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RABINDRANATH TAGORE (1861-1941)

The “Shakespeare” of Bengal (Bangladesh)
Hindu, Bridged Eastern and Western spirituality

THE RAIN HAS HELD BACK FOR DAYS
The rain has held back for days and days,
my God, in my arid heart.
The horizon is fiercely naked--
not the thinnest cover of a soft cloud,
not the vaguest hint of a distant cool shower.
Send thy angry storm, dark with death,
if it is thy wish, and with lashes of lightning
startle the sky from end to end.
But call back, my lord,
call back this pervading silent heat,
still and keen and cruel,
burning the heart with dire despair.
Let the cloud of grace bend low from above
like the tearful look of the mother on the day of
the father’s wrath.
Tagore: The Mystic Poets Series,
trans. Tagore
(Woodstock, Vermont: Skylight Paths Publishing, 2004) 81.

TIME AND NO-TIME
Time is endless in thy hands, my lord. There is none
to count thy minutes.
Days and nights pass and ages bloom and fade like
flowers.
Thou knowest how to wait.
Thy centuries follow each other perfecting
a small wildflower.
We have no time to lose, and having no time we must
scramble for our chances. We are too poor to be late.
And thus it is that time goes by while I give it to
every querulous man who claims it, and thine altar is
empty of all offerings to the last.
At the end of the day I hasten in fear lest thy gate be
shut;
but I find that yet there is time.

Tagore: The Mystic Poets Series, trans. Tagore
(Woodstock, Vermont: Skylight Paths Publishing, 2004) 111.

 
 
Excerpt from
Tagore: The Mystic Poet Series

"A Short Introduction to Tagore's Mysticism," pgs. 11-13.

Rabindranath Tagore’s spiritual vision is embodied in all of his work--novels, plays, and paintings--but especially in his poetry. He had the ability to speak to people of many backgrounds and spiritualities in simple ways. His verse is not difficult to understand or to enter into. However, all of his writing is, as he himself put it, filled “with the ancient spirit of India as revealed in our sacred texts and manifested in the life of today” (Sadhana, p. vii). There is a great deal of meaning behind some of his simple phrasings of love, devotion, and struggle for personal understanding.

The inner-seeking spirituality of India infused all of Tagore’s writing. He wrote in many genres of the deep religious milieu of Hinduism. This passage from his novel The Home and the World, for instance, offers a domesticated version of the devotion so common in the spiritual feelings and actions of the Indian people:

I know, from my childhood’s experience, how devotion is beauty itself, in its inner aspect. When my mother arranged the different fruits, carefully peeled by her own loving hands, on the white stone plate, and gently waved her fan to drive away the flies while my father sat down to his meals, her service would lose itself in a beauty which passed beyond outward forms. Even in my infancy I could feel its power. It transcended all debates, or doubts, or calculations: it was pure music.

The values and core beliefs of the Hindu scriptures permeated his work. These core beliefs include:

· The universe in which we live is a partial manifestation of the Infinite Spirit
· There is no hard and fast line between nature and humankind or between humankind and God. Evil and suffering are not absolute realities, but are only the temporary expedients of the evolving Spirit.
· The Absolute Spirit is all ineffable joy and love.
· True knowledge is that which perceives the unity of all things in God.
· The emancipation of humankind consists in our absolute self-surrender in service and love.

Tagore: The Mystic Poets, preface by Swami Adiswarananda (Woodstock, Vermont: Skylight Paths Publishing, 2004) 11-13.st

Used with permission of Skylight Paths Publishing.

Tagore Book Cover


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(Woodstock, Vermon

ock, Veblishing, 2004.) 36-37.

 


THE MYSTICAL EXPERIENCE

> What makes
someone a Mystic?

> How do I find the
Mystic Path?

> What can I learn
from Mystic Poets?

> How can I nurture
my connection to the Sacred?


THE MYSTERY
OF GOD

>Overview

>How can I explore
the Mystery?

>What can I know for certain?

>What shows me that
God cares?

>How can Jesus help
me understand?

>Where can I touch
the edge of heaven?

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





 

 

 

 

 

 

 




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