Gitanjali (song offerings) by Rabindranath Tagore;foreword by Mohit K Ray and introduction by Rama Kundu
Material type:
- 9788124802458
- 954.035 R1132 G 102469
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Ubhayabharati General Stacks | Non-fiction | 954.035 R1132 G 102469 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 102469 |
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954.03 Is36 H 101975 A History of Modern India / | 954.035 In283 A 102248 Sri Aurobindo and His Contemporary Thinkers / | 954.035 K8365 G 102070 Gandhi's Dharma / | 954.035 R1132 G 102469 Gitanjali (song offerings) | 954.035092 C3618 L 102587 Lohia A Political Biography | 954.035092 G9595 S 102372 Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel / | 954.04 Ia6 P The Partition of India |
The initial fame of Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913 was due to Gitanjali which was published from London in 1912, although Tagore had published another G?t?njali in Bengali in 1910. Deeply rooted in the Indian soil and steeped in the Upanishadic thoughts as the poems were, nevertheless the reception of the book in the West was simply overwhelming. Great poets like W.B. Yeats, Ezra Pound sang paean to it. Yeats was visibly excited over the arrival of a great poet, whom he hailed as “greater than any of us”, while Pound too was moved by “the saner stillness” of the poems as opposed to “our clanguor of mechanisms”. While eminent critics have put on record their genuine admiration of the translation through the past hundred years, devotion of the heart and simplicity of the song seem to be mutually complementary in the poems. The simplicity may have been informed by the very mood and tenor of most of the poems, which is one of utter and humble submission; a happy contentment of surrender and union that brings him to the realization that the loudness and flashiness of ‘ornaments’ are not only redundant but out of tune at such a moment. Gitanjali, with its ideas, images, its music of utterance, its divine joy, and also its occasional dark clouds of sorrow and anguish, seems to run through the interstices of Tagore’s stories, plays, songs, dance-drama, and even non-fictional prose till the end. After going through the volume every time the reader too would (like Wilfred Owen) perhaps feel like singing in unison with the poet “what I have seen is unsurpassable”. The new edition of Gitanjali: Song Offerings will offer a stimulating reading to the lovers of Tagore all over the world. A comprehensive Introduction has been given to provide deeper insights into the poet and his great work.
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