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    Tagore (1861~1941) India renowned poet, writer, artist and social activist.In 1913 attained the Nobel prize in literature.Had been born in a Calcutta rich philosophy and the literary arts tutelage family, 13 years old namely can create the long poem and the ode body poetry anthology.  In 1878 went to England to study abroad, in 1880 returned to homeland to be engaged in the literature activity specially.Held the post of buddhist society secretary 1884 to 1911, the 20"s organized the International University.In 1941 wrote complains the England colonial rule and believed the motherland will certainly to obtain the independent liberation the famous last words "Civilized Crisis".Tagore has the huge world influence writer

  • 2 # 蝸牛LOVE旅遊

    Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)

    Greatest writer in modern Indian literature, Bengali poet, novelist, educator, and an early advocate of Independence for India. Tagaore won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Two years later he was awarded the knighthood, but he surrendered it in 1919 as a protest against the Massacre of Amritsar, where British troops killed some 400 Indian demonstrators. Tagore"s influence over Gandhi and the founders of modern India was enormous, but his reputation in the West as a mystic has perhaps mislead his Western readers to ignore his role as a reformer and critic of colonialism.

    "When one knows thee, then alien there is none, then no door is shut. Oh, grant me my prayer that I may never lose touch of the one in the play of the many." (from Gitanjali)

    Rabindranath Tagore was born in Calcutta into a wealthy and prominent Brahman family. His father was Maharishi Debendranath Tagore, a religious reformer and scholar. His mother, Sarada Devi, died when Tagore was very young - he realized that she will never come back was when her body was carried through a gate to a place where it was burned. Tagore"s grandfather had established a huge financial empire for himself. He helped a number of public projects, such as Calcutta Medical College.

    The Tagores tried to combine traditional Indian culture with Western ideas; all the children contributed significantly to Bengali literature and culture. However, in My Reminiscences Tagore mentions that it was not until the age of ten when he started to use socks and shoes. And servants beat the children regularly. Tagore, the youngest, started to compose poems at the age of eight. Tagore"s first book, a collection of poems, appeared when he was 17; it was published by Tagore"s friend who wanted to surprise him.

    Tagore received his early education first from tutors and then at a variety of schools. Among them were Bengal Academy where he studied history and culture. At University College, London, he studied law but left after a year - he did not like the weather. Once he gave a beggar a cold coin - it was more than the beggar had expected and he returned it. In England Tagore started to compose the poem "Bhagna Hridaj" (a broken heart).

    In 1883 Tagore married Mrinalini Devi Raichaudhuri, with whom he had two sons and three daughters. In 1890 Tagore moved to East Bengal (now Bangladesh), where he collected local legends and folklore. Between 1893 and 1900 he wrote seven volumes of poetry, including SONAR TARI (The Golden Boat), 1894 and KHANIKA, 1900. This was highly productive period in Tagore"s life, and earned him the rather misleading epitaph "The Bengali Shelley." More important was that Tagore wrote in the common language of the people. This also was something that was hard to accept among his critics and scholars.

    Tagore was the first Indian to bring an element of psychological realism to his novels. Among his early major prose works are CHOCHER BALI (1903, Eyesore) and NASHTANIR (1901, The Broken Nest), published first serially. Between 1891 and 1895 he published forty-four short stories in Bengali periodical, most of them in the monthly journal Sadhana.

    Especially Tagore"s short stories influenced deeply Indian Literature. "Punishment", a much anthologized work, was set in a rural village. It describes the oppression of women through the tragedy of the low-caste Rui family. Chandara is a proud, beautiful woman, "buxom, well-rounded, compact and sturdy," her husband, Chidam, is a farm-laborer, who works in the fields with his brother Dukhiram. One day when they return home after whole day of toil and humiliation, Dukhiram kills in anger his sloppy and slovenly wife because his food was not ready. To help his brother, Chidam"s tells to police that his wife struck her sister-in-law with the farm-knife. Chandara takes the blame on to herself. "In her thoughts, Chandara was saying to her husband, "I shall give my youth to the gallows instead of you. My final ties in this life will be with them."" Afterwards both Chidam and Dukhiram try to confess that they were quilty but Chandara is convicted. Just before the hanging, the doctor says that her husband wants to see her. "To hell with him," says Chandara.

    In 1901 Tagore founded a school outside Calcutta, Visva-Bharati, which was dedicated to emerging Western and Indian philosophy and education. It become a university in 1921. He produced poems, novels, stories, a history of India, textbooks, and treatises on pedagogy. Tagore"s wife died in 1902, next year one of his daughters died, and in 1907 Tagore lost his younger son.

    Tagore"s reputation as a writer was established in the United States and in England after the publication of GITANJALI: SONG OFFERINGS, about divine and human love. The poems were translated into English by the author himself. In the introduction from 1912 William Butler Yates wrote: "These lyrics - which are in the original, my Indians tell me, full of subtlety of rhythm, of untranslatable delicacies of colour, of metrical invention - display in their thought a world I have dreamed of all my life long." Tagore"s poems were also praised by Ezra Pound, and drew the attention of the Nobel Prize committee. "There is in him the stillness of nature. The poems do not seem to have been produced by storm or by ignition, but seem to show the normal habit of his mind. He is at one with nature, and finds no contradictions. And this is in sharp contrast with the Western mode, where man must be shown attempting to master nature if we are to have "great drama." (Ezra Pound in Fortnightly Review, 1 March 1913) However, Tagore also experimented with poetic forms and these works have lost much in translations into other languages.

    Much of Tagore"s ideology come from the teaching of the Upahishads and from his own beliefs that God can be found through personal purity and service to others. He stressed the need for new world order based on transnational values and ideas, the "unity consciousness." "The soil, in return for her service, keeps the tree tied to her; the sky asks nothing and leaves it free." Politically active in India, Tagore was a supporter of Gandhi, but warned of the dangers of nationalistic thought. Unable to gain ideological support to his views, he retired into relative solitude. Between the years 1916 and 1934 he travelled widely. From his journey to Japan in 1916 he produced articles and books. In 1927 he toured in Southeast Asia. Letters from Java, which first was serialized in Vichitra, was issued as a book, JATRI, in 1929. His Majesty, Riza Shah Pahlavi, invited Tagore to Iran in 1932. On his journeys and lecture tours Tagore attempted to spread the ideal of uniting East and West. While in Japan he wrote: "The Japanese do not waste their energy in useless screaming and quarreling, and because there is no waste of energy it is not found wanting when required. This calmness and fortitude of body and mind is part of their national self-realization."

    Tagore wrote his most important works in Bengali, but he often translated his poems into English. At the age of 70 Tagore took up painting. He was also a composer, settings hundreds of poems to music. Many of his poems are actually songs, and inseparable from their music. Tagore"s "Our Golden Bengal" became the national anthem of Bangladesh. Only hours before he died on August 7, in 1941, Tagore dictated his last poem. His written production, still not completely collected, fills nearly 30 substantial volumes. Tagore remained a well-known and popular author in the West until the end of the 1920s, but nowadays he is not so much read.

    For further reading: Rabindranath Tagore by Krishna Kripalani (1962); Rabindranath Tagore by H. Banerjee (1971); Rabindranath Tagore by B.C. Chakravorty (1971); An Introduction to Rabindranath Tagore by V.S. Naravene (1977); The Humanism of Rabindranath Tagore by M.R. Anand (1979); Rabindranath Tagore by S. Ghose (1986); The Unversal Man by S. Chattopadhyay (1987); Sir Rabindranath Tagore by K.S. Ramaswami Sastri (1988); Gandhi and Tagore by D.W. Atkinson (1989); Rabindranath Tagore by K. Basak (1991); Rabindranath Tagore by E.J. Thompson (1991) - Suom.: Tagorelta on myös suomennettu draamat Pimeän kammion kuningas ja muita dramoja, novellivalikoima Ahnaat paadet sekä teos Puutarhuri Eino Leinon käännöksenä 1913.

    Selected works:

    KABIKAHINI, 1878 - A Poet"s Tale

    SADHYA SANGEET, 1882 - Evening Songs

    PRABHAT SANGEET, 1883 - Morning Songs

    BAU-THAKURANIR HAT, 1883

    RAJASHI, 1887

    RAJA O RANI, 1889 - The King and the Queen / Devouring Love

    VISARGAN, 1890 - Sacrifice

    MANASI, 1890

    IUROPE-JATRIR DIARI, 1891, 1893

    VALMIKI PRATIBHA, 1893

    SONAR TARI, 1894 - The Golden Boat

    KHANIKA, 1900 - Moments

    KATHA, 1900

    KALPANA, 1900

    NAIVEDYA, 1901

    NASHTANIR, 1901 - The Broken Nest

    SHARAN, 1902

    BINODINI, 1902

    CHOCHER BALI, 1903 - Eyesore

    NAUKADUBI, 1905 - Haaksirikko

    KHEYA, 1906

    NAUKADUBI, 1906 - The Wreck

    GORA, 1907-09 - suom.

    SARADOTSAVA, 1908 - Autumn Festival

    GALPAGUCCHA, 1912 - A Bunch of Stories

    CHINNAPATRA, 1912

    VIDAY-ABHISAP, 1912 - The Curse at Farewell

    GITANJALI, 1912 - Song Offerings (new translation in 2000 by Joen Winter, publ. Anvil Press) - Uhrilauluja

    JIBAN SMRTI, 1912 - My Reminiscenes - Elämäni muistoja , trans. by J. Hollo

    DAKGHAR, 1912 - Post Office

    The Crescent Moon, 1913

    Glimpses of Bengal Life, 1913

    The Hungry Stones and Other Stories, 1913

    CHITRA, 1914 - transl.

    GHITIMALAYA, 1914

    The King of the Dark Chamber, 1914

    The Post Office, 1914

    Sadhana, 1914

    GHARE-BAIRE, 1916 - The Home and the World - Koti ja maailma

    BALAK, 1916 - A Flight of Swans

    CHATURANGA, 1916 - transl.

    Fruit Gathering, 1916

    The Hungry Stones, 1916

    Stray Birds, 1916

    PERSONALITY, 1917 - Persoonallisuus

    The Cycle of Spring, 1917

    Sacrifice, and Other Plays, 1917

    My Reminiscene, 1917

    Nationalism, 1917

    Mashi and Other Stories, 1918

    Stories from Tagore, 1918

    PALATAKA, 1918

    JAPAN-JATRI, 1919 - A Visit to Japan

    Greater India, 1921

    The Fugitive, 1921

    Creative Unity, 1921

    LIPIKA, 1922

    MUKTADHARA, 1922 - trans.

    Poems, 1923

    Gora, 1924

    Letters from Abroad, 1924

    Red Oleander, 1924

    GRIHAPRABESH, 1925

    Broken Ties and Other Stories, 1925

    Rabindranath Tagore: Twenty-Two Poems, 1925

    RAKTA-KARABI, 1925 - Red Oleanders

    SADHANA, 1926 - suom.

    NATIR PUJA, 1926 - transl.

    Letters to a Friend, 1928

    SESHER KAVITA, 1929 - Farewell, My Friend

    MAHUA, 1929 - The Herald of Spring

    JATRI, 1929

    YAGAYOG, 1929

    The Religion of Man, 1930

    The Child, 1931

    RASHIAR CHITHI, 1931 - Letters from Russia

    PATRAPUT, 1932

    PUNASCHA, 1932

    Mahatmahi and the Depressed Humanity, 1932

    The Golden Boat, 1932

    Sheaves, Poems and Songs, 1932

    DUI BON, 1933 - Two Sisters

    CHANDALIKA, 1933 - transl.

    MALANCHA, 1934 - The Garden

    CHAR ADHYAYA, 1934 - Four Chapters

    BITHIKA, 1935

    SHESH SAPTAK, 1935

    PATRAPUT, 1936

    SYAMALI, 1936 - trans.

    Collected Poems and Plays, 1936

    KHAPCHARA, 1937

    SEMJUTI, 1938

    PRANTIK, 1938

    PRAHASINI, 1939

    PATHER SANCAY, 1939

    AKASPRADIP, 1939

    SYAMA, 1939

    NABAJATAK, 1940

    SHANAI, 1940

    CHELEBELA, 1940 - My Boyhood Days

    ROGSHAJYAY, 1940

    AROGYA, 1941

    JANMADINE, 1941

    GALPASALPA, 1941

    Last Poems, 1941

    The Parrots Training, 1944

    Rolland and Tagore, 1945

    Three Plays, 1950

    Crisis in Civilization, 1950

    Sheaves, 1951

    More Stories from Tagore, 1951

    A Tagore"s Testament, 1955

    Our Universe, 1958

    The Runaway and Other Stories, 1959

    Wings of Death, 1960

    GITABITAN, 1960

    A Tagore Reader, 1961 (ed. by Amiya Chakravarty)

    Towards Universal Man, 1961

    On Art and Aesthetics, 1961

    BICITRA, 1961

    GALPAGUCCHA, 1960-62 (4 vols.)

    Boundless Sky, 1964

    The Housewarming, 1964

    RABINDRA-RACANABALI, 1964-1966 (27 vols.)

    Patraput, 1969

    Imperfect Encounter, 1972

    Later Poems, 1974

    The Housewarming, 1977

    Rabindranath Tagore: Selected Poems, 1985

    Rabindranath Tagore: Selected Short Stories, 1991 (trans. by William Radice)

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