We do not offer 24 hour support. All enquiries and requests for support will be responded within 4 hours, from 8:30am to 7:00pm, Monday to Friday (GMT). If you experiencing any technical difficulties outside of these hours, response times will be longer.
"Not to master all, but to taste one fully — that is the secret the 64 whisper. A man with one true art is richer than a king with sixty-three half-dreams." If you actually need a reference to a real book with that title for research or purchase, please clarify, and I can help describe or locate known Tamil publications. Would you like me instead to list all 64 arts in order?
If you meant for me to — as in, a sample of writing in the style of a book or a poetic list about these 64 arts — here it is for you: Aaya Kalaigal 64 (An excerpt from an imagined classical Tamil manuscript)
(And 48 more — from horse-taming to elephant-lore, from gem-cutting to parrot-speech teaching, from lute-stringing to eyeliner-making.) aaya kalaigal 64 book
It seems you're referring to the traditional Tamil concept of (அறுபத்து நான்கு கலைகள்) — the 64 classical arts, which include everything from music and dance to archery, martial arts, architecture, weaving, and even cooking or applying kolam.
9. Kannadi Sutral Kalaigal — Mirror-making — catching the soul in silvered glass. 10. Manai Adai Sastram — Architecture — aligning doorways with the planets' breath. 11. Kollan Velai — Blacksmith's craft — fire tamed into a plowshare. "Not to master all, but to taste one
12. Madhu Kalaigal — The 64 pleasures of love — where bodies speak a silent grammar. 13. Mooligai Kalaigal — Root and leaf — the poison that cures, the cure that kills.
However, there is no single famous standard book titled just "Aaya Kalaigal 64" that is universally recognized. Instead, the 64 arts are described in ancient texts (like Silappadikaram , Kama Sutra , Agamas ), and several modern Tamil books have been published with similar titles (e.g., 64 Kalaigalum Kalaigalum , Tamilar Aaya Kalaigal ). If you meant for me to — as
The sages say: He who knows but one art knows none. He who chases all sixty-four becomes the universe.