(S 1) | ||
Then with a smile august as noonday heavens | ||
The godhead of the vision wonderful: | ||
“How shall earth-nature and man’s nature rise | ||
610 | To the celestial levels, yet earth abide? | |
(S 2) | ||
Heaven and earth towards each other gaze | ||
Across a gulf that few can cross, none touch, | ||
Arriving through a vague ethereal mist | ||
Out of which all things form that move in space, | ||
615 | The shore that all can see but never reach. | |
(S 3) | ||
Heaven’s light visits sometimes the mind of earth; | ||
Its thoughts burn in her sky like lonely stars; | ||
In her heart there move celestial seekings soft | ||
And beautiful like fluttering wings of birds, | ||
620 | Visions of joy that she can never win | |
Traverse the fading mirror of her dreams. | ||
(S 4) | ||
Faint seeds of light and bliss bear sorrowful flowers, | ||
Faint harmonies caught from a half-heard song | ||
Fall swooning mid the wandering voices’ jar, | ||
625 | Foam from the tossing luminous seas where dwells | |
The beautiful and far delight of gods, | ||
Raptures unknown, a miracled happiness | ||
Thrill her and pass half-shaped to mind and sense. | ||
(S 5) | ||
Above her little finite steps she feels, | ||
630 | Careless of knot or pause, worlds which weave out | |
A strange perfection beyond law and rule, | ||
A universe of self-found felicity, | ||
An inexpressible rhythm of timeless beats, | ||
The many-movemented heart-beats of the One, | ||
635 | Magic of the boundless harmonies of self, | |
Order of the freedom of the infinite, | ||
The wonder-plastics of the Absolute. | ||
(S 6) | ||
There is the All-Truth and there the timeless bliss. | EoS | |
(S 7) | ||
But hers are fragments of a star-lost gleam, | ||
640 | Hers are but careless visits of the gods. | |
(S 8) | ||
They are a Light that fails, a Word soon hushed | ||
And nothing they mean can stay for long on earth. | ||
(S 9) | ||
There are high glimpses, not the lasting sight. | ||
(S 10) | ||
A few can climb to an unperishing sun, | EoS | |
645 | Or live on the edges of the mystic moon | |
And channel to earth-mind the wizard ray. | ||
(S 11) | ||
The heroes and the demigods are few | ||
To whom the close immortal voices speak | ||
And to their acts the heavenly clan are near. | ||
(S 12) | ||
650 | Few are the silences in which Truth is heard, | EoS |
Unveiling the timeless utterance in her deeps; | ||
Few are the splendid moments of the seers. | ||
(S 13) | ||
Heaven’s call is rare, rarer the heart that heeds; | ||
The doors of light are sealed to common mind | ||
655 | And earth’s needs nail to earth the human mass, | |
Only in an uplifting hour of stress | ||
Men answer to the touch of greater things: | ||
Or, raised by some strong hand to breathe heaven-air, | EoS | |
They slide back to the mud from which they climbed; | ||
660 | In the mud of which they are made, whose law they know | |
They joy in safe return to a friendly base, | ||
And, though something in them weeps for glory lost | ||
And greatness murdered, they accept their fall. | ||
(S 14) | ||
To be the common man they think the best, | ||
665 | To live as others live is their delight. | |
(S 15) | ||
For most are built on Nature’s early plan | ||
And owe small debt to a superior plane; | ||
The human average is their level pitch, | ||
A thinking animal’s material range. | ||
(S 16) | ||
670 | In the long ever-mounting hierarchy, | |
In the stark economy of cosmic life | ||
Each creature to its appointed task and place | ||
Is bound by his nature’s form, his spirit’s force. | ||
(S 17) | ||
If this were easily disturbed, it would break | ||
675 | The settled balance of created things; | |
The perpetual order of the universe | ||
Would tremble, and a gap yawn in woven Fate. | ||
(S 18) | ||
If men were not and all were brilliant gods, | ||
The mediating stair would then be lost | ||
680 | By which the spirit awake in Matter winds | |
Accepting the circuits of the middle Way, | ||
By heavy toil and slow aeonic steps | ||
Reaching the bright miraculous fringe of God, | ||
Into the glory of the Oversoul. | ||
(S 19) | ||
685 | My will, my call is there in men and things; | EoS |
But the Inconscient lies at the world’s grey back | ||
And draws to its breast of Night and Death and Sleep. | ||
(S 20) | ||
Imprisoned in its dark and dumb abyss | ||
A little consciousness it lets escape | ||
690 | But jealous of the growing light holds back | |
Close to the obscure edges of its cave | ||
As if a fond ignorant mother kept her child | ||
Tied to her apron strings of Nescience | ||
(S 21) | ||
The Inconscient could not read without man’s mind | EoS | |
695 | The mystery of the world its sleep has made: | |
Man is its key to unlock a conscious door. | ||
(S 22) | ||
But still it holds him dangled in its grasp: | ||
It draws its giant circle round his thoughts, | ||
It shuts his heart to the supernal Light. | ||
(S 23) | ||
700 | A high and dazzling limit shines above, | |
A black and blinding border rules below: | ||
His mind is closed between two firmaments. | ||
(S 24) | ||
He seeks through words and images the Truth, | ||
And, poring on surfaces and brute outsides | ||
705 | Or dipping cautious feet in shallow seas, | |
Even his Knowledge is an Ignorance. | ||
(S 25) | ||
He is barred out from his own inner depths; | ||
He cannot look on the face of the Unknown. | ||
(S 26) | ||
How shall he see with the Omniscient’s eyes, | ||
710 | How shall he will with the Omnipotent’s force? | |
(S 27) | ||
O too compassionate and eager Dawn, | ||
Leave to the circling aeons’ tardy pace | ||
And to the working of the inconscient Will, | ||
Leave to its imperfect light the earthly race: | ||
715 | All shall be done by the long act of Time. | |
(S 28) | ||
Although the race is bound by its own kind, | EoS | |
The soul in man is greater than his fate: | ||
Above the wash and surge of Time and Space, | ||
Disengaging from the cosmic commonalty | ||
720 | By which all life is kin in grief and joy, | |
Delivered from the universal Law | ||
The sunlike single and transcendent spirit | ||
Can blaze its way through the mind’s barrier wall | ||
And burn alone in the eternal sky, | ||
725 | Inhabitant of a wide and endless calm. | |
(S 29) | ||
O flame, withdraw into thy luminous self. | ||
(S 30) | ||
Or else return to thy original might | ||
On a seer-summit above thought and world; | ||
Partner of my unhoured eternity, | ||
730 | Be one with the infinity of my power: | |
For thou art the World-Mother and the Bride. | ||
(S 31) | ||
Out of the fruitless yearning of earth’s life, | ||
Out of her feeble unconvincing dream, | ||
Recovering wings that cross infinity | ||
735 | Pass back into the Power from which thou cam’st. | |
(S 32) | ||
To that thou canst uplift thy formless flight, | ||
Thy heart can rise from its unsatisfied beats | ||
And feel the immortal and spiritual joy | ||
Of a soul that never lost felicity. | ||
(S 33) | ||
740 | Lift up the fallen heart of love which flutters | |
Cast down desire’s abyss into the gulfs. | ||
(S 34) | ||
For ever rescued out of Nature’s shapes | ||
Discover what the aimless cycles want, | ||
There intertwined with all thy life has meant, | ||
745 | Here vainly sought in a terrestrial form. | |
(S 35) | ||
Break into eternity thy mortal mould; | ||
Melt, lightning, into thy invisible flame! | ||
(S 36) | ||
Clasp, Ocean, deep into thyself thy wave, | ||
Happy for ever in the embosoming surge. | ||
(S 37) | ||
750 | Grow one with the still passion of the depths. | |
(S 38) | ||
Then shalt thou know the Lover and the Loved, | ||
Leaving the limits dividing him and thee. | ||
(S 39) | ||
Receive him into boundless Savitri, | ||
Lose thyself into infinite Satyavan. | ||
(S 40) | ||
755 | O miracle, where thou beganst, there cease!” | |
(S 41) | ||
But Savitri answered to the radiant God: | EoS | |
“In vain thou temptst with solitary bliss | ||
Two spirits saved out of a suffering world; | ||
My soul and his indissolubly linked | ||
760 | In the one task for which our lives were born, | |
To raise the world to God in deathless Light, | ||
To bring God down to the world on earth we came, | ||
To change the earthly life to life divine. | ||
(S 42) | ||
I keep my will to save the world and man; | ||
765 | Even the charm of thy alluring voice, | |
O blissful Godhead, cannot seize and snare. | ||
(S 43) | ||
I sacrifice not earth to happier worlds. | ||
(S 44) | ||
Because there dwelt the Eternal’s vast Idea | ||
And his dynamic will in men and things, | ||
770 | So only could the enormous scene begin. | |
(S 45) | ||
Whence came this profitless wilderness of stars, | EoS | |
This mighty barren wheeling of the suns? | ||
(S 46) | ||
Who made the soul of futile life in Time, | ||
Planted a purpose and a hope in the heart, | ||
775 | Set Nature to a huge and meaningless task | |
Or planned her million-aeoned effort’s waste? | ||
(S 47) | ||
What force condemned to birth and death and tearscondemned | ||
These conscious creatures crawling on the globe? | ||
(S 48) | ||
If earth can look up to the light of heaven | ||
780 | And hear an answer to her lonely cry, | |
Not vain their meeting, nor heaven’s touch a snare. | ||
(S 49) | ||
If thou and I are true, the world is true; | EoS | |
Although thou hide thyself behind thy works, | ||
To be is not a senseless paradox; | ||
785 | Since God has made earth, earth must make in her God; | |
What hides within her breast she must reveal. | ||
(S 50) | ||
I claim thee for the world that thou hast made. | EoS | |
(S 51) | ||
If man lives bound by his humanity, | ||
If he is tied for ever to his pain, | ||
790 | Let a greater being then arise from man, | |
The superhuman with the Eternal mate | ||
And the Immortal shine through earthly forms. | ||
(S 52) | ||
Else were creation vain and this great world | EoS | |
A nothing that in Time’s moments seems to be. | ||
(S 53) | ||
795 | But I have seen through the insentient mask; | |
I have felt a secret spirit stir in things | ||
Carrying the body of the growing God: | ||
It looks through veiling forms at veilless truth; | ||
It pushes back the curtain of the gods; | ||
800 | It climbs towards its own eternity.” | |
(S 54) | ||
But the god answered to the woman’s heart: | ||
“O living power of the incarnate Word, | ||
All that the Spirit has dreamed thou canst create: | ||
Thou art the force by which I made the worlds, | ||
805 | Thou art my vision and my will and voice. | |
(S 55) | ||
But knowledge too is thine, the world-plan thou knowest | ||
And the tardy process of the pace of Time. | ||
(S 56) | ||
In the impetuous drive of thy heart of flame, | EoS | |
In thy passion to deliver man and earth, | ||
810 | Indignant at the impediments of Time | |
And the slow evolution’s sluggard steps, | ||
Lead not the spirit in an ignorant world | ||
To dare too soon the adventure of the Light, | ||
Pushing the bound and slumbering god in man | ||
815 | Awakened mid the ineffable silences | |
Into endless vistas of the unknown and unseen, | ||
Across the last confines of the limiting Mind | ||
And the Superconscient’s perilous border line | ||
Into the danger of the Infinite. | ||
(S 57) | ||
820 | But if thou wilt not wait for Time and God, | EoS |
Do then thy work and force thy will on Fate. | ||
(S 58) | ||
As I have taken from thee my load of night | ||
And taken from thee my twilight’s doubts and dreams, | ||
So now I take my light of utter Day. | ||
(S 59) | ||
825 | These are my symbol kingdoms but not here | |
Can the great choice be made that fixes fate | ||
Or uttered the sanction of the Voice supreme. | ||
(S 60) | ||
Arise upon a ladder of greater worlds | EoS | |
To the infinity where no world can be. | ||
(S 61) | ||
830 | But not in the wide air where a greater Life | |
Uplifts its mystery and its miracle, | ||
And not on the luminous peaks of summit Mind, | ||
Or in the hold where subtle Matter’s spirit | ||
Hides in its light of shimmering secrecies, | ||
835 | Can there be heard the Eternal’s firm command | |
That joins the head of destiny to its base. | ||
(S 62) | ||
These only are the mediating links; | ||
Not theirs is the originating sight | ||
Nor the fulfilling act or last support | ||
840 | That bears perpetually the cosmic pile. | |
(S 63) | ||
Two are the Powers that hold the ends of Time; | EoS | |
Spirit foresees, Matter unfolds its thought, | ||
The dumb executor of God’s decrees, | ||
Omitting no iota and no dot, | ||
845 | Agent unquestioning, inconscient, stark, | |
Evolving inevitably a charged content, | ||
Intention of his force in Time and Space, | ||
In animate beings and inanimate things; | ||
Immutably it fulfils its ordered task, | ||
850 | It cancels not a tittle of things done; | |
Unswerving from the oracular command | ||
It alters not the steps of the Unseen. | ||
(S 64) | ||
If thou must indeed deliver man and earth | ||
On the spiritual heights look down on life, | ||
855 | Discover the truth of God and man and world; | |
Then do thy task knowing and seeing all. | ||
(S 65) | ||
Ascend O soul, into thy timeless self; | ||
Choose destiny’s curve and stamp thy will on Time.” | ||
(S 66) | ||
He ended and upon the falling sound | ||
860 | A power went forth that shook the founded spheres | |
And loosed the stakes that hold the tents of form. | ||
(S 67) | ||
Absolved from vision’s grip and the folds of thought, | ||
Rapt from her sense like disappearing scenes | ||
In the stupendous theatre of Space | ||
865 | The heaven-worlds vanished in spiritual light. | |
(S 68) | ||
A movement was abroad, a cry, a word, | ||
Beginningless in its vast discovery, | ||
Momentless in its unthinkable return: | ||
Choired in calm seas she heard the eternal Thought | ||
870 | Rhythming itself abroad unutterably | |
In spaceless orbits and on timeless roads. | ||
(S 69) | ||
In an ineffable world she lived fulfilled. | ||
(S 70) | ||
An energy of the triune Infinite, | ||
In a measureless Reality she dwelt, | ||
875 | A rapture and a being and a force, | |
A linked and myriad -motioned plenitude,, | ||
A virgin unity, a luminous spouse, | ||
Housing a multitudinous embrace | ||
To marry all in God’s immense delight, | ||
880 | Bearing the eternity of every spirit, | |
Bearing the burden of universal love, | ||
A wonderful mother of unnumbered souls. | ||
(S 71) | ||
All things she knew, all things imagined or willed: | ||
Her ear was opened to ideal sound, | ||
885 | Shape the convention bound no more her sight, | |
A thousand doors of oneness was her heart. | ||
(S 72) | ||
A crypt and sanctuary of brooding light | ||
Appeared, the last recess of things beyond. | ||
(S 73) | ||
Then in its rounds the enormous fiat paused, | ||
890 | Silence gave back to the Unknowable | |
All it had given. Still was her listening thought. | ||
(S 74) | ||
The form of things had ceased within her soul. | ||
(S 75) | ||
Invisible that perfect godhead now. | ||
(S 76) | ||
Around her some tremendous spirit lived, | ||
895 | Mysterious flame around a melting pearl, | |
And in the phantom of abolished Space | ||
There was a voice unheard by ears that cried: | ||
“Choose, spirit, thy supreme choice not given again; | ||
For now from my highest being looks at thee | ||
900 | The nameless formless peace where all things rest. | |
(S 77) | ||
In a happy vast sublime cessation know, — | ||
An immense extinction in eternity, | ||
A point that disappears in the infinite, — | ||
Felicity of the extinguished flame, | ||
905 | Last sinking of a wave in a boundless sea, | |
End of the trouble of thy wandering thoughts, | ||
Close of the journeying of thy pilgrim soul. | ||
(S 78) | ||
Accept, O music, weariness of thy notes, | ||
O stream, wide breaking of thy channel banks.” | ||
(S 79) | ||
910 | The moments fell into eternity. | |
(S 80) | ||
But someone yearned within a bosom unknown | ||
And silently the woman’s heart replied: | ||
“Thy peace, O Lord, a boon within to keep | ||
Amid the roar and ruin of wild Time | ||
915 | For the magnificent soul of man on earth. | |
(S 81) | ||
Thy calm, O Lord, that bears thy hands of joy.” | ||
(S 82) | ||
Limitless like ocean round a lonely isle | ||
A second time the eternal cry arose: | ||
“Wide open are the ineffable gates in front. | ||
(S 83) | ||
920 | My spirit leans down to break the knot of earth, | |
Amorous of oneness without thought or sign | ||
To cast down wall and fence, to strip heaven bare, | ||
See with the large eye of infinity, | ||
Unweave the stars and into silence pass.” | ||
(S 84) | ||
925 | In an immense and world-destroying pause | EoS |
She heard a million creatures cry to her. | ||
(S 85) | ||
Through the tremendous stillness of her thoughts | ||
Immeasurably the woman’s nature spoke: | ||
“Thy oneness, Lord, in many approaching hearts, | ||
930 | My sweet infinity of thy numberless souls.” | |
(S 86) | ||
Mightily retreating like a sea in ebb | ||
A third time swelled the great admonishing call: | ||
“I spread abroad the refuge of my wings. | ||
(S 87) | ||
Out of its incommunicable deeps | ||
935 | My power looks forth of mightiest splendour, stilled | |
Into its majesty of sleep, withdrawn | ||
Above the dreadful whirlings of the world.” | ||
(S 88) | ||
A sob of things was answer to the voice, | ||
And passionately the woman’s heart replied: | ||
940 | “Thy energy, Lord, to seize on woman and man, | |
To take all things and creatures in their grief | ||
And gather them into a mother’s arms.” | ||
(S 89) | ||
Solemn and distant like a seraph’s lyre | ||
A last great time the warning sound was heard: | ||
945 | “I open the wide eye of solitude | |
To uncover the voiceless rapture of my bliss, | ||
Where in a pure and exquisite hush it lies | ||
Motionless in its slumber of ecstasy, | ||
Resting from the sweet madness of the dance | ||
950 | Out of whose beat the throb of hearts was born.” | |
(S 90) | ||
Breaking the Silence with appeal and cry | ||
A hymn of adoration tireless climbed, | ||
A music beat of winged uniting souls, | ||
Then all the woman yearningly replied: | ||
955 | “Thy embrace which rends the living knot of pain, | |
Thy joy, O Lord, in which all creatures breathe, | ||
Thy magic flowing waters of deep love, | ||
Thy sweetness give to me for earth and men.” |
Book 11, Canto 1 – The Eternal Day: The Soul’s Choice and the Supreme Consummation, Section 4Savitri Bhavan2021-05-15T05:32:33+00:00