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Bengali essayist, poet and writers (1868–1946) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pramathanath Chaudhuri (7 August 1868 – 2 September 1946), known as Pramatha Chaudhuri, alias Birbal, was an Indian writer and a figure in Bengali literature. He was the nephew of Rabindranath Tagore as his mother was Sukumari Debi, the second sister of Tagore. He married musician and writer Indira Devi Chaudhurani, daughter of Satyendranath Tagore, the first Indian to have joined the Indian Civil Services and an author, composer and feminist, who was the second eldest brother of Rabindranath Tagore.
Pramathanath Chaudhuri | |
---|---|
Native name | প্রমথ চৌধুরী |
Born | Jessore, Bengal, British India | 7 August 1868
Died | 2 September 1946 78) Calcutta, Bengal, British India | (aged
Pen name | Birbal |
Occupation | Poet, essayist, writer |
Period | Bengal Renaissance |
He studied in Krishnanagar Debnath High School in Krishnanagar.[citation needed] From his 5th to 13th year, Chaudhuri lived at Krishnanagar[citation needed]}
Chaudhuri joined the Presidency College, Kolkata for the First Arts course. But he had to shift to Krishnagar again as there was an outbreak of dengue fever in Kolkata and joined the sophomore year Arts class at Krishnagar College. He suspended his studies again and moved to his father in Dinajpur owing to persistent fever. Returning to Kolkata in 1887, he passed the Arts examination from St. Xavier's College, Calcutta with second division marks.[citation needed]
After qualifying law, Chaudhuri joined the law firm of Ashutosh Dhar, a solicitor, as an article clerk. Chaudhuri sailed for England in 1893 and returned three years after as a Barrister-at-Law, having been called to the bar at the Inner Temple. Meanwhile, between, 1890 and 1893, two of his original essays and two stories, Phuldani (The Flower Vase) and Torquato Tasso, were published. Khayal Khata (A Scrap Book) was the first piece that appeared under the pen name Birbal in a Bengali journal Bharati in 1902. He wrote Ek Tukro Smritikatha (A Handful of Reminiscence), in 1908.[citation needed]
Sabuj Patra (Bengali: সবুজ পত্র, "Green Leaf"), a liberal and pro-Tagore Bengali magazine he, made its debut in April, 1914. In the first issue Chaudhuri explained the magazine's title:
The new leaf is green, a wonderful amalgam of aesthetic and spiritual beauty... The green dynamic mind works a wonderful synthesis between the finite and the infinite, the east and the west[1]
1. Pramatha Chaudhuri Granthabali, 1926 – Collection of Prose and Poetical Works
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