I am sure many of us have gone through it. It's called life. That life which we curse when something bad happens with us which we never wanted it to happen.
Life is all about ups and downs, by taking in mind that yes we can succeed we can come out of the problem. Always remember that every problem comes with a solution. When one door is closed on us we don't bother to look at the other door which has been opened for us , because we are too busy looking at the closed door. You won't see that good thing hidden in your problem, but eventually you will. Having faith at our courage and will is an ultimate key to every unsuccessful lock to open. What we need is just to figure out that silver lining, which is a tough task for every individual.. But not impossible. So be optimistic and have faith in you that yes I have the capability to come out with this problem.
Every cloud has a silver lining meaning
ReplyDeleteEvery bad situation has some great aspect to it. This adage is usually said as an encouragement to a man who is overwhelmed by some trouble and is unable to perceive any positive way forward.
ohn Milton authored the expression 'silver lining' in Comus: A Mask Displayed at Ludlow Castle, 1634
I see ye noticeably, and now accept
That he, the Preeminent Great, to whom all things sick
Are yet as slavish officers of vengeance,
Would send a glistering guardian, if require were
To keep my life and respect unassailed.
Was I misled, or did a sable cloud
Turn forward her silver lining on the night?
I didn't blunder; there does a sable cloud
Turn forward her silver lining on the night,
And casts a gleam over this tufted woods.
'Clouds' and 'silver linings' were alluded to regularly in literature from that point onward, usually refering to Milton and much of the time alluding to them as Milton's clouds. It isn't until the days of the elevating language of Victoria's England that we start to hear the proverbial shape that we are presently familiar with - 'every cloud has a silver lining'. The principal event that is unequivocally communicating that thought comes in The Dublin Magazine, Volume 1, 1840, in a survey of the novel Marian; or, a Youthful Maid's Fortunes, by Mrs S. Hall, which was distributed in 1840:
As Katty Macane has it, "there's a silver lining to every cloud that sails about the heavens in the event that we could just observe it."
'There's a silver lining to every cloud' was the shape that the maxim was usually communicated in the Victorian era. The at present utilized 'every cloud has a silver lining' appeared, in another literary audit, in 1849. The New month to month beauty assemblée, Volume 31 incorporate what implied to be a quotation from Mrs Hall's book - "Every cloud has a silver lining", however which didn't in fact appear in Marian, which just replicated Milton's original content.