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1, "I Want Nothing" Rabindranath Tagore.
I wanted nothing but stand behind a tree at the edge of the forest.
Tiredness lingered in the eyes of dawn, dew in the air.
The lazy smell of wet grass hangs over the mist of the ground.
Under the banyan tree, you squeeze the milk with your creamy hands.
I stood still. I didn't approach you.
The sky awoke with the sound of gongs in the temple, and the dust of the streets flew under the hooves of the oxen that drove away.
With the gurgling water bottle around her waist, the women came from the river.
Your bracelet is ding, and the milk foam overflows the edge of the jar.
The morning light faded away, and I didn't come near you.
2, "Endurance" Rabindranath Tagore.
If you don't speak, I will fill my heart with your silence and endure it.
I will wait quietly, like a sleepless star in the night, bowing my head patiently.
The dawn will come, the darkness will pass away, and your voice will pour into the golden fountain and pierce the sky.
Then your language will sound in every nest of my birds, and your melodious tunes will be furious in the flowers of my jungle.
3. "If You Cry for Losing the Sun" Rabindranath Tagore.
If you weep over the loss of the sun, then you will also lose the stars.
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Ten short poems by Rabindranath Tagore are as follows:
Ten of Tagore's most famous poems: Gitanjali, The Birds, The Sand in the Eyes, The Four, The Family and the World, The Gardener, The Crescent, The Last Psalms, Gora, The Crisis of Civilization.
Rabindranath Tagore was an Indian poet, writer, activist for social change, philosopher, and Indian nationalist. His works reflect the strong or friendly aspirations of the Indian people to change their destiny under the oppression of imperialism and the feudal caste system, and describe their indomitable resistance struggle, which is full of a clear patriotic and democratic spirit.
His works are mostly based on the real life of India, reflecting the tragic fate of the Indian people under the oppression of colonialism, feudalism, ignorance and backward ideas, depicting the changes in Indian society and the awakening of the new generation under the impact of new ideas, and also recording his personal spiritual exploration.
Excerpts from the poem: 1. The world kisses me with pain and wants me to repay it with a song. 1. Rabindranath Tagore's "The Birds".
2. We see the world wrongly and say that it has deceived us. —Rabindranath Tagore, The Birds
3. You smile slightly, and don't say anything to me. And I think I've been waiting a long time for this. Ichimin Tagore, "The Birds".
4. Even if you are sad, don't be sad, because you don't know who will fall in love with your smile. —Rabindranath Tagore, The Birds
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Your sun smiles at the winter of my heart, never doubting its spring flowers.
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Tagore's ten short poems are Gitanjali, The Birds, The Sand in the Eyes, The Four, The Family and the World, The Gardener, The Crescent, The Last Psalm, Gora, and The Crisis of Civilization.
Gitanjali is a collection of poems written by the Indian writer Rabindranath Tagore, a collection of religious lyric poems that is a sacrifice to the gods. Tagore's song to God is the song of life, and he sings about the glory of life, the joy and sorrow of real life in a brisk and cheerful tone, expressing the author's concern for the future of the motherland.
The Birds is a collection of poems by the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore, which consists of 325 beautiful untitled poems, first published in 1916. The basic themes of these poems are mostly extremely common things, such as grass, fallen leaves, birds, stars, rivers, and so on.
Tagore's character experience
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 Buddhist Society, and in the 20s 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", a posthumous relict of accusations against British colonial rule and the belief that the motherland would be independent and liberated.
Reference: Encyclopedia - Tagore.
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12 Selected Poems of Rabindranath Tagore:
1. The birds in summer flew to my window to sing and flew away.
Autumn yellow leaves, they have nothing to sing, only sigh and fly there.
2. A small group of wanderers in the world, please leave your footprints in my words.
3. The world has taken off its vast mask in the face of its lover.
It's smaller, as small as a song, as small as an eternal kiss.
4. It is the tears of the "earth" that make her smile remain youthful and unthankful.
5. The vast desert passionately pursued the love of a leaf of green grass, but she shook her head, laughed, and flew away.
6. If you cry when you miss the sun, then you will also miss the stars.
7. The dancing flowing water, the mud and sand on your way, ask for your singing, your flow.
Are you willing to put your lame mud and sand down?
8. Her eager face, like night rain, disturbs my dream soul.
9. Once, we dreamed that everyone was not acquainted.
We awoke, but we knew that we were dear to each other.
10. Anxiety calms down in my heart, just as dusk in the silent forest.
11. Some invisible fingers, like lazy micro (wind thoughts), are playing gurgling music on my heart.
12. "Sea water, what are you talking about":
1) "It is an eternal contemplation".
2) "O sky, what are my words".
3) "It is eternal silence".
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