BK Mohan Kumar
This paper explores Pablo Neruda’s lyrical mastery and emotional resonance in “Tonight I Can Write the Saddest Lines” and “The Song of Despair.” Composed during his early twenties and included in Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair (1924), these works embody the turbulence of love, memory, and grief. Integrating repetition, nature imagery, alliteration, and direct speech, Neruda transforms highly personal sorrow into universal poetic experience, blending sensual introspection with philosophical meditation. The study examines Neruda’s poetic techniques, his treatment of solitude, emotional transience, memory and symbolic landscapes, and his creation of a poetic voice that bridges the immediacy of loss and the aspiration for transcendence. As these poems harness heartbreak as artistic fuel, the paper demonstrates how Neruda forges a language of vulnerability, revealing the timeless dialogue between love and pain at the heart of human existence.
Pages: 296-298 | 179 Views 113 Downloads