Rabindranath Tagore

 Tagore: the Ubermensch

Tagore: Life

Greatest writer in modern Indian literature, Bengali poet, novelist, educator, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Tagore was awarded the knighthood in 1915, but he surrendered it in 1919 as a protest against the Massacre of Amritsar, where British troops killed some 400 Indian demonstrators protesting colonial laws. Tagore's reputation in the West as a mystic has perhaps mislead his Western readers to ignore his role as a reformer and critic of colonialism. "Bigotry tries to keep truth safe in its hands. With a grip that kills it." (from Fireflies) Rabindranath Tagore was born in Calcutta in a wealthy and prominent Brahman family. His father was Maharishi Debendranath Tagore, a religious reformer and scholar, his mother Sarada Devi. His grandfather had established a huge financial empire for himself, and financed public projects, such as Calcutta Medical College. The Tagores were pioneers of  Bengal Renaissance and tried to combine traditional Indian culture with and Western ideas. All the children contributed significantly to Bengali literature and  culture. Tagore, the youngest of the children, received his early education first from tutors and then at a variety of schools, among them Bengal Academy where he studied Bengali history and culture, and University College, London, where he studied law but left after a year without completing his studies. In 1883 Tagore married Mrinalini Devi Raichaudhuri, with whom he had two sons and three daughters. He moved 1890 to East Bengal in 1890. His first book, a collection of poems, was published when he was 17. In East Bengal (now Bangladesh) he collected loca legends and folklore and wrote seven volumes of poetry between 1893 and 1900, including SONAR TARI (The Golden Boat), 1894 and KHANIKA, 1900. This was highly productive period in Tagore's life, and earned him the rather misleading epitaph 'The Bengali Shelley.' More important was that Tagore wrote in the common language of the people and abandoned the ancient for of the Indian language. This also was something that was hard to accept among his critics and scholars. 
Tagore's early major prose works include Chokher Bali (1903, Eyesore) and Nasta Neer (1901, The Broken Nest), published first serially. Between 1891 and 1895 he published forty-four short stories in Bengali periodical, most of them in the monthly journal  Sadhana. In 'Punishment' Tagore set the story in a rural village and described the oppression of women through the tragedy of the low-caste Rui family. Chandara is a proud, beautiful woman, "buxom, well-rounded, compact and sturdy," her husband, Chidam, is a farm-laborer, who works in the fields with his brother Dukhiram. One day when they return home after whole day of toil and humiliation, Dukhiram kills in anger his sloppy and slovenly wife because his food was not ready. Chidam's tells to police, to help his brother, that his wife struck her sister-in-law with the farm-knife. Chandara takes the blame on to herself. 'In her thoughts, Chandara was saying to her husband, "I shall give my youth to the gallows instead of you. My final ties in this life will be with them."' Afterwards both Chidam and Dukhiram try to confess that they were quilty but Chandara is convicted. Just before the hanging, the doctor tells that her husband wants to see her. "To hell with him," says Chandara. In 1901 Tagore founded a school outside Calcutta, Visva-Bharati, which was dedicated to emerging Western and Indian philosophy and education. It become a university in 1921. He produced poems, novels, stories, a history of India, textbooks, and treatises on pedagogy. His wife died in 1902, followed in 1903 by the death of one of his daughters and in 1907 his younger son. Tagore's reputation as a writer was established in the United States and in England after the publication of GITANJALI: SONG OFFERINGS, in which Tagore tried to find inner calm and explored the themes of divine and human love. The poems were translated into English by Tagore himself. "When one knows thee, then alien there is none, then no door is shut. Oh, grant me my prayer that I may never lose touch of the one in the play of the many." Tagore's cosmic visions owed much to the lyric tradition of Vaishnava Hinduism and its concepts about the relationship between man and God. The poems appeared in 1912 with an introduction by William Butler Yates, who wrote "These lyrics - which are in the original, my Indians tell me, full of subtlety of rhythm, of untranslatable delicacies of colour, of metrical invention - display in their thought a world I have dreamed of all my life long." His poems were praised by Ezra Pound, and drew the attention of the Nobel Prize committee. "There is in him the stillness of nature. The poems do not seem to have been produced by storm or by ignition, but seem to show the normal habit of his mind. He is at on with nature, and finds no contradictions. And this is in sharp contrast with the Western mode, where man must be shown attempting to master nature of we are to have "great drama." (Ezra Pound in Fortnightly Review, 1 March 1913) However, Tagore also experimented with poetic forms and these works have lost much in translations into other languages. 
Much of Tagore's ideology come from the teaching of the Upahishads and from his own beliefs that God can be found through personal purity and service to others. He stressed the need for new world order based on transnational values and ideas, the "unity consciousness." "The soil, in return for her service, keeps the tree tied to her; the sky asks nothing and leaves it free." Politically active in India, Tagore was a supporter of Gandhi, but warned of the dangers of nationalistic thought. Unable to gain ideological support to his views, he retired into relative solitude. Between the years 1916 and 1934 he travelled widely, attempting to spread the ideal of uniting East and West. Only hours before he died on August 7, in 1941, Tagore dictated his last poem. Especially Tagore's short stories influenced deeply Indian Literature, and he was the first Indian to bring an element of psychological realism to his novels. Tagore wrote his most important works in Bengali, but he translated his poems into English, forming new collections. Many of his poems are actually songs, and inseparable from their music. His written production, still not completely collected, fill 26 substantial volumes. 
At the age of 70 Tagore took up painting. He was also a composer, settings hundreds of poems to music. Tagore's song "Our Golden Bengal" became the national anathem of Bangladesh. He was an early advocate of Independence for India and his influence over Gandhi and the founders of modern India was enormous. Tagore remained a well-known and popular author in the West until the end of the 1920s, but nowadays he is not so much read. 

Highlights

Year

Event

7 May 1861

25 Baishakh 1268

 

Born in a cultured aristocratic family in Kolikata, Tagore's early life was spent in an atmosphere of philosophical cross-current involving arts, literature, music and painting
1868 Composed his first poem as seven years old boy
1878 Publication of his first book of poetry
1878 Left India for higher education

Young Tagore: Child of English Romanticism

1883 Married to Mrinalini Debi
1890 Publication of Manasi, a collection of his  poems
1890 Settled for a break away at Shilaidaha in Kushtia
22 Dec 1901 Founded the school, Santiniketan, at Bolpur in Birbhum. The school was a great success and later blossomed into Biswabharati. It became a great seat of culture and learning
1910 Became a staunch supporter of remarriage of young widows
1910 Composed Gitanjli in Bengali
1912 Gitanjali was published in English
1913

 

Tagore was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature following the publication of his collection of poems, Gitanjali
1915 Conferred the title " Sir" by the British king
1919 Renounced the British title as a protest against Jalianwala massacre by the British colonial rulers in India
1924 Founded the Biswa Bharati university at Santi Niketan
1929 Directed his creative energy into painting
1939 Requested Ghandhi to lift ban on Netaji Subhash Chandra Basu
7 Aug 1941 Breathed his last in Kolikata leaving behind a huge  cultural legacy

Tagore & Einstein: two most accomplished figures of 20th century

Tagore and Ghandi: champions of  modern India

Selected Works of Tagore

Year Works Year Works
1878 Kabikahini: A Poet's Tale 1882 Sandhya Sangeet /Evening Songs
1883 Prabhat Sangeet/ Morning Songs 1883 BauThakuranir Hat 
1887 Rajarshi 1889 Raja O Rani: The King and the Queen 
1890 Bisharjan: Sacrifice  1890 Manasi 
1891 Europe Jatreer Diary   1893 Balmiki Pratibha 
1894 Sonar Tari: The Golden Boat  1900 Khanika: Moments 
1900 Katha  1900 Kalpana 
1901 Naibedya  1901 Nashta Neer: The Broken Nest 
1902 Smaran 1902 Binodini  
1903 Chokher Bali: Eyesore 1905 Nauka Dubi: 
1906 Kheya 1906 Naukadubi: The Wreck 
'07-09 Gora  1908 Saradotsab: Autumn Festival 
1912 Galpa Gucchha: A Bunch of Stories 1912 Chinna Patra: Torn Letter
1912 Biday Abhisap: The Curse at Farewell  1912 Geetanjali: Song Offerings 
1912  Jiban Smriti: My Reminiscenes 1912 Dakghar: Post Office 
1913 The Crescent Moon   1913 Glimpses of Bengal Life 
1913 Khudita Pashan: The Hungry Stones and Other Stories  1914 Chitra 
1914 Geet Malya   1914 The King of the Dark Chamber 1914
1914 The Post Office  1914 Sadhana 
1916 Ghare Bairey: The Home and the World 1916 Balaka:  A Flight of Swans 
1916 Chaturanga: Four Quartet  1916 Fruit Gathering 
1916 The Hungry Stones  1916 Stray Birds
1917 Personality  1917 The Cycle of Spring 
1917 Sacrifice and Other Plays  1917 My Reminiscene 
1917 Nationalism 
1918 Mashi and Other Stories
1918 Stories from Tagore   1918 Palataka 
1919 Japan Jatree: A Visit to Japan  1921 Greater India 
1921 The Fugitive 1921 Creative Unity
1922 Lipika 1922 Muktadhara 
1923 Poems 1924 Gora
1924 Letters from Abroad 1924 Rakta Karabi: Red Oleander  
1925 Griha Prabesh  1925 Broken Ties and Other Stories 
1925  Rabindranath Tagore: Twenty-Two Poems 
1925 Rakta Karabi: Red Oleanders
1926 Sadhana  1926 Natir Puja 
1928 Letters to a Friend 
1929 Sesher Kabita 
1929 Mahua: The Herald of Spring 1929 Jatree 
1929 Yogayog  1930 Manab Dharma: The Religion of Man
1931 The Child   1931 Rashiar Chithi: Letters from Russia 
1932 Patraput  1932 Punaschya 
1932 Mahatmahi and the Depressed Humanity  1932 The Golden Boat 1932 
1932 Sheaves: Poems and Songs  1933 Dui Bon 1933: Two Sisters
1933 Chandalika  
1934 Malancha:  The Garden 
1934 Char Adhyay: Four Chapters  1935 Bithika  
1935  Shesh Saptak   1936 Ptrapath 
1936 Shyamali  1936 Collected Poems & Plays
1937 Khapchara  1938 Senjutee 
1938 Prantik  1939 Prahasini  
1939 Pather Sanchay 1939 
1939 Akash Pradeep  
1939 Shyama  1940  Nabajatak 
1940 Shanai   1940 Chhelebela: My Boyhood Days
1940 Rogshajyay: On Sick Bed 1941 Arogya 
1941 Janma Din: The Birth Day 1941 Galpa Salpa: Just Stories 
1941 Last Poems 1944 The Parrots Training 
1945 Rolland and Tagore 1945 1950   Three Plays 
1950 Crisis in Civilization  1951 Sheaves
1951 More Stories from Tagore 1955 A Tagore's Testament
1958 Our Universe  1959 The Runaway & Other Stories 
1960 Wings of Death  1960 Geet Bitan
1961 A Tagore Reader (ed. Amiya Chakraborty)  1961 Towards Universal Man
1961 On Art and Aesthetics 1961 Bichitra 1961
'60-61 Galpa Gucchha 1960-62 (4 vols.) 1964   Boundless Sky 
 1964  The Housewarming  64-66 Rabindra Rachanabali (27 vols)
1969 Patraput   1972 Imperfect Encounter
1974 Later Poems 
1977 The Housewarming
1985 Rabindranath Tagore: Selected Poems 1991 Rabindranath Tagore: Selected Short Stories

Further Reading 

Rabindranath Tagore:Krishna Kripalani (1962) 
Rabindranath Tagore:H. Banerjee (1971)
Rabindranath Tagore:BC Chakraborty (1971)
An Introduction to Rabindranath Tagore: VS Narabene (1977)
The Humanism of Rabindranath Tagore:MR Anand (1979)
Rabindranath Tagore: S Ghose (1986)
The Unversal Man: S Chattopadhyay (1987)
Sir Rabindranath Tagore: KS Ramaswami Sastri (1988)
Gandhi and Tagore: DW Atkinson (1989)
Rabindranath Tagore: K Basak (1991)
Rabindranath Tagore: EJ Thompson (1991)
Ketaki Kushari Dyson: Translations of Tagore's Poems

Sites on Tagore

Noble Laureates

Tagore's Detailed Biography
Tagore's Conversation with HG Wells
Tagore's Conversation with Albert Einetein

Tagore's Songs

Articls on Tagore

Rabindra-Bhavana at Vishva-bharati

Tagore Home Page (with articles)

Tagore Stamps' Page

Tagore Page at Nobel Internet Archive

Short biography and bibliography

Tagore Page

Collection of Tagore songs

The Hungry Stone and other stories

The King of the dark chamber

Stray Birds

Once there was a king

Tagore's conversation with H.G . Wells
A little known letter from Tagore

Poems by Tagore (in Bengali)

http://www.pa.uky.edu/~sugata/rabin.html

http://www.math.brockport.edu/~smitra/tagore.html 

http://home1.swipnet.se/~w-17889/gpr.htm





page to be completed

 


Home| Contents | Best Bangalees | Music | Literature| Arts & Crafts |Philosophy | Education | Religion |

 

CopyrightŠ Muktadhara.net 9 May 2001. All rights reserved.