(S 1) | ||
This is the ephemeralcreature’s daily life. | ||
(S 2) | ||
As long as the human animal is lord | ||
460 | And a dense nether nature screens the soul, | |
As long as intellect’s outward-gazing sight | ||
Serves earthy interest and creature joys, | ||
An incurable littleness pursues his days. | ||
(S 3) | ||
Ever since consciousness was born on earth, | ||
465 | Life is the same in insect, ape and man, | |
Its stuff unchanged, its way the common route. | ||
(S 4) | ||
If new designs, if richer details grow | ||
And thought is added and more tangled cares, | ||
If little by little it wears a brighter face, | ||
470 | Still even in man the plot is mean and poor. | |
(S 5) | ||
A gross content prolongs his fallen state; | ||
His small successes are failures of the soul, | ||
His little pleasures punctuate frequent griefs: | ||
Hardship and toil are the heavy price he pays | ||
475 | For the right to live and his last wages death. | |
(S 6) | ||
An inertia sunk towards inconscience, | ||
A sleep that imitates death is his repose. | ||
(S 7) | ||
A puny splendour of creative force | ||
Is made his spur to fragile human works | ||
480 | Which yet outlast their brief creator’s breath. | |
(S 8) | ||
He dreams sometimes of the revels of the gods | ||
And sees the Dionysian gesture pass, — | ||
A leonine greatness that would tear his soul | ||
If through his failing limbs and fainting heart | ||
485 | The sweet and joyful mighty madness swept: | |
Trivial amusements stimulate and waste | ||
The energy given to him to grow and be. | ||
(S 9) | ||
His little hour is spent in little things. | ||
(S 10) | ||
A brief companionship with many jars, | ||
490 | A little love and jealousy and hate, | |
A touch of friendship mid indifferent crowds | ||
Draw his heart-plan on life’s diminutive map. | ||
(S 11) | ||
If something great awakes, too frail his pitch | ||
To reveal its zenith tension of delight, | ||
495 | His thought to eternise its ephemeral soar, | |
Art’s brilliant gleam is a pastime for his eyes, | ||
A thrill that smites the nerves is music’s spell. | ||
(S 12) | ||
Amidst his harassed toil and welter of cares, | ||
Pressed by the labour of his crowding thoughts, | ||
500 | He draws sometimes around his aching brow | |
Nature’s calm mighty hands to heal his life-pain. | ||
(S 13) | ||
He is saved by her silence from his rack of self; | ||
In her tranquil beauty is his purest bliss. | ||
(S 14) | ||
A new life dawns, he looks out from vistas wide; | ||
505 | The Spirit’s breath moves him but soon retires: | |
His strength was not made to hold that puissant guest. | ||
(S 15) | ||
All dulls down to convention and routine | ||
Or a fierce excitement brings him vivid joys: | ||
His days are tinged with the red hue of strife | ||
510 | And lust’s hot glare and passion’s crimson stain; | |
Battle and murder are his tribal game. | ||
(S 16) | ||
Time has he none to turn his eyes within | ||
And look for his lost self and his dead soul. | ||
(S 17) | ||
His motion on too short an axis wheels; | ||
515 | He cannot soar but creeps on his long road | |
Or if, impatient of the trudge of Time, | ||
He would make a splendid haste on Fate’s slow road, | ||
His heart that runs soon pants and tires and sinks; | ||
Or he walks ever on and finds no end. | ||
(S 18) | ||
520 | Hardly a few can climb to greater life. | |
(S 19) | ||
All tunes to a low scale and conscious pitch. | ||
(S 20) | ||
His knowledge dwells in the house of Ignorance; | ||
His force nears not even once the Omnipotent, | ||
Rare are his visits of heavenly ecstasy. | ||
(S 21) | ||
525 | The bliss which sleeps in things and tries to wake, | |
Breaks out in him in a small joy of life: | ||
This scanty grace is his persistent stay; | ||
It lightens the burden of his many ills | ||
And reconciles him to his little world. | ||
(S 22) | ||
530 | He is satisfied with his common average kind; | |
Tomorrow’s hopes and his old rounds of thought, | ||
His old familiar interests and desires | ||
He has made into a thick and narrowing hedge | ||
Defending his small life from the Invisible; | ||
535 | His being’s kinship to infinity | |
He has shut away from him into inmost self, | ||
Fenced off the greatnesses of hidden God. | ||
(S 23) | ||
His being was formed to play a trivial part | ||
In a little drama on a petty stage; | ||
540 | In a narrow plot he has pitched his tent of life | |
Beneath the wide gaze of the starry Vast. | ||
(S 24) | ||
He is the crown of all that has been done: | ||
Thus is creation’s labour justified; | ||
This is the world’s result, Nature’s last poise! | ||
545 | And if this were all and nothing more were meant, | |
If what now seems were the whole of what must be, | ||
If this were not a stade through which we pass | ||
On our road from Matter to eternal Self, | ||
To the Light that made the worlds, the Cause of things, | ||
550 | Well might interpret our mind’s limited view | |
Existence as an accident in Time, | ||
Illusion or phenomenon or freak, | ||
The paradox of a creative Thought | ||
Which moves between unreal opposites, | ||
555 | Inanimate Force struggling to feel and know, | |
Matter that chanced to read itself by Mind, | ||
Inconscience monstrously engendering soul. | ||
(S 25) | ||
At times all looks unreal and remote: | ||
We seem to live in a fiction of our thoughts | ||
560 | Pieced from sensation’s fanciful traveller’s tale, | |
Or caught on the film of the recording brain, | ||
A figment or circumstance in cosmic sleep. | ||
(S 26) | ||
A somnambulist walking under the moon, | ||
An image of ego treads through an ignorant dream | ||
565 | Counting the moments of a spectral Time. | |
(S 27) | ||
In a false perspective of effect and cause, | ||
Trusting to a specious prospect of world-space, | ||
It drifts incessantly from scene to scene, | ||
Whither it knows not, to what fabulous verge. | ||
(S 28) | ||
570 | All here is dreamed or doubtfully exists, | |
But who the dreamer is and whence he looks | ||
Is still unknown or only a shadowy guess. | ||
(S 29) | ||
Or the world is real but ourselves too small, | ||
Insufficient for the mightiness of our stage. | ||
(S 30) | ||
575 | A thin life-curve crosses the titan whirl | |
Of the orbit of a soulless universe, | ||
And in the belly of the sparse rolling mass | ||
A mind looks out from a small casual globe | ||
And wonders what itself and all things are. | ||
(S 31) | ||
580 | And yet to some interned subjective sight | |
That strangely has formed in Matter’s sightless stuff, | ||
A pointillage minute of little self | ||
Takes figure as world-being’s conscious base. | ||
(S 32) | ||
Such is our scene in the half-light below. | ||
(S 33) | ||
585 | This is the sign of Matter’s infinite, | |
This the weird purport of the picture shown | ||
To Science the giantess, measurer of her field, | ||
As she pores on the record of her close survey | ||
And mathematises her huge external world, | ||
590 | To Reason bound within the circle of sense, | |
Or in Thought’s broad impalpable Exchange | ||
A speculator in tenuous vast ideas, | ||
Abstractions in the void her currency | ||
We know not with what firm values for its base. | ||
(S 34) | ||
595 | Only religion in this bankruptcy | |
Presents its dubious riches to our hearts | ||
Or signs unprovisioned cheques on the Beyond: | ||
Our poverty shall there have its revenge. | ||
(S 35) | ||
Our spirits depart discarding a futile life | ||
600 | Into the blank unknown or with them take | |
Death’s passport into immortality. |
Book 2, Canto 5 – The Godheads of the Little Life, Section 4Savitri Bhavan2023-08-05T10:57:18+00:00