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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Ilion – Book III 377<br />

Voicing angers shrill; for the people astonished were silent.<br />

Long he pursued not; a shouting broke from that stupor of fury,<br />

Men sprang pale to their feet and hurled out menaces lethal;<br />

All that assembly swayed like a forest swept by the stormwind.<br />

Obstinate, straining his age-dimmed eyes Ucalegon, trembling<br />

Worse yet with anger, clamoured feebly back at the people,<br />

Whelmed in their roar. Unheard was his voice like a swimmer in surges<br />

Lost, yet he spoke. But the anger grew in the throats of the people<br />

Lion-voiced, hurting the heart with sound and daunting the nature,<br />

Till from some stalwart hand a javelin whistling and vibrant<br />

Missing the silvered head of the senator rang disappointed<br />

Out on the distant wall of a house by the side of the market.<br />

Not even then would the old man hush or yield to the tempest.<br />

Wagging his hoary beard and shifting his aged eyeballs,<br />

Tossing his hands he stood; but Antenor seized him and Aetor,<br />

Dragged him down on his seat though he strove, and chid him and silenced,<br />

“Cease, O friend, for the gods have won. It were easier piping<br />

High with thy aged treble to alter the rage of the Ocean<br />

Than to o’erbear this people stirred by Laocoon. Leave now<br />

Effort unhelpful, wrap thy days in a mantle of silence;<br />

Give to the gods their will and dry-eyed wait for the ending.”<br />

So now the old men ceased from their strife with the gods and with Troya;<br />

Cowed by the storm of the people’s wrath they desisted from hoping.<br />

But though the roar long swelled, like the sea when the winds have subsided,<br />

One man yet rose up unafraid and beckoned for silence,<br />

Not of the aged, but ripe in his look and ruddy of visage,<br />

Stalwart and bluff and short-limbed, Halamus son of Antenor.<br />

Forward he stood from the press and the people fell silent and listened,<br />

For he was ever first in the mellay and loved by the fighters.<br />

He with a smile began: “Come, friends, debate is soon ended<br />

If there is right but of lungs and you argue with javelins. Wisdom<br />

Rather pray for her aid in this dangerous hour of your fortunes.<br />

Not to exalt Laocoon, too much praising his swiftness,<br />

Trojans, I rise; for some are born brave with the spear in the war-car,<br />

Others bold with the tongue, nor equal gifts unto all men<br />

Zeus has decreed who guides his world in a round that is devious<br />

Carried this way and that like a ship that is tossed on the waters.

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