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This paragraph] introduction to Rabindranath Tagore.
Rabindranath (7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941) was a famous Indian poet, writer, writer, artist, activist, philosopher and Hindu nationalist born in Kolkata to a cultured family belonging to the Brahmin caste. In 1913, he won the Nobel Prize in Literature for his religious lyric poem Gitanjai (Gitanjaei, published in 1911), the first Indian (and the first Asian) to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. He is as famous as the Lebanese poet Ki Ha Gibran and is known as "the two giants who stand on the cultural bridge between East and West".
His poetry collections include Stories and Poems (1900), The Gardener (1913), Crescent Moon (1913), Fruit Picking, Edge (1938), Birds (1916), Gitanjali (1910), The Gift of the Lover, Wandering Fireflies (1928), Strange Paths, and Birthdays (1941). The screenplays include "Sacrifice and Beyond", "The Post Office", "King of the Dark Room", and "The Cycle of Spring"; **Collected "The Realization of Life" and "Personality"; **There are short stories "Paying the Debt" (1891), "Renunciation" (1893), "Suba" (1893), "Is Man Alive, or Dead?" (1892), Mahamaya (1892), The Sun and the Clouds (1894), the novella Four Men (1916), the novella The Shipwreck (1906), Gora (1910), The Family and the World (1916), Two Sisters (1932); His important plays include The Stubborn Fortress (1911), Mokdotara (1925), and Oleander (1926); Important essays include "Death" (1881), "A Conversation in China" (1924), and "Russian Letters" (1931).
In Bengali, according to the Indians, his poems are more beautiful than those written in English, and he is the first of our saints: he who does not reject life, but speaks of life itself, and that is why we love him.
His prose is mainly social, political, and educational, and his poetry, in addition to its religious content, is primarily about nature and life. In Tagore's poetry, life itself and its diversity are the cause of joy. At the same time, the love he expresses is also one of the contents of his poetry.
The national anthems of India and Bangladesh both use Tagore's poems. Among them, the national anthem of India is "The Will of the People", and the national anthem of Bangladesh is "Golden Bengal".
His prose poem "Golden Flower" was selected into the Chinese textbook of the first grade of junior high school, and the short story "Golden Fragrant Wood Flower" was selected into the Chinese textbook of the third grade of primary school.
In 1941, Rabindranath Tagore died at the age of 81.
For details, please refer to it.
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Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941) was an Indian poet, writer, activist, philosopher, and Indian nationalist. His representative works include Gitanjali, The Flying Mill of the Birds, The Sand in the Eyes, Four People, The Family and the World, The Gardener, The Crescent Moon, The Last Psalm, Gora, The Crisis of Civilization, etc. [1]
Born on May 7, 1861, Rabindranath Tagore to a wealthy aristocratic family in Calcutta, India, was able to write long poems and carols at the age of 13. In 1878 he went to England to study, and in 1880 he returned to China to devote himself to literary activities. From 1884 to 1911 he was secretary of the Vatican Society, and in the twenties he founded the International University.
In 1913, he became the first Asian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature for Gitanjali. In 1941, he wrote "The Crisis of Civilization", the last words of the accusation against British colonial rule and the belief that the motherland would be independent and liberated.
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<>1. Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) was an Indian poet, writer, social activist, philosopher and Indian nationalist. His representative works include Gitanjali, The Birds, The Sand in the Eyes, The Four Persons, The Family and the World, The Gardener, The Crescent Moon, The Last Psalm, Gora, The Crisis of Civilization, etc.
Rabindranath Tagore was born on May 7 of that year into a wealthy aristocratic family in Calcutta, India. At the age of 13, he was able to compose many poems and poems. In 1878 he went to England to study, and in 1880 he returned to China to specialize in literary activities.
From 1884 to 1911 he served as secretary of the Sanskrit language, and in the 1920s he founded the International University. In 1913, he won the Nobel Prize for Literature for Gitanjali. In 1941, he wrote "The Crisis of Civilization," his last words complaining about British colonial rule and believing that the motherland would be liberated from independence.
Rabindranath Tagore, R., (1861-1941).
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The oranges are sweet and delicious!