(S 1) |
|
|
|
BUT NOW the destined spot and hour were close; |
|
|
Unknowing she had neared her nameless goal. |
|
(S 2) |
|
|
|
For though a dress of blind and devious chance |
|
|
Is laid upon the work of all-wise Fate, |
|
5 |
Our acts interpret an omniscient Force |
|
|
That dwells in the compelling stuff of things, |
|
|
And nothing happens in the cosmic play |
|
|
But at its time and in its foreseen place. |
|
(S 3) |
|
|
|
To a space she came of soft and delicate air |
|
10 |
That seemed a sanctuary of youth and joy, |
|
|
A highland world of free and green delight |
|
|
Where spring and summer lay together and strove |
|
|
In indolent and amicable debate, |
|
|
Inarmed, disputing with laughter who should rule. |
|
(S 4) |
|
|
15 |
There expectation beat wide sudden wings |
|
|
As if a soul had looked out from earth’s face, |
|
|
And all that was in her felt a coming change |
|
|
And forgetting obvious joys and common dreams, |
|
|
Obedient to Time’s call, to the spirit’s fate, |
|
20 |
Was lifted to a beauty calm and pure |
|
|
That lived under the eyes of Eternity. |
|
(S 5) |
|
|
|
A crowd of mountainous heads assailed the sky |
|
|
Pushing towards rival shoulders nearer heaven, |
|
|
The armoured leaders of an iron line; |
|
25 |
Earth prostrate lay beneath their feet of stone. |
|
(S 6) |
|
|
|
Below them crouched a dream of emerald woods |
|
|
And gleaming borders solitary as sleep: |
|
|
Pale waters ran like glimmering threads of pearl. |
|
(S 7) |
|
|
|
A sigh was straying among happy leaves; |
|
30 |
Cool-perfumed with slow pleasure-burdened feet |
|
|
Faint stumbling breezes faltered among flowers. |
|
(S 8) |
|
|
|
The white crane stood, a vivid motionless streak, |
|
|
Peacock and parrot jewelled soil and tree, |
|
|
The dove’s soft moan enriched the enamoured air |
|
35 |
And fire-winged wild-drakes swam in silvery pools. |
|
(S 9) |
|
|
|
Earth couched alone with her great lover Heaven, |
|
|
Uncovered to her consort’s azure eye. |
|
(S 10) |
|
|
|
In a luxurious ecstasy of joy |
|
|
She squandered the love-music of her notes, |
|
40 |
Wasting the passionate pattern of her blooms |
|
|
And festival riot of her scents and hues. |
|
(S 11) |
|
|
|
A cry and leap and hurry was around, |
|
|
The stealthy footfalls of her chasing things, |
|
|
The shaggy emerald of her centaur mane, |
|
45 |
The gold and sapphire of her warmth and blaze. |
|
(S 12) |
|
|
|
Magician of her rapt felicities, |
|
|
Blithe, sensuous-hearted, careless and divine, |
|
|
Life ran or hid in her delightful rooms; |
|
|
Behind all brooded Nature’s grandiose calm. |
|
(S 13) |
|
|
50 |
Primaeval peace was there and in its bosom |
|
|
Held undisturbed the strife of bird and beast. |
|
(S 14) |
|
|
|
Man the deep-browed artificer had not come |
|
|
To lay his hand on happy inconscient things, |
|
|
Thought was not there nor the measurer, strong-eyed toil, |
|
55 |
Life had not learned its discord with its aim. |
|
(S 15) |
|
|
|
The Mighty Mother lay outstretched at ease. |
|
(S 16) |
|
|
|
All was in line with her first satisfied plan; |
|
|
Moved by a universal will of joy |
|
|
The trees bloomed in their green felicity |
|
60 |
And the wild children brooded not on pain. |
|
(S 17) |
|
|
|
At the end reclined a stern and giant tract |
|
|
Of tangled depths and solemn questioning hills, |
|
|
Peaks like a bare austerity of the soul, |
|
|
Armoured, remote and desolately grand |
|
65 |
Like the thought-screened infinities that lie |
|
|
Behind the rapt smile of the Almighty’s dance. |
|
(S 18) |
|
|
|
A matted forest-head invaded heaven |
|
|
As if a blue-throated ascetic peered |
|
|
From the stone fastness of his mountain cell |
|
70 |
Regarding the brief gladness of the days; |
|
|
His vast extended spirit couched behind. |
|
(S 19) |
|
|
|
A mighty murmur of immense retreat |
|
|
Besieged the ear, a sad and limitless call |
|
|
As of a soul retiring from the world. |
|
(S 20) |
|
|
75 |
This was the scene which the ambiguous Mother |
|
|
Had chosen for her brief felicitous hour; |
|
|
Here in this solitude far from the world |
|
|
Her part she began in the world’s joy and strife. |
|
(S 21) |
|
|
|
Here were disclosed to her the mystic courts, |
|
80 |
The lurking doors of beauty and surprise, |
|
|
The wings that murmur in the golden house, |
|
|
The temple of sweetness and the fiery aisle. |
|
(S 22) |
|
|
|
A stranger on the sorrowful roads of Time, |
|
|
Immortal under the yoke of death and fate, |
|
85 |
A sacrificant of the bliss and pain of the spheres, |
|
|
Love in the wilderness met Savitri. |
|