印度大诗人泰戈尔
Rabindranath Tagore
作者:Unknown
来源:http://pitara.com
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(Illustrated by
Amarjeet Malik)
Mystic, painter and Nobel
laureate for literature, Rabindranath Tagore was a prolific
writer (3,000 poems, 2,000 songs, 8 novels, 40 volumes of essays
and short stories, 50 plays), who drew inspiration both from his
native Bengal and from English literary tradition. His major
theme was humanity's search for God and truth. He was awarded
the Nobel Prize in Literature for his collection of well-known
poems Gitanjali (Song Offerings).
Born in Calcutta on May 7, 1861,
Rabindranath was the youngest of fourteen children. His father,
Debendranath Tagore, was a Sanskrit scholar and a leading member
of the Brahmo Samaj. Rabindranath's early education was imparted
at home. In school, while others use to learn their lessons, he
would slip into more exciting world of dreams. Inspired by his
older nephew, he wrote his first poem when he was hardly seven.
At the age of seventeen, his first book of poems was published.
From 1878 to 1880 Tagore studied
law in England, and in 1890, having returned to India, he took
charge of his father's estates, where he saw firsthand the
suffering and backwardness of India's rural poor and grew to
love the serenity of the Indian countryside. Devoting himself to
the agricultural development of the land and the health and
education of the people, he founded, in 1901, Santiniketan
("Abode of Peace"), which became an international university
with a wide-ranging curriculum. He was knighted in 1915, an
honor he renounced four years later as a protest against the
Jallianwala Bagh massacre by the British in India.
Tagore was keenly aware of
India's socio-political condition under British rule. He
supported the Swadeshi movement and had been deeply influenced
by the religious renaissance of 19th century India. Coming out
strongly against orthodox rituals he wrote, "Leave this chanting
and singing and telling of beads! Whom dost than worship in this
lonely dark corner of a temple with doors all shut? Open thine
eyes and see thy God is not before thee!" (Verse 11, Gitanjali)
Tragically, between 1902 and
1907, Tagore lost his wife, son and daughter. But out of his
pain emerged some of his most tender work, including Gitanjali,
published in 1910. Tagore remained a true patriot, supporting
the national movement and writing the lyrics of the "Jana Gana
Mana", which is India's national anthem.
Between 1916 and 1941, Tagore
published 21 collections of songs and poems and held lecture
tours across Europe, the Americas, China, Japan, Malaya and
Indonesia. In 1924, he inaugurated the Viswa Bharati University
at Santiniketan, an All India Centre for culture. Tagore died in
Calcutta on 7th August 1941.
Tagore's works are classics,
renowned for their lyrical beauty and spiritual poignancy. He is
remembered for his literary genius and Santiniketan remains
flourishing institute. In Tagore's own words, "The world speaks
to me in colours, my soul answers in music".
His profound symbolism, abetted
by the free-flowing nature of his verse, create a universe of
haunting beauty that expresses God's infinite love and
humanity's deep compassion for all things beautiful.