Article Details

Rabindra Nath Tagore's Mysticism and Humanism in Poetry | Original Article

Somalal Baghel*, Suresh Kumar, in Journal of Advances and Scholarly Researches in Allied Education | Multidisciplinary Academic Research

ABSTRACT:

Mysticism is defined as a collection of diverse practices, discourses, texts, institutions, traditions, and experiences directed at human transformation, as defined by various traditions. Mysticism is a phrase that encompasses anything that has to do with God. Tagore entered the domain of mysticism because of his passion for nature and God, according to an analysis of his words and concepts. As a result, Rabindra nath‘s Gitanjali is better described as Nature Mysticism rather than Soul or God. Only enlightened saints and poets such as Kalidasa and Auribindo are capable of attaining mysticism. Humanism is a phrase with a long and complicated history, as well as an unusually broad range of meanings and applications. Readers have been baffled by how various authors have used it in various ways. Humanism was a cultural, literary, scientific, and intellectual movement that advocated for the study of humanities, ancient Greek and Roman languages, literature, and history. In writing, study, and other aspects of life, humanist intellectuals modeled themselves after ancient authors.