The Poison Tree


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About The Book

About The "The Poison Tree" (Bishabriksha) is set in Bankim Chandra’s own time. Nagendra gives refuge to a young widow Kundanandini in his own house, who is orphaned after the death of her father. He becomes attracted to the girl and is torn between his devoted wife Suryamukhi and the beautiful Kundanandini. There are other characters like Kamalamani, Nagendra’s sister, Taracharan who is desirous of Kundanandini, etc About The Bankim Chandra Chatterjee (1838-1894), Indian author, whose novels firmly established prose as a literary vehicle for the Bengali language and helped create in India a school of fiction on the European model. Bankim Chandra was a member of an orthodox Brahman family and was educated at Hooghly College, at Presidency College, Calcutta, and at the University of Calcutta, of which he was one of the first graduates. From 1858, until his retirement in 1891, he served as a deputy magistrate in the Indian civil service. Miriam Singleton Knight (1834–1908), Translator of the works of Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay; also known as Minnie Knight, née Spurr, Miriam S. Knight, M. S. Knight and Mrs. J. B. Knight, Translations; The Second Daughter-in-law (1882, tr. from Sivanath Sastri) (transcription project); The Spoilt Boy (1883, tr. from Peary Chand Mitra, with Narendranath Mitra) (transcription project); The Poison Tree, A Tale of Hindu Life in Bengal, with a preface by Sir Edwin Arnold (1884); Shornalata (1884) (tr. from Taraknath Gangopadhyay) (transcription project); Lalita and Saudamini or, The Mother's Device (1891) (tr. from Taraknath Gangopadhyay) (transcription project); Krishna Kanta's Will, with introduction, glossary, and notes by J. F. Blumhardt (1895); The Globe of Gold (1896) (tr. of Subarna-Golak by Bankim Chandra Chattopad
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