(S 1) |
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FATE followed her foreseen immutable road. |
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(S 2) |
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Man’s hopes and longings build the journeying wheels |
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That bear the body of his destiny |
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And lead his blind will towards an unknown goal. |
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(S 3) |
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5 |
His fate within him shapes his acts and rules; |
EoS |
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Its face and form already are born in him, |
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Its parentage is in his secret soul: |
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Here Matter seems to mould the body’s life |
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And the soul follows where its nature drives. |
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(S 4) |
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10 |
Nature and Fate compel his free-will’s choice. |
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(S 5) |
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But greater spirits this balance can reverse |
EoS |
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And make the soul the artist of its fate. |
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(S 6) |
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This is the mystic truth our ignorance hides: |
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Doom is a passage for our inborn force, |
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15 |
Our ordeal is the hidden spirit’s choice, |
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Ananke is our being’s own decree. |
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(S 7) |
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All was fulfilled the heart of Savitri |
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Flower-sweet and adamant, passionate and calm, |
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Had chosen and on her strength’s unbending road |
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20 |
Forced to its issue the long cosmic curve. |
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(S 8) |
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Once more she sat behind loud hastening hooves; |
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A speed of armoured squadrons and a voice |
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Far-heard of chariots bore her from her home. |
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(S 9) |
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A couchant earth wakened in its dumb muse |
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25 |
Looked up at her from a vast indolence: |
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Hills wallowing in a bright haze, large lands |
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That lolled at ease beneath the summer heavens, |
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Region on region spacious in the sun, |
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Cities like chrysolites in the wide blaze |
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30 |
And yellow rivers pacing lion-maned |
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Led to the Shalwa marches’ emerald line, |
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A happy front to iron vastnesses |
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And austere peaks and titan solitudes. |
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(S 10) |
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Once more was near the fair and fated place, |
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35 |
The borders gleaming with the groves’ delight |
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Where first she met the face of Satyavan |
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And he saw like one waking into a dream |
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Some timeless beauty and reality, |
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The moon-gold sweetness of heaven’s earth-born child. |
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(S 11) |
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40 |
The past receded and the future neared: |
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Far now behind lay Madra’s spacious halls, |
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The white carved pillars, the cool dim alcoves, |
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The tinged mosaic of the crystal floors, |
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The towered pavilions, the wind-rippled pools |
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45 |
And gardens humming with the murmur of bees, |
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Forgotten soon or a pale memory |
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The fountain’s plash in the white stone-bound pool, |
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The thoughtful noontide’s brooding solemn trance, |
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The colonnade’s dream grey in the quiet eve, |
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50 |
The slow moonrise gliding in front of Night. |
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(S 12) |
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Left far behind were now the faces known, |
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The happy silken babble on laughter’s lips |
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And the close-clinging clasp of intimate hands |
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And adoration’s light in cherished eyes |
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55 |
Offered to the one sovereign of their life. |
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(S 13) |
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Nature’s primaeval loneliness was here: |
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Here only was the voice of bird and beast, — |
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The ascetic’s exile in the dim-souled huge |
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Inhuman forest far from cheerful sound |
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60 |
Of man’s blithe converse and his crowded days. |
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(S 14) |
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In a broad eve with one red eye of cloud, |
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Through a narrow opening, a green flowered cleft, |
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Out of the stare of sky and soil they came |
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Into a mighty home of emerald dusk. |
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(S 15) |
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65 |
There onward led by a faint brooding path |
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Which toiled through the shadow of enormous trunks |
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And under arches misers of sunshine, |
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They saw low thatched roofs of a hermitage |
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Huddled beneath a patch of azure hue |
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70 |
In a sunlit clearing that seemed the outbreak |
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Of a glad smile in the forest’s monstrous heart, |
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A rude refuge of the thought and will of man |
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Watched by the crowding giants of the wood. |
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(S 16) |
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Arrived in that rough-hewn homestead they gave, |
EoS |
75 |
Questioning no more the strangeness of her fate, |
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Their pride and loved one to the great blind king, |
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A regal pillar of fallen mightiness |
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And the stately care-worn woman once a queen |
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Who now hoped nothing for herself from life, |
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80 |
But all things only hoped for her one child, |
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Calling on that single head from partial Fate |
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All joy of earth, all heaven’s beatitude. |
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(S 17) |
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Adoring wisdom and beauty like a young god’s, |
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She saw him loved by heaven as by herself, |
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85 |
She rejoiced in his brightness and believed in his fate |
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And knew not of the evil drawing near. |
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(S 18) |
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Lingering some days upon the forest verge |
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Like men who lengthen out departure’s pain, |
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Unwilling to separate sorrowful clinging hands, |
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90 |
Unwilling to see for the last time a face, |
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Heavy with the sorrow of a coming day |
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And wondering at the carelessness of Fate |
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Who breaks with idle hands her supreme works, |
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They parted from her with pain-fraught burdened hearts |
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95 |
As forced by inescapable fate we part |
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From one whom we shall never see again; |
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Driven by the singularity of her fate, |
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Helpless against the choice of Savitri’s heart |
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They left her to her rapture and her doom |
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100 |
In the tremendous forest’s savage charge. |
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(S 19) |
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All put behind her that was once her life, |
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All welcomed that henceforth was his and hers, |
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She abode with Satyavan in the wild woods: |
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Priceless she deemed her joy so close to death; |
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105 |
Apart with love she lived for love alone. |
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(S 20) |
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As if self-poised above the march of days, |
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Her immobile spirit watched the haste of Time, |
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A statue of passion and invincible force, |
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An absolutism of sweet imperious will, |
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110 |
A tranquillity and a violence of the gods |
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Indomitable and immutable. |
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