Original text of "The Farthest Distance in the World":
The furthest distance in the world is not the distance between life and death?
It is when I stand with you You don’t know that I love you in front of you?
The farthest distance in the world?
You don’t know that I love you if I am not standing in front of you?
But Is it that I love you so much that I can’t say I love you?
The furthest distance in the world is not that I can’t say I love you?
It’s that I miss you so much that my heart aches but I can only Buried deep in my heart?
The furthest distance in the world is not that I can’t say I miss you?
It’s that we love each other but can’t be together?
The world The furthest distance between us is not loving each other?
But we cannot be together but we know that true love is invincible?
But we pretend not to care?
The world What is the farthest distance on the road?
Not the distance between trees?
But the branches growing from the same root but unable to depend on each other in the wind?
The furthest distance in the world? The far distance is not that the branches cannot rely on each other?
It is that the stars looking at each other have no intersection.
"Tagore's Poems: The Farthest Distance in the World" contains Tagore's most popular poems The three most representative collections of poems in Guangzhou are "Crescent Moon Collection", "Flying Birds Collection" and "Gardener Collection". The full text reveals the unique spiritual philosophy of Rabindranath Tagore, the "poet saint of a generation", with fresh poetry and profound writing style. Reading these poems will open up blocked sources of wisdom for us and comfort our loneliness in body and mind. "Collected Poems of Rabindranath Tagore: The Farthest Distance in the World" presents the charm of the original works to readers in the form of Chinese and English comparisons.
About the author:
Tagore (1861-1941) was a famous Indian poet, writer, artist and social activist. Containing profound religious and philosophical insights, his poems enjoy epic status in India. His works are regarded as "beacons of spiritual life" and opened up a broad path for modern Indian literature. In 1913, he won the Nobel Prize for Literature, becoming the first Asian to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.