Divine Consciousness In The Works Of Tennessee Williams And Tagore
Sharma, Vikram Pratap
Assistant Professor, Alliance Business School, Alliance University, Anekal Road, Bangalore, India
Abstract
Compassion, love and emotions that are empathetic in nature form the crux of all work written by both Tennessee Williams as well as Rabindranath Tagore. A very deep understanding of the human nature coupled with an extraordinary theological bend is the characteristic of both their works. Half a century apart and born millions of miles distant to different religions, cultures as well as backgrounds, these two artistically gifted individuals have a twain that meets which tries to define the very nature of human existence the way it is. The variance in cultures or religion does not stop them from asking the same questions, looking for the answers to the riddle of human reality, the subtlety of the rhythms in appreciation of God and the deeper knowledge of the difference between good and evil. Just like Williams, Tagore never lost faith in God. He had conceived of a personal God, his life‟s God (Jiban-devata), in „Gitanjali‟. Then again, in the last years of his life, Tagore was to sing in praise of God in man, the Supreme Man