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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Ilion – Book IV 395<br />

Six were the halls of its splendour, a hundred and one were its chambers<br />

Lifted on high upon columns that soared like the thoughts of its dwellers,<br />

Thoughts that transcended the earth though they sank down at last into<br />

ashes;<br />

So had Apollo dreamed to his lyre; and its tops were a grandeur<br />

Domed, as if seeking to roof men’s lives with a hint of the heavens;<br />

Marble his columns rose and with marble his roofs were appointed,<br />

Conquered wealth of the world in its largeness suffered, supporting<br />

Purities of marble, glories of gold. Nor only of matter<br />

Blazed there the brutal pomps, but images mystic or mighty<br />

Crowded ceiling and wall, a work that the gods even admire<br />

Hardly believing that forms like these were imagined by mortals<br />

Here upon earth where sight is a blur and the soul lives encumbered.<br />

Scrolls that remembered in gems the thoughts austere of the ancients<br />

Bordered the lines of the stone and the forms of serpent and Naiad<br />

Ran in relief on those walls of pride in the palace of Priam<br />

Mingled with Dryads who tempted and fled and Satyrs who followed,<br />

Sports of the nymphs in the sea and the woods and their meetings with<br />

mortals,<br />

Sessions and battles of Trojan demigods, deaths that were famous,<br />

Wars and loves of men and the deeds of the golden immortals.<br />

Pillars sculptured with gods and with giants soared up from bases<br />

Lion-carved or were seated on bulls and bore into grandeur<br />

Amply those halls where they soared, or in lordliness slenderly fashioned,<br />

Dressed in flowers and reeds like virgins standing on Ida,<br />

Guarded the screens of stone and divided alcove and chamber.<br />

Ivory carved and broidered robes and the riches of Indus<br />

Cherished in sandalwood triumphed and teemed in the palace of Priam;<br />

Doors that were carven and fragrant sheltered the joys of its princes.<br />

Here in a chamber of luminous privacy Paris was arming.<br />

Near him moved Helen, a whiteness divine, and intent on her labour<br />

Fastened his cuirass, bound the greaves and settled the hauberk<br />

Thrilling his limbs with her touch that was heaven to the yearning of mortals.<br />

She with her hands of delight caressing the senseless metal<br />

Pressed her lips to his brilliant armour; she bowed down, she whispered:<br />

“Cuirass, allowed by the gods, protect the beauty of Paris;<br />

Keep for me that for which country was lost and my child and my brothers.”

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