Download Free Rhyme Gurus Poems Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Rhyme Gurus Poems and write the review.

About the Book: All the poems are written by me. It's a collection of most my poems under various topics. You’ll get to read poems on various people and topics where I have tried my best to express them in a poetic way. Every piece is a masterpiece in its own way and its written with hard work, time, and dedication. Every piece has a different flavor and has something unique to deliver to the audience. So that you read you enjoy every piece and enjoy your time. About the Author: Nishant S. Vaidya has been a young Certified Poet Of The Year 2020. He is a Bhagwan Shri Sathya Sai Baba’s devotee. He lived and studied in Abu Dhabi and he was a student from The Daly College, Indore. He has completed Masters in Performing Arts in Tabla from Maharaja Sayajirao University, Vadodara, Gujarat, India. He is commonly known as “Rhyme-Guru” from India in Africa. He has been a Vice President for an Indian community named “Writers’ Global Movement India” He has been an Editor for a Global Anthology named War Against Fake News by Luqman Alawode from Nigeria. His poems have been published in few African Magazines namely Roots Magazine-Malawi, Urban Magazine-Uganda, Theguru Ent. Magazine-Zimbabwe etc.. His written article has also been published in The Mount Kenya Times, Kenya. He has even been a Co Author of few Indian and African Anthologies too.
The 'Indian Mona Lisa' is an eighteenth-century portrait of the goddess Radha from the Kishangarh school of Rajput Painting. It was purportedly modelled after a young enslaved woman and court-performer, Banī-ṭhanī, who became a concubine of the patron of the painting, crown-prince Savant Singh. Tracing her career, Heidi Pauwels recovers her role as a composer of devotional songs in multiple registers of Classical Hindi and shows how she was a conduit for trend-setting styles from Delhi, including the new vogue of Urdu. Through a combination of literary, historical, and art-historical analysis, she brings to life the vibrant cultural production center of Kishangarh in the eighteenth century by reconstructing how Banī-ṭhanī came to be acclaimed as the devotional poetess Rasikbihārī and as 'India's Mona Lisa'. This major new study conveys important new insights in the history of Hindi literature and devotion, the family, palace women and the social mobility of the enslaved.
Diary Poems and Story Tellers Rhymes continues two traditions of poetry into contemporary times: (a) the oral tradition where fables, parables, and myths are narrated in rhymed verse, both for instruction and entertainment; (b) the introspective and reflective written tradition where deep personal concerns emerge in heightened rhythm and rhyme, through images, metaphors, and symbols. This book blends these two traditions, maintaining a distinction all the time. Some of the fables are originally created out of contemporary issues. “Poach Tantra” takes up the problem of poaching through an animal fable in the Panchtantra tradition. Others like “The Snake Story,” “The Comet Avatar,” and the “Katha Serial Saga” (a contemporary retake on the frame story of Kathasaritasagar) are remakes of ancient myths to suit the contemporary times. The Diary Poems are actually diary poems preserved through a period of intense personal crisis and transition. Together with the Story Tellers Rhymes, they try to juxtapose the complex and intricate relationship between the objective and the subjective worlds in which we simultaneously exist. For example, “Curtain Calls” is a meditation after the death of the poet’s parents in quick succession in 2010. “Poach Tantra” that follows is a grandfather’s tale to a granddaughter from an earlier date. At the same time, one sincerely hopes that they are able to continue into these troubled contemporary times, and in an age dominated by prose and reason, the wonder and beauty and possibilities of poetry as narrative and poetry as introspection.
The Sikh World is an outstanding guide to the Sikh faith and culture in all its geographical and historical diversity. Written by a distinguished team of international contributors, it contains substantial thematic articles on the dynamic living experiences of the global Sikh community. The volume is organised into ten distinct sections: History, Institutions, and Practices Global Communities Ethical Issues Activism Modern Literature and Exegesis Music, Visual Art, and Architecture Citizenship, Sovereignty, and the Nation State Diversity and its Challenges Media Education Within these sections, interdisciplinary themes such as intellectual history, sexuality, ecotheology, art, literature, philosophy, music, cinema, medicine, science and technology, politics, and global interactions are explored. Integrating textual evidence with Sikh practice, this volume provides an authoritative and accessible source of information on all topics of Sikhism. The Sikh World will be essential reading to students of Sikh studies, South Asian studies and religious studies. It will also be of interest to those in related fields, such as sociology, world philosophies, political science, anthropology, and ethics.
"The anthropology of Hinduism has amply established that Hindus have strong involvement with sacred geography. The Hindu sacred topography is dotted with innumerable pilgrimage places, and popular Hinduism is abundant with spatial imaginings. Thus Shiva and his partner, the mother goddess, live in the Himalayas, goddesses descend on earth as beautiful rivers, the goddess Kali's body parts are imagined to have fallen in various sites of Hindu geography sanctifying them as sacred centres, and yogis meditate in forests. Bengal similarly has a thriving culture of exalting sacred centres and pilgrimage places, one of the most important among them being the Navadvip-Mayapur sacred complex, Bengal's greatest site of guru-centred Vaishnavite pilgrimage and devotional life. The main question my book seeks to answer is what sites and senses of place beyond physical geographical ones can do to our notions of space/place, affect, and sanctity. While the contemporary anthropology of place and embodiment, following Edward Casey's philosophy (1993), is dominated by the idea of body-in-place, my book seeks to extend his formulations by also analysing cultural constructions and experiences of place in the body, mind etc. Traveling through both exterior and interior landscapes, I show that the practitioner inhabits Krishna's world through every daily religious practice. The synaesthesia that results from the overlap of these different planes of experience confirms the intensely transformative power of Vaishnava ritual processes"--Provided by publisher.
Contributed papers at a writers' workshop held in Calcutta, West Bengal.
Section A : First Flight (Prose and Poetry) FIRST FLIGHT : A. Prose 1. A LETTER TO GOD —G.L. Fuentes 2. NELSON MANDELA : LONG WALK TO FREEDOM —Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela 3. TWO STORIES ABOUT FLYING I. HIS FIRST FLIGHT–Liam O'Flaherty II. BLACK AEROPLANE –Frederick Forsyth 4. FROM THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK —Anne Frank 5. THE HUNDRED DRESSES-I —El Bsor Ester 6. THE HUNDRED DRESSES-II —El Bsor Ester 7. GLIMPSES OF INDIA 8. MILBIL THE OTTER —Gavin Maxwell 9. MADAM RIDES THE BUS —Vallikkannan 10. THE SERMON AT BENARES —Betty Renshaw 11. THE PROPOSAL —Anton Chekhov FIRST FLIGHT : B. POETRY 1. DUST OF SNOW —Robert Frost 2. FIRE AND ICE —Robert Frost 3. A TIGER IN THE ZOO —Leslie Morris 4. HOW TO TELL WILD ANIMALS —Carolyn Wells 5. THE BALL POEM —John Berryman 6. AMANDA —Robin Klein 7. ANIMALS —Walt Whitman 8. THE TREES —Adrienne Rich 9. FOG —Carl Sandburg 10. THE TALE OF CUSTARD THE DRAGON —Ogden Nash 11. FOR ANNE GREGORY —William Butler Yeats Section B : Footprints Without Feet (Supplementary Reader) 1. A TRIUMPH OF SURGERY —James Herriot 2. THE THIEF’S STORY —Ruskin Bond 3. THE MIDNIGHT VISITOR —Robert Arthur 4. A QUESTION OF TRUST —Victory Canning 5. FOOTPRINTS WITHOUT FEET —H. G. Wells 6. THE MAKING OF A SCIENTIST —Robert W. Peterson 7. THE NECKLACE —Guy De Maupassant 8. THE HACK DRIVER —Sinclair Lewis 9. BHOLI —K. A. Abbas 10. THE BOOK THAT SAVED THE EARTH —Claire Boiko Section C : Grammar (Reading and Writing) 1. READING SECTION 2. GRAMMAR (Tenses, Modals, Passive Voice, Subject-Verb Concord, Reporting, Clauses, Determiners, Preposition) 3. LETTER WRITING Appendix : Chapterwise Multiple Choice Questions Board Examination Paper (With Solved & OMR Sheet)
With surprising honesty and words that resonate long after reading, A Hurricane in My Head tackles the themes of friendship, bullying, technology and the life of a modern teenager. These poems say the things we can't always put into words; they may make you laugh, they may make you cry, but they will most definitely make you reminisce, escape, discover... This is a truly stunning collection from Matt Abbott, nationally acclaimed writer and performer, with poems that will make you want to become a poet and put your own words to paper much to the perplexity of any careers advisor!
I have always been interested in rhyming poetry. I even have a tattered copy of the old, One Hundred One Famous Poems, where there is to my way of thinking some of the greatest use of the language other than the Holy Bible. Such poems as Trees by Kipling; and Laugh and the World Laughs With You have been an inspiration to me for many years. Every where I have been, in church, schools, work or Lodge over the past seventy years, I have written poetry about something. In this book, I have written about many things I have either seen in my office, remembered from my past or have seen out my office window.
“A landmark volume, filled with beautiful renderings of writings from the Guru Granth Sahib.” —Simran Jeet Singh, author of The Light We Give: How Sikh Wisdom Can Transform Your Life An exquisite new translation of Guru Nanak’s verses, illuminating the sacred tenets cherished by millions of Sikhs worldwide. Guru Nanak (1469–1539), a native of Panjab, founded the Sikh religion. His vast corpus of nearly a thousand hymns forms the core of the Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikhs’ sacred book of ethics, philosophy, and theology. The scripture was expanded and enriched by his nine successors, and Sikhs continue to revere it today as the embodiment of their tradition. This beautiful new translation by Nikky-Guninder Kaur Singh, a foremost authority on Sikhism, offers a selection of spiritual lyrics composed by Guru Nanak. Here the reader will find the range and depth of his pluralistic vision of the singular divine and discover his central values of equality, inclusivity, and civic action—values that continue to shape the lives of Sikhs worldwide.