But one question haunts literary scholars and casual readers alike:
Tagore is bedridden in "Jorasanko Thakur Bari," the family mansion in Kolkata. He asks for his dictaphone (a rare device then). He dictates a message to the world, not a poem. the last poem by rabindranath tagore pdf
Most of us avoid thinking about our last words. We hope to leave behind property, memories, or children. Tagore, in his final act as a poet, chose to leave behind —the ability to perceive truth. But one question haunts literary scholars and casual
In those final days, he had already instructed his secretary to bring his writing board. Despite being barely conscious at times, he dictated the poem. Eyewitness accounts describe a man who, though physically blind to the world, was having visions of the cosmos. The poem is startlingly brief—a hallmark of Tagore’s late style, which had shed all ornamentation for raw, elemental truth. It is written as a conversation with death, or with God (whom Tagore often called "Jeebandebota" – the Lord of Life). Most of us avoid thinking about our last words
Because "Dristidan" offers something rare:
Tagore dies. On his bedside table, next to a creased copy of the Upanishads , lies the scribbled dictation of "Dristidan."