I CAST MY NET INTO THE SEA

by: Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941)

      N the morning I cast my net into the sea.
       
      I dragged up from the dark abyss things of strange aspect and strange beauty -- some shone like a smile, some glistened like tears, and some were flushed like the cheeks of a bride.
       
      When with the day's burden I went home, my love was sitting in the garden idly tearing the leaves of a flower.
       
      I hesitated for a moment, and then placed at her feet all that I had dragged up, and stood silent.
       
      She glanced at them and said, "What strange things are these? I know not of what use they are!"
       
      I bowed my head in shame and thought, "I have not fought for these, I did not buy them in the market; they are not fit gifts for her."
       
      Then the whole night through I flung them one by one into the street.
       
      In the morning travellers came; they picked them up and carried them into far countries.

"I cast my net into the sea" is reprinted from The Gardener. Rabindranath Tagore. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1913.

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