Analysis and Comparison of Gita Govinda and Song of Solomon Gita Govinda is a religious love poem in the Indian religion. The poem consists of mainly two characters, Krishna and Radha, who are estranged lovers. Towards the end of the poem, however, they are reunited, giving accounts of how they feel about each other along the way. The Song of Solomon from the Bible is a religious poem in the Catholic religion. There aren’t any names given in the poem, but it seems very clear that there are two people involved. This poem gives insight into the courtship and marriage customs of the time when this was written.
This poem also gives the reader a feeling of the sacredness and depth of marriage. The similarities between these two poems are many. They both deal with two people in love. Both poems are expressing the feelings of the characters involved. In each one, the characters are comparing the features of their loved ones to the beautiful things in each of their societies.
These poems are also structured in similar fashions. Each paragraph is about three to four sentences long. As a new chapter begins, the speaker changes, always saying how they feel about the other person. These poems also have differing qualities about them. The Song of Solomon goes through the motions of love, and ends with the two lovers being married. In Gita Govinda, the story is basically about the two lovers reuniting, with no reference to them becoming married.
The Essay on Judith Wright Poems Love Earth
Judith Wright's second anthology Woman to Man (1949) is better known for the freshness of her approach in examining until-then taboo subjects of sexual desire and especially women's sexuality. Such economical though passionate poems as Woman to Child and Woman to Man, apart from confounding thousands of adolescents in their final school-year examination papers, provided a new language for ...
There is also a structure difference between these two. Gita Govinda has a lot of repetition in it. In every chapter, there is at least one, if not two, lines that are repeated in every paragraph for about half of the chapter. The Song of Solomon has no such format. There is no repetition of lines here. There is, however, a title to each one of the chapters and subchapter’s, which I found to make it a lot easier to follow than the Gita Govinda.
I personally found the Song of Solomon a lot easier to follow. This is probably due to the fact that I am Christian and have read parts of the Bible in the earlier parts of my life. This is not to say that the Gita Govinda was not good. I did find it interesting, but it was too hard for me to follow it. This is because I am not familiar with the Indian culture or religion. The references that the Gita Govinda made to other names lost me a few times.
With all things said, both of these religious poems are similar in many ways, which shows the commonality between the two religions and cultures.