Dwijendranath Tagore (11 March 1840 – 19 January 1926) was an Indian poet, song composer, philosopher, mathematician and painter.
However, he also studied for some time at St. Paul's School and Hindu College in Calcutta (now Presidency University).
On the other hand, Satyendranath was in favor of breaking these reforms and forming a new modern society.
[9] Dwijendranath, accustomed to a simple life, was a man of poetry, knowledge-loving and experiment-loving.
The book was published in 1860, exactly one year before the birth of Nobel Prize-winning younger brother Rabindranath Tagore.
[1] When Dwijendranath Tagore started practicing poetry, Michael Madhusudan Dutt was at the pinnacle of his success.
It was during Dwijendranath's lifetime that Bankimchandra Chattopadhyay and Rabindranath Tagore's 'Strong Writing Set Bengali Literature to the Peak of Glory'.
Rabindranath writes that the torn manuscripts of the dreamy poems were scattered all over the Jorasanko Thakur Bari.
He assisted in the establishment and management of two philosophical organizations, the National Society and the Vidvajjan Samagam.
His other two philosophical works are Advaita Mater Samalochana (1896) and Aryadharma O Boudhadharmer Ghat-Protighat (1899).
[13] But his other brother Jyotirindranath Tagore proposed to start a new magazine called Bharati.
[1][3] For his outstanding contribution to Bengali literature, he was elected President of the Bangiya Sahitya Parishad from 1897 to 1900.
[1][3] When the income of his zamindari declined during the Pabna Rebellion in 1873, he recommended strict measures against the peasants to "restore peace".
At that time, none other than Kshetramohan Goswami, an assistant to King Saurindra Mohan Tagore, did this work.
The Brahma Sangeet, Karo Tar Nam Gaan, Jatadin Rahe Deha Pran, composed by him was used for prayer for 7th Pous for many years.
His Brahma songs are also widely sung in the general prayers of the Brahmo Samaj.
[3] One of his popular patriotic songs written for the Hindu Mela was Malin Mukhchandrama Bharat Tomari.
[13] Dwijendranath spent the last twenty years of his life in Santiniketan in the company of nature through the practice of knowledge and writing.
If he did not understand anything, Bidhusekhar would seek the help of Shastri and Kshitimohan Sen.[11] Rabindranath used to call him Barodada.
On his return from South Africa, Mahatma Gandhi and Charles Freer Andrews visited Santiniketan and met Dwijendranath, who also addressed him as Barodada.
[17] Bengali:[13][3][7] English: A book on boxometry (Baksamiti, which has been described as "an elaborate affair of manufacturing receptacles of an endless variety with paper folded in accordance with set codes and formulae very much in the nature of Euclidean principles"[18]) (1913), Ontology (1871) and geometry.