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  1. Naidu's poetry is characterized by its lyrical beauty and exploration of themes related to India's natural world, love, and patriotism. She skillfully uses vivid imagery and symbolism, often drawing inspiration from Indian folklore and mythology.

  2. Sarojini Naidu was a popular indian poet. Her first collection of poems The Golden Threshold was published in 1905. Her poems were admired by many prominent indian politicians like Gopal Krishna Gokhale and a large part of indian public.

  3. Her mother wrote poetry in Bengali. [2] Drawing of Naidu by John Butler Yeats, 1896, from the frontispiece of The Golden Threshold (1905) She was the eldest of the eight siblings. Her brother Virendranath Chattopadhyay was a revolutionary, and another brother Harindranath was a poet, a dramatist, and an actor.

  4. Sarojini Naidu was a prolific poet whose volumes of poetry include The Golden Threshold (1905), The Bird of Time (1912), The Sceptred Flute (1928), and The Feather of the Dawn (1961). She was the first female Indian governor of Uttar Pradesh in independent India.

  5. Sarojini Naidu’s ‘Indian Weavers‘ portrays the titular weavers making three different garments, each one embodying a period of human life. The poem thereby engages with themes of art, life and the inevitability of the passage of time.

  6. '''Sarojini Naidu''' (née Chattopadhyaya; 13 February 1879 – 2 March 1949), also known by the sobriquet The Nightingale of India (Bharatiya Kokila), was a child prodigy, Indian independence activist and poet.

  7. Sarojini Naidu was an Indian political rights activist and writer. She is remembered for promoting women’s emancipation through her work and her writing. Greatly influenced by the Romantic poets, Naidu’s poetry is noted for its rich use of sensory imagery. She is sometimes regarded as the “Nightingale of India.”