Showing posts with label Rabindranath Tagore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rabindranath Tagore. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2020

191. The Auspicious Vision. Rabindranath Tagore Story Reintroduced By P S Remesh Chandran

191

The Auspicious Vision. Rabindranath Tagore Story Reintroduced  

P. S. Remesh Chandran

 
Editor, Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum


Article Title Image 01 By ID 6335159. Graphics: Adobe SP.


Rabindranath Tagore was a great Indian short story writer, renowned educator, politician, patriot and the National Poet. He actively took part in the Indian Independence Movement. His story The Auspicious Vision is a comedy of an error in which fate plays a key part. Auspicious Vision is a part of Bengali wedding ceremony when the veil of the bride is lifted for the groom to see her face. The reckless hero in the story had not bothered to see his bride before the marriage and was shocked to see the face of his bride for the first time. But it was too late anyway. 

Meeting the beautiful village maid during a shooting expedition.

Kanthi Chandra was a young Bengali Brahmin widower who used to go for shooting expeditions in the woods near the river banks with his friends. Once, as he was sitting in his boat cleaning the gun, a beautiful village maid came to the riverside carrying two ducks. Seeing the shooters she quickly disappeared into a thicket of bamboo woods. But one of Kanthi’s friends had already shot and wounded one of those ducks. Attracted by the wild beauty of the girl, Kanthi followed her into the thicket and found her nursing the wounded duck beside a well-to-do house. He learned that the girl was deaf and dumb but did not learn that she belonged to another house. He was of the impression that the girl was of that house. Then somebody called ‘Sudha’ from inside the house and at that very moment the girl happened to rise and go inside the house. Naturally, Kanthi thought her name was Sudha and she was of that house. It was love at first sight and he wanted to gain her as his bride. Instead of talking with the people of the house then and there, however, he decided to return to his boat for the time being. Thus fate dealt him a card. 

Proposing to marry the girl while not bothering to see the bride.

Infatuated with the idea of marrying this girl, one day, Kanthi went to that well-to-do house and made friendship with the head of the house. He was an old Brahmin, by name Nabin Banerji, whose only care in life was sending his daughter away in marriage to a suitable partner. The old man and the young man soon began to meet outdoors and engage in conversations. The old man soon learned that Kanthi also belonged to a reputed Bengali Brahmin family. (Tagore also was). On another day, sitting on his boat and in the middle of a conversation, Kanthi told the old man that he wished to marry his daughter. The old man was much delighted at this prospect of sending his daughter soon away in marriage. When asked to see his would-be wife, Kanthi did not bother to do so. He believed he had already seen her and held the beautiful girl with the ducks whom he had seen entering the house was the old man’s daughter Sudha. He never knew that the beautiful deaf and dumb girl always accompanying, carrying, fondling, or nursing pets was considered as a nuisance in the village. So, fate here dealt him another card. 

If you want to marry a girl, at least see her face before the marriage.

On the day of the marriage, as part of the ceremony, the bridal veil was lifted. Kanthi was shocked: it was not the beautiful village maiden he had met and liked! But he was not to reveal his anxiety and shock, at least then. It was beyond time for that. At that moment, a young hare rushed into the middle of the people in the hall, disrupting the nuptial ceremony. And following it was that village maiden who rushed into the hall in pursuit. The people in the hall scolded her for spoiling the ceremony. It was also casually revealed to the young man that she was not only deaf and dumb but was underdeveloped in mind also. The irony in the situation is that Kanthi found it relieving to have escaped from marrying an underdeveloped and mentally retarded girl. The story also brings the moral that if you want to marry a girl, at least see her face before the marriage. 

Are hapless human beings to be left out permanently in this world?

Do you know why Tagore wrote this story? If even a widower is not willing to marry a deaf and dumb beautiful village maid, then who will? Are they to be deprived of marriage and the happiness in life? Are they to be left out permanently in this world? Are they to be permanently left to live with no families of their own? Was it their fault they were born without faculties of speech and hearing? When nature took away from this girl her speech and hearing, did she not more than compensate for in beauty? No doubt, she must have found herself alienated in her own village, without friends, without companions. And hence she always being seen accompanying, carrying, fondling, and nursing hapless other creatures like hares and ducks: they too cannot tell their grief like her.


Article Title Image 02 By ID 6335159. Graphics: Adobe SP.

Written in: January 1991
First published on: 27 March 2020


Tags:
 

Bengal Brahmin Marriages, Child Disability, Deaf Dumb, Free Student Notes, Handicapped Girls, Indian Writers, Rabindranath Tagore, Short Stories Reintroduced, Surprise End Stories,

About the Author P. S. Remesh Chandran:


03. Author Profile Of P S Remesh Chandran By Sahyadri Archives.

Editor of Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum. Author of several books in English and in Malayalam. And also author of Swan: The Intelligent Picture Book. Born and brought up in the beautiful village of Nanniyode in the Sahya Mountain Valley in Trivandrum, in Kerala. Father British Council trained English teacher and Mother University educated. Matriculation with distinction and Pre Degree Studies in Science with National Merit Scholarship. Discontinued Diploma studies in Electronics and entered politics. Unmarried and single.

Face Book: https://www.facebook.com/psremeshchandra.trivandrum
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PSRemeshChandra
You Tube: http://www.youtube.com/user/bloombooks/videos
Blog: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.com/
Site: https://sites.google.com/site/timeuponmywindowsill/
E-Mail: bloombookstvm@gmail.com

Post: P. S. Remesh Chandran, Editor, Sahyadri Books, Trivandrum, Padmalayam, Nanniyode, Pacha Post, Trivandrum- 695562, Kerala State, South India.




Friday, May 5, 2017

074. P S Remesh Chandran’s Articles Volume I.


074. 

P S Remesh Chandran’s Articles Volume I By P S Remesh Chandran

Editor, Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum


By  PSRemeshChandra, 5th May 2017. Short URL http://nut.bz/2ca-zvmi/ First Posted in Wikinut>Writing>Essays



Articles written by P S Remesh Chandran, Editor, Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books Trivandrum, published at reputed platforms including Wikinut, Linked In and Internet Archives which are of interest to students, researchers and general readers are brought here at one place as part of a series of articles to make them accessible to all. Those available only in his sites and blogs, or only as books, and his video songs, speeches and single line drawings are all linked here.

Ten earliest essays are reintroduced here with useful links.



The ten articles reintroduced here are: 001 Solitude: Alexander Pope. 002 Sophist: P S Remesh Chandran. 003 The Forsaken Merman: Matthew Arnold. 004 The Leech Gatherer: William Wordworth. 005 The Lake Isle Of Innisfree: W B Yeats. 006 Leisure: W H Davies. 007. Song To The Men Of England: P B Shelley. 008. Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening: Robert Frost. 009. Two Famous Death Poems: Shirley And Shakespeare. 010. Leave This Chanting: Rabindranath Tagore.

Links to Articles, Free PDF Downloads and Flip Books are provided.


When these articles were first released, there were only the articles. Now there is Free PDF Downloads and Flip Books to these articles which would be of immense help to students, so their links are provided here. Students are perfectly free to download them for their studies. It is the author’s and his Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum’s wish for them to be of use to the world student community. Remember that the pictures used in these articles may have restrictions on reuse but the text of these articles is perfectly free to be downloaded for academic purposes.

001. Solitude. Alexander Pope Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.

  
01. Happy to breathe his native air in his own ground By Robert.

Alexander Pope was born a Catholic in Protestant England, was forbidden to live in London City and was liable to pay a double taxation. Moreover, he was suffering from a series of diseases. ‘To combat these handicaps’, he possessed more than the courage of a lion. His poems were acrimonious attacks on society, and in a few cases they were against authority. He mentioned names in his poems, leaving dashes in places, which his contemporaries happily filled in to the embarrassment of adversaries. 

First Published: 7th Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/281k669t/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2011/11/01.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFAYUotN081VDVnZGc

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE001SolitudeAlexanderPopePSRemeshChandran

002. Sophist. P S Remesh Chandran Poem.


02. Athens in 1832 By Martinus Rørbye.

The ancient Sophist saints in Greece were exceptionally clever with the use of their tongues. Don't play with them- they can bind us cunningly with their tongues. And don't corner them- we will never forget what hit us. Here in this poem, one sophist saint is tried in Court for crime when Judges get stung. Classical sophists were well-versed in paradoxes, understanding the meaning of which won’t be easy. So, here, the court had to let him go free. 

First Published: 2 Sep 2010. Short URL http://nut.bz/oth.p1gi/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2010/09/sophist-poem-by-psremesh-chandran.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFAWDJfNERITEdDc2M

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE002SophistPoemPSRemeshChandran

003. The Forsaken Merman. Matthew Arnold Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.


03. We will gaze at the lost town. Mermaid statue Cleveland Museum of Art Ohio By Daderot.

Matthew Arnold was a severe critic of literature. Essays In Criticism was his monumental work in which he let no great poet go unscathed. Usually such critics would be asked a question: why don't you write a great poem? The Forsaken Merman was Arnold's answer to this question in which he proved not only could he create poems with hilarious themes but incorporate multi tunes also into a single poem. After creating a few more poems, he returned to academics and criticism. 

First Published: 13th Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/1ljtosiw/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/01/03the-forsaken-merman-matthew-arnold.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFALXV4eUVNOVdFV1U

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE003TheForsakenMermanMatthewArnoldPSRemeshChandran

004. The Leech Gatherer. William Wordworth Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.

 04. Marshes, beauty spots of nature By Ivan Shishkin 1890.

William Wordsworth's poetry has no style because nature and life has no style. The perfect plainness of his poems gained him popularity. He mostly wrote about nature and man and is considered the world's greatest nature poet. The world was very late in recognizing his merit. However, glory found its way to his grave. The Leech-Gatherer, alternatively titled ‘Resolution And Independence’ is the universal symbol of eternal human labour. 

First Published: 15th Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/134a-2vx/
Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/02/004-leech-gatherer-william-wordsworth.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFAR2RqazZHTDg1YTQ

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE004TheLeechGathererWilliamWordsworthPSRemeshChandran

005. The Lake Isle Of Innisfree. William Butler Yeats Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.

 05. The mid-lake abode of loneliness and quietness By Eibsee.

Poets are accused to be unrealistic day-dreamers who are given to fancy. Day-dreaming and fancying all do and take off, but only a few can safely land also. W B Yeats was a perfect poet who could do both. Not many have expressed fancy in more beautiful words than he did, and fewer still have reminded the world of its duties and responsibilities as effectively. This poem has always been a sensation among the poetry-reading public and is the international song and manifesto of solitude-seekers. 

First Published: 16th Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/19ed-hvz/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/01/05-lake-isle-of-innisfree-wbyeats.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFATEdtcEwzaHhpeDg

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE005TheLakeIsleOfInnisfreeWBYeatsPSRemeshChandran

006. Leisure. W H Davies Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.

 06. Guardian of the gateway in leisurely vigil: A heron By Pauline Eccles.

Man is always eager to observe and enjoy the beauties of nature. Only that he does not get enough time for rest to elate and thrill his mind by soaking up the magnificent spectacles Mother Nature has created around him. It was in the midst of and from these beauties that man was created. Therefore, his wish to always be with them is only natural. Whenever he has to leave the beauties of nature behind, he pines in his heart as if leaving his homeland. 

First Published: 16th Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/qp4j6ml6/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/02/06-leisure-whdavies-appreciation-by.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFAanhJUUxUSXUwVG8

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE006LeisureWHDaviesPSRemeshChandran

007. Song To The Men Of England. Percy Bysshe Shelley Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.

 07. Sow seed and reap but let not the idle heap By Bernard Gagnon.

A revolutionary is a person who causes constant changes around him wherever he is. In this sense, Shelley was a revolutionary poet. Song To The Men Of England opened up world's eyes to the torture, brutality and exploitation workers were subjected to in England during the time of her colonial prosperity and raised the question: Why can't they revolt? Karl Marx predicted workers’ revolution in England as follow up of the Industrial Revolution but it never happened. The English workers were inert. 

First Published: 18th Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/21kpi-9l/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/02/07-song-to-men-of-england-pbshelley.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFAZXY2SE9tYmZHZnM

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE007SongToTheMenOfEnglandPBShelleyPSRemeshChandran

008. Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening. Robert Frost Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.

 08. All a winter's work By Böhringer Friedrich.

Nature creates many beauties for man to observe but man, being burdened with the multitude of tasks of running a family, cannot spare his time for sharing the pleasantness nature imbues. In his rush of life he is forced to abandon the easy solaces nature offers which if accepted, would have served as a balm for his mind in flames. Robert Frost's poem ‘Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening’ shows a glimpse of what treasures man has lost. True, what man forgets first is the beauty of his mother. 

First Published: 19th Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/eslzz8m7/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/02/08-stopping-by-woods-robert-frost.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFASHJ6NHdhUWZQZlE

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE008StoppingByWoodsRobertFrostPSRemeshChandran

009. Two Famous Death Poems By Shirley And Shakespeare. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.



09. A burial painting By Enrico Pollastrini 1851.

Death is the end of all earthly cares and the beginning of eternal things. It is believed that the moment we die, we are born in another universe. With it begins a new way of being. More number of songs and poems has been written on death than on birth. It is considered an important event in man's life. In many communities throughout the world, death is an occasion for rejoicing and celebration. Shakespeare's Fear No More and James Shirley's Death The Leveller are appreciated here. 

First Published: 21st Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/evi23ktc/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/02/009-two-famous-death-poems-shirley-and.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFAc1QwSU13U3dMWTQ

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE009TwoFamousDeathPoemsShirleyAndShakespearePSRemeshChandran

010. Leave This Chanting. Rabindranath Tagore Poem. Appreciation By P S Remesh Chandran.

 10. Tagore reading to others 1925 By Unknown.

God was the most beautiful creation of mankind, created in his exact image- man’s own image- playful, lovely and comely, so that he can easily identify himself with God. So why not love him ardently and affectionately, and respect him beyond everything? After creating mankind, God did not wish to leave them alone but decided to stay with them, which was a great sacrifice on His part. Leave This Chanting is one of the most read poems of Rabindranath Tagore, with the most universal message. 

First Published: 22nd Mar 2011. Short URL http://nut.bz/1zdohpx2/

Link: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.in/2012/03/010-leave-this-chanting-rabindranath.html

Download PDF: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7UyS8upcOFAX1JkMkpHaVBwTkU

Flip Book: https://archive.org/details/SBTAE010LeaveThisChantingRabindranathTagorePSRemeshChandran

___________________________
Pictures Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons
___________________________

Picture Credits:

01. Happy to breathe his native air in his own ground By Robert.
02. Athens in 1832 By Martinus Rørbye.
03. We will gaze at the lost town By Daderot.
04. Marshes, beauty spots of nature By Ivan Shishkin 1890.
05. The mid-lake abode of loneliness and quietness By Eibsee.
06. Guardian of the gateway in leisurely vigil: A heron By Pauline Eccles.
07. Sow seed and reap but let not the idle heap By Bernard Gagnon.
08. All a winter's work By Böhringer Friedrich.
09. A burial painting By Enrico Pollastrini 1851.
10. Tagore reading to others 1925 By Unknown.
11. Author Profile of P S Remesh Chandran By Sahyadri Archives.


Meet the author: About the author and accessing his other literary works. 


Editor of Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum. Author of several books in English and in Malayalam. And also author of 'Swan, The Intelligent Picture Book'. Edits and owns Bloom Books Channel. Born and brought up in Nanniyode, a little village in the Sahya Mountain Valley in Kerala. Father British Council-trained English Teacher and mother university-educated. Matriculation with High First Class, Pre Degree studies in Science with National Merit Scholarship, discontinued Diploma Studies in Electronics and entered politics. Unmarried and single.

11. Author Profile of P S Remesh Chandran By Sahyadri Archives.

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Alexander Pope, Bloom Books Trivandrum, English Articles, Free Student Notes, James Shirley, Leave This Chanting, Leisure, Matthew Arnold, P B Shelley, Poem Reviews, Poetry Appreciations, P S Remesh Chandran, Rabindranath Tagore, Robert Frost, Sahyadri Books Trivandrum, Solitude, Song To The Men Of England, Sophist, Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening, The Forsaken Merman, The Lake Isle Of Innisfree, The Leech Gatherer, Two Famous Death Poems, W B Yeats, W H Davies, William Shakespeare, William Wordworth, 

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First Published: 05 May 2017 
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Identifier: SBT-AE-074. P S Remesh Chandran’s Articles Volume I.

Articles English Downloads Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum. 

Editor: P S Remesh Chandran



Tuesday, October 7, 2014

066. Where The Mind Is Without Fear. Rabindranath Tagore Poem. Reintroduced By P S Remesh Chandran

066
 

Where The Mind Is Without Fear. Rabindranath Tagore Poem. Reintroduced 

P S Remesh Chandran

Editor, Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum


Article Title Image By Karl and Ali. Graphics: Adobe SP.


Tagore was one of the most musical-minded poets of the 19th century who lived to see the glories and advancement of the 20th century also. India’s supreme educational visionary, he started Saanthi Nikethan in Calcutta which grew into the Viswa Bhaarathi World University. Tagore was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Where The Mind Is Without Fear is the 35th song in Gitanjali, his Nobel collection of poems, Gitanjali meaning Dedication of Flowers.
   
Tagore grew up in an unbelievably intoxicating atmosphere of music and dance and literature. Who will believe he would ever write poems with no music at all?
 
Tagore was born in a house where veena, tamburu, harmonium, mridamgam, tabala and flute resounded day and night from every room, and that great house in Calcutta had so many rooms too. It was a large family, every member being artists, painters, singers, poets, musicians or dancers. Father, mother, uncles, aunts, in-laws, brothers, sisters, nieces- everyone immersed in art or music or dance. He grew up in an unbelievably intoxicating atmosphere of music and dance and literature. Who will believe he would ever write poems with no music at all? He himself wrote and tuned more than Five Hundred songs in his Bengali language; they gained wide popularity in Bengal and constituted that famous branch of Bengali Music which later came to be known as Rabindra Sangeetham. So, we have a real musician with us, who also cared to write songs, plays and short stories, in Bengali as well as in English, all excelling one another. 

In exquisiteness of the music in his poems, Tagore is comparable only to Omar Khayyam, Alfred Lord Tennyson and Percy Bysshe Shelley.

 

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwQWwZsiDI4&t=64s


Even though the tunes of almost all his Bengali songs are known, as he himself had tuned them, the tunes of songs which he wrote in English still remain a mystery. That they also had exhilarating tunes hidden in them was certain but he never cared to reveal them to public. It seems this expert and visionary in the field of education, literature, music and art, wished to keep them as a challenge to the whole English-speaking world, for them to rediscover in their time and leisure. He hardened the challenge by locking his lines too. The standard locking method he used was positioning the start and end of lines where they should not be. In general appearance, his English poems would look like prose-poems, generally known in English literature as free-verse. But once we shed academic pride and approach these poems as enjoyers, we have the option to try and try and try sincerely to sing them in their tunes and in some unexpected moment, they will click and unlock themselves and the original tunes without which these poems could not have been written will be revealed to us. In exquisiteness of the music contained in his poems, Tagore is comparable only to Omar Khayyam, Alfred Lord Tennyson and Percy Bysshe Shelley. The fact was the world came nowhere near what he expected the world to do in this intellectual challenge of his, with the result that Tagore still remains widely mistaken as a free-verse poet in English. 

The most paradoxical thing about recognizing Tagore as a writer is, his Nobel Prize Collection Gitanjali of 1913 was Tagore in his least brilliance.



Educated in England, firm-rooted in traditional Indian style of teaching, and open to the whole world’s literary influence, we see him in counsel with Gandhi, agreeing and disagreeing, conferring with Einstein in closed rooms and they never revealing the subject of their discussions, touching musical chords in Sarijini Naidu, the Nightingale of India, switching Romaine Rolland to oriental themes, moving Kahlil Gibran to read and enjoy him and causing Haldane to accept Indian citizenship. What shall we call this person with wide acceptance, reputation and influence? The National Poet of India is too narrow a title for Rabindranath Tagore. His poems made people awakened and alert. His plays made people roused and kinetic. His stories made people weep, and occasionally, laugh. The treasure-trove of Bengali and English literature he produced remains unparalleled and unique in this world. Even his love-songs were classic creations of harmony with nature, mostly in Bengali. He was in actual love with nature! The most paradoxical thing about recognizing Tagore as a writer is, his Nobel Prize Collection Gitanjali of 1913 was Tagore in his least brilliance. 

He instituted Santhi Nikethan as a school where classes were conducted in the lap of nature, amid bird-cries and murmuring streams, under shades of trees, in mango gardens.

 

A school is an assembly of teachers and a class is an assembly of learners, with no walls and buildings. When Tagore conceived an educational institution, he conceived it without walls and buildings. He instituted his Santhi Nikethan, the Abode of Peace, as a school where classes were conducted in the lap of nature, in the midst of bird-cries and murmuring of streams, under shades of trees, in mango gardens. We have noted his openness to the world, his firm-rootedness in Indian teaching styles and his dislike for bondage, slavery and intellectual darkness. To celebrate these three important views, he created three of his most musical and famous poems, and sure, locked their lines too, intellectually challenging the world in general, and the academic community in particular, asking can they ever unlock and sing these lines. Who will deny he was playful also? Anyway, his stories and plays are full of little children. He could easily have revealed their original tunes but he chose not to and to leave it to time. They still remain the most challenging and unyielding in musification and musical recitation, eternally mistaken as free-verse poems. They are, Leave This Chanting, Govinda’s Disciple and Where The Mind Is Without Fear, respectively. 


Tagore pointed fingers at world’s ignorance, fear and exploitation, like Shelley did in his Song To The Men Of England, without actually pointing fingers at anyone.


Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHnjSnH1qa8



Without knowing the cosmopolitan world Tagore lived in and the broad world perspective he cultivated and held, we cannot understand the meaning, depth and relevance of his poem Where The Mind Is Without Fear. Only when we are able and intellectually equipped enough to enjoy the liquidity and clearness of the waters that fed into the pool of his imagination can we understand and enjoy fully this trio of poems and laugh with heartiness at the skill with which Tagore pointed fingers at the whole world’s ignorance, fear and exploitation, like Shelley did in his Song To The Men Of England, without actually pointing fingers at anyone. It was the time of industrial revolution and exploitation and economic slavery throughout the world, in Russian, British and German Empires. The world was on the brink of October Revolution. Temperatures were high everywhere in the world. What state of affairs are described in this poem existed in British India and in the other inhuman empires as well. The Russian Empire collapsed within three years in 1917 and the British and German around 1947. It was only natural and logical that all these three empires collapsed within 25 years of his envisioning and a little breeze, sunshine and freshness seeped into the world just as Tagore prayed in this song. 

The poem’s dual purpose of unveiling the position to which Britain brought a country and being a scale of measure to gauge if India has progressed any, after half a century of independence.

 

When we pray, if we pray for riches, it is clear we are very poor. If we pray for health, we are then certainly sick. And if we pray for freedom, we are sure in shackles, bondage and hands and feet fettered. Written in the peak hours of the cruelty and brutality of the British administration in India, around 1910, Where The Mind Is Without Fear is Tagore’s Utopia, in a sense, in which he presents his dream world of liberation, freedom and upliftment for his country and his world. The distance between his dream and the real state of affairs in his country is far, and he skillfully brings to world's attention the state into which his great nation has been made to fall by the British administration. He does this without offending anyone, and as was expected from an England-educated noble genius. As an aftermath of the Second World War and due to severity of the Indian Independence Movement, the British were however forced to leave India in 1947. But six years earlier, Tagore had died without seeing his free India. In present times, this poem serves the dual purpose of unveiling the horrible downtrodden position to which Britain brought his country and its heritage, and being a scale of measure to gauge if India has progressed any, after half a century of independence. 

In countries condemned to live in darkness and gloom, people will hope for a ray of light in the far distant horizon, expressed through their poets and visionaries like Tagore and Shelley.

 

Think about a country anywhere in this world where people live in constant fear and terror of evil and horrible things that can happen to them from authorities- they can be brutally trodden over and crushed down to death by soldiers’ horses, cut down by police bayonets, hunted down by government spies, betrayed by neighbours who work in collision with authorities, imprisoned for saying things publicly and executed without trials for speaking against government. Do not wonder where such countries were or are existing. Look how people lived in Asian, African and American colonies under the British, French, Dutch, Portuguese and Spanish conquerors in the past- suppressed, oppressed and cruelly beaten, brothers, sisters, wives and children raped and killed before them, flogged to death or executed publicly in gallows as a warning to all. Look how people lived even till recently in totalitarian and militaristic states like Russia, China and Germany, constantly fearing when GRU, MSS or Gestapo will knock on doors at the dead of night. So, fear has not gone from this world, nor will it go. In such miserable conditions of animalistic living, whose heads will not be lowered due to helplessness and shame? In such hopeless countries which are not illuminated by the light of knowledge but condemned to live in perpetual darkness and gloom, their people will hope for a ray of light, of knowledge, in the far distant horizon, expressed through their poets and visionaries like Tagore and Shelley. Knowledge is something to be pursued in peace and calmness. One should be free, unencumbered by jealous and spiteful authorities watching like hawks, to access knowledge. Do not anyone interpret Tagore’s lines that he wished for free knowledge for his people. 

Why cannot we travel throughout ancient civilization routes like Huen Tsang, Fa Hien, Marco Polo, Barbosa, Nicolo Conti, Sulaiman, Megasthenes and many others did through ages, without Pass Ports?
 
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxgGvw5SIqk

If we travel through great land masses of the world- Africa, Asia, America, when we pass each country and reach the border, we will be asked Pass Ports and Vista. What system is this? Cannot we travel throughout ancient civilization routes like Huen Tsang, Fa Hien, Marco Polo, Pliny, Buchanan, Barbosa, Nicolo Conti, Sulaiman, Megasthenes and many others did, through ages? Not anymore. Even though it is a single world filled with people who all look alike, narrow nationalist feelings have caused it to be broken up into fragments by raising domestic walls around each little hostile piece. Which intelligent and sensible man will not grieve at the prospect of loosing all worlds beyond, for a small confined one of his own? This genuine grief of the open-minded, civilized and cultured man brutally suppressed down and walled in by worthless administrators in tyrannical states is such unearthly, godly, universal and eternal that world has begun to respond, in some land masses, initiated by the wise and thoughtful in those parts of the world. In Europe, if you have a single Pass Port, you can travel through all signatory countries now, spending the same Euro wherever you go. Tagore wrote this poem in a time when Bertrand Russell, H.G.Wells, Arnold Toynbee, George Orwell and many other visionaries were thinking about oneness of the world. 

We have learned about Euphrates and Tigress giving birth to Mesopotamian civilization, Iraq serving as a beacon of light, hope and enlightenment to the world and Baghdad shining as a seat of learning.


Mankind has a destination, a purpose, in life. But in totalitarian, militaristic, colonial and undemocratic states, they cannot pursue this purpose but can only do what the state says to do. In such countries, day after day, decade after decade, people are compelled and forced to do what they do not like but what authorities very much like. Life, for people, becomes a burden of dead habits and weights there. How much tirelessly and hard people strive in their lives to achieve man’s missions, with their arms stretching towards perfection in life, their lives will only become purposeless and futile in the end, in such countries with only persecution and suffocation and no freedom. Every spoken word will be an untruth, clothed to disguise personal motives as state’s wishes, to keep slaves in perpetual subjection and sovereigns in unquestioned power. Gradually the clear stream of logic and reason looses its way and dries up, and vanishes into the dreary desert sand of dead habits and purposelessness in those countries. We have learned about Euphrates and Tigress giving birth to Mesopotamian civilization, Iraq serving as a beacon of light, hope and enlightenment to the world and Baghdad shining as a seat of learning. Last we heard from that great city was, Saddam Hussain was storing and using chemical warfare weapons, slaying his own people in tens of thousands and finally succumbing to world’s will power. So, Tagore was right in his poem: lack of logic and reason kills not only the people of a country but its soul too. It can happen anywhere, anytime, once dictators ascend the throne. 

We cannot touch and feel a state, unless through its people. If we already have touched a nation and felt it good, know that its people are good, well nurtured and benevolent.


Who has more freedom and responsibility for thought and action- the citizens or the state? It is an age-old question, discussed well and having a well-cut answer. A state cannot think unless through its people. And it cannot act, unless through its people. People are real, and the state is amorphous, something not precipitated. We cannot touch and feel a state, unless through its people. If we already have touched a nation and felt it good, know that its people are good, well nurtured and benevolent. State is a conviction of its people, something they envision in their absolute freedom, something they achieve through the collective thought and action of their unrestrained minds, led forward by the godly inborn purity of their self awareness and self respect. Putrid rulers cannot force people to build their nation: they can only force and people will obey, but they will not believe. To become a heaven of a state, it has to be conceived that way by its people, goaded by goodwill for the whole world, because, once it has built its ideal nation, human mind will not stay in that cocoon; it will wish to pass to worlds beyond. 

You can view, listen to and download the most challenging Tagore songs in Bloom Books Channel, absolutely free.
 
04. Slide Bloom Books Channel.
 

Many people in the world, in all continents, have tuned, orchestrated and video-produced many of Tagore’s songs in English, as they are very popular among students and teachers and included in university studies. Some recordings came very close to original tunes, some nowhere near them and most not at all with any tune. In India, his home country where he is celebrated as National Poet, no attempts were made in the academic world or by authorities to orchestrate his English songs. Even Prasar Bharathi Corporation, All India Radio and Door Darshan with their vast resources and enormous funds, did not even try during the past fifty years. Try these three most challenging of his songs from Bloom Books Channel in You Tube. They are of course crude recordings made with pagan tools, created by poor people, but they do have a tune and they are the only sincere attempts ever. Remember, they are just prototypes for the world’s children, released into public domain, for any one to build upon. Someday, fine recordings of these songs will come, from those little children who download them now.

1. Where The Mind Is Without Fear
2. Leave This Chanting
3. Govinda’s Disciple

First published on: 16th September 2014
 

Article Title Image By Micael Widell. Graphics: Adobe SP.

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Pictures Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons
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Tags
 

Appreciations, Articles, English Literature, Essays, Indianwriters, P S Remesh Chandran, Rabindranath Tagore, Reintroductions, Reviews, Sahyadri Books Bloom Books Trivandrum, Stories, Tagore Songs, Tagore Videos, Where The Mind Is Without Fear


About the Author P. S. Remesh Chandran: 

05. Author Profile Of P S Remesh Chandran By Sahyadri Archives.

Editor of Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum. Author of several books in English and in Malayalam. And also author of Swan: The Intelligent Picture Book. Born and brought up in the beautiful village of Nanniyode in the Sahya Mountain Valley in Trivandrum, in Kerala. Father British Council trained English teacher and Mother University educated. Matriculation with distinction and Pre Degree Studies in Science with National Merit Scholarship. Discontinued Diploma studies in Electronics and entered politics. Unmarried and single. 

Author of several books in English and in Malayalam, mostly poetical collections, fiction, non fiction and political treatises, including Ulsava Lahari, Darsana Deepthi, Kaalam Jaalakavaathilil, Ilakozhiyum Kaadukalil Puzhayozhukunnu, Thirike Vilikkuka, Oru Thulli Velicham, Aaspathri Jalakam, Vaidooryam, Manal, Jalaja Padma Raaji, Maavoyeppoleyaakaan Entheluppam!, The Last Bird From The Golden Age Of Ghazals, Doctors Politicians Bureaucrats People And Private Practice, E-Health Implications And Medical Data Theft, Did A Data Mining Giant Take Over India?, Will Dog Lovers Kill The World?, Is There Patience And Room For One More Reactor?, and Swan, The Intelligent Picture Book. 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/PSRemeshChandra 

You Tube: http://www.youtube.com/user/bloombooks/videos
Blog: http://sahyadribooks-remesh.blogspot.com/
Site: https://sites.google.com/site/timeuponmywindowsill/
E-Mail: bloombookstvm@gmail.com
 
Post: P. S. Remesh Chandran, Editor, Sahyadri Books, Trivandrum, Padmalayam, Nanniyode, Pacha Post, Trivandrum- 695562, Kerala State, South India.