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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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352 Pondicherry, c. 1910 – 1920<br />

Answered the virgin disdainfully, wroth at the words of the Argive:<br />

“Hast thou not ended the errand they gave thee, envoy of Hellas?<br />

Not, do I think, as our counsellor cam’st thou elected from Argos,<br />

Nor as a lover to Troy hast thou hastened with amorous footing<br />

Hurting thy heart with her frowardness. Hatred and rapine sent thee,<br />

Greed of the Ilian gold and lust of the Phrygian women,<br />

Voice of Achaian aggression! Doom am I truly; let Gnossus<br />

Witness it, Salamis speak of my fatal arrival and Argos<br />

Silent remember her wounds.” But the Argive answered the virgin:<br />

“Hearken then to the words of the Hellene, Penthesilea.<br />

‘Virgin to whom earth’s strongest are corn in the sweep of thy sickle,<br />

Lioness vain of thy bruit who besiegest the paths of the battle!<br />

Art thou not satiate yet? hast thou drunk then so little of slaughter?<br />

Death has ascended thy car; he has chosen thy hand for his harvest.<br />

But I have heard of thy pride and disdain, how thou scornest the Argives<br />

And of thy fate thou complainest that ever averse to thy wishes<br />

Cloisters the Phthian and matches with weaklings Penthesilea.<br />

“Not of the Ithacan boar nor the wild-cat littered in Locris<br />

Nor of the sleek-coat Argive wild-bulls sates me the hunting;”<br />

So hast thou said, “I would bury my spear in the lion of Hellas.”<br />

Blind and infatuate, art thou not beautiful, bright as the lightning?<br />

Were not thy limbs made cunningly linking sweetness to sweetness?<br />

Is not thy laughter an arrow surprising hearts imprudent?<br />

Charm is the seal of the gods upon woman. Distaff and girdle,<br />

Work of the jar at the well and the hush of our innermost chambers,<br />

These were appointed thee, but thou hast scorned them, O Titaness, grasping<br />

Rather the shield and the spear. Thou, obeying thy turbulent nature,<br />

Tramplest o’er laws that are old to the pleasure thy heart has demanded.<br />

Rather bow to the ancient Gods who are seated and constant.<br />

But for thyself thou passest and what hast thou gained for the aeons<br />

Mingled with men in their works and depriving the age of thy beauty?<br />

Fair art thou, woman, but fair with a bitter and opposite sweetness<br />

Clanging in war when thou matchest thy voice with the shout of assemblies.<br />

Not to this end was thy sweetness made and the joy of thy members,<br />

Not to this rhythm Heaven tuned its pipe in thy throat of enchantment,<br />

Armoured like men to go warring forth and with hardness and fierceness<br />

Mix in the strife and the hate while the varied meaning of Nature

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