(S 1) | ||
OUT OF the voiceless mystery of the past | ||
In a present ignorant of forgotten bonds | ||
These spirits met upon the roads of Time. | ||
(S 2) | ||
Yet in the heart their secret conscious selves | ||
5 | At once aware grew of each other warned | |
By the first call of a delightful voice | ||
And a first vision of the destined face. | ||
(S 3) | ||
As when being cries to being from its depths | ||
Behind the screen of the external sense | ||
10 | And strives to find the heart-disclosing word, | |
The passionate speech revealing the soul’s need, | ||
But the mind’s ignorance veils the inner sight, | ||
Only a little breaks through our earth-made bounds, | ||
So now they met in that momentous hour, | ||
15 | So utter the recognition in the deeps, | |
The remembrance lost, the oneness felt and missed. | ||
(S 4) | ||
Thus Satyavan spoke first to Savitri: | ||
“O thou who com’st to me out of Time’s silences, | ||
Yet thy voice has wakened my heart to an unknown bliss, | ||
20 | Immortal or mortal only in thy frame, | |
For more than earth speaks to me from thy soul | ||
And more than earth surrounds me in thy gaze, | ||
How art thou named among the sons of men? | ||
(S 5) | ||
Whence hast thou dawned filling my spirit’s days, | ||
25 | Brighter than summer, brighter than my flowers, | |
Into the lonely borders of my life, | ||
O sunlight moulded like a golden maid? | ||
(S 6) | ||
I know that mighty gods are friends of earth. | ||
(S 7) | ||
Amid the pageantries of day and dusk, | ||
30 | Long have I travelled with my pilgrim soul | |
Moved by the marvel of familiar things. | ||
(S 8) | ||
Earth could not hide from me the powers she veils: | ||
Even though moving mid an earthly scene | ||
And the common surfaces of terrestrial things, | ||
35 | My vision saw unblinded by her forms; | |
The Godhead looked at me from familiar scenes. | ||
(S 9) | ||
I witnessed the virgin bridals of the dawn | ||
Behind the glowing curtains of the sky | ||
Or vying in joy with the bright morning’s steps | ||
40 | I paced along the slumbrous coasts of noon, | |
Or the gold desert of the sunlight crossed | ||
Traversing great wastes of splendour and of fire, | ||
Or met the moon gliding amazed through heaven | ||
In the uncertain wideness of the night, | ||
45 | Or the stars marched on their long sentinel routes | |
Pointing their spears through the infinitudes: | ||
The day and dusk revealed to me hidden shapes; | ||
Figures have come to me from secret shores | ||
And happy faces looked from ray and flame. | ||
(S 10) | ||
50 | I have heard strange voices cross the ether’s waves, | |
The Centaur’s wizard song has thrilled my ear; | ||
I have glimpsed the Apsaras bathing in the pools, | ||
I have seen the wood-nymphs peering through the leaves; | ||
The winds have shown to me their trampling lords, | ||
55 | I have beheld the princes of the Sun | |
Burning in thousand-pillared homes of light. | ||
(S 11) | ||
So now my mind could dream and my heart fear | ||
That from some wonder-couch beyond our air | ||
Risen in a wide morning of the gods | ||
60 | Thou drov’st thy horses from the Thunderer’s worlds. | |
(S 12) | ||
Although to heaven thy beauty seems allied, | ||
Much rather would my thoughts rejoice to know | ||
That mortal sweetness smiles between thy lids | ||
And thy heart can beat beneath a human gaze | ||
65 | And thy aureate bosom quiver with a look | |
And its tumult answer to an earth-born voice. | ||
(S 13) | ||
If our time-vexed affections thou canst feel, | ||
Earth’s ease of simple things can satisfy, | ||
If thy glance can dwell content on earthly soil, | ||
70 | And this celestial summary of delight, | |
Thy golden body, dally with fatigue | ||
Oppressing with its grace our terrain, while | ||
The frail sweet passing taste of earthly food | ||
Delays thee and the torrent’s leaping wine, | ||
75 | Descend. Let thy journey cease, come down to us. | |
(S 14) | ||
Close is my father’s creepered hermitage | ||
Screened by the tall ranks of these silent kings, | ||
Sung to by voices of the hue-robed choirs | ||
Whose chants repeat transcribed in music’s notes | ||
80 | The passionate coloured lettering of the boughs | |
And fill the hours with their melodious cry. | ||
(S 15) | ||
Amid the welcome-hum of many bees | ||
Invade our honied kingdom of the woods; | ||
There let me lead thee into an opulent life. | ||
(S 16) | ||
85 | Bare, simple is the sylvan hermit-life; | |
Yet is it clad with the jewelry of earth. | ||
(S 17) | ||
Wild winds run — visitors midst the swaying tops, | ||
Through the calm days heaven’s sentinels of peace | ||
Couched on a purple robe of sky above | ||
90 | Look down on a rich secrecy and hush | |
And the chambered nuptial waters chant within. | ||
(S 18) | ||
Enormous, whispering, many-formed around | ||
High forest gods have taken in their arms | ||
The human hour, a guest of their centuried pomps. | ||
(S 19) | ||
95 | Apparelled are the morns in gold and green, | |
Sunlight and shadow tapestry the walls | ||
To make a resting chamber fit for thee.” | ||
(S 20) | ||
Awhile she paused as if hearing still his voice, | ||
Unwilling to break the charm, then slowly spoke. | ||
(S 21) | ||
100 | Musing she answered, “I am Savitri, | |
Princess of Madra. Who art thou? What name | ||
Musical on earth expresses thee to men? | ||
(S 22) | ||
What trunk of kings watered by fortunate streams | ||
Has flowered at last upon one happy branch? | ||
(S 23) | ||
105 | Why is thy dwelling in the pathless wood | |
Far from the deeds thy glorious youth demands, | ||
Haunt of the anchorites and earth’s wilder broods, | ||
Where only with thy witness self thou roamst | ||
In Nature’s green unhuman loneliness | ||
110 | Surrounded by enormous silences | |
And the blind murmur of primaeval calms?” | ||
(S 24) | ||
And Satyavan replied to Savitri: | ||
“In days when yet his sight looked clear on life, | ||
King Dyumatsena once, the Shalwa, reigned | ||
115 | Through all the tract which from behind these tops | |
Passing its days of emerald delight | ||
In trusting converse with the traveller winds | ||
Turns, looking back towards the southern heavens, | ||
And leans its flank upon the musing hills. | ||
(S 25) | ||
120 | But equal Fate removed her covering hand. | |
(S 26) | ||
A living night enclosed the strong man’s paths, | ||
Heaven’s brilliant gods recalled their careless gifts, | ||
Took from blank eyes their glad and helping ray | ||
And led the uncertain goddess from his side. | ||
(S 27) | ||
125 | Outcast from empire of the outer light, | |
Lost to the comradeship of seeing men, | ||
He sojourns in two solitudes, within | ||
And in the solemn rustle of the woods. | ||
(S 28) | ||
Son of that king, I, Satyavan, have lived | ||
130 | Contented, for not yet of thee aware, | |
In my high-peopled loneliness of spirit | ||
And this huge vital murmur kin to me, | ||
Nursed by the vastness, pupil of solitude. | ||
(S 29) | ||
Great Nature came to her recovered child; | ||
135 | I reigned in a kingdom of a nobler kind | |
Than men can build upon dull Matter’s soil; | ||
I met the frankness of the primal earth, | ||
I enjoyed the intimacy of infant God. | ||
(S 30) | ||
In the great tapestried chambers of her state, | ||
140 | Free in her boundless palace I have dwelt | |
Indulged by the warm mother of us all, | ||
Reared with my natural brothers in her house. | ||
(S 31) | ||
I lay in the wide bare embrace of heaven, | ||
The sunlight’s radiant blessing clasped my brow, | ||
145 | The moonbeams’ silver ecstasy at night | |
Kissed my dim lids to sleep. Earth’s morns were mine; | ||
Lured by faint murmurings with the green-robed hours | ||
I wandered lost in woods, prone to the voice | ||
Of winds and waters, partner of the sun’s joy, | ||
150 | A listener to the universal speech: | |
My spirit satisfied within me knew | ||
Godlike our birthright, luxuried our life | ||
Whose close belongings are the earth and skies. | ||
(S 32) | ||
Before Fate led me into this emerald world, | ||
155 | Aroused by some foreshadowing touch within, | |
An early prescience in my mind approached | ||
The great dumb animal consciousness of earth | ||
Now grown so close to me who have left old pomps | ||
To live in this grandiose murmur dim and vast. | ||
(S 33) | ||
160 | Already I met her in my spirit’s dream. | |
(S 34) | ||
As if to a deeper country of the soul | ||
Transposing the vivid imagery of earth, | ||
Through an inner seeing and sense a wakening came. | ||
(S 35) | ||
A visioned spell pursued my boyhood’s hours, | ||
165 | All things the eye had caught in coloured lines | |
Were seen anew through the interpreting mind | ||
And in the shape it sought to seize the soul. | ||
(S 36) | ||
An early child-god took my hand that held, | ||
Moved, guided by the seeking of his touch, | ||
170 | Bright forms and hues which fled across his sight; | |
Limned upon page and stone they spoke to men. | ||
(S 37) | ||
High beauty’s visitants my intimates were. | ||
(S 38) | ||
The neighing pride of rapid life that roams | ||
Wind-maned through our pastures, on my seeing mood | ||
175 | Cast shapes of swiftness; trooping spotted deer | |
Against the vesper sky became a song | ||
Of evening to the silence of my soul. | ||
(S 39) | ||
I caught for some eternal eye the sudden | ||
King-fisher flashing to a darkling pool; | ||
180 | A slow swan silvering the azure lake, | |
A shape of magic whiteness, sailed through dream; | ||
Leaves trembling with the passion of the wind, | ||
Pranked butterflies, the conscious flowers of air, | ||
And wandering wings in blue infinity | ||
185 | Lived on the tablets of my inner sight; | |
Mountains and trees stood there like thoughts from God. | ||
(S 40) | ||
The brilliant long-bills in their vivid dress, | ||
The peacock scattering on the breeze his moons | ||
Painted my memory like a frescoed wall. | ||
(S 41) | ||
190 | I carved my vision out of wood and stone; | |
I caught the echoes of a word supreme | ||
And metred the rhythm-beats of infinity | ||
And listened through music for the eternal Voice. | ||
(S 42) | ||
I felt a covert touch, I heard a call, | ||
195 | But could not clasp the body of my God | |
Or hold between my hands the World-Mother’s feet. | ||
(S 43) | ||
In men I met strange portions of a Self | ||
That sought for fragments and in fragments lived: | ||
Each lived in himself and for himself alone | ||
200 | And with the rest joined only fleeting ties; | |
Each passioned over his surface joy and grief, | ||
Nor saw the Eternal in his secret house. | ||
(S 44) | ||
I conversed with Nature, mused with the changeless stars, | ||
God’s watch-fires burning in the ignorant Night, | ||
205 | And saw upon her mighty visage fall | |
A ray prophetic of the Eternal’s sun. | ||
(S 45) | ||
I sat with the forest sages in their trance: | ||
There poured awakening streams of diamond light, | ||
I glimpsed the presence of the One in all. | ||
(S 46) | ||
210 | But still there lacked the last transcendent power | |
And Matter still slept empty of its Lord. | ||
(S 47) | ||
The Spirit was saved, the body lost and mute | ||
Lived still with Death and ancient Ignorance; | ||
The Inconscient was its base, the Void its fate. | ||
(S 48) | ||
215 | But thou hast come and all will surely change: | |
I shall feel the World-Mother in thy golden limbs | ||
And hear her wisdom in thy sacred voice. | ||
(S 49) | ||
The child of the Void shall be reborn in God, | ||
My Matter shall evade the Inconscient’s trance. | ||
(S 50) | ||
220 | My body like my spirit shall be free. | |
(S 51) | ||
It shall escape from Death and Ignorance.” | ||
(S 52) | ||
And Savitri, musing still, replied to him: | ||
“Speak more to me, speak more, O Satyavan, | ||
Speak of thyself and all thou art within; | ||
225 | I would know thee as if we had ever lived | |
Together in the chamber of our souls. | ||
(S 53) | ||
Speak till a light shall come into my heart | ||
And my moved mortal mind shall understand | ||
What all the deathless being in me feels. | ||
(S 54) | ||
230 | It knows that thou art he my spirit has sought | |
Amidst earth’s thronging visages and forms | ||
Across the golden spaces of my life.” | ||
(S 55) | ||
And Satyavan like a replying harp | ||
To the insistent calling of a flute | ||
235 | Answered her questioning and let stream to her | |
His heart in many-coloured waves of speech: | ||
“O golden princess, perfect Savitri, | ||
More I would tell than failing words can speak, | ||
Of all that thou hast meant to me, unknown, | ||
240 | All that the lightning-flash of love reveals | |
In one great hour of the unveiling gods. | ||
(S 56) | ||
Even a brief nearness has reshaped my life. | ||
(S 57) | ||
For now I know that all I lived and was | ||
Moved towards this moment of my heart’s rebirth; | ||
245 | I look back on the meaning of myself, | |
A soul made ready on earth’s soil for thee. | ||
(S 58) | ||
Once were my days like days of other men: | ||
To think and act was all, to enjoy and breathe; | ||
This was the width and height of mortal hope: | ||
250 | Yet there came glimpses of a deeper self | |
That lives behind Life and makes her act its scene. | ||
(S 59) | ||
A truth was felt that screened its shape from mind, | ||
A Greatness working towards a hidden end, | ||
And vaguely through the forms of earth there looked | ||
255 | Something that life is not and yet must be. | |
(S 60) | ||
I groped for the Mystery with the lantern, Thought. | ||
(S 61) | ||
Its glimmerings lighted with the abstract word | ||
A half-visible ground and travelling yard by yard | ||
It mapped a system of the Self and God. | ||
(S 62) | ||
260 | I could not live the truth it spoke and thought. | |
(S 63) | ||
I turned to seize its form in visible things, | ||
Hoping to fix its rule by mortal mind, | ||
Imposed a narrow structure of world-law | ||
Upon the freedom of the Infinite, | ||
265 | A hard firm skeleton of outward Truth, | |
A mental scheme of a mechanic Power. | ||
(S 64) | ||
This light showed more the darknesses unsearched; | ||
It made the original Secrecy more occult; | ||
It could not analyse its cosmic Veil | ||
270 | Or glimpse the Wonder-worker’s hidden hand | |
And trace the pattern of his magic plans. | ||
(S 65) | ||
I plunged into an inner seeing Mind | ||
And knew the secret laws and sorceries | ||
That make of Matter mind’s bewildered slave: | ||
275 | The mystery was not solved but deepened more. | |
(S 66) | ||
I strove to find its hints through Beauty and Art, | ||
But Form cannot unveil the indwelling Power; | ||
Only it throws its symbols at our hearts. | ||
(S 67) | ||
It evoked a mood of self, invoked a sign | ||
280 | Of all the brooding glory hidden in sense: | |
I lived in the ray but faced not to the sun. | ||
(S 68) | ||
I looked upon the world and missed the Self, | ||
And when I found the Self, I lost the world, | ||
My other selves I lost and the body of God, | ||
285 | The link of the finite with the Infinite, | |
The bridge between the appearance and the Truth, | ||
The mystic aim for which the world was made, | ||
The human sense of Immortality. | ||
(S 69) | ||
But now the gold link comes to me with thy feet | ||
290 | And His gold sun has shone on me from thy face. | |
(S 70) | ||
For now another realm draws near with thee | ||
And now diviner voices fill my ear, | ||
A strange new world swims to me in thy gaze | ||
Approaching like a star from unknown heavens; | ||
295 | A cry of spheres comes with thee and a song | |
Of flaming gods. I draw a wealthier breath | ||
And in a fierier march of moments move. | ||
(S 71) | ||
My mind transfigures to a rapturous seer. | ||
(S 72) | ||
A foam-leap travelling from the waves of bliss | ||
300 | Has changed my heart and changed the earth around: | |
All with thy coming fills. Air, soil and stream | ||
Wear bridal raiment to be fit for thee | ||
And sunlight grows a shadow of thy hue | ||
Because of change within me by thy look. | ||
(S 73) | ||
305 | Come nearer to me from thy car of light | |
On this green sward disdaining not our soil. | ||
(S 74) | ||
For here are secret spaces made for thee | ||
Whose caves of emerald long to screen thy form. | ||
(S 75) | ||
Wilt thou not make this mortal bliss thy sphere? | ||
(S 76) | ||
310 | Descend, O happiness, with thy moon-gold feet | |
Enrich earth’s floors upon whose sleep we lie. | ||
(S 77) | ||
O my bright beauty’s princess Savitri, | ||
By my delight and thy own joy compelled | ||
Enter my life, thy chamber and thy shrine. | ||
(S 78) | ||
315 | In the great quietness where spirits meet, | |
Led by my hushed desire into my woods | ||
Let the dim rustling arches over thee lean; | ||
One with the breath of things eternal live, | ||
Thy heart-beats near to mine, till there shall leap | ||
320 | Enchanted from the fragrance of the flowers | |
A moment which all murmurs shall recall | ||
And every bird remember in its cry.” |
Book 5, Canto 3 – Satyavan and Savitri, Section 1Savitri Bhavan2019-06-03T07:31:15+00:00