This poem beautifully and implicitly expresses the author's outlook on life and the world, summer flowers is a symbol of exuberant life, life is like a summer flower, live, be brilliant, exuberant, be as gorgeous and exuberant as the flowers blooming in the summer, be kind to life, cherish life, live a meaningful and valuable life, rather than muddling through life.
Autumn leaves, sentimental, melancholy, poignant, quiet, facing death, the face of life toward the natural return, to be quiet, quiet, let life pass away, do not have to be sensational, as long as the autumn leaves like quietly enough, not to feel sad and fear. In short, everything is done calmly and naturally.
From The Book of Birds, a collection of 325 beautifully untitled poems by the Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore, first published in 1916. The basic subjects of these poems are mostly extremely common things, nothing more than grass, falling leaves, birds, stars and rivers.
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Author's Biography:
Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) was an Indian poet, man of letters, social activist, philosopher and Indian nationalist. His representative works include Gitanjali, Birds of Prey, Sand in the Eyes, Four Men, The Family and the World, The Gardener's Collection, The Crescent Collection, The Last Psalm, Gora, The Crisis of Civilization, etc.?
Born on May 7, 1861, Rabindranath Tagore was born in Calcutta, India, into a wealthy aristocratic family, and at the age of 13 he was able to compose long poems and collections of poems in the form of odes. 1878 he went to England to study, and returned to his country to specialize in literary activities in 1880. 1884 to 1911 he served as the secretary of the Vaishnava Society, and in the twenties he founded the International University. 1913 he became the first person to win the Nobel Prize in Literature for his work "Gitanjali". In 1913, he became the first Asian to win the Nobel Prize for Literature with Gitanjali, and in 1941 he wrote his last words, "The Crisis of Civilization," an indictment of British colonial rule and the belief that his country would gain independence and liberation.
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