Posted on: 29 April 2010

GLIMPSES OF BENGAL - Selected from the LETTERS of Sir Rabindranath Tagore, 1885 to 1895.
Published by MacMillan and Co., London - 1921.

Book Extract :
INTRODUCTION

THE letters translated in this book span the most productive period of my literary life, when, owing to great good fortune, I was young and less known.

Youth being exuberant and leisure ample, I felt the writing of letters other than business ones to be a delightful necessity. This is a form of literary extravagance only possible when a surplus of thought and emotion accumulates. Other forms of literature remain the author's and are made public for his good ; letters that have been given to private individuals once for all, are therefore characterized by the more generous abandonment.

It so happened that selected extracts from a large number of such letters found their way back to me years after they had been written. It had been rightly conjectured that they would delight me by bringing to mind the memory of days when, under the shelter of obscurity, I enjoyed the greatest freedom my life has ever known.

Since these letters synchronize with a considerable part of my published writings, I thought their parallel course would broaden my readers' understanding of my poems as a track is widened by retreading the same ground. Such was my justification for publishing them in a book for my countrymen. Hoping that the descriptions of village scenes in Bengal contained in these letters would also be of interest to English readers, the translation of a selection of that selection has been entrusted to one who, among all those whom I know, was best fitted to carry it out.


RABINDRANATH TAGORE
20th June 1920


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Read Book Online : http://www.archive.org/stream/glimpsesofbengal00tagoiala#page/n5/mode/2up

Download Book : http://ia341329.us.archive.org/1/items/glimpsesofbengal00tagoiala/glimpsesofbengal00tagoiala.pdf

Fascinating!

I've read this one. A wonderful read.

wonderful!

Great

did anyone published it now

Q.why letters? Ans: I felt the writing of letters other than business ones to be a delightful necessity. This is a form of literary extravagance only possible when a surplus of thought and emotion accumulates. Other forms of literature remain the author's and are made public for his good ; letters that have been given to private individuals once for all, are therefore characterized by the more generous abandonment.