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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Ilion – Book I 343<br />

Seeking a mortal’s love. On the threshold Thrasymachus halted<br />

Looking for servant or guard, but felt only a loneness of slumber<br />

Drawing the soul’s sight within away from its life and things human;<br />

Soundless, unheeding, the vacant corridors fled into darkness.<br />

He to the shades of the house and the dreams of the echoing rafters<br />

Trusted his high-voiced call, and from chambers still dim in their twilight<br />

Strong Aeneas armoured and mantled, leonine striding,<br />

Came, Anchises’ son; for the dawn had not found him reposing,<br />

But in the night he had left his couch and the clasp of Creüsa,<br />

Rising from sleep at the call of his spirit that turned to the waters<br />

Prompted by Fate and his mother who guided him, white Aphrodite.<br />

Still with the impulse of speed Thrasymachus greeted Aeneas:<br />

“Hero Aeneas, swift be thy stride to the Ilian hill-top.<br />

Dardanid, haste! for the gods are at work; they have risen with the morning,<br />

Each from his starry couch, and they labour. Doom, we can see it,<br />

Glows on their anvils of destiny, clang we can hear of their hammers.<br />

Something they forge there sitting unknown in the silence eternal,<br />

Whether of evil or good it is they who shall choose who are masters<br />

Calm, unopposed; they are gods and they work out their iron caprices.<br />

Troy is their stage and Argos their background; we are their puppets.<br />

Always our voices are prompted to speech for an end that we know not,<br />

Always we think that we drive, but are driven. Action and impulse,<br />

Yearning and thought are their engines, our will is their shadow and helper.<br />

Now too, deeming he comes with a purpose framed by a mortal,<br />

Shaft of their will they have shot from the bow of the Grecian leaguer,<br />

Lashing themselves at his steeds, Talthybius sent by Achilles.”<br />

“Busy the gods are always, Thrasymachus son of Aretes,<br />

Weaving Fate on their looms, and yesterday, now and tomorrow<br />

Are but the stands they have made with Space and Time for their timber,<br />

Frame but the dance of their shuttle. What eye unamazed by their workings<br />

Ever can pierce where they dwell and uncover their far-stretching purpose?<br />

Silent they toil, they are hid in the clouds, they are wrapped with the<br />

midnight.<br />

Yet to Apollo I pray, the Archer friendly to mortals,<br />

Yet to the rider on Fate I abase myself, wielder of thunder,<br />

Evil and doom to avert from my fatherland. All night Morpheus,<br />

He who with shadowy hands heaps error and truth upon mortals,

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