mill kiyun?

Re: Historical Romances

Nope I can’t post a single page even :bummer: They have written all love affairs which each & every details by defining sizes :smack2:

Re: Historical Romances

Chacha was a famous flirt or he posed to be flirt. In his own words, gori mems were impressed from his Greek looks, but when I see him, his words/claims seems all greek to me.

Re: Historical Romances

idhar india me british daur ki textile mill thi uska naam bhi empress tha aur usi naamse mall wagera bhi khule hain isiliye puchh liya?

Re: Historical Romances

sannan bhai naam to bataa sakte ho

Re: Historical Romances

:ast:

Badha ke piyas meri usne hath chor liya
wo kar raha tha murawwat bhi dil lagi ki tarah

I say only post the names of those pairs. We’ll try to post qabil e asha’at material here.

Re: Historical Romances

mustansar ka look greek se zyada bengali hai bhai

Re: Historical Romances

You know Mustansar Hussain Tarar?

Re: Historical Romances

googled him

actually meri urdu parhne ki raftar kam hai haan manto ka naam kafi pehle sun chuka hun

Re: Historical Romances

:eek: don’t say :hayaa: uss kay baal albatah Rehman Malik say miltay hain :omg:

Re: Historical Romances

haha sannan bhai just google for "Utpal Dutt"

aur wo list bhi shaaya kare 100 ashiq aur mashuq ki details dene ki zaroorat nahi hai

Re: Historical Romances

**
Nehru-Edwina kahani - Pamela ki zubani

**The reported love affair between Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first Prime Minister, and Lady Edwina Mountbatten, blossomed during a 1947 trip to Mashobra, a hill station, as part of a party of family and friends, writes Edwina’s younger daughter, Lady Pamela Hicks.
**
According to Lady Hicks, the affair, though not physical, was one of many that her mother had during her lifetime.
**
In her book – India Remembered, written by herself and her daughter, India Hicks – Lady Pamela recalls that Nehru wrote a letter to Edwina a decade later, in which he described that trip to Mashobra as the defining moment in their relationship, a momemnt when he realised, and perhaps she did too, “that there was a deeper attachment between us, that some uncontrollable force, of which I was dimly aware, drew us to one another.” :wub:

According to The Independent, Lady Pamela, who travelled and stayed in India with her parents (Earl and Lady Mountbatten) for 16 months when she was a 17-year-old, her mother’s love for Nehru created an an extraordinary emotional triangle in the midst of a major political upheaval.She said: “It amazes me that 60 years on people are still so fascinated by them. When you think that Nehru was the first Prime Minister of India, an incredible man, and that my mother was an amazing woman, and that both left an extraordinary legacy to history, it’s odd that the only thing people want to know is: Did they go to bed together?” *( :asa: You people should behave)

Lady Hicks further goes on to say that none in the family has ever spoken about the love between the two publicly, so when her daughter, India, suggested that she write a book about her stay in 1947-48, she was appalled at the idea of it all.

“I come from a generation that kept our heads down,” Lady Pamela Hicks says, adding that it took her some time to make the trip to the Mountbatten archives at Southampton University, to once again “feel the heat of India and see the grandeur of the viceroy’s house which was once home”.
**
Speaking of her mother, she says Edwina, then 45, was slender, glamorous and vivacious, sometimes temperamental, but also clever and serious-minded, and her attraction to Nehru, and him to her, was mutual.**(Edwina-Nehru Razi, to kia kare ga Qazi) :)**Edwina, she says "was young (young at 45 :eek: Bibi hamare haan to yeh Allah Allah karne ki stage samjhi jati hai), she was rich, she was beautiful and she was married to a naval officer who was away for long periods of time. So, having affairs at that time in history, though shocking and painful to her father, seemed to be the most natural thing to engage in, or have. ***(Such a understandable daughter *:salute:)

She, however, says that though her father was heart broken on hearing of the first affair, her mother still loved him and he loved her.

She says that Edwina always use to refer to her father as her “First Sea Lion.” (isse kehte hain do kashtion mai sawar hona)

Edwina’s love affairs were all done so naturally, that she thought everyone “had a bunny in the family”, and according to The Independent, it seems that Mountbatten decided to take the same patient line when he sensed his wife’s attraction to Nehru.**

Lady Hicks believes to this day that the whole Mountbatten family fell under Nehru’s spell, and she recalls, that back home, Edwina’s reported affection for Nehru, and her father’s decision to invite Indians to every cocktail party hosted by him in India, brought the roof down in the conservative and elitist 1940s society of Britain. **(These goras were always under superiority complex. Good show by Mountbattens :k: )

**She recalls that during one such cocktail party in Britain, she overheard some of Britain’s hoi poloi contemptuously describing the Nehru-Edwina affair as “disgusting, absolutely disgusting”'. (So this is how we know ander ki baat)

Nehru, she said, was a romantic in a big way and liked to regard Edwina “as the lady on the pedestal, unobtainable.” - Ishq e Lahasil

The attachment between them lasted until her death in 1960. A packet of letters from Nehru was found by her bedside. In her will she left all Nehru’s letters - a suitcase full - to her husband. (She might like Jagjeet Singh’s 'Tere khushboo main base khat main jalata kaise)

Lady Pamela says that, “My father was almost certain that there would be nothing in the letters to wound him. However, a tiny doubt caused him to ask me to read the letters first. I was happy to be able to reassure him. They were remarkable letters but contained nothing to hurt him.”

http://www.andhranews.net/Intl/2007/July/23/Nehru-Edwina-Mountbatten-8970.asp**

Hope this article clarifies the story of pawitar prem of Nehru-Edwina.

Re: Historical Romances

:eek:

Re: Historical Romances

But read the real fact about Nehru & Mounbaiteen :smack2:

Nehro & lady mountbatten

:omg: :rotfl:

aai hay :wub:


Restored attachments:

Re: Historical Romances

Feroz and Indira Gandhi
it gave us one prime minister and one awaiting prime minster:)

It generates revenue of most of the currencies in all denomination I suppose:D