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Savitri
by Sri Aurobindo
Part Two
Book Four - The Book of Birth and Quest
Canto Four
The Quest
The world-ways opened before Savitri. At first a strangeness of
new brilliant scenes Peopled her mind and kept her body's gaze. But as
she moved across the changing earth A deeper consciousness welled up in
her: A citizen of many scenes and climes, Each soil and country it had
made its home; It took all clans and peoples for her own, Till the whole
destiny of mankind was hers. These unfamiliar spaces on her way Were
known and neighbours to a sense within, Landscapes recurred like lost
forgotten fields, Cities and rivers and plains her vision claimed Like
slow-recurring memories in front, The stars at night were her past's
brilliant friends, The winds murmured to her of ancient things And she
met nameless comrades loved by her once. All was a part of old forgotten
selves: Vaguely or with a flash of sudden hints Her acts recalled a line
of bygone power, Even her motion's purpose was not new: Traveller to a
prefigured high event, She seemed to her remembering witness soul To
trace again a journey often made. A guidance turned the dumb revolving
wheels And in the eager body of their speed The dim-masked hooded
godheads rode who move Assigned to man immutably from his
birth, Receivers of the inner and outer law, At once the agents of his
spirit's will And witnesses and executors of his fate. Inexorably
faithful to their task, They hold his nature's sequence in their
guard Carrying the unbroken thread old lives have spun. Attendants on his
destiny's measured walk Leading to joys he has won and pains he has
called, Even in his casual steps they intervene. Nothing we think or do
is void or vain; Each is an energy loosed and holds its course. The
shadowy keepers of our deathless past Have made our fate the child of our
own acts, And from the furrows laboured by our will We reap the fruit of
our forgotten deeds. But since unseen the tree that bore this fruit And
we live in a present born from an unknown past, They seem but parts of a
mechanic Force To a mechanic mind tied by earth's laws; Yet are they
instruments of a Will supreme, Watched by a still all-seeing Eye above. A
prescient architect of Fate and Chance Who builds our lives on a foreseen
design The meaning knows and consequence of each step And watches the
inferior stumbling powers. Upon her silent heights she was aware Of a
calm Presence throned above her brows Who saw the goal and chose each
fateful curve; It used the body for its pedestal; The eyes that wandered
were its searchlight fires, The hands that held the reins its living
tools; All was the working of an ancient plan, A way proposed by an
unerring Guide. Across wide noons and glowing afternoons, She met with
Nature and with human forms And listened to the voices of the
world; Driven from within she followed her long road, Mute in the
luminous cavern of her heart, Like a bright cloud through the resplendent
day. At first her path ran far through peopled tracts: Admitted to the
lion eye of States And theatres of the loud act of man, Her carven
chariot with its fretted wheels Threaded through clamorous marts and
sentinel towers Past figured gates and high dream-sculptured fronts And
gardens hung in the sapphire of the skies, Pillared assembly halls with
armoured guards, Small fanes where one calm Image watched man's life And
temples hewn as if by exiled gods To imitate their lost eternity. Often
from gilded dusk to argent dawn, Where jewel-lamps flickered on frescoed
walls And the stone lattice stared at moonlit boughs, Half-conscious of
the tardy listening night Dimly she glided between banks of sleep At rest
in the slumbering palaces of kings. Hamlet and village saw the fate-wain
pass, Homes of a life bent to the soil it ploughs For sustenance of its
short and passing days That, transient, keep their old repeated
course, Unchanging in the circle of a sky Which alters not above our
mortal toil. Away from this thinking creature's burdened hours To free
and griefless spaces now she turned Not yet perturbed by human joys and
fears. Here was the childhood of primaeval earth, Here timeless musings
large and glad and still, Men had forborne as yet to fill with
cares, Imperial acres of the eternal sower And wind-stirred grass-lands
winking in the sun: Or mid green musing of woods and rough-browed
hills, In the grove's murmurous bee-air humming wild Or past the long
lapsing voice of silver floods Like a swift hope journeying among its
dreams Hastened the chariot of the golden bride. Out of the world's
immense unhuman past Tract-memories and ageless remnants came, Domains of
light enfeoffed to antique calm Listened to the unaccustomed sound of
hooves And large immune entangled silences Absorbed her into emerald
secrecy And slow hushed wizard nets of fiery bloom Environed with their
coloured snare her wheels. The strong importunate feet of Time fell
soft Along these lonely ways, his titan pace Forgotten and his stark and
ruinous rounds. The inner ear that listens to solitude, Leaning self-rapt
unboundedly could hear The rhythm of the intenser wordless Thought That
gathers in the silence behind life, And the low sweet inarticulate voice of
earth In the great passion of her sun-kissed trance Ascended with its
yearning undertone. Afar from the brute noise of clamorous needs The
quieted all-seeking mind could feel, At rest from its blind outwardness of
will, The unwearied clasp of her mute patient love And know for a soul
the mother of our forms. This spirit stumbling in the fields of
sense, This creature bruised in the mortar of the days Could find in her
broad spaces of release. Not yet was a world all occupied by care. The
bosom of our mother kept for us still Her austere regions and her musing
depths, Her impersonal reaches lonely and inspired And the mightinesses
of her rapture haunts. Muse-lipped she nursed her symbol mysteries And
guarded for her pure-eyed sacraments The valley clefts between her breasts
of joy, Her mountain altars for the fires of dawn And nuptial beaches
where the ocean couched And the huge chanting of her prophet
woods. Fields had she of her solitary mirth, Plains hushed and happy in
the embrace of light, Alone with the cry of birds and hue of flowers, And
wildernesses of wonder lit by her moons And grey seer-evenings kindling with
the stars And dim movement in the night's infinitude. August, exulting in
her Maker's eye, She felt her nearness to him in earth's
breast, Conversed still with a Light behind the veil, Still communed with
Eternity beyond. A few and fit inhabitants she called To share the glad
communion of her peace; The breadth, the summit were their natural
home. The strong king-sages from their labour done, Freed from the
warrior tension of their task, Came to her serene sessions in these
wilds; The strife was over, the respite lay in front. Happy they lived
with birds and beasts and flowers And sunlight and the rustle of the
leaves, And heard the wild winds wandering in the night, Mused with the
stars in their mute constant ranks, And lodged in the mornings as in azure
tents, And with the glory of the noons were one. Some deeper plunged;
from life's external clasp Beckoned into a fiery privacy In the soul's
unprofaned star-white recess They sojourned with an everliving Bliss; A
Voice profound in the ecstasy and the hush They heard, beheld an
all-revealing Light. All time-made difference they overcame; The world
was fibred with their own heart-strings; Close drawn to the heart that beats
in every breast, They reached the one self in all through boundless
love. Attuned to Silence and to the world-rhyme, They loosened the knot
of the imprisoning mind; Achieved was the wide untroubled witness
gaze, Unsealed was Nature's great spiritual eye; To the height of heights
rose now their daily climb: Truth leaned to them from her supernal
realm; Above them blazed eternity's mystic suns. Nameless the austere
ascetics without home Abandoning speech and motion and desire Aloof from
creatures sat absorbed, alone, Immaculate in tranquil heights of self On
concentration's luminous voiceless peaks, World-naked hermits with their
matted hair Immobile as the passionless great hills Around them grouped
like thoughts of some vast mood Awaiting the Infinite's behest to
end. The seers attuned to the universal Will, Content in Him who smiles
behind earth's forms, Abode ungrieved by the insistent days. About them
like green trees girdling a hill Young grave disciples fashioned by their
touch, Trained to the simple act and conscious word, Greatened within and
grew to meet their heights. Far-wandering seekers on the Eternal's
path Brought to these quiet founts their spirit's thirst And spent the
treasure of a silent hour Bathed in the purity of the mild gaze That,
uninsistent, ruled them from its peace, And by its influence found the ways
of calm. The Infants of the monarchy of the worlds, The heroic leaders of
a coming time, King-children nurtured in that spacious air Like lions
gambolling in sky and sun Received half-consciously their godlike
stamp: Formed in the type of the high thoughts they sang They learned the
wide magnificence of mood That makes us comrades of the cosmic urge, No
longer chained to their small separate selves, Plastic and firm beneath the
eternal hand, Met Nature with a bold and friendly clasp And served in her
the Power that shapes her works. One-souled to all and free from narrowing
bonds, Large like a continent of warm sunshine In wide equality's
impartial joy, These sages breathed for God's delight in
things. Assisting the slow entries of the gods, Sowing in young minds
immortal thoughts they lived, Taught the great Truth to which man's race
must rise Or opened the gates of freedom to a few. Imparting to our
struggling world the Light They breathed like spirits from Time's dull yoke
released, Comrades and vessels of the cosmic Force, Using a natural
mastery like the sun's: Their speech, their silence was a help to
earth. A magic happiness flowed from their touch; Oneness was sovereign
in that sylvan peace, The wild beast joined in friendship with its
prey; Persuading the hatred and the strife to cease The love that flows
from the one Mother's breast Healed with their hearts the hard and wounded
world. Others escaped from the confines of thought To where Mind
motionless sleeps waiting Light's birth, And came back quivering with a
nameless Force, Drunk with a wine of lightning in their cells; Intuitive
knowledge leaping into speech, Seized, vibrant, kindling with the inspired
word, Hearing the subtle voice that clothes the heavens, Carrying the
splendour that has lit the suns, They sang Infinity's names and deathless
powers In metres that reflect the moving worlds, Sight's sound-waves
breaking from the soul's great deeps. Some lost to the person and his strip
of thought In a motionless ocean of impersonal Power, Sat mighty,
visioned with the Infinite's light, Or, comrades of the everlasting
Will, Surveyed the plan of past and future Time. Some winged like birds
out of the cosmic sea And vanished into a bright and featureless
Vast: Some silent watched the universal dance, Or helped the world by
world-indifference. Some watched no more merged in a lonely
Self, Absorbed in the trance from which no soul returns, All the occult
world-lines for ever closed, The chains of birth and person cast
away: Some uncompanioned reached the Ineffable.
As floats a sunbeam
through a shady place, The golden virgin in her carven car Came gliding
among meditation's seats. Often in twilight mid returning troops Of
cattle thickening with their dust the shades When the loud day had slipped
below the verge, Arriving in a peaceful hermit grove She rested drawing
round her like a cloak Its spirit of patient muse and potent prayer. Or
near to a lion river's tawny mane And trees that worshipped on a praying
shore, A domed and templed air's serene repose Beckoned to her hurrying
wheels to stay their speed. In the solemnity of a space that seemed A
mind remembering ancient silences, Where to the heart great bygone voices
called And the large liberty of brooding seers Had left the long impress
of their soul's scene, Awake in candid dawn or darkness mooned, To the
still touch inclined the daughter of Flame Drank in hushed splendour between
tranquil lids And felt the kinship of eternal calm. But morn broke in
reminding her of her quest And from low rustic couch or mat she rose And
went impelled on her unfinished way And followed the fateful orbit of her
life Like a desire that questions silent gods Then passes starlike to
some bright Beyond. Thence to great solitary tracts she came, Where man
was a passer-by towards human scenes Or sole in Nature's vastness strove to
live And called for help to ensouled invisible Powers, Overwhelmed by the
immensity of his world And unaware of his own infinity. The earth
multiplied to her a changing brow And called her with a far and nameless
voice. The mountains in their anchorite solitude, The forests with their
multitudinous chant Disclosed to her the masked divinity's doors. On
dreaming plains, an indolent expanse, The death-bed of a pale enchanted
eve Under the glamour of a sunken sky, Impassive she lay as at an age's
end, Or crossed an eager pack of huddled hills Lifting their heads to
hunt a lairlike sky, Or travelled in a strange and empty land Where
desolate summits camped in a weird heaven, Mute sentinels beneath a drifting
moon, Or wandered in some lone tremendous wood Ringing for ever with the
crickets' cry Or followed a long glistening serpent road Through fields
and pastures lapped in moveless light Or reached the wild beauty of a desert
space Where never plough was driven nor herd had grazed And slumbered
upon stripped and thirsty sands Amid the savage wild-beast night's
appeal. Still unaccomplished was the fateful quest; Still she found not
the one predestined face For which she sought amid the sons of men. A
grandiose silence wrapped the regal day: The months had fed the passion of
the sun And now his burning breath assailed the soil. The tiger heats
prowled through the fainting earth; All was licked up as by a lolling
tongue. The spring winds failed; the sky was set like bronze.
End of Canto Four
End of Book Four
in "Savitri" - SABCL Volume 29
- (pages 377-386)
published by Sri
Aurobindo Ashram - Pondicherry
diffusion by SABDA
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