Indic & South Asian Poetry, Classics By Subject, Asian Fiction & Literature Classics
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Overview
The poems of Rabindranath Tagore are among the most haunting and tender in Indianand world literature, expressing a profound and passionate human yearning. His ceaselessly inventive works deal with such subjects as the interplay between God and mortals, the eternal and the transient, and the paradox of an endlessly changing universe that is in tune with unchanging harmonies. Poems such as “Earth” and “In the Eyes of a Peacock” present a picture of natural processes unaffected by human concerns, while others, as in “Recovery—14,” convey the poet's bewilderment about his place in the world. And exuberant works such as “New Rain” and “Grandfather's Holiday” describe Tagore's sheer joy at the glories of nature or simply in watching a grandchild play.Author Biography: Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941), one of India's greatest and most prolific writers of the twentieth century, was awarded the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature.
William Radice is a poet, scholar, and translator of Bengali, who has written or edited nearly thirty books. He has translated Tagore's short stories and his novel The Home and the World for Penguin Classics.
Book Details
Published
July 27, 1989
Publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
Pages
208
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780140183665