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Kabir Ke Dohas

Kabir Ke Dohas Kabir – The Weaver-Saint of India: Mystical Couplets Defying Religion, Celebrating Inner Truth 15th Century CE | Compiled in Bijak, Adi Granth, etc. | Hundreds of dohas (couplets) | Nirguna Bhakti | Sant Mat | Universal Wisdom | Oral & Written Traditions Among the most revolutionary voices of medieval India, Kabir (1440–1518) was a mystic poet and weaver from Varanasi whose dohas (couplets) cut through the rituals of organised religion like a sharp blade. Kabir’s verses, composed in a direct, earthy dialect of Hindi (often called Sadhukkarī or Avadhi), reject idol worship, caste hierarchy, and empty rites. Instead, he calls for a direct, personal union with the Nirguna (formless, attribute-less) divine. His dohas are short, two-line verses that pack immense spiritual and moral weight. They were transmitted orally for generations and later compiled in texts such as the Bijak (the most authentic collection of Ka...

Gitanjali by Rabindranath Tagore

Gitanjali Rabindranath Tagore – Song Offerings to the Divine, a Sublime Collection of Spiritual Poetry 1910 CE (Bengali) | 1912 CE (English) | 157 Poems (Bengali) / 103 Poems (English) | Spiritual Poetry | Nobel Prize in Literature 1913 | Pure devotion Among the most luminous works of world literature, Gitanjali (Song Offerings) by Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) is a collection of poems that transcends the boundaries of language, religion, and culture. Written originally in Bengali and published in 1910, Tagore later translated a selection of these poems into English, creating a version that is less a literal translation than a re‑creation. The English Gitanjali appeared in 1912 with an introduction by the Irish poet W.B. Yeats, who called it “the work of a supreme culture.” The following year, Tagore was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature – the first non‑European to receive the honour. The poems are offerings to the divine, ...

My Inventions by Nikola Tesla

My Inventions Nikola Tesla – The Extraordinary Autobiography of a Visionary Genius 1919 CE | 6 Chapters | Autobiography, Memoir | Alternating Current, Tesla Coil, Wireless Power | Pure brilliance Among the most fascinating autobiographies ever written, My Inventions by Nikola Tesla (1856-1943) is a first‑hand account of the life, mind, and discoveries of one of history’s most extraordinary inventors. First published as a series of six articles in Electrical Experimenter magazine in 1919, the book offers a rare glimpse into Tesla’s unique mental processes – his eidetic memory, his ability to visualise and test inventions entirely in his imagination, his compulsive habits, and his prophetic visions of a world powered by wireless electricity. Tesla recounts his childhood in Serbia, his education, his emigration to America, his triumph in the “War of the Currents” against Thomas Edison, and his later, more speculative work on wireles...

The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. Du Bois

The Souls of Black Folk W.E.B. Du Bois – The Foundational Work of African American Literature and Sociology 1903 CE | 14 Essays | Sociology, Memoir, History | Double Consciousness, The Veil, Sorrow Songs | Pure power Among the most influential works of American letters, The Souls of Black Folk by William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (1868-1963) is a searing, lyrical, and profoundly insightful collection of essays that gave voice to the African American experience at the turn of the twentieth century. Published in 1903, the book combines history, sociology, memoir, and spiritual reflection to address the central question of the age: what does it mean to be a Black person in a white‑dominated society that refuses to see you as fully human? Du Bois introduced two enduring concepts – double consciousness (the sense of always looking at oneself through the eyes of a racist society) and the veil (the invisible barrier that separates Black...

The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka

The Metamorphosis Franz Kafka – A Haunting Masterpiece of Alienation, Absurdity, and the Fragile Nature of Identity 1915 CE | 3 Parts | Novella | Existentialism, Absurdist Fiction | Gregor Samsa, Grete, Mr. Samsa | Pure unease Among the most influential and unsettling works of twentieth‑century literature, The Metamorphosis ( Die Verwandlung ) by Franz Kafka (1883-1924) opens with one of the most famous sentences in literary history: “As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect.” What follows is not a fantasy adventure but a devastatingly realistic account of a man’s gradual alienation from his family, his humanity, and himself. The novella refuses to explain why Gregor has changed; instead, it focuses on the consequences – the practical, psychological, and emotional collapse of a man who can no longer work, communicate, or be recognised as a son and brother....