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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Ilion – Book I 347<br />

Shaking in wrath his filleted head Talthybius answered:<br />

“Princes, ye speak their words who drive you! Thus said Achilles:<br />

‘Rise, Talthybius, meet in her spaces the car of the morning;<br />

Challenge her coursers divine as they bound through the plains of the Troad.<br />

Hasten, let not the day wear gold ere thou stand in her ramparts.<br />

Herald charged with my will to a haughty and obstinate nation,<br />

Speak in the palace of Priam the word of the Phthian Achilles.<br />

Freely and not as his vassal who leads, Agamemnon, the Argive,<br />

But as a ruler in Hellas I send thee, king of my nations.<br />

Long I have walked apart from the mellay of gods in the Troad,<br />

Long has my listless spear leaned back on the peace of my tent-side,<br />

Deaf to the talk of the trumpets, the whine of the chariots speeding;<br />

Sole with my heart I have lived, unheeding the Hellene murmur,<br />

Chid when it roared for the hunt the lion pack of the war-god,<br />

Day after day I walked at dawn and in blush of the sunset,<br />

Far by the call of the seas and alone with the gods and my dreaming,<br />

Leaned to the unsatisfied chant of my heart and the rhythms of ocean,<br />

Sung to by hopes that were sweet-lipped and vain. For Polyxena’s brothers<br />

Still are the brood of the Titan Laomedon slain in his greatness,<br />

Engines of God unable to bear all the might that they harbour.<br />

Awe they have chid from their hearts, nor our common humanity binds them,<br />

Stay have they none in the gods who approve, giving calmness to mortals:<br />

But like the Titans of old they have hugged to them grandeur and ruin.<br />

Seek then the race self-doomed, the leaders blinded by heaven —<br />

Not in the agora swept by the winds of debate and the shoutings<br />

Lion-voiced, huge of the people! In Troya’s high-crested mansion<br />

Speak out my word to the hero Deiphobus, head of the mellay,<br />

Paris the racer of doom and the stubborn strength of Aeneas.<br />

Herald of Greece, when thy feet shall be pressed on the gold and the marble,<br />

Rise in the Ilian megaron, curb not the cry of the challenge.<br />

Thus shalt thou say to them striking the ground with the staff of defiance,<br />

Fronting the tempests of war, the insensate, the gamblers with downfall.<br />

“Princes of Troy, I have sat in your halls, I have slept in your chambers;<br />

Not in the battle alone as a warrior glad of his foemen,<br />

Glad of the strength that mates with his own, in peace we encountered.<br />

Marvelling I sat in the halls of my enemies, close to the bosoms<br />

Scarred by the dints of my sword and the eyes I had seen through the battle,

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