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The Delightful Tamil Garden

Bharati Shuddhananda
Date de parution 15/08/2011
EAN: 9782940393282
Disponibilité Disponible chez l'éditeur
The Delightful Tamil Garden The Delightful Tamil Garden is a rare book of prose; I was ecstatic on reading it. The great talent of the author, Yogi Suddhananda Bharathi is admirable! As his great qualities are well-known to the world, it will only be... Voir la description complète
Nom d'attributValeur d'attribut
Common books attribute
ÉditeurASSA
Nombre de pages120
Langue du livreAnglais
AuteurBharati Shuddhananda
FormatPaperback / softback
Type de produitLivre
Date de parution15/08/2011
Poids180 g
Dimensions (épaisseur x largeur x hauteur)1,30 x 11,40 x 18,30 cm
A rare book of prose
The Delightful Tamil Garden The Delightful Tamil Garden is a rare book of prose; I was ecstatic on reading it. The great talent of the author, Yogi Suddhananda Bharathi is admirable! As his great qualities are well-known to the world, it will only be an exaggeration if I say that this book written by him is wonderful in many ways. It is praiseworthy that, as the title implies, he has written the book, creating a relationship between trees, plants, creepers, flowers, and unripe fruits and the names of the Tamil books. Dr. U. V. Swaminatha Iyer.The lush gardenThe English gardenI strolled in the marine groves of English language; immersed myself in Shakespeare’s dramatic literature. The soliloquy of Hamlet, the anger of the relatives of King Lear, the self pity of Cardinal Wolsey for wasting his days in the service of the king, the scene of the death of Julius Caesar at the tip of the treacherous sword, Anthony’s calm oration and the true love of Romeo and Juliet stood before me and talked! I was completely mesmerised by the ideas which were deeper than seas, more magnificent than mountains; the graceful style more tender than the spring breeze, words with profound meaning and stories with ingenious plots! I was awakened by the words “arise, awake”, in the poem Paradise Lost written by Milton! Byron, who was ecstatic in the forests, happy in loneliness, listening to the song of freedom in the noise of the beating sea, had great affection for people and nature. Editions ASSA, Christian Piaget