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  1. Manmohan Ghose (19 January 1869 [1] – 4 January 1924) was an Indian poet and one of the first from India to write poetry in English. He was a brother of Sri Aurobindo . Background. Manmohan Ghose was born the son of Dr. Krishna Dhan Ghose by his wife, Swarnalata Devi Ghose ( née Basu).

    • Monomohun Ghose

      Manmohun Ghose (Mônmohon Ghosh) (also spelt Monomohun Ghosh,...

  2. Lalmohan Ghosh (1849 – 18 October 1909) was the sixteenth President of the Indian National Congress and Bengali barrister and also Co-Founder of Indian National Congress. [1] Early life. He was born in Krishnagar, West Bengal in 1849, the second son of Ramolochan Ghose, gentleman.

  3. Manmohan Ghose was the son of Dhan Ghose and his wife, Swarnalata Basu. His younger brother was Sri Aurobindo (Aravinda) Ghose , the politician and spiritual leader. Manmohan, a brilliant scholar, was educated at Manchester grammar school (1881–4), St Paul's School in London (1884–7) and won an open scholarship to Christ Church, Oxford which he took up in 1887.

  4. www5.open.ac.uk › research-projects › making-britainManmohan Ghose | Making Britain

    About: Laurence Binyon was a poet, critic, artist, dramatist and curator. He worked in the British Museum from 1892 till his retirement in 1933 and was instrumental in promoting Asian Art in the Museum. He was introduced to Indian literature and philosophy by the poet Manmohan Ghose. They met as schoolboys at St Paul's School, in a seventh form ...

  5. 3 de ene. de 2002 · In 1879 Manmohan Ghose went to England where he remained until 1894, completing a professional qualification of Bar-at-law at Lincoln's Inn. On his return to India, he joined Patna College as professor of English; later on, he was appointed professor at Presidency College, Kolkata and worked as Inspector of schools.

  6. Chapter 3 explores how the end-of-century Indian-English poets Manmohan Ghose and the slightly later Sarojini Naidu, as well as Ghoses Oxford contemporary Cornelia Sorabji, both anglicised, yet orientalized their writing, and the personas they presented to British society.