This poem expresses the author’s outlook on life and world view beautifully and implicitly. Summer flowers are a symbol of vigorous life. To live like summer flowers, to live must be brilliant and unrestrained, and to be like flowers blooming in summer. Flowers are so gorgeous and vigorous. We must treat life well, cherish life, and live a meaningful and valuable life instead of living in a muddleheaded way.
Autumn leaves are sentimental, melancholy, poignant, and quiet. Facing death, facing life and returning to nature, we must let life pass away quietly and peacefully. It does not need to be vigorous, just as quietly as autumn leaves. Don't feel sad or afraid. All in all, everything happened calmly and naturally.
From "The Birds" is a collection of poems created by the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore. It includes 325 beautiful untitled poems and was first published in 1916. The basic themes of these poems are mostly extremely common things, including grass, fallen leaves, birds, stars, and rivers.
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About the author:
Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), Indian poet, writer, socialist Activist, philosopher and Indian nationalist. His representative works include "Gitanjali", "Birds", "Sand in the Eyes", "Four People", "Family and the World", "The Gardener", "New Moon", "The Last Psalm", "Gola" ”, “The Crisis of Civilization”, etc. ?
On May 7, 1861, Rabindranath Tagore was born into a wealthy aristocratic family in Calcutta, India. He was able to compose long poems and ode-style poems at the age of 13. He went to England to study in 1878 and returned to China in 1880 to specialize in literary activities. He served as the secretary of the Vatican Society from 1884 to 1911, and founded the International University in the 1920s. In 1913, he became the first Asian to win the Nobel Prize for Literature for "Gitanjali". In 1941, he wrote "The Crisis of Civilization", his last words indicting British colonial rule and believing that the motherland would be independent and liberated.
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Reference material: Baidu Encyclopedia—Flying Bird Collection
Reference material: Baidu Encyclopedia—Tagore