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    <title>Boloji - Literary Shelf </title> 
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      <pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2026 12:49:46 -0500</pubDate> 
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      <webMaster>ideas@ekant.com (Ekant Solutions)</webMaster><item><title>From Postwar Despair to Pandemic Fear and Modern Conflict </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55416/from-postwar-despair-to-pandemic-fear-and-modern-conflict</link><description>When T.S. Eliot published The Waste Land in 1922 he showed us a world that was broken. This was after the First World War. A hundred years later The Waste Land still makes sense to us. We just went through the COVID-19 pandemic. There are still a lot of tensions in the world especially in the Middle East. What T.S. Eliot wrote about back then seems real to us now.</description><pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55416/from-postwar-despair-to-pandemic-fear-and-modern-conflict</guid></item><item><title>Sita Swayamvar </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55405/sita-swayamvar</link><description>Translation of the chapter of marriage of Rama and Sita from Ramcharitmanas</description><pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55405/sita-swayamvar</guid></item><item><title>Literature and Culture in Women's Conversations </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55404/literature-and-culture-in-womens-conversations</link><description>Every human being has literary and cultural needs. Writers and artists must fulfill these needs. For children, games, songs, small activities, and childhood friendships help meet these literary needs. Informal conversations among women (amma-lakkala muchatlu) enhance children’s culture and awareness.</description><pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55404/literature-and-culture-in-womens-conversations</guid></item><item><title>Tommy by Rudyard Kipling </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55403/tommy-by-rudyard-kipling</link><description>Rudyard Kipling even though he likes to call himself an English writer or is considered so as for colonial allegiance and loyalty but is not as for Bombay being the place of birth and his India connection which he cannot do away with. He may think himself to be one of the British empire but is not exactly an Englishman of that type. He is a journo and his English is journo English. A journalist breaks and creates and recreates. His English is not even Anglo-Indian English, but is Hindustani English, pidgin-Indian English, Cockney verse. T</description><pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55403/tommy-by-rudyard-kipling</guid></item><item><title>Viharam - The Sojourn - 2 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55387/viharam--the-sojourn--2</link><description></description><pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55387/viharam--the-sojourn--2</guid></item><item><title>Rama's Vanwas </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55386/ramas-vanwas</link><description></description><pubDate>Sun, 03 May 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55386/ramas-vanwas</guid></item><item><title>Viharam - The Sojourn </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55385/viharam--the-sojourn</link><description></description><pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55385/viharam--the-sojourn</guid></item><item><title>Sir Arthur Comyn Lyall's Siva </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55376/sir-arthur-comyn-lyalls-siva</link><description>Siva is one of the longer poems composed by Sir A.C. Lyall (1835-1911) who was not only a British civil servant, but a historian and a poet. He joined the ICS in 1856 and served in different administrative capacities. His understanding and knowledge of India is extraordinary.</description><pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55376/sir-arthur-comyn-lyalls-siva</guid></item><item><title>O.P. Bhatnagar: Trying to Mean it; Birth of A Nation </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55358/o.p.-bhatnagar-trying-to-mean-it-birth-of-a-nation</link><description>What is it in mapping, re-mapping if it leads to animosity, hatred, malice, envy, revenge-killing, death, murder, genocide and bloodletting? What it in partition if it could be so gruesome, bloody and bestial?</description><pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55358/o.p.-bhatnagar-trying-to-mean-it-birth-of-a-nation</guid></item><item><title>Summary of  Ramulu's Story of Saravva and Friends </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55355/summary-of-ramulus-story-of-saravva-and-friends</link><description>Saravva and Friends is an English translation of an original Telugu story. It is written by B.S. Ramulu. The story in the form of a letter. The story is not just about one woman. It is about how society treats women, especially poor Dalit women. It is also about caste, education, power, and the ability of a woman to rise again after falling many times.</description><pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55355/summary-of-ramulus-story-of-saravva-and-friends</guid></item><item><title>How the World Wars Inspired a Britisher  to study the Mahabharata</title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55351/how-the-world-wars-inspired-a-britisher-to-study-the-mahabharata</link><description>The mass destruction wrought by two world wars inspired an Englishman, S.C. Nott to make available to the English-speaking world insights from the Mahabharata. He began by selecting from the first two books (Adi and Sambhava) as had been Englished by K.M. Ganguli in 1883.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55351/how-the-world-wars-inspired-a-britisher-to-study-the-mahabharata</guid></item><item><title>Aurobindo's Bride of the Fire  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55342/aurobindos-bride-of-the-fire</link><description>Some of the poems which Aurobindo has written are really great poems which have come through the pen of the Master, the Yoga Guru. Bride of the Fire and Rose of God are alike as Revelation and Trance of Waiting.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55342/aurobindos-bride-of-the-fire</guid></item><item><title>Pearls of Wisdom </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55313/pearls-of-wisdom</link><description>Prof R.K. Bhushan Sabharwal is  a poet, translator, critic, editor, soft skills exponent and able administrator. An affable person known for his unassuming nature, he has endeared himself  with his abiding love and friendship with all those who come into contact with him. His commendable academic and creative work won him many honours and awards.  </description><pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55313/pearls-of-wisdom</guid></item><item><title>Poetry: The Oldest Form of Literature </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55300/poetry-the-oldest-form-of-literature</link><description>Poetry is the inner breath of humanity. As long as it exists, human beings do not lose their sense of humanity. Poetry does not belong to poets alone it belongs to every human being. It is the most ancient form of literature in human civilization.</description><pubDate>Sat, 21 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55300/poetry-the-oldest-form-of-literature</guid></item><item><title>Conversation with Prof P. Gopichand  and Dr P. Naga Suseela</title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55299/conversation-with-prof-p.-gopichand-and-dr-p.-naga-suseela</link><description>Prof P. Gopichand is Principal of J.K.C. College, Guntur, Andhra Pradesh. He is a poet, translator, critic and editor of several books. Dr P. Naga Suseela is Associate Professor in English, J.K.C. College, Guntur. Their collaborative academic endeavours are well appreciated. They conducted International Poetry Festivals, Workshops for students and teachers in Soft Skills, published several poetry anthologies, ELT books, texts of literary translation and research papers. They made academic presentations in National and International Conferences in India and abroad.   </description><pubDate>Sat, 21 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55299/conversation-with-prof-p.-gopichand-and-dr-p.-naga-suseela</guid></item><item><title>Vairamuthu: A Poet of Powerful Metaphors </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55294/vairamuthu-a-poet-of-powerful-metaphors</link><description>The Jnanpith Award, regarded as the highest literary honour in India, has been conferred for the year 2025 on the Tamil poet R. Vairamuthu. Vairamuthu may be described primarily as a neo-Sangam poet. The ancient Sangam literary tradition—especially its thinai system, which links landscapes with human emotions—flows strongly through his poetry. Mountains, forests, and rivers in his poems are not merely background scenery; they become the language of human feeling itself. For this reason, Vairamuthu stands out as a significant voice in contemporary Tamil literature.</description><pubDate>Sat, 21 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55294/vairamuthu-a-poet-of-powerful-metaphors</guid></item><item><title>Kashmiri Song by Laurence Hope (1865-1904) </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55287/kashmiri-song-by-laurence-hope-1865-1904</link><description>One from Gloucestershire, Adela Florence Cory came to India along with her sisters to assist his colonel father in editing the Sind Gazette. Her father was posted in Lahore. But after the death of their father her elder sister Isabella took over the editorship. Her younger sister Annie Sophie wrote novels under the pseudonym of Victoria Cross. Later, she married Colonel Malcolm Hassels Nicolson of the Bombay army. The Garden of Kama appeared in 1901 as a collection of translated and arranged stuffs culled from different sources.</description><pubDate>Sat, 14 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55287/kashmiri-song-by-laurence-hope-1865-1904</guid></item><item><title>Conversation with Annie George   </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55285/conversation-with-annie-george</link><description>Annie George is a multilingual, versatile writer. Born and brought up in Durgapur she is a  poet, critic, translator and voice over artist. She edited a few books of poetry besides publishing poems in English extensively. She is pivot in organising cultural and creative events in Kerala, where she settled after her father&#039;s retirement from service. She anchored many events; one of them was attended by Dr A.P.J Abdul Kalam, former President of India. At present she is Assistant Registrar in Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam.</description><pubDate>Sat, 14 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55285/conversation-with-annie-george</guid></item><item><title>Face to Face with Dr Hrusikesh Panda </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55281/face-to-face-with-dr-hrusikesh-panda</link><description>An intellectual, literary meeting about Odia/ Kalinga/ Utkal/ Odhra cultural roots through the works of Dr Hrusikesh Panda, IAS (Retd), in Hyderabad on Saturday, 07 March 2026. Jointly organised by Muse India literary ezine &amp; Pragna Bharati. Translation of Hrusikesh&#039;s Odia books into English and Telugu.</description><pubDate>Sat, 14 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55281/face-to-face-with-dr-hrusikesh-panda</guid></item><item><title>Interpreting the Philosophers of the Soul </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55273/interpreting-the-philosophers-of-the-soul</link><description>Laxmiprasad: It is a journey of many experiences and challenges. In fact, I still learn new things. My great-grandfather, late Puram Ranga Rao, was a Telugu writer. From him, I drew inspiration. He was a scholar with many milestones to his credit. I think I have inherited his genes into my blood. As for the books, I can say that the number of books is not enough. It is quality and merit that finally speak about the writer. I have published 45 books as of today. It has been a journey, but not a destination. It has been fulfilling and rewarding.</description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55273/interpreting-the-philosophers-of-the-soul</guid></item><item><title>Derozio: My Native Land  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55272/derozio-my-native-land</link><description>My Native Land by Henry Louis Vivian Derozio (1809-1831) is one of the most widely read and appreciated poems composed by Henry Louis Vivian Derozio in which the love for the motherland is so strong and the longing to serve it as a true son of the soil. A Eurasian by birth, one of some mixed descent, his father was an Indo-Portuguese and his mother an Englishwoman. Having been schooled from David Drummond Dharmatala Academy, he left it do some work. His poems fond favor with John Grant’s journal and were published in various periodicals and papers.</description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55272/derozio-my-native-land</guid></item><item><title>Muktavaram Parthasaradhi - A Tribute </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55270/muktavaram-parthasaradhi--a-tribute</link><description>The Telugu language is a vast ocean. Upon its waves drift countless stories, poems, novels, cultures, and emotions. Yet the true breadth of that ocean cannot be fully experienced unless the rivers of the world flow into it. Muktavaram Parthasaradhi was the rare literary voyager who brought many such rivers, one after another, into the ocean of Telugu literature. He was not merely a translator. He was a quiet wanderer of literature - one who created conversations between languages.</description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Mar 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55270/muktavaram-parthasaradhi--a-tribute</guid></item><item><title>Conversation with Sony Dalia </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55259/conversation-with-sony-dalia</link><description>Sony Dalia is pseudonym of Dr T.S.Chandra Mouli, a poet, translator and critic. He travelled across continents and made academic presentations on literary studies, translation studies and cultural studies. Dr  K.S. Anish Kumar is Associate Professor in Bharathidasan University, Tiruchirappalli , Tamil Nadu. He is a poet, translator and critic. He published several research papers and books  on literature and language. This interview throws light on the creative process and related aspects of Sony Dalia&#039;s poetry.</description><pubDate>Sat, 28 Feb 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55259/conversation-with-sony-dalia</guid></item><item><title>Chordia: Zeb-un-Nissa </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55250/chordia-zeb-un-nissa</link><description>We could not think that a poem would come to us in the form of Zeb-un-Nissa from the poetic pen of S.S.L. Chordia. Aurangzeb’s daughter, did her heart beat for Shivaji or not? We are not sure about it. Did Shivaji have feelings of love for her or not? Who can tell? But are sure of that Aurangzeb was a bigot, a zealot, a fanatic known for his religious orthodoxy and conservatism. He was a man who had even to jail his daughter.</description><pubDate>Sat, 21 Feb 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55250/chordia-zeb-un-nissa</guid></item><item><title>Jayanta Mahapatra: Grass </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55241/jayanta-mahapatra-grass</link><description>What is it that makes it flutter across? What is it that keeps swaying over? Green grass is the thing of his reckoning, rumination. It’s O.K.</description><pubDate>Sat, 14 Feb 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55241/jayanta-mahapatra-grass</guid></item><item><title>Dravidian Literatures </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55235/dravidian-literatures</link><description>Dravidian literatures are not merely four distinct scripts. They are four ways of living. To view them comparatively is not to decide which is superior, but to recognize the vastness of human experience they embody. When we examine the Dravidian languages comparatively, what becomes clear is not only that they belong to a single linguistic family, but that they form a family of shared experiences. Despite their diverse styles, one finds within them a common, human-centred philosophy. That is why the unity of Dravidian literatures is not merely a political statement it is an intrinsic literary truth.</description><pubDate>Sun, 08 Feb 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55235/dravidian-literatures</guid></item><item><title>Conversation with  Prof  C.L Khatri  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55234/conversation-with-prof-c.l-khatri</link><description>Prof C.L. Khatri was an academic, poet, critic and Chief Editor of &#039;Cyber Literature&#039; a reputed literary journal  that is regularly published for the last 29 years. An outstanding teacher of English Prof Khatri was an office bearer of AESI[ Association for English Studies in India].He endeared himself to teaching community and lovers of English literature through his journal and books of poetry in English.</description><pubDate>Sun, 08 Feb 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55234/conversation-with-prof-c.l-khatri</guid></item><item><title>Jayanta Mahapatra: Moving </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55231/jayanta-mahapatra-moving</link><description>Moving which been taken from A Rain of Rites is one of the best poems by Jayanta Mahapatra who is renowned for discerning poetic language, visionary glide and mythical framework and structure. Jayanta as a poet is one of the doors of dreams and visionary glides and his poetry is steeped in silence.</description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Feb 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55231/jayanta-mahapatra-moving</guid></item><item><title>Goethe's Sakontala </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55220/goethes-sakontala</link><description>To read Sakontala by Goethe in German not, English translation is to talk of the Sanskrit drama’s rendering into English and other European languages.</description><pubDate>Sat, 31 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55220/goethes-sakontala</guid></item><item><title> Conversation with Prof Sunil Sharma </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55217/conversation-with-prof-sunil-sharma</link><description>Prof Sunil Sharma-Former Professor of English and Principal of a reputed college in Mumbai -- Editor of Setu -e-magazine published from Pittsburg, USA. He initiated publication of &#039;Episteme&#039; online journal in Mumbai-Now living in Vancouver, Canada-His novels are well known and established him as a fiction writer. His poetry is globally published and appreciated. He is well known for initiating many modes of creative work with established and budding writers. </description><pubDate>Sat, 31 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55217/conversation-with-prof-sunil-sharma</guid></item><item><title>Glamorous Grammar </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55214/glamorous-grammar</link><description>In popular thought, grammar is often seen as a strict schoolmaster, rule-bound and intimidating. For second-language (L2) speakers of English, grammar can feel even more daunting. It presents a maze of tenses, prepositions, articles, and idioms that seem illogical. However, when approached creatively and contextually, grammar can be glamorous. It shines with clarity, rhythm, and expressive power, changing hesitant learners into confident communicators. </description><pubDate>Sat, 24 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55214/glamorous-grammar</guid></item><item><title>Leigh Hunt: The Plate of Gold </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55211/leigh-hunt-the-plate-of-gold</link><description>The Plate of Gold by Leigh Hunt (1784-1859) is an allegorical poem, one put down to us as a religious and philanthropic note, extended to correct what it ails us, what it pains us. It counters and contradicts the common opinion with regard to searching of God externally rather than internally and one cannot without being charitable, philanthropic, righteous, virtuous, good and noble. Can one in the absence of charity, nobility, virtue, kindness, mercy and righteousness?</description><pubDate>Sat, 24 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55211/leigh-hunt-the-plate-of-gold</guid></item><item><title>Conversation with Prof Indira Babbellapati </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55201/conversation-with-prof-indira-babbellapati</link><description>Poet, translator and ELT professional Indira Babbellapati is a former Professor of English. Sensitive poet Indira is a soft spoken person. An accomplished translator of poetry and fiction from Telugu into English, she completed translation assignments for institutions of Higher learning. Despite her participation in academic events and literary festivals extensively, she is known for her unassuming nature.</description><pubDate>Sat, 17 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55201/conversation-with-prof-indira-babbellapati</guid></item><item><title>Conversation with Prof Murali Sivaramakrishnan </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55180/conversation-with-prof-murali-sivaramakrishnan</link><description>Prof Murali Sivaramakrishnan is a poet, artist, critic, scholar and outstanding writer. A former Professor and HOD, English Dept, Pondicherry University, Pondicherry, he has extensively travelled and conducted exhibitions of his art and paintings in India and abroad. He is founder of ASLE, India and has been striving to bring together environment lovers to conserve and sustain environment safe for all. He has a good number of books on art and literature to his credit.</description><pubDate>Sat, 10 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55180/conversation-with-prof-murali-sivaramakrishnan</guid></item><item><title>Love: The Only Song that Sustains Humanity  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55174/love-the-only-song-that-sustains-humanity</link><description>Such reflections on love, such contemplations and insights, are gently unfolded before us by the celebrated poet K. Siva Reddy in his Ode to Love. Ode to Love, or Prema Geetam (A Love Song), stands as one of the most profound explorations in his poetic oeuvre. In this poem, love is not portrayed merely as a romantic emotion but envisioned as a humane, philosophical, and universal force.</description><pubDate>Sat, 03 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55174/love-the-only-song-that-sustains-humanity</guid></item><item><title>Conversation with Prof Susheel Kumar Sharma </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55171/conversation-with-prof-susheel-kumar-sharma</link><description>Conversation with Prof Susheel Kumar Sharma, English Dept, Allahabad University. A globally reputed scholar ,poet and critic. His poems and books of poems are prescribed for U.G.and P.G.Studies in Madhya Pradesh apart from having been  included in sylabi of a number of Universities in India. His poems are extensively translated into many Indian and European languages.Most acclaimed academician and poet.</description><pubDate>Sat, 03 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55171/conversation-with-prof-susheel-kumar-sharma</guid></item><item><title>The Immigrant </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55162/the-immigrant</link><description>Had he thought it about that he would end up as an immigrant to whom the visa would not be extended any more, he would not have sailed for definitely, he would not have thought of leaving for. Had he been that then he would be deported, he would not have gone with sweeter dreams as for to be forced to return back, to cut his journey short afar.</description><pubDate>Sat, 03 Jan 2026 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55162/the-immigrant</guid></item><item><title>Chordia: Chittor </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55143/chordia-chittor</link><description>Chittor is a fine poem by S.S.L. Chordia which appeared in his poetry collection published in 1928. A true son of the soil, Chordia sings of his motherland. The glory of Chittor he has not forgotten and it is the lore of bravery, chivalry and knighthood that he revels in. The forts, ramparts, palaces and kingdoms are but the parts of the landscape. Through the cover of this small poem, he relates to history and fall, how have the invasions overtaken us, how the loots and plunders have taken place, how the histories fraught with capture and seize.</description><pubDate>Sat, 20 Dec 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55143/chordia-chittor</guid></item><item><title>The Poetic Quality of the Ordinary </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55131/the-poetic-quality-of-the-ordinary</link><description>Whether itis art or poetry, there is no need for a grand display, pomp, or publicity. In real, they themselves are the mirror and the light; they are the image and the reflection.” Vinod Kumar Shukla’s writings move precisely in the spirit of these words, embodying and reflecting such ideas. Shukla’s be it poetry, a short story or a novel the same simplicity the same sensitivity, and the same restraint prevail.</description><pubDate>Sat, 13 Dec 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55131/the-poetic-quality-of-the-ordinary</guid></item><item><title>Bhikshu's Song by Dhan Gopal Mukerji </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55118/bhikshus-song-by-dhan-gopal-mukerji</link><description>Dhan Gopal Mukerji (1890-1936) as a man is one of different sorts, a fictionist, a translator, a poet, a children’s writer, a rebel and so on, all combined in one. After having received his education at Duff School (now Scottish Church Collegiate School, Calcutta), Duff College, under Calcutta Univ., he studied at the Univ. of Tokyo, the Univ. of California Berkeley and Stanford Univ. An Indian American, he used to live in New York.</description><pubDate>Sat, 06 Dec 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55118/bhikshus-song-by-dhan-gopal-mukerji</guid></item><item><title>The Banyan Tree by Rabindranath Tagore </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55102/the-banyan-tree-by-rabindranath-tagore</link><description>The Banyan Tree by Rabindranath Tagore is one of the memorable poems excerpted from The Crescent Moon which the poet translated from the original to be published in 1913 in dedication to T. Sturge Moore, who nominated him for the Nobel Prize in Literature. The poet has drawn upon childhood memories and reminiscences and observations.</description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55102/the-banyan-tree-by-rabindranath-tagore</guid></item><item><title>Noon by Dorothy Noel Bonarjee  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55089/noon-by-dorothy-noel-bonarjee</link><description>Noon is one of those poems of Dorothy Noel Bonarjee (1894-1983) which speak of the art and style of the poetess whose poems found publication with, but the things did not go in her favor, and she remained largely unknown except by a small coterie that she wrote and her poems were brought out.</description><pubDate>Sat, 22 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55089/noon-by-dorothy-noel-bonarjee</guid></item><item><title>Creativity - The Foundation for a Child's Future </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55082/creativity--the-foundation-for-a-childs-future</link><description>Children are not merely the citizens of tomorrow , they are the creators of the future. Creativity in children does not mean just storytelling, poetry, or art, it is a way of life, a form of education. Creativity lights a lamp within a child’s mind, a flame that fills them with knowledge, values, and awareness, shaping them into responsible and humane citizens. Such is the power of creativity.</description><pubDate>Sat, 15 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55082/creativity--the-foundation-for-a-childs-future</guid></item><item><title>The Crux of the Matter </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55075/the-crux-of-the-matter</link><description>Nissim Ezekiel as a poet derives and draws from Elizabethan lyric-writers and sonneteers and modern American poetry-writers and his poetry is no exception to that. The influence of modern poetry can also be marked in his writings. But as a poet he is an alien insider because the India of traditions and thoughts he knows it not, nor has he come to feel it in his poetry and this is because he suffers from identity crisis and is often questioned, how far Indian is his poetry?</description><pubDate>Sat, 15 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55075/the-crux-of-the-matter</guid></item><item><title>A Study of A.K. Ramanujan </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55063/a-study-of-a.k.-ramanujan</link><description>they show it in their poetry and poetic publications bought out through some evolutionary process and to some extent if put we the matter they are famous from their first works. A.K. Ramanujan too is no exception to that and this can happen only in the realm of Indian English poetry. I</description><pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55063/a-study-of-a.k.-ramanujan</guid></item><item><title>Read, Digest and Assimilate </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55056/read-digest-and-assimilate</link><description></description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55056/read-digest-and-assimilate</guid></item><item><title>Human Migration is Not Merely a Geographical Journey </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55052/human-migration-is-not-merely-a-geographical-journey</link><description>Human Migration Is Not Merely a Geographical Journey ” The Novels of Kiran Desai</description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55052/human-migration-is-not-merely-a-geographical-journey</guid></item><item><title>Creation by Kulwant Singh Gill </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55049/creation-by-kulwant-singh-gill</link><description>How was the universe created? How did the creation come into being? How did the story begin? How to take to it theologically or should we go after physics and its theories or through biology we may come to understand the whole gamut, the riddle of life? Survival theories, survival of the fittest may opine it otherwise. What does science say about the mysterious universe?</description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Nov 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55049/creation-by-kulwant-singh-gill</guid></item><item><title>Kali The Mother by Sarojini Naidu </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55039/kali-the-mother-by-sarojini-naidu</link><description>Kali The Mother no doubt forms a part of Kali poetry, the love and reverence with which Kali is seen and worshipped, but side by side hair stands on to see the dreadful rupas, we mean the faces of hers and the altars connected. A goddess integrated into the pantheon; she is of the pre-Vedic period rooted in the aboriginal primitive stock of unknown tribal folklore.</description><pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55039/kali-the-mother-by-sarojini-naidu</guid></item><item><title>Stories that Nest in the Heart </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55035/stories-that-nest-in-the-heart</link><description>When stories build their nests, they do not choose pages they choose hearts. That is what Banu Mushtaq’s writing has done for over half a century. And now, the world has turned its gaze toward her gentle yet unflinching voice as she got the 2025 International Booker Prize for her remarkable collection Heart Lamp, translated from Kannada into English by Deepa Bhasthi. This recognition is more than a personal triumph.</description><pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55035/stories-that-nest-in-the-heart</guid></item><item><title>Creative Translation: The Human Driver </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55030/creative-translation-the-human-driver</link><description>As a result of the surging wave of technological advancement, artificial intelligence (AI) is hailed as a revolutionary invention today. Its impact is evident not only in scientific and technological fields but also in creative domains. In the literary world, particularly in the realm of translation, AI is making significant inroads.</description><pubDate>Sat, 18 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55030/creative-translation-the-human-driver</guid></item><item><title>The Shepherd by Harindranath Chattopadhyaya </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55024/the-shepherd-by-harindranath-chattopadhyaya</link><description>The Shepherd is one of the small poems by Harindranath Chattopadhyaya excerpted from Strange Journey published in 1936 which was brought out by Bharatha Shakthy Nilayam, Pondicherry. We do not know who the shepherd is, but a reading shows that no one else but the poet is himself a shepherd speaking through the lines. The soul is a shepherd. The soul of a mystic shepherd, how to comprehend? And the Shepherd of Shepherds is but a great mystic shepherd which we have not felt.</description><pubDate>Sat, 18 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55024/the-shepherd-by-harindranath-chattopadhyaya</guid></item><item><title>In Conversation with Mukunda Ramarao </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55009/in-conversation-with-mukunda-ramarao</link><description>Conversation with a writer-Poet-Translator,Critic-Childhood-Influences on his craft-Reflections-Advise to budding writers</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/55009/in-conversation-with-mukunda-ramarao</guid></item><item><title>To Naina Devi by Kulwant Singh Gill </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54999/to-naina-devi-by-kulwant-singh-gill</link><description>The poet tells about the location of the hilly temple and the scenic surroundings, the concentric steps leading to the temple gate and the myth of Siva-Sati story. Why has it been named Naina Devi? How has faith drawn people? A Shakti-pitha, where the bodily part of Sati had fallen, it is famous for the eyes which have on the spot. The lovelorn wandering of Siva adds beauty to the poem. </description><pubDate>Sat, 04 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54999/to-naina-devi-by-kulwant-singh-gill</guid></item><item><title>The Rope-Dancers by Kulwant Singh Gill </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54988/the-rope-dancers-by-kulwant-singh-gill</link><description>The poem reminds us of the rope dancers, Indian rope dancers, the show men with the makeshift poles and the rope hanging in between and she balancing on the rope tightly showing her shows to hold us back in awe and suspense, wonder and amazement and the children sitting below clapping, which but Hazlitt has long before and it is our pleasure that Kulwant Singh Gill is putting before us again to applaud and to note it with one’s impression and diary jotting.</description><pubDate>Sat, 27 Sep 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54988/the-rope-dancers-by-kulwant-singh-gill</guid></item><item><title>Harindranath's Echo &amp; Fire </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54977/harindranaths-echo-amp-fire</link><description>Echo and Fire are smaller poems taken from Harindranath Chattopadhyaya’s Ancient Wings collection. Harindranath, the brother of Saroijini Naidu was a poet of mystical leanings. But politics, comedy, reality and other mundane and mortal things deviate and digress him.</description><pubDate>Sat, 20 Sep 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54977/harindranaths-echo-amp-fire</guid></item><item><title>Laurence Binyon: Asoka </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54960/laurence-binyon-asoka</link><description>Asoka by Laurence Binyon (1869-1943) is the poem I had been searching for and now I have got it from the Intranet, poetry webs and portals, but the things I get from these sites no teachers and keepers can give to in reality.</description><pubDate>Sat, 06 Sep 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54960/laurence-binyon-asoka</guid></item><item><title>Dongerkery: The Flute-Player  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54946/dongerkery-the-flute-player</link><description>The Flute-Player by S.R. Dongerkery is one of those poems which tell of Krishna magic and music doing the rounds and the ears and the eyes do not tire of viewing and listening to the spectacle, the plethora of mystery and myth unfolding, coming down to us in the form of lore. The poem under our discussion is an extract from his work named The Ivory Tower published in 1943.</description><pubDate>Sun, 31 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54946/dongerkery-the-flute-player</guid></item><item><title>Jamuna by Keshav Malik </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54939/jamuna-by-keshav-malik</link><description>Jamuna is one of those poems which have been excerpted from Keshav Malik’s poetry collection named Islands of Mind: Poems published in 1992, and these speak of his artistic bent of mind and the rudimentary idea, thought and reflection they contain in to reflect it otherwise. Keshav Malik is first of all an artist, an art-critic and an editor before being a poet and he writes from the art point of view rather than a pure literary perspective. His poems contain in a series of reflections and stray ideas difficult to be penetrated if we think thematically.</description><pubDate>Sat, 23 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54939/jamuna-by-keshav-malik</guid></item><item><title>Janmashtami by Kasiprasad Ghosh </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54929/janmashtami-by-kasiprasad-ghosh</link><description>To find a poem and to read and enjoy exactly on the eve of Krishna Janmashtami is really a blessing, an endowment from the Unseen and we are lucky enough to have got it from Kasiprasad Ghosh who is but a festival chronicler and a narrator and he narrates the festivals and fairs and festive occasions which hold a sway over us. We generally read such a thing in the book of essays and paragraphs, but he has tried his hands poetically to bestow upon the verses of such a sort. </description><pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54929/janmashtami-by-kasiprasad-ghosh</guid></item><item><title>Raksha Bandhan by P. Shesadri  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54921/raksha-bandhan-by-p.-shesadri</link><description>Raksha  Bandhan by P. Shesadri is a fine poem full of sisterly affection, bonding and sympathy. Those who have sisters can feel it and those who have not too may feel the void differently. Even if somebody ties the band on the wrist, it gives immense pleasure to feel it within.</description><pubDate>Sat, 09 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54921/raksha-bandhan-by-p.-shesadri</guid></item><item><title>RIP Old English, Bonjour Frenglish! - 2 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54916/rip-old-english-bonjour-frenglish--2</link><description>At first glance, it seems like English could pass for a Romance language—after all, it’s packed with French words, right? But hold your baguette! Things aren’t quite that simple. Yes, English borrowed thousands of French words (thanks, Normans!), but here’s the twist: the words Brits  actually use every day—those sturdy little workhorses—are almost all Germanic. Their  core vocabulary still comes from Old English.</description><pubDate>Sat, 02 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54916/rip-old-english-bonjour-frenglish--2</guid></item><item><title>Chordia on Surdas and Mira </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54913/chordia-on-surdas-and-mira</link><description>Chordia says that Surdas is like the sun among the bards of the Braja region. Looking upon love and youth, tracking the path of truth, he kept on singing till darkness fell it upon. A poet of Krishna-prem and sweetness, he was a singer of Love Divine, a Milton of Hindi literature, devotional verses.</description><pubDate>Sat, 02 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54913/chordia-on-surdas-and-mira</guid></item><item><title>Nobo Kissen Ghose - In Memoriam </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54910/nobo-kissen-ghose--in-memoriam</link><description>Nobo Kissen Ghose (1837-1918) is one of those poets of Indian English poetry who are so good at writing occasional, eventual verses and in doing that he outdoes many a writer. Michael Madhusudan Dutt as a poem is of a tributary nature; is a homage paid to the great Bengali poet who was a rage in those times.</description><pubDate>Sat, 02 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54910/nobo-kissen-ghose--in-memoriam</guid></item><item><title>RIP Old English, Bonjour Frenglish! - 1 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54905/rip-old-english-bonjour-frenglish--1</link><description>The English language, as you know it, doesn’t actually exist. It’s just badly pronounced French. So quipped 20th-century French statesman and master of the zinger, Georges Clemenceau. Though not a linguistics professor (as some mischievous mouths have claimed), Clemenceau’s quip was echoed more academically by Bernard Cerquiglini, a real-deal French linguist.</description><pubDate>Sat, 02 Aug 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54905/rip-old-english-bonjour-frenglish--1</guid></item><item><title>Sri Panchami by Kasiprasad Ghose </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54898/sri-panchami-by-kasiprasad-ghose</link><description>None can think that the poem entitled Sri Panchami was included in Kasiprasad Ghose’s The Shair and Other Poems which saw the publication of the day long back in 1830. The poem describes the arrival of Saraswati and the herald of Spring which, but the woodlands and forested tracts too seem to be whispering about the swift footfall of it, doing the rounds with a new spirit, enigma to be seen in flora and fauna.</description><pubDate>Sat, 26 Jul 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54898/sri-panchami-by-kasiprasad-ghose</guid></item><item><title>The Temple Tank by Chettur </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54887/the-temple-tank-by-chettur</link><description>A temple tank solitude dotted by the herons photographed and the silence prevalent around captured, stored in for recollection forms the basis of the poem, the substance and verve of it. The poet can just see, read, but cannot imitate. How do the sunrises come upon breaking the lull of silence? How do the herons sit by? How do the sunsets retreat through? This is but a story, a picture, a reflection.</description><pubDate>Sat, 19 Jul 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54887/the-temple-tank-by-chettur</guid></item><item><title>Kipling: Buddha at Kamakura (1892) </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54875/kipling-buddha-at-kamakura-1892</link><description>Buddha At Kamakura is one of those poems of Rudyard Kipling which belie it that he was of the empire and was a singer of colonialism and the East-West divide. We may know many aspects of Kipling, but we know it not that he does the mazak in such a light vein.</description><pubDate>Sat, 12 Jul 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54875/kipling-buddha-at-kamakura-1892</guid></item><item><title>Narenderpal Singh: The Niagara Falls </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54856/narenderpal-singh-the-niagara-falls</link><description>To read the poem is to feel the urge of visiting the spot, to remind of the famous Niagara Falls which we read in our books of general knowledge and geography. The common people just read about, but he had the opportunity of visiting and he has recorded his impressions. The wonder lies in his expressions. The Niagara Falls itself does the rounds. What can be more scenic than this natural scenery and landscape so heavenly and full of splendor?  </description><pubDate>Sat, 28 Jun 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54856/narenderpal-singh-the-niagara-falls</guid></item><item><title>The Passionate Pilgrim by Kulwant Singh Gill </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54846/the-passionate-pilgrim-by-kulwant-singh-gill</link><description>The Passionate Pilgrim as a poem by Kulwant Singh Gill is a desi version of Shakespeare’s Seven Ages of Man, an Indian and Punjabi version of the autobiography of man. Let us see how the drama of life starts. How the story of life? How is the history of mankind? Is it in some way the story of the life of Kulwant Singh Gill? A Punjabi history of life? Whatever the context, it is but an excellent poem from him.</description><pubDate>Sat, 21 Jun 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54846/the-passionate-pilgrim-by-kulwant-singh-gill</guid></item><item><title>Memoir by Vijay Seshadri </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54840/memoir-by-vijay-seshadri</link><description>Vijay Seshadri is an India-born American poet who often derives from the corridor of thought and idea, climbing the stairs, going down the lanes of memory and reflection assessing and re-assessing the things in a flux, the times to be read and the destiny which but lies in waiting. But India does not haunt him nostalgically so often. He is happy in America and can clutch along Americanness.</description><pubDate>Sun, 15 Jun 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54840/memoir-by-vijay-seshadri</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 10 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54834/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--10</link><description>Louis de Rouvroy, who was the Duke of Saint-Simon, wrote his Memoirs between1739 and 1750, around the time Voltaire wrote The Age of Louis XIV. Written in the early 18th century but not published until long after Saint Simon’s death, these memoirs provide one of the most important first-hand accounts of life at Versailles. The Memoirs is one of the most remarkable writing achievements in history. One man, with no specific reader in mind, wrote thousands of pages—recording the past for future generations. He brings back to life both personal and shared memories in a unique way.</description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Jun 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54834/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--10</guid></item><item><title>Dongerkery: Nataraja </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54824/dongerkery-nataraja</link><description>Nataraja by S.R. Dongerkery is one of the finest poems on Nataraja. The poem has been taken from his book of poems named The Ivory Tower published in 1943. S.R. Dongerkery was an educationist of note and was the Vice Chancellor of Marathwada University</description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Jun 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54824/dongerkery-nataraja</guid></item><item><title>Meeting Chitra Divakaruni, Author of The Last Queen  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54820/meeting-chitra-divakaruni-author-of-the-last-queen</link><description>This interview was conducted in Houston, where Chitra is settled and teaches Creative Writing at the University of Houston, where she is a Professor in the English Department. Chitra Ji many thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to meet with me to discuss your book The Last Queen.</description><pubDate>Sat, 31 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54820/meeting-chitra-divakaruni-author-of-the-last-queen</guid></item><item><title>T.V. Reddy - Few Poems </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54818/t.v.-reddy--few-poems</link><description>The Sparrow from When the Grief Rains collection though small is a specimen of poetry reminding us of Victorian trend and tradition, the twilight of romanticism, pensive brooding and reflection, the crux is one derived from sorrow and despair, as he is a poet of the country, the farmer and the schoolmaster. T.V. Reddy who had been the Principal of Govt. College, Puttur, Andhra Pradesh in the latter years was also awarded Visiting National Fellowship for a tenure. The poem which may be cited as an example dances before the eyes just as an image. The whole scene of making and unmaking comes to our purview as and when we sit to discuss this poem.</description><pubDate>Sat, 31 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54818/t.v.-reddy--few-poems</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 9 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54813/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--9</link><description>Like Fenelon’s “Adventures of Telemachus”, Montesquieu’s “Persian Letters” (Les &quot;Lettres persanes&quot; de Montesquieu) became a classic—a book that people still read, quote, and study today. The names of its characters, Usbek and Rica, are now famous on their own, even without knowing the book.</description><pubDate>Sat, 07 Jun 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54813/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--9</guid></item><item><title>Kulwant Singh's Enigma  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54803/kulwant-singhs-enigma</link><description>While going through Kulwant Singh Gill&#039;s poetry, a sense of spiritual awakening grips us, a quest haunts the passionate pilgrim who goes about counting the scattered beads of meditation. In Flower Children, he talks of the Western people on their way to find peace in India which is but in non-attachment and the realization of the self, Tat-tvam-asi, Sat-Chit-Ananda. The poet feels enigma when being drawn by the sweet scent of the lass passing, the wisp and whiff breaking his sadhna of meditation. This is what he says in Enigma.</description><pubDate>Sat, 24 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54803/kulwant-singhs-enigma</guid></item><item><title>Puran Singh's Rajhans </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54791/puran-singhs-rajhans</link><description>Rajhans is one of the best and the most celebrated poems of Puran Singh ever written in the annals of Indian English poetry that too dating back to the colonial times of British rule and administration. </description><pubDate>Sat, 17 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54791/puran-singhs-rajhans</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 8 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54783/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--8</link><description>Fénelon&#039;s book is written as a story that fits into the gap between the fourth and tenth cantos of Homer’s Odyssey. In Homer’s version, Telemachus, the son of Odysseus, goes looking for his missing father at the end of the fourth canto. Odysseus finally returns home in the tenth canto. Fénelon imagines what happens in between—this imagined story becomes The Adventures of Telemachus.</description><pubDate>Sat, 24 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54783/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--8</guid></item><item><title>Brahmin Girls </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54778/brahmin-girls</link><description>Brahmin Girls is a superb poem composed by Joseph Furtado and it is a reality that we do not find a poet of his caliber frolicking and mimicking in his way, striding and gliding as a merry-go-lucky man, oblivious of the this world of care and anxiety, daily humdrum and frivolity, monotony and din and bustle, lost into the world of his own.</description><pubDate>Sat, 10 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54778/brahmin-girls</guid></item><item><title>Joseph Furtado's Pariah Girl </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54771/joseph-furtados-pariah-girl</link><description>The Pariah Girl reveals what we have left behind the social order wherein we could not rise above petty considerations, narrow mentality and the times too were so, one of dire poverty, cruelty, superstition, backwardness, fatalism, lethargy, inaction, underdevelopment and discrimination. We regressed in darkness and dormancy. We could not learn in the school of humanism discarding our obsolete set-up.</description><pubDate>Sat, 03 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54771/joseph-furtados-pariah-girl</guid></item><item><title>So, We Beat On ... ... </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54765/so-we-beat-on-...-...</link><description>It was on April 10, 1925, that Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby – the defining portrait of the Jazz Age’s extravagance and glamour aimed at achieving “vast, vulgar, meretricious beauty of material success” sans moral cudgels— adorned the shelves of book stalls. Much against the author’s expectations, it was greeted by tepid reviews and disappointing sales. But Fitzgerald said, &#039;Of all the reviews, even the most enthusiastic, not one had the slightest idea what the book was about.&#039; Its sales were so-so, and by the time of the author’s death in 1940, copies of the modest second print run remained with the book stalls for a long.</description><pubDate>Sat, 26 Apr 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54765/so-we-beat-on-...-...</guid></item><item><title>Sita-Rama by A.F. Khabardar </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54757/sita-rama-by-a.f.-khabardar</link><description>India, the land of Rama and Krishna, the Rama lore, the Krishna lore of it, where did it not spread to? The song of Rama, how to sing it? Can it be if the bhakti is not? What is the abode of Rama? The heart, is it not?  Who the singers of Rama? Was Kabir not? Was Mahatma not? Ramdhuna, how pleasant is it to get lost in?</description><pubDate>Sat, 26 Apr 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54757/sita-rama-by-a.f.-khabardar</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 7 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54755/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--7</link><description>We have been reading  in our last many  chapters that how the reign of Louis XIV marked a golden era for French classical literature, a period where the ideals of clarity, balance, order, and decorum—derived from classical antiquity—found full expression. Literature during this time not only flourished under royal patronage but was deeply intertwined with the values of the absolutist state. With institutions like the Académie Française solidifying the French language and literary standards, this period produced towering figures in theatre, poetry, prose, and moral philosophy.</description><pubDate>Sat, 10 May 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54755/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--7</guid></item><item><title>Freedom by A. E. Russell </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54750/freedom-by-a.-e.-russell</link><description></description><pubDate>Sat, 19 Apr 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54750/freedom-by-a.-e.-russell</guid></item><item><title>Silence by Romen Basu </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54737/silence-by-romen-basu</link><description>We do not know what the poet wants to describe, silence or somebody’s appearance? What is it that he is attempting to represent? Let us go deep into the lines as for an interpretation; an explanation, as poetry is dripping out of silence, poetry composed in silence is on the table and to put it in different words, poetry of silence is as thus. Poetry of silence, what to say it about? Who can but read silence? </description><pubDate>Sat, 12 Apr 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54737/silence-by-romen-basu</guid></item><item><title>Kali The Woman - A Feministic Interpretation </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54726/kali-the-woman--a-feministic-interpretation</link><description>Kali The Woman as a poem no doubt seems to be a mythological presentation, not other than a painting of Kali looking awesome, bizarre and terrible, but actually it is a feministic interpretation of the womanly self. Dismissing the Aryan discourse, we may take up the non-Aryan standpoint. Just taking the cue from it, we may take Kali, a dark-complexioned girl as the protagonist of the discourse. A dark maid, how does she keep working, doing household jobs? How has she been exploited for a long time?</description><pubDate>Sat, 05 Apr 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54726/kali-the-woman--a-feministic-interpretation</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 6 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54722/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--6</link><description>Jean Racine (1639-1699) was a French poet and playwright, widely regarded as one of the greatest writers in the French language. He is known for his contributions to the development of French tragedy, and his plays are still widely performed and studied today. Racine&#039;s life, works, and legacy have had a profound impact on French literature and the world of theater.</description><pubDate>Sat, 19 Apr 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54722/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--6</guid></item><item><title>Poems By Simanchal Patnaik </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54720/poems-by-simanchal-patnaik</link><description>If we do not talk about Simanchal Patnaik, the story of Indian English poetry would not be complete. A Subordinate Judge he wrote and published poetry which we could not take a note of so seriously but was a writer who engaged and definitely who sought to grapple with.</description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54720/poems-by-simanchal-patnaik</guid></item><item><title>Joseph Furtado: A Poetic Study  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54713/joseph-furtado-a-poetic-study</link><description>Joseph Furtado is without any doubt one of the best poets who have enriched the treasure-trove of Indian English poetry, but it is lapse on our part that we have failed to recognize them. Why could we not know them? How could we forget them so easily?  It is a matter of reckoning. Perhaps we had not the capacity of grasping humour, irony and caricature. We were but a backward, underdeveloped, rural, superstitious, illiterate and poor lot living below the poverty line under impoverished circumstances. Had we been conversant with the language, we could have admired and appreciated him.</description><pubDate>Sat, 22 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54713/joseph-furtado-a-poetic-study</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 5 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54707/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--5</link><description>Pierre Corneille, often regarded as the father of French classical tragedy, was a playwright whose works laid the foundation for the grandeur and refinement of 17th-century French drama. His contributions to literature and theatre significantly influenced not only his contemporaries but also subsequent generations of dramatists, including Jean Racine and Molière. Corneille’s ability to blend intricate plots, complex character development, and moral dilemmas within a framework of classical decorum makes him one of the most celebrated literary figures of his time. This essay delves into Corneille’s life, his major works, his contribution to French theatre, and his enduring legacy.</description><pubDate>Sat, 29 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54707/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--5</guid></item><item><title>Translator as Half Author? </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54706/translator-as-half-author</link><description>A friend, very much academically oriented, yesterday sent me an article by noted translator Jayasree Kalathil, titled &#039;Literary translation and its discontents.&#039; and sought my views on some of the points she has raised.</description><pubDate>Sat, 15 Mar 2025 16:15:21 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54706/translator-as-half-author</guid></item><item><title>The Refugee </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54703/the-refugee</link><description></description><pubDate>Sat, 15 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54703/the-refugee</guid></item><item><title>Harvest by O.P. Bhatnagar </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54689/harvest-by-o.p.-bhatnagar</link><description></description><pubDate>Sat, 08 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54689/harvest-by-o.p.-bhatnagar</guid></item><item><title>Kamala Chandrakant: The Immortal Storyteller  </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54682/kamala-chandrakant-the-immortal-storyteller</link><description>On February 9, 2025, India lost this literary giant at the age of 84. But her stories, her words, and her profound impact on Indian storytelling will continue to educate, inspire, and enthrall generations to come.</description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54682/kamala-chandrakant-the-immortal-storyteller</guid></item><item><title>Guru Prakasham by A.P.J. Kalam </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54680/guru-prakasham-by-a.p.j.-kalam</link><description>The Prakasham was born, how was it? The magic lies in the use and application of the word, as it is by the South Indians in their tone and tenor. What is Prakasham? How to get Light, Mystical, Mythical Light, Light Logical and Illuminating, Dispelling Darkness is the case in hand. But the Gurus saw it, felt it and acted as per Instruction. It illumined the Punjab, the place of the rivers. They spread their message, and it went far wide, moved beyond as for something exceptional and extraordinary to be given, hand over to humanity, never felt in terms of social equality, human goodness, charity, virtue, morality, mercy, kindness and congregational food. How to be practical, the men of practical wisdom? How to foster saintliness at the same time? They had been the men of earth, God-sent people as well who but preached a new lesson and precept. </description><pubDate>Sat, 01 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54680/guru-prakasham-by-a.p.j.-kalam</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 4 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54676/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--4</link><description>Louis XIV&#039; was a patron of the arts and The French Academy, founded earlier flourished under him promoting the French language and literature. 
Molière was one of the artist  in his time who gained popularity worldwide. He  not just a playwright; he was also an actor and a theater director. In his comedies, he brilliantly exposed the vices and absurdities of the society he observed so keenly. His works portray all social classes, making it difficult to choose just a few to highlight.</description><pubDate>Sat, 15 Mar 2025 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54676/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--4</guid></item><item><title>Yakshi from Didarganj </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54673/yakshi-from-didarganj</link><description>How is the artistic sense expressed through the sculpture! How voluptuous and classical the image! How the damsel in youthful decoration! How aesthetic and ornate the imagery in carving! Lal would have seen it in the Patna Museum, but one may also write after seeing the picture. Had the photo been with, it would have helped in analyzing the poem.</description><pubDate>Sat, 22 Feb 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54673/yakshi-from-didarganj</guid></item><item><title>The Tower of Silence* </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54667/the-tower-of-silence</link><description>The Tower of Silence is one of the finest poems ever written by Dhan Gopal Mukherji (1890-1936) . An Indian American Mukherji popularized Indian culture in the West and was one of the spokesmen of it no doubt. He wrote at that time when a few could have thought of achieving in a foreign land.</description><pubDate>Sat, 15 Feb 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54667/the-tower-of-silence</guid></item><item><title>Age of Enlightenment and French Literature - 3 </title><link>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54663/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--3</link><description>As was seen in the previous chapter, the colorful tapestry of French literature during the reign of Louis XIV was woven by number of authors   reflecting the colors of ideals, order, reason, and clarity, while exploring themes of love, ambition, morality, and human nature. But the questions which arose for dissemination were how were the reception of the readers? Did they support the views of the authors’ whole heartedly or did they oppose?</description><pubDate>Sat, 22 Feb 2025 00:00:00 -0600</pubDate><guid>https://www.boloji.com/articles/54663/age-of-enlightenment-and-french-literature--3</guid></item></channel></rss>