Collected Poems

CONTENTS

Pre-content

Part One

England and Baroda 1883 ­ 1898

Poem Published in 1883 Light

Songs to Myrtilla

Songs to Myrtilla

O Coïl, Coïl

Goethe

The Lost Deliverer

Charles Stewart Parnell

Hic Jacet

Lines on Ireland

On a Satyr and Sleeping Love

A Rose of Women

Saraswati with the Lotus

Night by the Sea

The Lover's Complaint

Love in Sorrow

The Island Grave

Estelle

Radha's Complaint in Absence

Radha's Appeal

Bankim Chandra Chatterji

Madhusudan Dutt

To the Cuckoo

Envoi

Incomplete Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1891 ­ 1892

Thou bright choregus

Like a white statue

The Vigil of Thaliard

Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1891 ­ 1898

To a Hero-Worshipper

Phaethon

The Just Man

Part Two Baroda, c. 1898 ­ 1902
Complete Narrative Poems Urvasie Canto Love and Death
Incomplete Narrative Poems, c. 1899 ­ 1902

Khaled of the Sea

Uloupie

Sonnets from Manuscripts, c. 1900 ­ 1901

O face that I have loved

I cannot equal

O letter dull and cold

My life is wasted

Because thy flame is spent

Thou didst mistake

Rose, I have loved

I have a hundred lives

Still there is something

I have a doubt

To weep because a glorious sun

What is this talk

Short Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1900 ­ 1901

The Spring Child

A Doubt

The Nightingale

Euphrosyne

A Thing Seen

Epitaph

To the Modern Priam

Song

Epigram

The Three Cries of Deiphobus

Perigone Prologuises

Since I have seen your face

So that was why

World's delight

Part Three Baroda and Bengal, c. 1900 ­ 1909

Poems from Ahana and Other Poems

Invitation

Who

Miracles

Reminiscence

A Vision of Science

Immortal Love

A Tree

To the Sea

Revelation

Karma

Appeal

A Child's Imagination

The Sea at Night

The Vedantin's Prayer

Rebirth

The Triumph-Song of Trishuncou

Life and Death

Evening

Parabrahman

God

The Fear of Death

Seasons

The Rishi

In the Moonlight

Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1900 ­ 1906

To the Boers

Vision

To the Ganges

Suddenly out from the wonderful East

On the Mountains

Part Four Calcutta and Chandernagore 1907 ­ 1910

Satirical Poem Published in 1907

Reflections of Srinath Paul, Rai Bahadoor, on the Present Discontents

Short Poems Published in 1909 and 1910

The Mother of Dreams

An Image

The Birth of Sin

Epiphany

To R.

Transiit, Non Periit

Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1909 ­ 1910

Perfect thy motion

A Dialogue

Narrative Poems Published in 1910

Baji Prabhou

Chitrangada

Poems Written in 1910 and Published in 1920 ­ 1921

The Rakshasas

Kama

The Mahatmas

Part Five Pondicherry, c. 1910 ­ 1920
Two Poems in Quantitative Hexameters Ilion
          Book I II III IV V
VI VII VIII IX

Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1912 ­ 1913

The Descent of Ahana

The Meditations of Mandavya

Incomplete Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1912 ­ 1920

Thou who controllest

Sole in the meadows of Thebes

O Will of God

The Tale of Nala [1]

The Tale of Nala [2]

Part Six Baroda and Pondicherry, c. 1902 ­ 1936

Poems Past and Present

Musa Spiritus

Bride of the Fire

The Blue Bird

A God's Labour

Hell and Heaven

Kamadeva

Life

One Day

Part Seven Pondicherry, c. 1927 ­ 1947

Six Poems

The Bird of Fire

Trance

Shiva

The Life Heavens

Jivanmukta

In Horis Aeternum

Poems

Transformation

Nirvana

The Other Earths

Thought the Paraclete

Moon of Two Hemispheres

Rose of God

Poems Published in On Quantitative Metre

Ocean Oneness

Trance of Waiting

Flame-Wind

The River

Journey's End

The Dream Boat

Soul in the Ignorance

The Witness and the Wheel

Descent

The Lost Boat

Renewal

Soul's Scene

Ascent

The Tiger and the Deer

Three Sonnets

Man the Enigma

The Infinitesimal Infinite

The Cosmic Dance

Sonnets from Manuscripts, c. 1934 ­ 1947

Man the Thinking Animal

Contrasts

The Silver Call

Evolution [1]

The Call of the Impossible

Evolution [2]

Man the Mediator

Discoveries of Science

All here is Spirit

The Ways of the Spirit [1]

The Ways of the Spirit [2]

Science and the Unknowable

The Yogi on the Whirlpool

The Kingdom Within

Now I have borne

Electron

The Indwelling Universal

Bliss of Identity

The Witness Spirit

The Hidden Plan

The Pilgrim of the Night

Cosmic Consciousness

Liberation [1]

The Inconscient

Life-Unity

The Golden Light

The Infinite Adventure

The Greater Plan

The Universal Incarnation

The Godhead

The Stone Goddess

Krishna

Shiva

The Word of the Silence

The Self's Infinity

The Dual Being

Lila

Surrender

The Divine Worker

The Guest

The Inner Sovereign

Creation

A Dream of Surreal Science

In the Battle

The Little Ego

The Miracle of Birth

The Bliss of Brahman

Moments

The Body

Liberation [2]

Light

The Unseen Infinite

"I"

The Cosmic Spirit

Self

Omnipresence

The Inconscient Foundation

Adwaita

The Hill-top Temple

The Divine Hearing

Because Thou art

Divine Sight

Divine Sense

The Iron Dictators

Form

Immortality

Man, the Despot of Contraries

The One Self

The Inner Fields

Lyrical Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1934 ­ 1947

Symbol Moon

The World Game

Who art thou that camest

One

In a mounting as of sea-tides

Krishna

The Cosmic Man

The Island Sun

Despair on the Staircase

The Dwarf Napoleon

The Children of Wotan

The Mother of God

The End?

Silence is all

Poems Written as Metrical Experiments

O pall of black Night

To the hill-tops of silence

Oh, but fair was her face

In the ending of time

In some faint dawn

In a flaming as of spaces

O Life, thy breath is but a cry

Vast-winged the wind ran

Winged with dangerous deity

Outspread a Wave burst

On the grey street

Cry of the ocean's surges

Nonsense and "Surrealist" Verse

A Ballad of Doom

Surrealist

Surrealist Poems

Incomplete Poems from Manuscripts, c. 1927 ­ 1947

Thou art myself

Vain, they have said

Pururavus

The Death of a God [1]

The Death of a God [2]

The Inconscient and the Traveller Fire

I walked beside the waters

A strong son of lightning

I made danger my helper

The Inconscient

In gleam Konarak

Bugles of Light

The Fire King and the Messenger

God to thy greatness

Silver foam

Torn are the walls

O ye Powers

Hail to the fallen

Seer deep-hearted

Soul, my soul [1]

Soul, my soul [2]

I am filled with the crash of war

In the silence of the midnight

Here in the green of the forest

Voice of the Summits

Appendix Poems in Greek and in French Greek Epigram Lorsque rien n'existait Sur les grands sommets blancs Note on the Texts Index of Titles Index of First Lines

 

Incomplete Poems from Manuscripts

Circa 1891 ­ 1892

 


 

Thou bright choregus

 

Thou bright choregus of the heavenly dance

Who with thy lively beauty wouldst endear

The alien stars and turnst thy paler glance

To us thy dominating sphere

 

Why didst thou with Erinna impart thy mind,

The faithful copyist of this cruelty,

Who to usurpers pays allegiance kind

Passing the true pretender by?

 

Like a white statue

 

Like a white statue made of lilies

Her eyes were hidden jewels beneath scabbards of black silk: her shoulders moonlit mountain-slopes when they are coated with new-fallen snow: her breasts two white apples odorous with the sweet fragrance of girlhood, her body a heap of silk in a queen's closet, her legs were marble pillars very clear- cut, her face ivory flushed by the dawn.

He frowned on her like a dark cloud instinct with rain over a tall white ship at sea.

The full orb of her loveliness revealed as when the fleecy gown is stripped from the shoulders of the moon and she stands naked in heaven.

The moon of the three worlds.

Her gait was the swan's in stateliness, the other's wild and jocund as the sea-fowl, her hair  windtost, her eyes sparkling like bubbles in a wine-cup, her face slim and very girlish.

 

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The Vigil of Thaliard

 

Where Time a sleeping dervish is

Or printed legend of Romance

Mid lilies and mid gold roses

Of mediaeval France,

Where Life, a faithful servitor

Mid alien faces cast,

Still wears in memory of her

The trappings of the Past,

Sweet Lily's child, that golden grape

Girl prince of Avelion,

Thaliard by early-plucking hap

Star-reaching Mador's son,

Kept vigil by the impious pool

Beyond the misty moaning sea

To win from warlock's weird misrule

His soul's sweet liberty.

 

For if throughout the monstrous night

Unblest by ave or by creed

By witched water Christian wight

Do finger bead by bead

His scarlet rosary of sins

And leave his soul ajar,

What hour the sleepy Evening pins

Her bodice with a star,

Until, the pitchy veil withdrawn

That swathes the looming dune,

The crowing trumpeter of dawn

Blows addio to the moon,

The awful record of his soul

Shall by God's finger blotted be,

And o'er his drowned past shall roll

Forgiveness like a sea.

 

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The warden of the starry waste

Who walks with orange-coloured lamp

And weird eyes nursing fire, paced

Night's silver-tented camp.

The rose-lipped golden-footed day,

A flower by maiden culled,

Beneath star-blossomed arras lay

In Evening's bosom lulled.

The water seemed a damson crust

With golden sugar poured,

Or mirror caked with purple dust

In lady's closet stored.

The hour like a weary snake

Coiled slowly gliding serpentine

Or drowsy nun perforce awake

To pace a pillared shrine.

 

The roses shuddered in their sleep,

The lilies drooped their silver fires,

The reeds upon the humming steep

Bowed low their tapering spires;

For tho' no sob pulsed in the air,

No agony of wind,

Down Heaven's moonlight-painted stair

Trod angels who had sinned.

Fireflies drizzled in the dark

Like drops of burning rain,

The glow-worm was a crawling spark,

The pool a purple stain,

The stars were grains of blazing sand,

A haunted soul the shadowy lea,

In forest-featured Broceliande

Beyond the echoing sea.

 

Sir Thaliard by the phantom edge

Heard rustling feet behind the trees

And the weird water lapped the sedge

With wistful symphonies:

 

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Sometimes a thrill of voices broke

In runic tongues of old,

Sometimes pale fingers seemed to stroke

His curls of crisping gold:

Thin laughter sobbed he knew not where

Till God's own candles paled,

Or else out in the moonless air

A goblin infant wailed.

Now in the moon's enchanted wake

Wild shadows ran a giant race,

And now the golden glassing lake

Was blotted with a face.

 

But when the naked moon rose clear

Above the ruins of the day,

Childe Thaliard saw a glinting spear

Across the milky way.

And when the white moon's sliding feet

One rank of stars had passed,

Upon him smote the windy beat

And terror of a blast.

The tempest rippled thro' the leaves,

New wine of evening sucked,

And at the water-lily sheaves

With nervous fingers plucked.

And in its wind-white arms it bore

A diademed and sceptred thing,

The semblance of a man, that wore

The glory of a king.

 

An argent cincture studded thick

With opal and the blushing stone

Fine wrought of texture Arabic

About his middle shone:

And in its buckled girth did sit,

A fierce and cloudy star,

Of temper fine as poet's wit

The Orient scimitar.

 

Page – 50


Morocco gave his wrathful dart,

The spring of widowed tears,

Tempered in Afric's sultry heart

Or famous far Algiers.

His barb was hued like cedar's core

In Aramean mountains born,

Wild as the sea on storm-vexed shore

And fronted as the morn.

 

Upon his kingly head the crown

Was eloquent of Iran's gold

Dropping fine threads of glory down

Upon the turban's fold.

His eyes were drops of smelted ore

That in a foundry chase:

His lips a cruel promise wore,

A marble pride his face.

As shows thro' gold caparison

Laburnum dusky-stemmed,

Thro' silks in Persian harem spun

His gorgeous body gleamed.

Or as a lithe and tropic snake

That from some fine mosaic glares,

Or spotted panther by a lake

Beneath the Indian stars.

 

This Orient vision burning-bright

Snapped close his bridle silver-lined

Between the moonlight and the night,

The water and the wind.

His cry sang like a stormy shower

Upon a thundering sea:

"O Thaliard, Thaliard, Britain's flower,

Wilt break a lance with me?

The golden scythe of Mahomet

Gleams crescent on my shield:

My harvest upon thine is set,

A cross in argent field.

 

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Prince-errant, prop of battle styled

And flawless glass of chivalry,

O Thaliard, Thaliard, golden childe,

Wilt break a lance with me?"

 

As trailing thunder dies in heaven

Thro' silence trailed his latest word,

And fire like the bearded levin

Beneath his eyelids stirred.

Childe Thaliard saw the burning stars

Vermilion grown like blood,

Thrice drew the serpent cross of Mars,

Thrice clamoured where he stood.

But Thaliard saw a milkwhite star

Grow large against the moon,

Quelled by whose candid flames, afar

Mars' ruby paled in a swoon.

"Not here" he faltered like the wind,

"Not here, where murmurs poison sleep,

When haunted memories grown half blind

Their ghastly vigils keep.

 

"Not here, when drifts past happy shores

From mortal vision far withdrawn

With lustrous sails and dipping oars

The hull that brings the dawn,

Seek me, but in the cloudy time

When ruin blazons forth

In sanguine hues the vaporous clime

And champaigns of the north."

As wine that from the bubbling lips

Of some fine beaker falls,

This honeyed utterance largely slips

Like murmurs in vast halls.

The wimpled moon bent down her ear,

And in the granaries of light

The seedling splendours thrilled to hear,

And all the east grew bright.

 

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The phantom like a burning page

Was furrowed with the ploughs of wrath,

And thro' his wintry orbs white rage

Rolled like the dead sea-froth.

His lance poised slanting like a ray

Of ominous sunlight fell.

Astarte in the milky way

Saw death half-risen from hell:

And soon the cold hooves of his horse

On shivering lilies trod,

Till, yellow anguish borrowing force,

Childe Thaliard cried on God.

The phantom, withering thro' the bars

Of Being like transitory sound,

Left but the murmur of the stars,

 

Left but the hush profound.

And now the naked wanton moon

Shed languorous glances on the lake

Whose ripples sobbing from their swoon

Grew golden for her sake:

The amorous stars were faint with love;

Earth's awning seemed so light

That Hesper like a flying dove

Would tremble into sight.

When Thaliard saw in drooping skies

Large drops of beauty burn,

A white-winged chorus did arise,

The prayers that purely yearn.

But Thaliard saw the curling deep

With foamy moon-tints blaze and break,

Till the slack spirit longed to steep

Rich fancies in the lake.

 

The penitent chorus of his prayers

Were mingled with voluptuous speech

Of daedal images and airs

Luxurious wrapping each:

 

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A blue papyrus-leaf designed

With fretted curls of fire,

A purple page with coronet lined

Or labyrinthine spire:

The fiery-coloured bee of night

With folded purple wing,

Or solitary chrysolite

Shut in an emerald ring:

The vellum binding of a book,

A scented volume spiced with Ind,

A magic purse by Genie shook

To loose a murmuring wind.

 

And in the bridal pomp of hell

Walked Beauty hand-in-hand with sin,

And Thought, the glorious infidel,

A helmed Paladin;

When shutting under cloudy bars

Astarte's radiant eye,

God sowed with multitudinous stars

His peacock in the sky.

The diamonds perished from the deep,

The moon-tints from the edge,

The wrinkled water smoothed in sleep

His locks of ruffled sedge.

Imagination, like a sponge

Wrung very pure of beauty, wept,

As from his pores with a tired plunge

His flakes of fancy leaped.

 

But hark! a wailing anguish woke

The silence with a fiery sting:

The foaming gulfs of clamour broke

Around a fallen king:

A distant moan of battle high

Above a phantom land,

And heron-weird a woman's cry

Went shrilling down the strand.

 

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While terror with a vulture's force

Was plucking at his throat,

He heard the shrill hooves of a horse

Prick echoes less remote.

And like old accents Night may lend

On lips long hushed in endless sleep,

The voice of a familiar friend

Came shuddering from the deep.

 

"Thaliard, awake; the smiling morn

Forgets the cloud of yesterday:

The sceptre from thy house is torn,

Thy glory washed away.

Amid the reeling battle trod,

As a poppy in the mill,

With white face lifted up to God,

Thy sire lies very still.

Pendragon's spear has stung him dead,

He sleeps among the slain;

The glorious princes heap his bed,

Like lilies in a plain.

Thy brothers Galert and Gyneth

Like toppling mountains whelmed I saw

Beneath the shadowy winds of death

In the rushing tide of war.

 

"Thy sister, fawn-eyed Guendolen,

Haled captive from thy tottering hall,

Lies helpless in the dragon's den

Luxurious Gawain's thrall.

His kisses tremble on her mouth

Like moonbeams on a rose,

For she is water to his drouth,

He sunlight to her snows:

Her flowering body to his love

A pleasaunce-garden sweet;

Her spirit, meeker than a dove,

Fawns blindly at his feet.

 

Page – 55


And with the pelting words of shame,

Like delicate pigments bleared by storm,

The gorgeous colouring of thy name

Is losing gloss and form.

 

"The night-wind in thy yawning dome

Has made her nest alive with song,

The humming wasps of Aeolus roam

Low-flying in a throng:

The thunder like a flying stork

Clangs hoarsely but aloof,

And lightning with his vermil fork

Has written on thy roof.

The lion lodges in thy gate,

The were-wolf is thy guest,

The night-owl, like a sombre fate,

Wails weirdly without rest.

Thy deeds are grown a haunting rhyme,

A fragment breaking from the past,

An atom, which the meteor, Time,

In his fiery flight has cast."

 

With sobs of shuddering agony bled

The silence as with stinging whips,

But Thaliard felt slim fingers laid

Upon his writhen lips.

The soul's redoubts flung each to each

A ringing challenge round,

To clench the ruby gates of speech

On the corridors of sound.

In dancing dithyrambs thro' each vein

A dizzy echo sang,

While on the anvil of his brain

The steely syllables rang:

And from the avenues of the heart

Thro' which the river of being pours,

The torpid life with a sudden start

Recoiled upon its doors.

 

Page – 56


The voice was now a violin

Shrill-winding, now a startled bat,

And now as linnet's warble thin,

Now wailful as a gnat,

But gathered volume as of yore

Until with refluent tide,

Like Ocean ebbing from her shore

The murmur ebbed and died.

Like beauty losing maidenhood

Astarte debonnair

Undid the crocus-coloured snood

That bound her glimmering hair.

And up the ladder of the moon,

As white smoke curls upon a glass,

He saw with flakes of glory strewn

A radiant figure pass.

 

Astarte from her cloudy chair

Paced with her troop of star-sweet girls;

Unfilleted, her glorious hair

Hung loose in cowslip curls.

And like the flower-song of a bee

On April's daffodil skirt,

A whisper from the smiling sea

In her crocus gown did flirt.

The waters quivering to her wiles

Among the rushes whipped,

As thro' the net-work of her smiles

Her visible murmur slipped.

But when they wooed her to repeat

Her primrose painted pilgrimage,

She dipped the white palms of her feet

In beds of bubbling sedge.

 

Again the stealthy minutes crept

On tiptoe to the breathless hour

And loud suspense her riot kept

Till budding doom should flower.

 

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The yellow moon, whom Heaven once more

From silver cowl did shake,

With golden letters scribbled o'er

The purple-written lake.

But when to Heaven's polished breast

Her rounded amulet clung

Below in the blue palimpsest

A slit, a chasm sprung.

A meteor from the purple brink,

A vivid star no eye may lose,

A pictured bowl of nectarous drink,

An apparition rose.

 

Her body lapped in cloth of gold

A wave disguised in moonlight seemed,

Whose every curve and curious fold

With opal facets gleamed.

Her nestling mass of rounded curls

Were soft as velvet cloths,

Once fingered by Arabian girls

Or piled in Syrian booths.

She was an ebon-framed lyre

Where wind-waked murmurs dance,

A tinted statue of Desire

In studios of Romance.

Her glowing cheeks just ripe with youth,

The purple passion of her eyes,

Half seemed a splendid mock at truth,

A brilliant mesh of lies.

 

Below with balmy sobs that drank

The must of life thro' thirsty lips,

Her pained bosom heaved and sank

Like Ocean-cradled ships.

And as bee-blossoms sapphire-looped,

The humming waves that kiss,

Her creamy forehead almost drooped

Burthened with too much bliss.

 

Page – 58


The artist Grace who limned her fair

With moist and liberal brush,

Painted a glory in her hair

And mixed a gorgeous blush

To tint her cheeks with flowery bloom,

To touch her lips with scarlet fire,  —

An empire's beauty in small room,

A vision of desire.

 

A fairy witch by painful charms

Had burgeoned this refulgent flower,

Embraced by wild and wanton arms

In weird and midnight hour.

She on the amber milk of bees

By magic mother nursed,

In laurel-sheltered libraries

Cons rudiments accurst,

The most familiar things of hell,

The mightiest names inherits,

And learns what iron syllable

Compels reluctant spirits.

A perilous thorn on fire with bloom,

A poppied spell, an empress snake,

She rose, the alchemist of doom,

The Lady of the Lake.

 

 

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