Rabindranath Tagore (7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941) was an Indian polymath who reshaped Bengali writing and music, and additionally Indian workmanship with Contextual Modernism in the late nineteenth and mid twentieth hundreds of years. Creator of Gitanjali and its "significantly delicate, crisp and delightful verse", he turned into the main non-European to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. Tagore's graceful melodies were seen as profound and fluctuating; in any case, his "rich writing and otherworldly verse" remain to a great extent obscure outside Bengal. He is here and there alluded to as "the Bard of Bengal". Tagore and his wife Mrinalini Devi, 1883 A Pirali Brahmin from Calcutta with hereditary upper class establishes in Jessore, Tagore composed verse as an eight-year-old. At sixteen years old, he discharged his first generous sonnets under the pen name ("Sun Lion"), which were seized upon by artistic experts as departed wo...
History of Bangladesh.