Tomar e ki bhalabasar riiti: Difference between revisions

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Seeps the scent of an unfamiliar flower.{{#tag:ref|This line is from a poem in Rabindranath Tagore's novel, [[:wikipedia:Shesher Kabita|Shesher Kabita]] (The Last Poem), written in 1928. (See [http://tagoreweb.in/Render/ShowContent.aspx?ct=Novels&bi=E0BD0A8D-A4A0-4035-A51D-4D426502A110&ti=E0BD0A8D-A4A0-49F5-251D-4D426502A110&ch=2 here].) Tagore's work is a love story with an unusual end, suggesting a conflict of desire, spiritual versus material. As Sarkar had great appreciation for Tagore and was familiar with his works, the parallels between this song and that novel cannot be ignored.|group="nb"}}
Seeps the scent of an unfamiliar flower.{{#tag:ref|This line is from a poem in Rabindranath Tagore's novel, [[:wikipedia:Shesher Kabita|Shesher Kabita]] (The Last Poem), written in 1928. (See [http://tagoreweb.in/Render/ShowContent.aspx?ct=Novels&bi=E0BD0A8D-A4A0-4035-A51D-4D426502A110&ti=E0BD0A8D-A4A0-49F5-251D-4D426502A110&ch=2 here].) Tagore's work is a love story with an unusual end, suggesting a conflict of desire, spiritual versus material. As Sarkar had great appreciation for Tagore and was familiar with his works, the parallels between this song and that novel cannot be ignored.|group="nb"}}
With the rosy lure of sunset,
With the rosy lure of sunset,
In negligence, it falls aside.
From negligence, it falls aside.
All love-tinged expectation
All love-tinged expectation
Succumbs to the frenzy of illusion.
Succumbs to the frenzy of illusion.

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