Here is my entry for Ese’s Weekly Shoot & Quote Challenge with the topic of silence.
The water in a vessel is sparkling; the water in the sea is dark. The small truth has words which are clear; the great truth has great silence. – Rabindranath Tagore
Rabindranath Tagore (Born 7 May 1861 – Died 7 August 1941), sobriquet Gurudev, was a Bengali polymath who reshaped his region’s literature and music. Author of Gitanjali and its “profoundly sensitive, fresh and beautiful verse”, he became the first non-European to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. In translation his poetry was viewed as spiritual and mercurial; however, his “elegant prose and magical poetry” remain largely unknown outside Bengal. Tagore introduced new prose and verse forms and the use of colloquial language into Bengali literature, thereby freeing it from traditional models based on classical Sanskrit. He was highly influential in introducing the best of Indian culture to the West and vice versa, and he is generally regarded as the outstanding creative artist of modern South Asia.
A Pirali Brahmin from Calcutta, Tagore wrote poetry as an eight-year-old. At age sixteen, he released his first substantial poems under the pseudonym Bhānusiṃha (“Sun Lion”), which were seized upon by literary authorities as long-lost classics. He graduated to his first short stories and dramas—and the aegis of his birth name—by 1877. As a humanist, universalist internationalist, and strident anti-nationalist he denounced the Raj and advocated independence from Britain. As an exponent of the Bengal Renaissance, he advanced a vast canon that comprised paintings, sketches and doodles, hundreds of texts, and some two thousand songs; his legacy endures also in the institution he founded, Visva-Bharati University.
Qi (energy) hugs,
Cee
My word, that wave shot is spectacular!!!
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Thanks. It was fun down at the beach that day!
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Great bottle shadow. 🙂
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Love this interpretation…and the bit of info to boot! 🙂
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Glad you enjoyed it.
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Beautiful post like always,as you have quoted R.N.Tagore, I would definitely add that I feel proud to be from the same region of India as Gurudev and I’m also a Bengali Brahmin like him 🙂 😀
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I’m thrilled that I found a piece of you!!
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Superb photos. Extremely opposite but appropriate for the same challenge.
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