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Personalities :: Literature
Michael Madhusudan Dutta Born January 25, 1824, Sagardari, Bengal -- died June 29, 1873. Michael Madhusudan Dutta experimented ceaselessly with diction and verse forms, and it was he who introduced Amitrakshara, a form of blank verse with varied caesuras, and many other original lyric styles. Madhusudan opened a new era in Bengali poetry. The life of Madhusudan Datta was a turbulent one. He faced poverty, maltreatment and misunderstanding. Although he was a genius of a high order, he was an erratic personality. Madhusudan is a typical example of one of Bengal’s intellectual elite caught between tradition and modernity. His early conversion to Christianity is indicative of his cross-cultural condition in life. Madhusudan’s early schooling was in Bengali and Persian. In
1837 he entered Hindu College where most of his education was in English.
He remained at Hindu College until age 19 when he converted to Christianity
in spite of the stiffest opposition from family, friends and community.
Madhusudan was one of the most brilliant students of his class and
perhaps the best English scholar of his college. At first Madhusudan’s
literary career was directed towards English literature. Later he
wrote in Bengali. In 1848 he moved to Madras where he worked as an
English teacher. There he published his best and longest poem in English,
'The Captive Ladie' along with other English works. The reception
of his English writing was lukewarm. His principal Bengali works, written mostly between 1858 and 1862, include a number of dramas written in prose, long narrative poems, and many lyrics. His most important prose drama, Sharmishtha (1858), is based on an episode in Sanskrit from the Mahabharata. His poetical works include the Tilottama-sambhava (1860), a narrative poem on the story of Sunda and Upasunda; the Meghanada-vadha-kabya (1861), an epic on the Ramayana theme; Vrajangana (1861), a cycle of lyrics on the Radha-Krishna theme; and Birangana (1862), a set of 21 epistolary poems on the model of Ovid's Heroides. Though he was a Christian and deeply versed in English literature he never severed his link with Bengali. In particular his poetic genius continued to be deeply impressed by the Radha-Krishna stories. Courtesy : |