-----A Poetic
Vision of Light
I can still picture myself as a little girl, perched on the
windowsill of the east-facing window on the top floor of my grandmother’s
house, watching the sunrise over the distant hills. At first a faint reddish
glow appeared, deepening into rich hues. Then the sun itself emerged above the
hilltop—an orange sphere swelling in brilliance, scattering into a thousand
beams, and suffusing the nearby paddy fields with a golden glow. At that age, I
could neither describe the beauty of those magical moments, nor explain the
deep sense of oneness with nature I felt. Poets, however, have done so
with effortless grace.
Great Poems on Light
Light has always inspired poets: the radiance of dawn, the
flame of truth, the glow of the soul, or the vision of divinity. Across ages
and cultures, poets have sung of light as life’s essence and mystery.
Over the years, I have come across poems in different
languages reflecting many facets of light. Here, I recall some of the
most beautiful ones.
Hymns and Poems on the Sun, Moon, and Stars
Even today, Hindus recite this mantra facing the rising
sun—on riverbanks, in homes, or during prayer. Though not religious, I too
recite it as part of my yoga practice each morning.
Goethe, the great German poet and scientist of colour, greets the rising sun as
a life-bringer in his poem To the Rising Sun:
The moon and stars have also inspired exquisite poetry. Kalidasa,
in his Sanskrit masterpiece Meghdutt, writes:
On the stars, Sara Williams, British producer and
writer, penned these lines:
From India, Sarojini Naidu in The Bird of Time
praises the many faces of light:
Light and Spirituality
To Emily Brontë, divine light is indestructible,
transcending all worlds. In No Coward Soul Is Mine she declares:
The Sufi mystic Rumi transforms light into divine
healing:
“The wound is the place where the Light enters you.”
Poems on Natural Light
William Wordsworth, central figure of English Romanticism, saw childhood wonder
shining through nature in Ode: Intimations of Immortality:
Emily Dickinson delicately captures the fleeting glow of seasonal light in A
Light Exists in Spring:
Poems on Inner Light
For William Blake, light reveals infinite vision, as
in Auguries of Innocence:
These lines reflect
the inner vision of the poet.
Percy Bysshe Shelley portrays light as a fleeting visitation of beauty in Hymn
to Intellectual Beauty:
Rabindranath Tagore often used light as a symbol of spiritual awakening and
inner strength. In Gitanjali he writes:
And in another verse:
“The darkness of night is still thick, but I feel the light
coming.”
Sarojini Naidu, too, merged light with national spirit. In Songs of
India (On Dawn) she writes:
Universal Light
Across cultures, light has been revered as life’s essence:
- The Rig Veda prays: “From darkness lead me
to light, from the unreal lead me to the real.”
- The Bhagavad Gita calls God “the light of all
lights, beyond all darkness.”
- In
Buddhist poetry, enlightenment itself is awakening into radiance.
Light in Indian Poetry Indian poetry, across Hindi, Urdu, and diverse
regional languages, celebrates light not only as a physical phenomenon but also
as a metaphor for wisdom, hope, and spiritual awakening.
Urdu poetry carries a unique tenderness—its images of light
often reach straight to the heart.
Allama Iqbal
Zia Fatehabadi
“Look at the
light arising from the East, the radiance of truth; abandon the metaphor and
servitude—you are the very essence of reality”. (from his first major collection Noor-e-Mashriq
(1937). These lines evoke
spiritual enlightenment, urging inner truth to outshine illusions
In Malayalam, Jnanpith awardee Akkitham Achuthan Namboothiri offered a
profound reflection: "Velicham dukhamanunni, thamasallo sukhapradham’ (Light is sorrow,
my son; darkness is bliss.)
In his monumental work The Epic of the 20th
Century, he writes:
Closing Reflection
Poets have also explored the absence of light too. Sarojini
Naidu, in The Poet to Death from The Broken Wing,
writes:
Jude Simpson echoes this truth:
And finally, T. S. Eliot, in Four Quartets (East
Coker), shows how endings prepare the stage for renewal:
From Milton’s holy
beam to Rumi’s healing grace, from Wordsworth’s celestial dawn to Tagore’s
inner flame, poets across centuries remind us that light is not only a natural
force but also spirit, vision, renewal, and the eternal fire within us.
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