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Epic poems in Hindi (7 P) H. Hindi poetry collections (8 P) ... Pages in category "Hindi poetry" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total.
S.A. Joglekar has carefully compiled them and has identified a total of 1006 poems in a book titled Halsatvahan’s Gathasaptashati Published in 1956 by Prasad Publications, Pune. It consists of 700 single-verse poems, divided into 7 chapters of 100 verses each. All the poems are couplets, and most are in the musical arya metre. [20]
Mahadevi Verma (26 March 1907 – 11 September 1987) was an Indian Hindi-language poet, essayist, sketch story writer and an eminent personality of Hindi literature. She is considered one of the four major pillars [a] of the Chhayawadi era in Hindi literature. [1]
Geet Chaturvedi (born 1977), poet, short story author and journalist; Ghananand (1673 - 1760), poet of the Reeti Era; Girish Tiwari (1945-2010), scriptwriter, lyricist, and poet; Gopal Singh Nepali (1911–1963), poet of Hindi literature and lyricist of Bollywood; Gopal Prasad Vyas (1915–2005), poet, known for his humorous poems
Geet Chaturvedi was awarded the Bharat Bhushan Agrawal Award in 2007. [2] His poetry has been translated into 22 languages. [3] In Anita Gopalan's English translation, his poems have been published in AGNI, PEN America, Poetry International, Sycamore Review, World Literature Today, Words without Borders, Asymptote, Chicago Review, The Offing, Modern Poetry in Translation, and elsewhere.
My Heart Is in a Foreign Land) (International title: Chasing My Heart) [3] is an Indian television series produced by Ekta Kapoor under her banner Balaji Telefilms for Star Plus. [4] The story, set in Austria, is inspired by the 1997 film Pardes and Manju Kapur's 2008 novel The Immigrant. [5] It was shot in locations in India, Vienna and Innsbruck.
Jyotsna Milan (1941–2014), poet, novelist, short story writer and editor; Kabir (1440–1518), mystic poet and saint of India; Kavi Bhushan (1613–1712), poet and scholar; Kaka Hathrasi (1906–1995), satirist and humorist poet; Kedarnath Agarwal (1911–2000), Hindi language poet and littérateur; Kedarnath Singh (1934– ), poet, critic ...
[8] [9] A museum dedicated to Kumar exists in C. T. T. Nagar, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh. [10] [11] The line "Tu kisi rail si guzarti hai" was taken from his poems and used as a song in the movie Masaan. ABP News and the Hindi poet Kumar Vishwas made an episode on Dushyant Kumar in their program Mahakavi which was aired on 12 and 13 November 2016.