Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - Tagore's Prose Poems

Tagore's Prose Poems

Tagore's prose poems can be divided into two parts. The first part is eight collections of English prose poems: Gitanjali, Gardener's Collection, Crescent Moon Collection, Colorful Fruit Collection, Birds Collection, Lover's Gift, Crossing, Wandering Thoughts Collection, etc.

The second part is a collection of five essays in Bengali, such as Random Thoughts, Again, Last Week, Pan Ye and Black Bull.

Tagore is an Indian poet, philosopher and Indian nationalist. 19/kloc-won Nobel Prize in Literature in 0/3, and was the first Asian to win Nobel Prize in Literature. His poems contain profound religious and philosophical views. His poems enjoy an epic status in India. Representative works: Gitanjali and Birds.

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Tagore had an extraordinary understanding of death. He said: "Life as a whole will never take death seriously. Before he died, he laughed, danced and played. It builds, stores and loves. Only when we separate the fact of individual death from the whole life can we see its emptiness and become depressed.

We forgot all about life. Death is only part of it, just like looking at a piece of cloth under a microscope. It looks like a net. We stared at those big holes and imagined shaking. But the truth is, death is not the ultimate truth. It looks dark, just like the sky looks blue, but death is not a blackened entity, just like the sky does not leave its color on the wings of birds. "

"In Tagore's works, death is full of poetry and yearning. For example, in the last stage of Gitanjali, more than 20 poems were used to praise death and express the process of being the same as God in death.