Canto One
The Destined
Meeting-Place
But
now the destined spot and hour were close;
Unknowing
she had neared her nameless goal.
For
though a dress of blind and devious chance
Is
laid upon the work of all-wise Fate,
Our
acts interpret an omniscient Force
That
dwells in the compelling stuff of things,
And
nothing happens in the cosmic play
But
at its time and in its foreseen place.
To a
space she came of soft and delicate air
That
seemed a sanctuary of youth and joy,
A
highland world of free and green delight
Where
spring and summer lay together and strove
In
indolent and amicable debate,
Inarmed, disputing with laughter
who should rule.
There
expectation beat wide sudden wings,
As
if a soul had looked out from earth's face
And
all that was in her felt a coming change
And
forgetting obvious joys and common dreams,
Obedient
to Time's call and the spirit's fate,
Were
lifted to a beauty calm and pure
That
lived under the eyes of Eternity.
A
crowd of mountainous heads assailed the sky
Pushing
towards rival shoulders nearer heaven,
The armoured leaders of an iron
line;
Earth
prostrate lay beneath their feet of stone.
Below
there crouched a dream of emerald woods
And
gleaming borders solitary as sleep:
Pale
waters ran like glimmering threads of pearl.
A
sigh was straying among happy leaves;
Cool-perfumed
with slow pleasure-burdened feet
Faint
stumbling breezes faltered among flowers.
Page – 389
The
white crane stood, a vivid motionless streak,
Peacock
and parrot jewelled soil
and tree,
The
dove's soft moan enriched the enamoured
air
And
fire-winged wild-drakes swam in silvery pools.
Earth
couched alone with her great lover Heaven,
Uncovered
to her consort's purple eye.
In
her luxurious ecstasy of joy
She
squandered the love-music of her notes,
Wasted
the passionate pattern of her blooms
And
festival riot of her scents and hues.
A
cry and leap and hurry ware around,
The
stealthy footfalls of her chasing things,
The
shaggy emerald of her centaur mane,
The
gold and sapphire of her warmth and blaze.
Magician
of her rapt felicities,
Blithe,
sensuous-hearted, careless and divine,
Life
ran or hid in her delightful rooms;
Behind
all brooded Nature's grandiose calm.
Primeval peace was there and in
its bosom
Held
undisturbed the strife of bird and beast.
Man,
the deep-browed artificer, had not come
To
lay his hand on happy inconscient things,
Thought
was not there nor the measurer, strong-eyed toil,
Life
had not learned its discord with its aim.
The
mighty Mother lay outstretched at ease.
All
was in line with her first satisfied plan;
Moved
by a universal will of joy
The
trees bloomed in their green felicity
And
the wild children brooded not on pain.
At
the end reclined a stern and giant tract
Of
tangled depths and solemn questioning hills
And
peaks like a bare austerity of the soul,
Armoured, remote and desolately
grand
Like
the thought-screened infinities that lie
Behind
the rapt smile of the Almighty's dance.
A
matted forest-head invaded heaven
Page – 390
As
if a blue-throated ascetic peered
From
the stone fastness of his mountain cell
Regarding
the brief gladness of the days;
His
vast extended spirit couched behind.
A
mighty murmur of immense retreat
Besieged
the ear, a sad and limitless call
As
of a soul retiring from the world.
This
was the scene which the ambiguous Mother
Had
chosen for her brief felicitous hour;
Here
in this solitude far from the world
Her
part she began in the world's joy and strife.
Here
were disclosed to her the mystic courts,
The
lurking doors of beauty and surprise,
The
wings that murmur in the golden house,
The
temple of sweetness and the fiery aisle.
A
stranger on the sorrowful roads of Time,
Immortal
under the yoke of death and fate,
A sacrificant of the bliss and
pain of the spheres,
Love
in the wilderness met Savitri.
End of Canto One
Page – 391
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