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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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260 Baroda and Bengal, c. 1900 – 1909<br />

Suddenly out from the wonderful East<br />

Suddenly out from the wonderful East like a woman exulting<br />

Dawn stepped forth with a smile on her lips, and the glory of morning<br />

Hovered over the hills; then sweet grew air with the breezes,<br />

Sweet and keen as a wild swift virgin; the wind walked blithely,<br />

Low was the voice of the leaves as they rustled and talked with the river,<br />

Ganges, the sacred river. Down from the northlands crowding,<br />

Touching the steps of the ghauts with the silver tips of their fingers<br />

Lightly the waters ran and talked to each other of sunshine,<br />

Lightly they laughed. But high on his stake impaled by the roadway<br />

Hung Mandavya the mighty in marble deep meditation,<br />

Sepulchred, dumb; on his either side were the thieves, immobile.<br />

They were dead, made free from cruelty, ceasing from anguish,<br />

And forgetting the thirst. But past them Ganges the mighty,<br />

First of the streams of the earth, our Mother, remembering the ages,<br />

Poured to the sea.<br />

Early at dawn by her ghauts the women of Mithila gathered.<br />

There they filled their gurgling jars, or gilding the Ganges<br />

Bathed in her waters and laughed as they bathed there clamouring, dashing<br />

Dew of her coolness in eyes of each other: the banks called sweetly<br />

Mad with the musical laughter of girls and joy of their crying,<br />

Low melodious cries. As when in a wood on the hillsides<br />

Thousands of bulbuls flitting and calling, eating the wild plums,<br />

Filling the ear with sweetness carry from treetop to treetop<br />

Vermeil of crest and scarlet of tail and small brown bodies<br />

Flitting and calling, calling and flitting, full of sweet clamour,<br />

Full of the wine of life, even such was the sweetness and clamour,<br />

Women bathing close by the ghauts of the radiant Ganges,<br />

Golden-limbed or white or darker than olives when ripest,<br />

Lovely of face or of mood, but all sweethearted and happy<br />

Aryan women. One there seemed of another moulding<br />

Who was aloof from the crowd and the chaos of cheerful faces.<br />

She at one side of the stairway slowly like one half-musing<br />

Bathed there, hiding her face in the deep cool bosom of waters,<br />

Losing herself in Ganges, or let its pearl drops dribble

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