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Love and Death By Sarojini Naidu Summary

I dreamed my love had set thy spirit free,
Enfranchised thee from Fate’s o’ermastering power,
And girt thy being with aย scathelessย dower
Of rich and joyous immortality;
Of Love, I dreamed my soul had ransomed thee,
In thy lone, dread, incalculable hour
From those pale hands at which all mortals cower,
And conquered Death by Love, like Savitri.
When I awoke, alas, my love was vain
E’en toย annulย oneย throeย of destined pain,
Or by one heart-beat to prolong thy breath;
O Love, alas, that love could not assuage
The burden of thy human heritage,
Or save thee from the swift decrees of Death.

In Sarojini Naidu’s sonnet “Love and Death,” the poet explores the themes of love, mortality, and the limitations of human emotions. Written in Petrarchan sonnet form, the poem has the rhyme scheme abbaabba ccdeed and is divided into an octave and a sestet.

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The poem’s story centres on the speaker’s dream in which she believes that her love has provided her deceased beloved’s ghost an immortal and happy existence, freeing him from the grip of fate. The speaker in the dream believes that her love can free a person’s spirit from the grip of death, a notion inspired by the myth of Savitri, who was able to successfully resurrect her husband.

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But as the speaker wakes up to the hard reality that her love could not change fate, the dream is dashed. The speaker considers the boundaries of her love after realising that it was unable to soothe even a single ache brought on by death while her sweetheart remained dead. The poet bemoans the fact that her love was not enough to fend off death and wrestles with the possibility that maybe she did not love her lover sufficiently to rescue him.

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The poem explores the tension that exists between the romanticised idea of a love that is stronger than death and the sobering truth that love, no matter how strong, frequently loses to death. The speaker feels guilty and regretful, doubting the extent of her love and lamenting how love cannot withstand death’s abrupt decisions.

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In “Love and Death,” Sarojini Naidu creates a moving meditation on the state of humanity, the transience of existence, and the paradoxical nature of love in the face of death.

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