COLLECTED POEMS

 

 SRI AUROBINDO

 

CONTENTS

 

 

I. SHORT POEMS 1890-1900 

Songs To Myrtilla

1890-92

Perfect Thy Motion

 

Phaethon

1890-92

To A Hero-Worshipper

September 1891

Estelle

1890-92

O Coil, Coil

1890-92

Hic Jacet

1890-92

Lines On Ireland

1896

Charles Stewart Parnell

1891

Night By The Sea

1890-92

A Thing Seen

 

The Lover's Complaint

1890-92

Love In Sorrow

1890-92

The Island Grave

1890-92

Bankim Chandra Chatterjee

 

Saraswati With The LoTUS

1894

Goethe

1890-92

The Lost Deliverer 1890-92

Madhusudan Dutt

 

Envoi

1890-92

The Spring Child

1900

Since I Have Seen Your Face

 

Euphrosyne

 

The Nightingale

 

Song

 

Epigram

 

The Three Cries of Deiphobus

 

Epitaph

 

A Doubt

 

Perigune Prologuises

 
 

  Short Poems 1895-1908

Invitation

1908-09 (Alipore Jail)

Who

1908-09

Reminiscence

 

A Vision Of Science

 

Immortal Love

 

To The Sea

 

The Sea At Night

 

Evening

 

Revelation

 

A Tree

 

A Child's Imagination

 

Miracles

 

The Vedantin's Prayer

 

On The Mountains

 

Rebirth

 

Seasons

 

The Triumph-Song Of  Trishuncou

 

The Fear of Death

 

Life And Death

 

In The Moonlight

 

Parabrahman

 

God

 

Short Poems 1902-1930

The Mother Of Dreams

1908-09

The Birth of  Sin

 

Epiphany

 

To R.

 

The Rakshasas

 

Kama

 

Kamadeva

 

The Mahatmas

 

The Meditations of Mandavya

12-04-1913

Hell And Heaven

 

Life

 

Short Poems 1930-1950

A God's Labour

31-7-1935,1-1-1936

Bride Of The Fire

11-11-1935

The Blue Bird

11-11-1935

The Mother Of  God

1945

The Island Sun

3/13-10-1939

Silence Is All

14-1-1946

Is This The End

3-6-1945

Who Art Thou That Camest

22-3-1944

One Day

1938-39

The Dwarf Napoleon

16-10-1939

The Children of Wotan

August 1940

Despair on The Staircase

October 1939

Surrealist

 

 

 

Short Poems - Fragments

Morcundeya

 

A Voice Arose

 

I Walked Beside The Waters

25-4-1934

Urvasie

 

The Cosmic Man

25-9-1938

 

 

Sonnets 1930-1950

The Kingdom Within

14-3-1936

The Yogi On The Whirlpool

14-3-1936

The Divine Hearing

24-10-1937

Electron

15-7-1938

The Indwelling Universal

15-7-1938

The Witness Spirit

26-7-1938, 21-3-1944

The Pilgrim Of The Night

26-7-1938, 18-8-1944

The Hidden Plan

26-7-1938, 21-3-1944

The Inconscient

27-7-1938, 21-3-1944

Liberation

27-7-1938, 22-3-1944

Cosmic Consciousness

28-7-1938

The Golden Light

8-8-1938, 22-3-1944

Life-Unity

8-8-1938, 22-3-1944

Bliss Of  Identity

25-7-1938, 21-3-1944

The Iron Dictators

14-11-1938

Form

16-11-1938

The Infinite Adventure

11-9-1939

The Greater Plan

12-9-1939

The Universal Incarnation

13-9-1939

The Godhead

13-9-1939

The Stone Goddess

13-9-1939

Krishna

15-9-1939

The Cosmic Dance

15-9-1939

Shiva

16-9-1939

The Word Of The Silence

18/19-9/1939

The Dual Being

19-9-1939

The Self's Infinity

18/19-9-1939

Lila

20-9-1939

Surrender

20-9-1939

The Divine Worker

20-9-1939

The Guest

21-9-1939

The Inner Sovereign

22-9-1939

The Conscious Inconscient

24/28-9-1939

A Dream Of Surreal Science

25-9-1939

In The Battle

25-9-1939

The Little Ego

26/29-9-1939

The Miracle Of  Birth

27/29-9-1939

Moments

29-9-1939, 2-10-1939

The Bliss of Brahman

29-9-1939, 21-10-1939

The Human Enigma

September 1939

The Body

2-10-1939

Liberation

2/3-10-1939

Light

3/4-10-1939

The Unseen Infinite

October 1939

Self

15-10-1939

The Cosmic Spirit

15-10-1939, 5-11-1939

"I"   

15-10-1939, 3-11-1939

Omnipresence

17-10-1939

The Inconscient  Foundation

18-10-1939, 7-2-1940

Adwaita

19-10-1939

The Hill-Top Temple

21-10-1939

Because Thou Art

25-10-1939

Divine Sight

26-10-1939

Divine Sense

1-11-1939

Immortality

1939 (?) 8-2-1940

Man, The Despot Of Contraries

29-7-1940 (?)

Evolution

1938, 22-3-1944

The Silver Call

1938, 23-3-1944

The Inner Fields

14-3-1947 (?)

Sonnets-Undated

Transformation

 

Nirvana

 

The Other Earths

 

Contrasts

 

Man, The Thinking Animal

 

The Dumb Inconscient

 

The Infinitesimal Infinite

 

Evolution

 

The One Self

 

Our Godhead Calls Us

 

Discoveries Of Science I

 

Discoveries Of Science II

 

Discoveries Of Science III

 

III. LONGER POEMS

The Vigil Of Thaliard

August 1891- April 1892

Urvasie

 

Love And Death

June,July 1899

Khaled Of  The Sea

 

Baji Prabhou

 

The Rishi

 

ChitraNganda

 

Uloupie

 

The Tale Of Nala

 
   

 

VI. POEMS IN NEW METRES

 

Fragments

 

VII. METRICAL EXPERIMENTS

1934-1939

INDEX OF FIRST LINES

 

Bibliographical Note

The Tale of Nala

 

 

Nala Nishadha's king, paced by a stream
Which ran escaping from solitudes
To flow through gardens in a pleasant land.
Murmuring it came of the green souls of hills
And of the lawns and hamlets it had seen,
The brown-limbed peasants toiling in the sun,
And the tired bullocks in the thirsty fields.
In its bright talk and laughter it recalled
The moonlight and the lapping dangerous tongues,
The sunlight and the skimming wings of birds,
And gurgling jars, and bright bathed limbs of girls
At morning, and its noons and lonely eves.
This memory to the jasmine trees it sang
Which dropped their slow white-petalled kisses down
Upon its haste of curling waves. Far off
A mountain rose, alone and purple vague,
Wide-watching from its large stone-lidded eye
The drowsy noontide earth; vastly outspread
Like Vindhya changed, against the height of heaven
It stood. And on the deep-blue nearness limned
Its shoulder in a mighty indolence
Reclined for giant rest the Titan paused.
The birds were voiceless on the unruffled boughs,
The spotted lizard in a dull-eyed ease
Basked on his sentinel stone, a single kite
Circled above; white-headed over rust
Of brown and gold he stained the azure noon.
Solitary in the spaces of his mind
Among these sights and sounds King Nala paced
Oblivious of the joy of world and kind.
Shrill and dissatisfied the wanderer's cry
Came to his ear; he saw with absent eye
The rapid waters in their ripple run
Nor marked the ruddy sprouting of the leaves,
Nor heard the dove's rare cooing on the trees.
His thoughts were with a face his dreams had seen
Diviner than the jasmine's moon-flaked glow;
He listened to a name his dreams had known 

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Sweeter than passion of the crooning bird.
The delicate syllables yearning through his mind
Repeated longingly their soft-wreathed call,
As if some far-off bright forgotten queen
From whom his heart had wandered through the world
Were summoning back to her her truant thrall,
Luring it with the music of her name,
Some sovereign magic face of amber pearled,
Some spirit embodied in a moon-gold flame.
But now a look on him he seemed to feel.
The summit self-uplifted to the sky
Mounting the air in act to climb and join
Heaven's sapphire longing with earth's green unease
Drew his far gaze, which scanned as for a thought
The undecipherable charactery
Of mingled rocks and woods; but all was lost
In too much light. Dull glared the giant stones;
The woods, fallen sleepy on their mountain couch,
Had nestled in a coverlet of haze.
Like dim-seen shapes of virgins stoled in blue
Huddling close-limbed the slumberers lay.1
Then from some covert bosom's shrouded riches
A revelation came; for like a gleam
Of beauty from some purple-guarded breast
A passionate glint of lovely whiteness stole
Fluttering awhile, then fast towards him fled
Seeking his vision; and its glowing race
Splintered the sapphire with a silvery hue,
And soon a flame-bright flock of swans was seen
Flying like one and breasting with its shock
Of faery speed the vastness of the noon.
Not only with an argent flashing ran
The brilliant cohort on its skiey path,
But shaking from its wild wings a hail of gold.
Heaven's lustrous tunic of transparent air
Regretted the bright ornament as they passed.
They flew not like the snowy cranes, a wreath
Of flowers driven in the rain-tide's breath,

 

1 Together clasped in a huddled grace
Sleeping close-limbed the mystic slumberers lay.
 

Page – 336


When thunder calls them northward, but came fast
Ranked in magnificent and lovely lines
Cleaving the air with splendour. All the pride
And rushing glory of their bosoms and wings
Assailed his eyes with silver and with flame.
Over the Nishadhan gardens flying round
They came down whirring softly. Filling awhile
With gentle clamour from their liquid throats
The region, they disturbed with dipping plumes
The turquoise slumber of the motionless lake
Lulled to unrippling rest by windless noon.
A hundred marvellous shapes in mystic crowd
Covered the water like a living robe.
Now on the stream were spread their glorious breasts.
Each close-ranked by her sweet companion's side
Floating they came and preened above the flood
Their long and stately necks like curving flowers.
The water petted with enamoured waves
Their bosoms and the slow air swooned along
Their wings, their motion set a wordless chant
To flow against the chidings of the stream.
A song from heaven was that gliding grace
And hard to speak their beauty, what silver mass
On mass, what flakes and peacock eyes of gold,
What passion of crimson flecked each pure white breast!
It seemed to his charmed sense that in this form
The loveliness of a diviner world
Had come to him winged. Tbyir beauty to tender greed
Moved him of all that living silver and gold.

 

 

"For now thy heaven-born pride must learn to range
My gardens of the earth and haunt my streams,
And to my call consent. If thou resist
I will imprison thee in a golden cage
And bind thy beauty with a silver chain."
A laughter beautiful arose from her
Thrilling her throat with bubbling ecstasies,
Sweet, satisfied because he praised her grace. 

Page – 337


And with mysterious mild deep-glowing eyes
In long and softly wreathing syllables
The wonder spoke: "Release me, for no birds
Are we, 0 mortal, but the moon-bosomed nymphs
Who to the trance-heard music of the gods
Sway in the mystic dances of the sky,
Apsaras, daughters of the tumbling seas.
Shaped by thy fancy is my white-winged form."
But Nala to his bright prisoner swan replied:
"And now thou choosest thyself by all thy words,
My divine captive and white-bosomed slave,
Bird of desire or goddess luminous-limbed
To satisfy my pride and my delight
Thou stoopst to me from unattainable heavens.
Thou shalt possess my streams, 0 white-winged swan,
And dance, 0 Apsara singing in my halls.
Between the illumined pillars thou shalt glide
When flute and breathing lyre and timbrel call,
Adorning with thy golden rhythmic limbs
The crystalline mosaic of my floors.
What I have seized by force, by force I keep."
Her eyes now smiled on him; against his bosom
She laid in all its. tender curving grace
The long white wonder of her neck upraised
In suppliant wreaths and flattering his cheek
With her soft gleaming head sweetly she cried:
"Because thou art bright and beautiful and bold,
So have I come to thee and thou hast seized
Whom if thou hadst set free, thy joy were lost,
So in thy mind from some celestial space
A name and face have come, yet are on earth,
Which if thou hadst not held with yearning's stays,
Thy mortal life would have been given in vain.
Forced by thy musing in the sapphire noon
Out of the mountain's breast to thee I flew."

(Incomplete)

Page – 338