Dhanshiri River
Dhanshiri is a river in the Jhalokati District of Bangladesh. It is narrower than it once was.[1]
Significance
Local lore has it that poet Jibanananda Das had a maternal uncle in Bamankathi village, and during childhood visits there fell in love with the natural beauty of the Dhanshiri River.[2] He wrote of it poignantly in his poem "Ābāra āsiba phirē" (I will come back again):
I will come back again to Bengal, to this Dhansiri riverside
Maybe not as a man — but a shalik, or white-crest kite;
Or a dawn crow maybe, new-rice-time, in misty flight
To this jackfruit-tree-shade one Kartik day will glide.[3]
gollark: This is in fact true. They have properties like high, er, monochromaticity too, but it's essentially just coherent light.
gollark: Shining bright or coherent things into eyes makes me nervous.
gollark: Lasers are just very focused light, utter bee.
gollark: Lasers are very dangerous because they get focused onto a small spot on the eye, and all that.
gollark: Well, yes, but directly doing things to eyes sounds possibly eye-damaging.
References
- Amin, Aasha Mehreen (4 June 2004). "Capturing Natural Treasures". Star Magazine. The Daily Star. Retrieved 27 May 2008.
- Eagle, Andrew (28 February 2014). "Questions for a Lone Bird Called Das". The Daily Star. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
- Doshi, Tishani (6 July 2003). "Literary Review: The loneliest poet". The Hindu. Retrieved 29 January 2016. Doshi reviews Joe Winter's translation of Jibanananda Das, including his poem "আবার আসিব ফিরে" ("I will come back again").
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.