daakings.blogg.se

Srikanta by sarat chandra chattopadhyay
Srikanta by sarat chandra chattopadhyay







srikanta by sarat chandra chattopadhyay

Many novels which portray aged characters, or people who have endured some great struggle, attain closure on a kind of diminuendo - a term from music meaning a diminishment of force or loudness, and in the case of novels a flickering and weakening of energies animating the work. Often novels also enact this mood with respect to their protagonists.

srikanta by sarat chandra chattopadhyay

To postpone closure, we try to read more slowly, linger over every sentence, close the book for a while and drift into our own thoughts. Surely this feeling is more painful than, say, the news of the death of a distant relative or acquaintance.

srikanta by sarat chandra chattopadhyay

Many readers are familiar with a wrenching experience associated with powerful novels: that of coming towards the close, the last few pages, after which our fortnight- or month-long involvement with a set of characters and an imagined world (no less real for being imagined) will abruptly come to an end.









Srikanta by sarat chandra chattopadhyay