In addition to Tagore's fresh and natural writing, readers feel more of a love for life and thinking about love. There is no doubt that Tagore's inspiration comes from life, but at the same time it is higher than life; With his love for life, he cleverly concealed some sufferings and darkness, and gave the rest of the light and smile to the readers without reservation.
His thinking on love covers many aspects, including the innocent love between young men and women, the eternal maternal love of mothers for their children, and the unspeakable love between man and nature ... Especially for love, Tagore used a lot of metaphors and rhetoric to praise the beauty and greatness of love.
In Tagore's eyes, the world needs love, and life needs love more, just as he wrote in Birds: "I believe in your love, so let this be my last words."
On the other hand, Tagore captured many inspirations about nature. He said that the dusk in the sky is like a lamp, the leaves in the breeze are like fragments of thoughts, and the singing of birds is the echo of the morning light of the earth; He is the embodiment of all things in nature. He made the sky talk to the sea, the birds talk to the clouds, and the flowers talk to the sun. ...
In short, in Tagore's works, the world is humanized, and nature is humanized, and everything has its own growth and thinking; And he just sorted out the fragments of his thoughts and humanized them.
Extended data:
Tagore is a writer with great world influence. Representative works include Gitanjali, Birds, Sand in Eyes, Four People, Family and the World, Gardeners Collection, Crescent Moon Collection, The Last Poetry, Gola, Crisis of Civilization, etc.
Rabindranath Tagore, (1861~1941) is a famous Indian poet, writer, philosopher, artist and social activist. 19 13 to obtain Nobel Prize in Literature. 13 years old, can write long poems and compose poems. 1878 went to study in Britain, 1880 returned to China, specializing in literary activities. International universities were founded in the 1920s. 194 1 year, he wrote his famous last words, Crisis of Civilization, accusing the British colonial rule and believing that the motherland would be liberated independently.
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-Robin Delanat Tagore