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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Ilion – Book I 341<br />

Vague like a phantom seen by the dim Acherontian waters.<br />

But to the guardian towers that watched over Pergama’s gateway<br />

Out of the waking city Deiphobus swiftly arriving<br />

Called, and swinging back the huge gates slowly, reluctant,<br />

Flung Troy wide to the entering Argive. Ilion’s portals<br />

Parted admitting her destiny, then with a sullen and iron<br />

Cry they closed. Mute, staring, grey like a wolf descended<br />

Old Talthybius, propping his steps on the staff of his errand;<br />

Feeble his body, but fierce still his glance with the fire within him;<br />

Speechless and brooding he gazed on the hated and coveted city.<br />

Suddenly, seeking heaven with her buildings hewn as for Titans,<br />

Marvellous, rhythmic, a child of the gods with marble for raiment,<br />

Smiting the vision with harmony, splendid and mighty and golden,<br />

Ilion stood up around him entrenched in her giant defences.<br />

Strength was uplifted on strength and grandeur supported by grandeur;<br />

Beauty lay in her lap. Remote, hieratic and changeless,<br />

Filled with her deeds and her dreams her gods looked out on the Argive,<br />

Helpless and dumb with his hate as he gazed on her, they too like mortals<br />

Knowing their centuries past, not knowing the morrow before them.<br />

Dire were his eyes upon Troya the beautiful, his face like a doom-mask:<br />

All Greece gazed in them, hated, admired, grew afraid, grew relentless.<br />

But to the Greek Deiphobus cried and he turned from his passion<br />

Fixing his ominous eyes with the god in them straight on the Trojan:<br />

“Messenger, voice of Achaia, wherefore confronting the daybreak<br />

Comest thou driving thy car from the sleep of the tents that besiege us?<br />

Fateful, I deem, was the thought that, conceived in the silence of midnight,<br />

Raised up thy aged limbs from the couch of their rest in the stillness, —<br />

Thoughts of a mortal but forged by the Will that uses our members<br />

And of its promptings our speech and our acts are the tools and the image.<br />

Oft from the veil and the shadow they leap out like stars in their brightness,<br />

Lights that we think our own, yet they are but tokens and counters,<br />

Signs of the Forces that flow through us serving a Power that is secret.<br />

What in the dawning bringst thou to Troya the mighty and dateless<br />

Now in the ending of Time when the gods are weary of struggle?<br />

Sends Agamemnon challenge or courtesy, Greek, to the Trojans?”<br />

High like the northwind answered the voice of the doom from Achaia:<br />

“Trojan Deiphobus, daybreak, silence of night and the evening

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