English, asked by pratha55m, 5 months ago

Which poem of Rabindranath Tagore has been taken from his English ‘Gitanjali’?​

Answers

Answered by shivanik2ood
0

Answer:

Taxation of salt by the British authorities

The taxation laws introduced by the British East India Company were in vogue during the ninety years of British Raj which followed the demise of the company

Explanation:

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Gitanjali is a collection of poems by the Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore. Tagore received the Nobel Prize for Literature, largely for the English translation, Song Offerings. It is part of the UNESCO Collection of Representative Works. Its central theme is devotion, and its motto is 'I am here to sing thee songs'.

Explanation:

Gītāñjali, a collection of poetry, the most famous work by Rabindranath Tagore, published in India in 1910. Tagore then translated it into prose poems in English, as Gitanjali: Song Offerings, and it was published in 1912 with an introduction by William Butler Yeats.

Medieval Indian lyrics of devotion provided Tagore’s model for the poems of Gītāñjali. He also composed music for these lyrics. Love is the principal subject, although some poems detail the internal conflict between spiritual longings and earthly desires. Much of his imagery is drawn from nature, and the dominant mood is minor-key and muted. The collection helped win the Nobel Prize for Literature for Tagore in 1913, but some later critics did not agree that it represents Tagore’s finest work.

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