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Showing posts from September, 2016

Her Hand: Mahapatra

Her Hand - Poem by Jayanta Mahapatra by Bijay Kant Dubey Even a few of the poets have said, what Jayanta Mahapatra has in this small poem of ready reference and delving, really a great poem to contain in present-day child abuse, moral depravity and sexual exploitation. Just out of filial love and expression, he says many a thing apart from the wish of holding the hand of the small girl.

Freedom: Mahapatra

Freedom by Jayanta Mahapatra By Bijay Kant Dubey Freedom by Jayanta Mahapatra is like the Freedom essay, radio-talk delivered by G.B.Shaw on the B.B.C., London wherein the dramatist discusses it what it is freedom, who a freeman and what the attributes of it? The dramatist as an anti-thesis giver, a playwright of ideas discusses it the types of slavery, natural slavery and man-made

Twilight: Mahapatra

Twilight by Jayanta Mahapatra By Bijay Kant Dubey An orange flare lights the pale panes of the hospital in a final wish of daylight. It's not yet dark. In the children�s ward under a mother's face the dead, always so young. Water startles in the river's throat. Its cry: a plea to share in its curse? Somewhere, this twilight shall fall and hide the whiteness of jasmines about to bloom.

Theme of Mahapatra

A Thematic Study of Jayanta Mahapatra�s Poems by Bijay Kand Dubey Jayanta Mahapatra is one of those poets of modern Indian English poetry whose bases are one of physics and the physicist-poet taking liberties with imagery, photography, penciled silhouette and word-play rather than literature, one of light and shade, astronomy and the origin of the universe, shadow space and random

The Tiger and the Deer by Aurobindo

The Tiger and the Deer by Maharshi Aurobindo BY Bijay Kant Dubey Brilliant, crouching, slouching, what crept through the green heart of the forest,Gleaming eyes and mighty chest and soft soundless paws of grandeur and murder?The wind slipped through the leaves as if afraid lest its voice and the noise of its steps perturb the pitiless Splendour,Hardly daring to breathe. But the great beast

Irony And Caricature In Nissim Ezekiel

Irony And Caricature In Nissim Ezekiel by Bijay Kant Dubey Of all the modern poets and poetesses whom we study into the realm of Indian English poetry, Nissim Ezekiel as a poet is best known for his use of irony and caricature, fun and joke, humour and laughter, chuckle and mockery. Even his friends are not able to regale and recreate as he does in his poetry just like the mimic man or a