Tomare bhalabase je jan: Difference between revisions

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Text replacement - "{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita: Songs" to "{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita Songs"
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{{PSUC}}
{{#seo:
{{#seo:
|keywords=Prabhat Samgiita,Prabhata Samgiita,Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar,Anandamurti,Ananda Marga,contemplation
|keywords=Prabhat Samgiita,Prabhata Samgiita,Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar,Anandamurti,Ananda Marga,contemplation
|description=Song by Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar
|description=Song by Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar
}}
}}{{Infobox Prabhat Samgiita
{{Infobox Prabhat Samgiita
| original_title_lang = bn
| original_title_lang = bn
| song number = [[List of songs of Prabhat Samgiita|1488]]
| song number = [[List of songs of Prabhat Samgiita|1488]]
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| lyrics = Bengali
| lyrics = Bengali
| music = [[:wikipedia:Dadra|Dadra]]
| music = [[:wikipedia:Dadra|Dadra]]
| audio = <flashmp3>https://sarkarverse.org/PS/1000-1999-f/1488%20TOMA%27RE%20BHA%27LOBESE%20JE%20JAN%20SE.mp3</flashmp3>
| audio = {{#widget:Audio|url=https://sarkarverse.org/PS/1000-1999-f/1488%20TOMA%27RE%20BHA%27LOBESE%20JE%20JAN%20SE.mp3}}
}}
}}
'''''Tomare bhalabase je jan''''' is the [[List of songs of Prabhat Samgiita|1488<sup>th</sup> song]] of [[Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar|Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar's]] [[Prabhat Samgiita]].<ref name="PSV15">{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita Songs 1401-1500|publisher=[[AmRevolution, Inc.]]|others=Translated by [[Abhidevananda|Acarya Abhidevananda Avadhuta]]|location=Tel Aviv|year=2019|ISBN=9781393988007}}</ref><ref name="PRS Vol3">{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita Volume 3|edition=2nd|location=Kolkata|year=1998|publisher=Ananda Marga Publications|editor=Acarya Vijayananda Avadhuta|language=Bengali|isbn=81-7252-155-3}}</ref>
'''''Tomare bhalabase je jan''''' is the [[List of songs of Prabhat Samgiita|1488<sup>th</sup> song]] of [[Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar|Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar's]] [[Prabhat Samgiita]].<ref name="PSV15">{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita Songs 1401-1500|edition=2nd|publisher=[[AmRevolution, Inc.]]|others=Translated by [[Abhidevananda|Acarya Abhidevananda Avadhuta]]|location=Tel Aviv|year=2020|ASIN=B084LPYLHV|ISBN=9781393988007}}</ref><ref name="PRS Vol3">{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita Volume 3|edition=2nd|location=Kolkata|year=1998|publisher=Ananda Marga Publications|editor=Acarya Vijayananda Avadhuta|language=Bengali|isbn=81-7252-155-3}}</ref>


== Lyrics ==
== Lyrics ==
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</poem>
</poem>
| <poem>
| <poem>
O lord,
The person who holds You dear,
can those who love you,  
Can she remain tranquil?
ever stay stationary?  
For the sake of gaining Thee,
 
She drops, exuding tears.
To attain you,  
tears flow from their eyes.
 
They flow day and night,
in their coming and going,
when smiling or crying.
 
In sweet nights,
You remain close to them
and make all float individually
in the essence of nectar.  


All are bound by the thread of love.
Daytime or nighttime, leaving or arriving,
Like the cakor bird around the moon,  
Weeping or smiling, night of the wedding,
they too, revolve around you,  
With His proximity, all become identical;
as if dying for you.  
And everybody drifts on essence of nectar.


Awaiting the moonlit night meeting,
She gets fastened by the cord of love,
how can they possibly stay inert?
Like that between the moon and [[:wikipedia:Chukar partridge|chukor]].{{#tag:ref|The chukor, also known as the red-legged or Himalayan partridge or curlew or bartavelle, is the national bird of Iraq and Pakistan. References to it date back to the Rg Veda. The chukor is reputed to gaze at the moon constantly and is hence said to be in love with the moon or to drink moonlight. In Indian mythology, the chukor often symbolizes intense love, sometimes unrequited.|group="nb"}}
Round and round she's bound to whirl,
At moonlit night's love-tryst.
</poem>
</poem>
|}
|}

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