(S 1) | ||
A WHILE on the chill dreadful edge of Night | ||
All stood as if a world were doomed to die | ||
And waited on the eternal silence’ brink. | ||
(S 2) | ||
Heaven leaned towards them like a cloudy brow | ||
5 | Of menace through the dim and voiceless hush. | |
(S 3) | ||
As thoughts stand mute on a despairing verge | ||
Where the last depths plunge into nothingness | ||
And the last dreams must end, they paused; in their front | ||
Were glooms like shadowy wings, behind them, pale, | ||
10 | The lifeless evening was a dead man’s gaze. | |
(S 4) | ||
Hungry beyond, the night desired her soul. | ||
(S 5) | ||
But still in its lone niche of templed strength | ||
Motionless, her flame-bright spirit, mute, erect, | ||
Burned like a torch-fire from a windowed room | ||
15 | Pointing against the darkness’ sombre breast. | |
(S 6) | ||
The Woman first affronted the Abyss | ||
Daring to journey through the eternal Night. | ||
(S 7) | ||
Armoured with light she advanced her foot to plunge | ||
Into the dread and hueless vacancy; | ||
20 | Immortal, unappalled, her spirit faced | |
The danger of the ruthless eyeless waste. | ||
(S 8) | ||
Against night’s inky ground they stirred, moulding | ||
Mysterious motion on her human tread, | ||
A swimming action and a drifting march | ||
25 | Like figures moving before eyelids closed: | |
All as in dreams went slipping, gliding on. | ||
(S 9) | ||
The rock-gate’s heavy walls were left behind; | ||
As if through passages of receding time | ||
Present and past into the Timeless lapsed; | ||
30 | Arrested upon dim adventure’s brink, | |
The future ended drowned in nothingness. | ||
(S 10) | ||
Amid collapsing shapes they wound obscure; | ||
The fading vestibules of a tenebrous world | ||
Received them, where they seemed to move and yet | ||
35 | Be still, nowhere advancing yet to pass, | |
A dumb procession a dim picture bounds, | ||
Not conscious forms threading a real scene. | ||
(S 11) | ||
A mystery of terror’s boundlessness, | ||
Gathering its hungry strength the huge pitiless void | ||
40 | Surrounded slowly with its soundless depths, | |
And monstrous, cavernous, a shapeless throat | ||
Devoured her into its shadowy strangling mass, | ||
The fierce spiritual agony of a dream. | ||
(S 12) | ||
A curtain of impenetrable dread, | ||
45 | The darkness hung around her cage of sense | |
As, when the trees have turned to blotted shades | ||
And the last friendly glimmer fades away, | ||
Around a bullock in the forest tied | ||
By hunters closes in no empty night. | ||
(S 13) | ||
50 | The thought that strives in the world was here unmade; | |
Its effort it renounced to live and know, | ||
Convinced at last that it had never been; | ||
It perished, all its dream of action done: | ||
This clotted cypher was its dark result. | ||
(S 14) | ||
55 | In the smothering stress of this stupendous Nought | |
Mind could not think, breath could not breathe, the soul | ||
Could not remember or feel itself; it seemed | ||
A hollow gulf of sterile emptiness, | ||
A zero oblivious of the sum it closed, | ||
60 | An abnegation of the Maker’s joy | |
Saved by no wide repose, no depth of peace. | ||
(S 15) | ||
On all that claims here to be Truth and God | ||
And conscious self and the revealing Word | ||
And the creative rapture of the Mind | ||
65 | And Love and Knowledge and heart’s delight, there fell | |
The immense refusal of the eternal No. | ||
(S 16) | ||
As disappears a golden lamp in gloom | ||
Borne into distance from the eyes’ desire, | ||
Into the shadows vanished Savitri. | ||
(S 17) | ||
70 | There was no course, no path, no end or goal: | |
Visionless she moved amid insensible gulfs, | ||
Or drove through some great black unknowing waste, | ||
Or whirled in a dumb eddy of meeting winds | ||
Assembled by the titan hands of Chance. | ||
(S 18) | ||
75 | There was none with her in the dreadful Vast: | |
She saw no more the vague tremendous god, | ||
Her eyes had lost their luminous Satyavan. | ||
(S 19) | ||
Yet not for this her spirit failed, but held | ||
More deeply than the bounded senses can | ||
80 | Which grasp externally and find to lose, | |
Its object loved. So when on earth they lived | ||
She had felt him straying through the glades, the glades | ||
A scene in her, its clefts her being’s vistas | ||
Opening their secrets to his search and joy, | ||
85 | Because to jealous sweetness in her heart | |
Whatever happy space his cherished feet | ||
Preferred, must be at once her soul embracing | ||
His body, passioning dumbly to his tread. | ||
(S 20) | ||
But now a silent gulf between them came | ||
90 | And to abysmal loneliness she fell, | |
Even from herself cast out, from love remote. | ||
(S 21) | ||
Long hours, since long it seems when sluggish time | ||
Is measured by the throbs of the soul’s pain, | ||
In an unreal darkness empty and drear | ||
95 | She travelled treading on the corpse of life, | |
Lost in a blindness of extinguished souls. | ||
(S 22) | ||
Solitary in the anguish of the void | ||
She lived in spite of death, she conquered still; | ||
In vain her puissant being was oppressed: | ||
100 | Her heavy long monotony of pain | |
Tardily of its fierce self-torture tired. | ||
(S 23) | ||
At first a faint inextinguishable gleam, | ||
Pale but immortal, flickered in the gloom | ||
As if a memory came to spirits dead, | ||
105 | A memory that wished to live again, | |
Dissolved from mind in Nature’s natal sleep. | ||
(S 24) | ||
It wandered like a lost ray of the moon | ||
Revealing to the night her soul of dread; | ||
Serpentine in the gleam the darkness lolled, | ||
110 | Its black hoods jewelled with the mystic glow; | |
Its dull sleek folds shrank back and coiled and slid, | ||
As though they felt all light a cruel pain | ||
And suffered from the pale approach of hope. | ||
(S 25) | ||
Night felt assailed her heavy sombre reign; | ||
115 | The splendour of some bright eternity | |
Threatened with this faint beam of wandering Truth | ||
Her empire of the everlasting Nought. | ||
(S 26) | ||
Implacable in her intolerant strength | ||
And confident that she alone was true, | ||
120 | She strove to stifle the frail dangerous ray; | |
Aware of an all-negating immensity | ||
She reared her giant head of Nothingness, | ||
Her mouth of darkness swallowing all that is; | ||
She saw in herself the tenebrous Absolute. | ||
(S 27) | ||
125 | But still the light prevailed and still it grew, | |
And Savitri to her lost self awoke; | ||
Her limbs refused the cold embrace of death, | ||
Her heart-beats triumphed in the grasp of pain; | ||
Her soul persisted claiming for its joy | ||
130 | The soul of the beloved now seen no more. | |
(S 28) | ||
Before her in the stillness of the world | ||
Once more she heard the treading of a god, | ||
And out of the dumb darkness Satyavan, | ||
Her husband, grew into a luminous shade. | ||
(S 29) | ||
135 | Then a sound pealed through that dead monstrous realm: | |
Vast like the surge in a tired swimmer’s ears, | ||
Clamouring, a fatal iron-hearted roar, | ||
Death missioned to the night his lethal call. | ||
(S 30) | ||
“This is my silent dark immensity, | ||
140 | This is the home of everlasting Night, | |
This is the secrecy of Nothingness | ||
Entombing the vanity of life’s desires. | ||
(S 31) | ||
Hast thou beheld thy source, O transient heart, | ||
And known from what the dream thou art was made? | ||
(S 32) | ||
145 | In this stark sincerity of nude emptiness | |
Hopest thou still always to last and love?” | ||
(S 33) | ||
The Woman answered not. Her spirit refused | ||
The voice of Night that knew and Death that thought. | ||
(S 34) | ||
In her beginningless infinity | ||
150 | Through her soul’s reaches unconfined she gazed; | |
She saw the undying fountains of her life, | ||
She knew herself eternal without birth. | ||
(S 35) | ||
But still opposing her with endless night | ||
Death, the dire god, inflicted on her eyes | ||
155 | The immortal calm of his tremendous gaze: | |
“Although thou hast survived the unborn void | ||
Which never shall forgive, while Time endures, | ||
The primal violence that fashioned thought, | ||
Forcing the immobile vast to suffer and live, | ||
160 | This sorrowful victory only hast thou won | |
To live for a little without Satyavan. | ||
(S 36) | ||
What shall the ancient goddess give to thee | ||
Who helps thy heart-beats? Only she prolongs | ||
The nothing dreamed existence and delays | ||
165 | With the labour of living thy eternal sleep. | |
(S 37) | ||
A fragile miracle of thinking clay, | ||
Armed with illusions walks the child of Time. | ||
(S 38) | ||
To fill the void around he feels and dreads, | ||
The void he came from and to which he goes, | ||
170 | He magnifies his self and names it God. | |
(S 39) | ||
He calls the heavens to help his suffering hopes. | ||
(S 40) | ||
He sees above him with a longing heart | ||
Bare spaces more unconscious than himself | ||
That have not even his privilege of mind, | ||
175 | And empty of all but their unreal blue, | |
And peoples them with bright and merciful powers. | ||
(S 41) | ||
For the sea roars around him and earth quakes | ||
Beneath his steps, and fire is at his doors, | ||
And death prowls baying through the woods of life. | ||
(S 42) | ||
180 | Moved by the Presences with which he yearns, | |
He offers in implacable shrines his soul | ||
And clothes all with the beauty of his dreams. | ||
(S 43) | ||
The gods who watch the earth with sleepless eyes | ||
And guide its giant stumblings through the void, | ||
185 | Have given to man the burden of his mind; | |
In his unwilling heart they have lit their fires | ||
And sown in it incurable unrest. | ||
(S 44) | ||
His mind is a hunter upon tracks unknown; | ||
Amusing Time with vain discovery, | ||
190 | He deepens with thought the mystery of his fate | ❊ |
And turns to song his laughter and his tears. | ||
(S 45) | ||
His mortality vexing with the immortal’s dreams, | ||
Troubling his transience with the infinite’s breath, | ||
They gave him hungers which no food can fill; | ||
195 | He is the cattle of the shepherd gods. | |
(S 46) | ||
His body the tether with which he is tied, | ||
They cast for fodder grief and hope and joy: | ||
His pasture ground they have fenced with Ignorance. | ||
(S 47) | ||
Into his fragile undefended breast | ||
200 | They have breathed a courage that is met by death, | |
They have given a wisdom that is mocked by night, | ||
They have traced a journey that foresees no goal. | ||
(S 48) | ||
Aimless man toils in an uncertain world, | ||
Lulled by inconstant pauses of his pain, | ||
205 | Scourged like a beast by the infinite desire, | |
Bound to the chariot of the dreadful gods. | ||
(S 49) | ||
But if thou still canst hope and still wouldst love, | ||
Return to thy body’s shell, thy tie to earth, | ||
And with thy heart’s little remnants try to live. | ||
(S 50) | ||
210 | Hope not to win back to thee Satyavan. | |
(S 51) | ||
Yet since thy strength deserves no trivial crown, | ||
Gifts I can give to soothe thy wounded life. | ||
(S 52) | ||
The pacts which transient beings make with fate, | ||
And the wayside sweetness earth-bound hearts would pluck, | ||
215 | These if thy will accepts make freely thine. | |
(S 53) | ||
Choose a life’s hopes for thy deceiving prize.” | ||
(S 54) | ||
As ceased the ruthless and tremendous Voice, | ||
Unendingly there rose in Savitri, | ||
Like moonlit ridges on a shuddering flood, | ||
220 | A stir of thoughts out of some silence born | |
Across the sea of her dumb fathomless heart. | ||
(S 55) | ||
At last she spoke; her voice was heard by Night: | ||
“I bow not to thee, O huge mask of death, | ||
Black lie of night to the cowed soul of man, | ||
225 | Unreal, inescapable end of things, | |
Thou grim jest played with the immortal spirit. | ||
(S 56) | ||
Conscious of immortality I walk. | ||
(S 57) | ||
A victor spirit conscious of my force, | ||
Not as a suppliant to thy gates I came: | ||
230 | Unslain I have survived the clutch of Night. | |
(S 58) | ||
My first strong grief moves not my seated mind; | ||
My unwept tears have turned to pearls of strength: | ||
I have transformed my ill-shaped brittle clay | ||
Into the hardness of a statued soul. | ||
(S 59) | ||
235 | Now in the wrestling of the splendid gods | |
My spirit shall be obstinate and strong | ||
Against the vast refusal of the world. | ||
(S 60) | ||
I stoop not with the subject mob of minds | ||
Who run to glean with eager satisfied hands | ||
240 | And pick from its mire mid many trampling feet | |
Its scornful small concessions to the weak. | ||
(S 61) | ||
Mine is the labour of the battling gods: | ||
Imposing on the slow reluctant years | ||
The flaming will that reigns beyond the stars, | ||
245 | They lay the law of Mind on Matter’s works | |
And win the soul’s wish from earth’s inconscient Force. | ||
(S 62) | ||
First I demand whatever Satyavan, | ||
My husband, waking in the forest’s charm | ||
Out of his long pure childhood’s lonely dreams, | ||
250 | Desired and had not for his beautiful life. | |
(S 63) | ||
Give, if thou must, or, if thou canst, refuse.” | ||
(S 64) | ||
Death bowed his head in scornful cold assent, | ||
The builder of this dreamlike earth for man | ||
Who has mocked with vanity all gifts he gave. | ||
(S 65) | ||
255 | Uplifting his disastrous voice he spoke: | |
“Indulgent to the dreams my touch shall break, | ||
I yield to his blind father’s longing heart | ||
Kingdom and power and friends and greatness lost | ||
And royal trappings for his peaceful age, | ||
260 | The pallid pomps of man’s declining days, | |
The silvered decadent glories of life’s fall. | ||
(S 66) | ||
To one who wiser grew by adverse Fate, | ||
Goods I restore the deluded soul prefers | ||
To impersonal nothingness’s bare sublime. | ||
(S 67) | ||
265 | The sensuous solace of the light I give | |
To eyes which could have found a larger realm, | ||
A deeper vision in their fathomless night. | ||
(S 68) | ||
For that this man desired and asked in vain | ||
While still he lived on earth and cherished hope. | ||
(S 69) | ||
270 | Back from the grandeur of my perilous realms | |
Go, mortal, to thy small permitted sphere! | ||
(S 70) | ||
Hasten swift-footed, lest to slay thy life | ||
The great laws thou hast violated, moved, | ||
Open at last on thee their marble eyes.” | ||
(S 71) | ||
275 | But Savitri answered the disdainful Shade: | |
“World-spirit, I was thy equal spirit born. | ||
(S 72) | ||
My will too is a law, my strength a god. | ||
(S 73) | ||
I am immortal in my mortality. | ||
(S 74) | ||
I tremble not before the immobile gaze | ||
280 | Of the unchanging marble hierarchies | |
That look with the stone eyes of Law and Fate. | ||
(S 75) | ||
My soul can meet them with its living fire. | ||
(S 76) | ||
Out of thy shadow give me back again | ||
Into earth’s flowering spaces Satyavan | ||
285 | In the sweet transiency of human limbs | |
To do with him my spirit’s burning will. | ||
(S 77) | ||
I will bear with him the ancient Mother’s load, | ||
I will follow with him earth’s path that leads to God. | ||
(S 78) | ||
Else shall the eternal spaces open to me, | ||
290 | While round us strange horizons far recede, | |
Travelling together the immense unknown. | ||
(S 79) | ||
For I who have trod with him the tracts of Time, | ||
Can meet behind his steps whatever night | ||
Or unimaginable stupendous dawn | ||
295 | Breaks on our spirits in the untrod Beyond. | |
(S 80) | ||
Wherever thou leadst his soul I shall pursue.” | ||
(S 81) | ||
But to her claim opposed, implacable, | ||
Insisting on the immutable Decree, | ||
Insisting on the immitigable Law | ||
300 | And the insignificance of created things, | |
Out of the rolling wastes of night there came | ||
Born from the enigma of the unknowable depths | ||
A voice of majesty and appalling scorn. | ||
(S 82) | ||
As when the storm-haired Titan-striding sea | ||
305 | Throws on a swimmer its tremendous laugh | |
Remembering all the joy its waves have drowned, | ||
So from the darkness of the sovereign night | ||
Against the Woman’s boundless heart arose | ||
The almighty cry of universal Death. | ||
(S 83) | ||
310 | “Hast thou god-wings or feet that tread my stars, | |
Frail creature with the courage that aspires, | ||
Forgetting thy bounds of thought, thy mortal role? | ||
(S 84) | ||
Their orbs were coiled before thy soul was formed. | ||
(S 85) | ||
I, Death, created them out of my void; | ||
315 | All things I have built in them and I destroy. | |
(S 86) | ||
I made the worlds my net, each joy a mesh. | ||
(S 87) | ||
A Hunger amorous of its suffering prey, | ||
Life that devours, my image see in things. | ||
(S 88) | ||
Mortal, whose spirit is my wandering breath, | ||
320 | Whose transience was imagined by my smile, | |
Flee clutching thy poor gains to thy trembling breast | ||
Pierced by my pangs Time shall not soon appease. | ||
(S 89) | ||
Blind slave of my deaf force whom I compel | ||
To sin that I may punish, to desire | ||
325 | That I may scourge thee with despair and grief | |
And thou come bleeding to me at the last, | ||
Thy nothingness recognised, my greatness known, | ||
Turn nor attempt forbidden happy fields | ||
Meant for the souls that can obey my law, | ||
330 | Lest in their sombre shrines thy tread awake | |
From their uneasy iron-hearted sleep | ||
The Furies who avenge fulfilled desire. | ||
(S 90) | ||
Dread lest in skies where passion hoped to live, | ||
The Unknown’s lightnings start and, terrified, | ||
335 | Lone, sobbing, hunted by the hounds of heaven, | |
A wounded and forsaken soul thou flee | ||
Through the long torture of the centuries, | ||
Nor many lives exhaust the tireless Wrath | ||
Hell cannot slake nor Heaven’s mercy assuage. | ||
(S 91) | ||
340 | I will take from thee the black eternal grip: | |
Clasping in thy heart thy fate’s exiguous dole | ||
Depart in peace, if peace for man is just.” | ||
(S 92) | ||
But Savitri answered meeting scorn with scorn, | ||
The mortal woman to the dreadful Lord: | ||
345 | “Who is this God imagined by thy night, | |
Contemptuously creating worlds disdained, | ||
Who made for vanity the brilliant stars? | ||
(S 93) | ||
Not he who has reared his temple in my thoughts | ||
And made his sacred floor my human heart. | ||
(S 94) | ||
350 | My God is will and triumphs in his paths, | |
My God is love and sweetly suffers all. | ||
(S 95) | ||
To him I have offered hope for sacrifice | ||
And gave my longings as a sacrament. | ||
(S 96) | ||
Who shall prohibit or hedge in his course, | ||
355 | The wonderful, the charioteer, the swift? | |
(S 97) | ||
A traveller of the million roads of life, | ||
His steps familiar with the lights of heaven | ||
Tread without pain the sword-paved courts of hell; | ||
There he descends to edge eternal joy. | ||
(S 98) | ||
360 | Love’s golden wings have power to fan thy void: | |
The eyes of love gaze starlike through death’s night, | ||
The feet of love tread naked hardest worlds. | ||
(S 99) | ||
He labours in the depths, exults on the heights; | ||
He shall remake thy universe, O Death.” | ||
(S 100) | ||
365 | She spoke and for a while no voice replied, | |
While still they travelled through the trackless night | ||
And still that gleam was like a pallid eye | ||
Troubling the darkness with its doubtful gaze. | ||
(S 101) | ||
Then once more came a deep and perilous pause | ||
370 | In that unreal journey through blind Nought; | |
Once more a Thought, a Word in the void arose | ||
And Death made answer to the human soul: | ||
“What is thy hope? to what dost thou aspire? | ||
(S 102) | ||
This is thy body’s sweetest lure of bliss, | ||
375 | Assailed by pain, a frail precarious form, | |
To please for a few years thy faltering sense | ||
With honey of physical longings and the heart’s fire | ||
And, a vain oneness seeking, to embrace | ||
The brilliant idol of a fugitive hour. | ||
(S 103) | ||
380 | And thou, what art thou, soul, thou glorious dream | |
Of brief emotions made and glittering thoughts, | ||
A thin dance of fireflies speeding through the night, | ||
A sparkling ferment in life’s sunlit mire? | ||
(S 104) | ||
Wilt thou claim immortality, O heart, | ||
385 | Crying against the eternal witnesses | |
That thou and he are endless powers and last? | ||
(S 105) | ||
Death only lasts and the inconscient Void. | ||
(S 106) | ||
I only am eternal and endure. | ||
(S 107) | ||
I am the shapeless formidable Vast, | ||
390 | I am the emptiness that men call Space, | |
I am a timeless Nothingness carrying all, | ||
I am the Illimitable, the mute Alone. | ||
(S 108) | ||
I, Death, am He; there is no other God. | ||
(S 109) | ||
All from my depths are born, they live by death; | ||
395 | All to my depths return and are no more. | |
(S 110) | ||
I have made a world by my inconscient Force. | ||
(S 111) | ||
My Force is Nature that creates and slays | ||
The hearts that hope, the limbs that long to live. | ||
(S 112) | ||
I have made man her instrument and slave, | ||
400 | His body I made my banquet, his life my food. | |
(S 113) | ||
Man has no other help but only Death; | ||
He comes to me at his end for rest and peace. | ||
(S 114) | ||
I, Death, am the one refuge of thy soul. | ||
(S 115) | ||
The Gods to whom man prays can help not man; | ||
405 | They are my imaginations and my moods | |
Reflected in him by illusion’s power. | ||
(S 116) | ||
That which thou seest as thy immortal self | ||
Is a shadowy icon of my infinite, | ||
Is Death in thee dreaming of eternity. | ||
(S 117) | ||
410 | I am the Immobile in which all things move, | |
I am the nude Inane in which they cease: | ||
I have no body and no tongue to speak, | ||
I commune not with human eye and ear; | ||
Only thy thought gave a figure to my void. | ||
(S 118) | ||
415 | Because, O aspirant to divinity, | |
Thou calledst me to wrestle with thy soul, | ||
I have assumed a face, a form, a voice. | ||
(S 119) | ||
But if there were a Being witnessing all, | ||
How should he help thy passionate desire? | ||
(S 120) | ||
420 | Aloof he watches sole and absolute, | |
Indifferent to thy cry in nameless calm. | ||
(S 121) | ||
His being is pure, unwounded, motionless, one. | ||
(S 122) | ||
One endless watches the inconscient scene | ||
Where all things perish, as the foam the stars. | ||
(S 123) | ||
425 | The One lives for ever. There no Satyavan | |
Changing was born and there no Savitri | ||
Claims from brief life her bribe of joy. There love | ||
Came never with his fretful eyes of tears, | ||
Nor Time is there nor the vain vasts of Space. | ||
(S 124) | ||
430 | It wears no living face, it has no name, | |
No gaze, no heart that throbs; it asks no second | ||
To aid its being or to share its joys. | ||
(S 125) | ||
It is delight immortally alone. | ||
(S 126) | ||
If thou desirest immortality, | ||
435 | Be then alone sufficient to thy soul: | |
Live in thyself; forget the man thou lov’st. | ||
(S 127) | ||
My last grand death shall rescue thee from life; | ||
Then shalt thou rise into thy unmoved source.” | ||
(S 128) | ||
But Savitri replied to the dread Voice: | ||
440 | “O Death, who reasonest, I reason not, | |
Reason that scans and breaks, but cannot build | ||
Or builds in vain because she doubts her work. | ||
(S 129) | ||
I am, I love, I see, I act, I will.” | ||
(S 130) | ||
Death answered her, one deep surrounding cry: | ||
445 | “Know also. Knowing, thou shalt cease to love | |
And cease to will, delivered from thy heart. | ||
(S 131) | ||
So shalt thou rest for ever and be still, | ||
Consenting to the impermanence of things.” | ||
(S 132) | ||
But Savitri replied for man to Death: | ||
450 | “When I have loved for ever, I shall know. | |
(S 133) | ||
Love in me knows the truth all changings mask. | ||
(S 134) | ||
I know that knowledge is a vast embrace: | ||
I know that every being is myself, | ||
In every heart is hidden the myriad One. | ||
(S 135) | ||
455 | I know the calm Transcendent bears the world, | |
The veiled Inhabitant, the silent Lord: | ||
I feel his secret act, his intimate fire; | ||
I hear the murmur of the cosmic Voice. | ||
(S 136) | ||
I know my coming was a wave from God. | ||
(S 137) | ||
460 | For all his suns were conscient in my birth, | |
And one who loves in us came veiled by death. | ||
(S 138) | ||
Then was man born among the monstrous stars | ||
Dowered with a mind and heart to conquer thee.” | ||
(S 139) | ||
In the eternity of his ruthless will | ||
465 | Sure of his empire and his armoured might, | |
Like one disdaining violent helpless words | ||
From victim lips Death answered not again. | ||
(S 140) | ||
He stood in silence and in darkness wrapped, | ||
A figure motionless, a shadow vague, | ||
470 | Girt with the terrors of his secret sword. | |
(S 141) | ||
Half-seen in clouds appeared a sombre face; | ||
Night’s dusk tiara was his matted hair, | ||
The ashes of the pyre his forehead’s sign. | ||
(S 142) | ||
Once more a wanderer in the unending Night, | ||
475 | Blindly forbidden by dead vacant eyes, | |
She travelled through the dumb unhoping vasts. | ||
(S 143) | ||
Around her rolled the shuddering waste of gloom, | ||
Its swallowing emptiness and joyless death | ||
Resentful of her thought and life and love. | ||
(S 144) | ||
480 | Through the long fading night by her compelled, | |
Gliding half-seen on their unearthly path, | ||
Phantasmal in the dimness moved the three. |
Book 9, Canto 2 – The Journey in Eternal Night and the Voice of the Darkness, Section 1Savitri Bhavan2019-08-19T09:03:51+00:00