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Acronyms used in the website

SABCL - Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library

CWSA - Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo

CWM - Collected Works of The Mother

Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Note on the Texts - Contd.htm
PART SEVEN: PONDICHERRY, CIRCA 1927 ­ 1947   Sri Aurobindo published three short volumes of poetry, and a volume on poetics that included poems as illustrations, between 1934and 1946. One of the volumes of poems, Poems Past and Present, comprises Part Six of the present volume. The other volumes are included in this part, which also contains complete and incomplete poems from his manuscripts of the same period.   Six Poems   These poems were written in 1932, 1933 and 1934. In 1934 a book was planned that would include the six poems along with translations of them into Bengali by disciples of
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Incomplete Narrative Poems Circa 1899 ­ 1902 - contd.htm
  Uloupie   CANTO I Under the high and gloomy eastern hills The portals of Pataala are and there The Bhogavathie with her sinuous waves Rises, a river alien to the sun, And often to its strange and gleaming sands Uloupie came, weary of those dim shades And great disastrous caverns neighbouring Hell, Avid of sunlight. Through the grasses long She glided and her fierce and gorgeous hood Gleamed with a perilous beauty and a light Above the green spikes of the grass; often In the slow sinuous waters she was spied Swimming, with mystic dusky hair and cheeks That had no rose,  —  one shoulder's d
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Two Poems in Quantitative Hexameters - CONTD.htm
  BOOK VII   The Book of the Woman   So to the voice of their best they were bowed and obeyed undebating; Men whose hearts were burning yet with implacable passion Felt Odysseus' strength and rose up clay to his counsels. King Agamemnon rose at his word, the wide-ruling monarch, Rose at his word the Cretan and Locrian, Thebes and Epirus, Nestor rose, the time-tired hoary chief of the Pylians. Round Agamemnon the Atreid Europe surged in her chieftains Forth from their tent on the shores of the Troad, splendid in armour, Into the golden blaze of the sun and the race of the sea-winds. Fierce and clear
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Two Poems in Quantitative Hexameters - CONTD.htm
'Collected Poems' by Sri Aurobindo - Page 1 of 50   Ilion Bk-I   What say the vaunters of Greece to the virgin Penthesilea?" High was the Argive's answer confronting the mighty in Troya. "Princes of Pergama, whelps of the lion who roar for the mellay, Suffer my speech! It shall ring like a spear on the hearts of the mighty. Blame not the herald; his voice is an impulse, an echo, a channel Now for the timbrels of peace and now for the drums of the battle. And I have come from no cautious strength, from no half-hearted speaker, But from the Phthian. All know him! Proud is his soul as his fortunes, Swift as his sword and his spear are
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Complete Narrative Poems - contd.htm
  Urvasi   CANTO IV   Through darkness and immense dim night he went Mid phantom outlines of approaching trees, And all the day in green leaves, till he came To peopled forests and sweet clamorous streams And marvellous shining meadows where he lived With Urvasie his love in seasons old. These like domestic faces waiting were. He knew each wind-blown tree, each different field; And could distinguish all the sounding rivers Each by its own voice and peculiar flow. Here were the happy shades where they had lain Inarmed and murmuring, here half-lustrous groves Still voiceful with a sacred sou
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Two Poems in Quantitative Hexameters - CONTD.htm
'Collected Poems' by Sri Aurobindo - Page 1 of 50   Ahana     Ahana   (Ahana, the Dawn of God, descends on the world where amid the strife and trouble of mortality the Hunters of Joy, the Seekers after Knowledge, the Climbers in the quest of Power are toiling up the slopes or waiting in the valleys. As she stands on the mountains of the East, voices of the Hunters of Joy are the first to greet her.)   Vision delightful alone on the hills whom the silences cover, Closer yet lean to mortality; human, stoop to thy lover. Wonderful, gold like a moon in the square of the sun where thou strayest Glimmers thy face amid crystal purities; might
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Poems from Ahana and Other Poems.htm
'Collected Poems' by Sri Aurobindo - Page 1 of 50   Part Three Baroda and Bengal Circa 1900 ­ 1909     Poems from Ahana and Other Poems     Invitation   With wind and the weather beating round me Up to the hill and the moorland I go. Who will come with me? Who will climb with me? Wade through the brook and tramp through the snow?   Not in the petty circle of cities Cramped by your doors and your walls I dwell; Over me God is blue in the welkin, Against me the wind and the storm rebel.   I sport with solitude here in my regions, Of misad
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Poems from Ahana and Other Poems - Contd.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 th
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Two Poems in Quantitative Hexameters - CONTD.htm
  BOOK III   The Book of the Assembly   But as the nation beset betwixt doom and a shameful surrender Waited mute for a voice that could lead and a heart to encourage, Up in the silence deep Laocoon rose up, far-heard,  — Heard by the gods in their calm and heard by men in their passion  — Cloud-haired, clad in mystic red, flamboyant, sombre, Priam's son Laocoon, fate-darkened seer of Apollo. As when the soul of the Ocean arises rapt in the dawning And mid the rocks and the foam uplifting the voice of its musings Opens the chant of its turbulent harmonies, so rose the far-borne V
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Collected Poems/Songs to Myrtilla.htm
'Collected Poems' by Sri Aurobindo - Page 1 of 50   Songs to Myrtilla   Songs to Myrtilla   GLAUCUS Sweet is the night, sweet and cool As to parched lips a running pool; Sweet when the flowers have fallen asleep And only moonlit rivulets creep Like glow-worms in the dim and whispering wood, To commune with the quiet heart and solitude. When earth is full of whispers, when No daily voice is heard of men, But higher audience brings The footsteps of invisible things, When o'er the glimmering tree-tops bowed The night is leaning on a luminous cloud, And always a melodious breeze Sings secret in the weird and charmed trees, Pleasant 't