Write a dialogue between ' Nobel prize awardee, national poet ' Rabindranath Tagore and you about how India should rise up with all the internal issues.
Answers
Explanation:
Rabindranath Tagore, who died in 1941 at the age of eighty, is a towering figure in the millennium-old literature of Bengal. Anyone who becomes familiar with this large and flourishing tradition will be impressed by the power of Tagore’s presence in Bangladesh and in India. His poetry as well as his novels, short stories, and essays are very widely read, and the songs he composed reverberate around the eastern part of India and throughout Bangladesh.
In contrast, in the rest of the world, especially in Europe and America, the excitement that Tagore’s writings created in the early years of the twentieth century has largely vanished. The enthusiasm with which his work was once greeted was quite remarkable. Gitanjali, a selection of his poetry for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913, was published in English translation in London in March of that year, and had been reprinted ten times by November, when the award was announced. But he is not much read now in the West, and already by 1937, Graham Greene was able to say: “As for Rabindranath Tagore, I cannot believe that anyone but Mr. Yeats can still take his poems very seriously.”
Answer:
Dialogue between Rabindranath Tagore and Me:
Me: Good evening Tagore grandpa.
Tagore: Good evening, Anamika.
Me: Do you want some tea? I am making some.
Tagore: Yes, thank you that will be wonderful.
Me: Here, take it.
Tagore: Thank you, Ana.
Me: Why are you at home? You look like you have been thinking about something a lot.
Tagore: Actually, I want to ask you something.
Me: About what?
Tagore: What is the youth's point of view towards the internal issues India is facing?
Me: well, it is high time, India needs to rise against such issues. We have been ruled over for like a century now and yet people do not learn the fact that the internal issues are stopping us from being developed.
Tagore: Hmmm, interesting.
Me: Why do you ask?
Tagore: I was thinking the same. I do not know when can I see India the way we thought it would turn out to be. No matter what, we keep drifting apart. There's a need for unity in the country. I hope the youth learns from the mistake of the adults and give me a better future.
Me: They will do not worry.
Tagore: I sure hope so.
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