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Siddhartha Analysis

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Throughout the book Siddhartha has three dreams, the first being his dream with Govinda and a woman and her breast milk. The second is of Kamala’s Rare songbird dead in its cage, and the third is about the sacred word “om” that symbolizes unity and perfection of the universe and is used in the brahmans’ meditation sessions. Siddhartha’s first dream is about his dear childhood friend, Govinda. In this dream Govinda stands before Siddhartha in the yellow robes of Buddha’s followers and with sad eyes Govinda says, “ ‘Why have you deserted me?’ ” (Hesse 27). Siddhartha embraces Govinda and kisses him, but as he does so Govinda turns into a woman with an exposed, milk-laden breast. Siddhartha drinks from it and it tastes “of woman and man, of sun and forest, of animal and flower, of every fruit, of every pleasure” (Hesse 27). When Siddhartha had this dream he had recently left his life as an ascetic which he shared with Govinda and is beginning a new life filled with sensual pleasures, desire, and his lover, Kamala. This dream guides Siddhartha by showing him what the next chapter in …show more content…

In the dream Siddhartha sees Kamala’s extremely rare songbird in its golden cage, the songbird always sang in the mornings but Siddhartha noticed that today, it was silent. When he gives the bird further inspection, he sees that it is dead. Siddhartha weighs the bird in his hand, then throws its body into the lane and as he did, “ He received a terrible fright, and his heart ached as if he had cast away everything valuable and good from himself…” (Hesse 44). When Siddhartha has this dream he is becoming more and more greedy and troubled by petty problems. He had started spending more of his time gambling, drinking and being unhappy with his life, he is becoming less “good”. He realizes he can’t continue on the path he is on and he leaves the town and his riches

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