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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Poems_Volume-05/A Child's Imagination.htm
-27_A Child's Imagination.htm
A Child’s Imagination
O thou golden image,
Miniature of bliss,
Speaking sweetly, speaking meetly!
Every word deserves a
kiss.
Strange, remote and splendid
Childhood’s fancy
pure
Thrills to thoughts we cannot fathom,
Quick felicities
obscure.
When the eyes grow solemn
Laughter fades away,
Nature of her mighty childhood
Recollects the Titan
play;
Woodlands touched by sunlight
Where the elves abode,
Giant meetings, Titan greetings,
Fancies of a youthful
God.
These
are coming on thee
In thy secret thought;
God remembers in thy bosom
All the wonders that He
wrought.
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Poems_Volume-05/The Lover's Complaint.htm
-10_The Lover's Complaint.htm
The Lover's Complaint
O plaintive, murmuring reed, begin thy strain;
Unloose that heavenly tongue,
Interpreter divine of pain;
Utter thy voice, the sister of my song.
Thee in the silver waters growing,
Arcadian pan, strange whispers blowing
Into thy delicate stops, did teach
A language lovelier than speech.
O plaintive, murmuring reed, begin thy strain;
O plaintive, murmuring reed.
Nisa
to Mopsus is decreed,
The moonwhite Nisa to a swarthy swain.
What love-gift now shall Hope not bring?
Election dwells no more with beauty's king.
The wild weed now has wed the rose,
Now ivy on the bramble grows;
Too happy lover, fill the la
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Poems_Volume-05/In the silence of midnight.htm
FRAGMENTS
In the silence of midnight
In the silence of midnight, in the light of dawn or noontide
I have heard the flutings of the Infinite, I have seen the sun-wings of the
seraphs.
On the boundless solitude of the mountains, on the shoreless roll of ocean
Something is felt of God's vastness, floating touches of the Absolute;
Momentary and immeasurable smiled the sense nature free from its limits,-
A brief glimpse, a hint, it passes but the soul grows deeper, wider:
God has set his mark upon the creature.
In the flash or flutter of flight of bird and insect, in the passion of winged
cry on the treet
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Poems_Volume-05/The Mahatmas.htm
The
Mahatmas
KUTHUMI
(This
poem is purely a play of the
imaginative, a poetic reconstruction of
the central idea only of
Mahatmahood.)
The
seven mountains and the seven seas
Surround
me. Over me the eightfold Sun
Blazing
with various colours – green
and blue,
Scarlet
and rose, violet and gold and white,
And
the dark disk that rides in the mortal cave –
Looks
down on me in flame. Below spread wide
The
worlds of the immortals, tier on tier
Like
a great mountain climbing to the skies,
And
on their summit Shiva dwells. Of old
My
doings were familiar with the earth,
The
mortals over whom I hold control
Were
then my fe
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Poems_Volume-05/Chitrangada.htm
Chitrangada
In Manipur upon her orient hills
Chitrangada beheld intending dawn
Gaze coldly in. She understood the call.
The silence and in perfect pallor passed
Into her heart and in herself she grew
Prescient of grey realities. Rising,
She gazed afraid into the opening world.
Then Urjoon, felt his mighty clasp a void
Empty of her he loved and, through the grey
Unwilling darkness that disclosed her face,
Sought out Chitrangada. "Why dost thou stand
In the grey light, like one from joy cast down?
O thou whose bliss is sure. Leave that grey space,
Come hither." So she came and leaning down,
With that strange sorrow in her eyes, replied:
“Great, dou
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Poems_Volume-05/Ocean Oneness.htm
VI
POEMS IN NEW METRES
Ocean Oneness*
Silence
is round me, wideness ineffable;
White birds on the ocean diving and wandering;
A soundless sea on a voiceless heaven,
Azure on azure, is mutely gazing.
Identified with silence and boundlessness
My spirit widens clasping the universe
Till all that seemed becomes the Real,
One in a mighty and single vastness.
Someone broods there nameless and bodiless,
Conscious and lonely; deathless and infinite,
And, sole in a still eternal rapture,
Gathers all things to his heart for ever.
*
Alcaics. Modulations are allowed, trochee or iamb in the first foot or a long
monosyllable; an occasional anapae
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/Post Content.htm
Title:
-40_The Possibility of a First Step Twoards International Unity.htm
View All Highlighted Matches
CHAPTER
XIV
The
Possibility of a First Step
towards International Unity-
Its Enormous Difficulties
THE study of the growth
of the nation-unit under the pressure indeed of a growing inner need and idea but
by the agency of political, economic and social forces, forms and instruments
shows us a progress that began from a loose formation in which various elements
were gathered together for unification, proceeded through a period of strong
concentration and coercion in which the conscious national ego was developed,
fortified and provided with a centre and instruments of its organic life and
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/1919.htm
1919
THE
year 1919 comes to us with the appearance of one of the most pregnant and
historic dates of the modern world. It has ended the greatest war in history,
begotten a new thing in the history of mankind, a League of Nations which claims
to be the foundation-stone for the future united life of the human race, and
cleared the stage for fresh and momentous other constructions or destructions,
which will bring us into another structure of society and of the framework of
human life than has yet been known in the recorded memory of the earth's
peoples. This is record enough for a single year and it looks as if there were
already sufficient to give this date an undisputed pree
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Social and Political Thought_Volume-15/ Ancient and Modern Methods of Empire.htm
CHAPTER
VI
Ancient and Modern Methods of Empire
A
CLEAR distinction must be made between ,two political
aggregates which go equally in current language by
name of empire. For there is the homogeneous national and
there is the
heterogeneous composite empire. In a sense, all empires are composites, at any
rate, if we go back to their origins; but in practice there is a difference
between the imperial aggregate in which the component elements are not divided
from other by a strong sense of their separate existence in the ole and the
imperial aggregate in which this psychological is of separation is still in
vigour. Japan before the absorption ,Fo