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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Ilion – Book II 367<br />

O that alone they could reach it! O that pity could soften<br />

Harsh Necessity’s dealings, sparing our innocent children,<br />

Saving the Trojan women and aged from bonds and the sword-edge!<br />

These had not sinned whom you slay in your madness! Ruthless, O mortals,<br />

Must you be then to yourselves when the gods even faltering with pity<br />

Turn from the grief that must come and the agony vast and the weeping?<br />

Say not the road of escape sinks too low for your arrogant treading.<br />

Pride is not for our clay; the earth, not heaven was our mother<br />

And we are even as the ant in our toil and the beast in our dying;<br />

Only who cling to the hands of the gods can rise up from the earth-mire.<br />

Children, lie prone to their scourge, that your hearts may revive in their<br />

sunshine.<br />

This is our lot! when the anger of heaven has passed then the mortal<br />

Raises his head; soon he heals his heart and forgets he has suffered.<br />

Yet if resurgence from weakness and shame were withheld from the creature,<br />

Every fall without morrow, who then would counsel submission?<br />

But since the height of mortal fortune ascending must stumble,<br />

Fallen, again ascend, since death like birth is our portion,<br />

Ripening, mowed, to be sown again like corn by the farmer,<br />

Let us be patient still with the gods accepting their purpose.<br />

Deem not defeat I welcome. Think not to Hellas submitting<br />

Death of proud hope I would seal. Not this have I counselled, O nation,<br />

But to be even as your high-crested forefathers, greatest of mortals.<br />

Troya of old enringed by the hooves of Cimmerian armies<br />

Flamed to the heavens from her plains and her smoke-blackened citadel<br />

sheltered<br />

Mutely the joyless rest of her sons and the wreck of her greatness.<br />

Courage and wisdom survived in that fall and a stern-eyed prudence<br />

Helped her to live; disguised from her mightiness Troy crouched waiting.<br />

Teucer descended whose genius worked at this kingdom and nation,<br />

Patient, scrupulous, wise, like a craftsman carefully toiling<br />

Over a helmet or over a breastplate, testing it always,<br />

Toiled in the eye of the Masters of all and had heed of its labour.<br />

So in the end they would not release him like souls that are common;<br />

They out of Ida sent into Ilion Pallas Athene;<br />

Secret she came and he went with her into the luminous silence.<br />

Teucer’s children after their sire completed his labour.

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