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| Year | Event | Significance | |------|-------|--------------| | | Birth of Mohan Chandra Sarkar in Jessore (now Bangladesh) | The future protagonist of the biography. | | 1902–1905 | Early literary activity in Kolkata’s Bharati circle | Sets the stage for the exile narrative. | | 1914 | Sarkar moves to London to pursue law & politics | First major “probashi” (exile) experience. | | 1922 | Returns briefly to Bengal, then heads to New York | The three‑continent odyssey that fuels the biography’s core. | | 1930 | Death of Sarkar’s first wife, Kamala; his poetic output intensifies | Emotional turning point, reflected in later chapters. | | 1947 | Partition of India; Sarkar becomes a voice for displaced peoples | Gives the biography its broader humanitarian resonance. | | 1962 | Death of Mohan Chandra Sarkar in New York | The biography’s subject passes, prompting post‑humous commemoration. |
: Similar "legend history" journals and independently published biographies are often listed on platforms like Google Books , typically featuring around 120 pages of curated history. detailed summary | | 1922 | Returns briefly to Bengal,
, which is frequently associated with similar keywords in online retail databases. January 7, 2020. Format: It is a 120-page paperback. | | 1962 | Death of Mohan Chandra
The most famous poem, "Bideshini Railgari" (Foreign Train), ends with the haunting line: "Jekhane amar desh shekhane prithibi furae / Jekhane amar prithibi shekhane desh shuru" (Where my country ends, the world ends / Where my world begins, my country begins). "Bideshini Railgari" (Foreign Train)
| Year | Event | Significance | |------|-------|--------------| | | Birth of Mohan Chandra Sarkar in Jessore (now Bangladesh) | The future protagonist of the biography. | | 1902–1905 | Early literary activity in Kolkata’s Bharati circle | Sets the stage for the exile narrative. | | 1914 | Sarkar moves to London to pursue law & politics | First major “probashi” (exile) experience. | | 1922 | Returns briefly to Bengal, then heads to New York | The three‑continent odyssey that fuels the biography’s core. | | 1930 | Death of Sarkar’s first wife, Kamala; his poetic output intensifies | Emotional turning point, reflected in later chapters. | | 1947 | Partition of India; Sarkar becomes a voice for displaced peoples | Gives the biography its broader humanitarian resonance. | | 1962 | Death of Mohan Chandra Sarkar in New York | The biography’s subject passes, prompting post‑humous commemoration. |
: Similar "legend history" journals and independently published biographies are often listed on platforms like Google Books , typically featuring around 120 pages of curated history. detailed summary
, which is frequently associated with similar keywords in online retail databases. January 7, 2020. Format: It is a 120-page paperback.
The most famous poem, "Bideshini Railgari" (Foreign Train), ends with the haunting line: "Jekhane amar desh shekhane prithibi furae / Jekhane amar prithibi shekhane desh shuru" (Where my country ends, the world ends / Where my world begins, my country begins).
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