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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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378 Pondicherry, c. 1910 – 1920<br />

Why should we rail then at one who is lame by the force of Cronion?<br />

Not by his will is he lame; he would race, if he could, with the swiftest.<br />

Yet is the halt man no runner, nor, friends, must you rise up and slay me,<br />

If I should say of this priest, he is neither Sarpedon nor Hector.<br />

Then, if my father whom once you honoured, ancient Antenor,<br />

Hugs to him Argive gold which I see not, his son in his mansion,<br />

Me too accusest thou, prophet Laocoon? Friends, you have watched me<br />

Sometimes fight. Did you see with my house’s allies how I gambolled,<br />

Changed, when with sportive spear I was tickling the ribs of my Argives,<br />

Nudges of friendly counsel inviting to entry in Troya?<br />

Men, these are visions of lackbrains; men, these are myths of the market.<br />

Let us have done with them, brothers and friends; hate only the Hellene.<br />

Prophet, I bow to the oracles. Wise are the gods in their silence,<br />

Wise when they speak; but their speech is other than ours and their wisdom<br />

Hard for a mortal mind to hold and not madden or wander;<br />

But for myself I see only the truth as a soldier who battles<br />

Judging the strength of his foes and the chances of iron encounter.<br />

Few are our armies, many the Greeks, and we waste in the combat<br />

Bound to our numbers, — they by the ocean hemmed from their kinsmen,<br />

We by our fortunes, waves of the gods that are harder to master,<br />

They like a rock that is chipped, but we like a mist that disperses.<br />

Then if Achilles, bound by an oath, bring peace to us, healing,<br />

Bring to us respite, help, though bought at a price, yet full-measured,<br />

Strengths of the North at our side and safety assured from the Achaian,<br />

For he is true though a Greek, will you shun this mighty advantage?<br />

Peace at least we shall have, though gold we lose and much glory;<br />

Peace we will use for our strength to breathe in, our wounds to recover,<br />

Teaching Time to prepare for happier wars in the future.<br />

Pause ere you fling from you life; you are mortals, not gods in your glory.<br />

Not for submission to new ally or to ancient foeman<br />

Peace these desire; for who would exchange wide death for subjection?<br />

Who would submit to a yoke? Or who shall rule Trojans in Troya?<br />

Swords are there still at our sides, there are warriors’ hearts in our bosoms.<br />

Peace your senators welcome, not servitude, breathing they ask for.<br />

But if for war you pronounce, if a noble death you have chosen,<br />

That I approve. What fitter end for this warlike nation,<br />

Knowing that empires at last must sink and perish all cities,

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