Rabindranath Tagore (186 1 May 7th-194 1 August 7th) is an Indian poet, writer, social activist, philosopher and Indian nationalist. Representative works include Gitanjaly, Birds, Sand in the Eyes, Four People, Family and the World, Gardeners Collection, Crescent Moon Collection, The Last Poetry, Gola, Crisis of Civilization, Practice: Enlightenment of Life, etc.
186 1 On May 7th, 2008, Rabindranath Tagore was born into a wealthy aristocratic family in Kolkata, India. 13 years old, can write long poems and compose poems. 1878 went to study in Britain, 1880 returned to China, specializing in literary activities. 1884 to 19 1 1, secretary of the Vatican Institute, founded an international university in the 1920s. 19 13 years, together with gitanjali, he became the first Asian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. 194 1 wrote his last words, Crisis of Civilization, accusing the British colonial rule, believing that the motherland would be liberated independently.
Tagore's characters experience
On May 7th, Tagore was born in Kolkata, West Bengal, India. As the youngest son of his parents, Robin Delanat was affectionately called "Rabbi" by his family and became the favorite child of every family member, but no one spoiled him. The little rabbi went to four schools in Calcutta. Although he doesn't like any of them, he received a good education under the supervision of his eldest brother and sister.
Tagore's achievements in literature first came from the influence of family environment. He attended Oriental College, Teachers College and Bangladesh College. But he was born free, hated the rigid school life, and didn't complete the formal school study courses. He was fascinated by poetry creation since he was a child, and began to write poetry at the age of 13, full of feelings of opposing colonialism and loving the motherland. /kloc-after 0/3 years old, Tagore published long poems such as Wild Flowers and Poet's Tales.