Why can't you read Tagore's poems?

I also like Tagore's poems very much and have read them for many years. As the Irish poet Yeats commented, "These poems show me a world I dream of. These poems represent a beautiful cultural atmosphere ... "Tagore is a pantheist, and pantheism simply means taking the whole universe and nature as gods and emphasizing the supremacy of nature. Tagore's Nobel Prize-winning Strange Tangari embodies his thoughts. "You", "My God" and "Father" in the poem can be understood as the only God, that is, nature, and Chittagong can be regarded as an ode to the whole world. In Tagore's thought, man and nature are unified. There, the heart is fearless, and the head is held high; There, knowledge is free; There, the world is not divided into pieces by the narrow walls of the home country; There, words come from the depths of truth; There, make unremitting efforts to reach out to "perfection"; There, the clear spring of reason did not sink into the desert of habit; There, the mind is guided by you, moving towards the thoughts and behaviors of constant relaxation-entering the paradise of freedom, my father, and awakening my country. This poem is regarded as one of Tagore's best works. I think we should read Tagore's poems with a sincere and pure heart. There are many philosophies in his poems, which need to be understood gradually. In fact, it doesn't matter if you don't understand it, because Tagore's poems are really beautiful, and the beautiful artistic conception he created is enough to immerse us in it. We can't understand the songs of birds, but we still feel beautiful-beautiful things don't have to be understood thoroughly.