Stray Birds

A collection of brief poetic reflections on nature, consciousness, and the inner life, expressed with clarity and restraint. In Stray Birds, Rabindranath Tagore gathers a sequence of short, aphoristic verses that move between observation and meditation, capturing fleeting moments of perception and transforming them into reflections on existence, beauty, and transience. Each entry stands independently, yet together they form a sustained contemplation of the relationship between the individual and the world.

The work is marked by its economy of language and precision of thought. Tagore distills complex emotional and philosophical insights into concise forms, often drawing on natural imagery-sky, water, light, and seasons-to suggest larger truths. The result is a text that invites slow reading and reflection, where meaning accumulates through quiet resonance rather than argument.

Positioned within the broader tradition of philosophical and spiritual literature, Stray Birds complements Tagore's longer works while offering a distinct mode of expression. It remains a widely read and enduring work, valued for its clarity, depth, and contemplative tone.

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Published Oct 29, 2008

56 pages

Average rating: 10

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