Savitri: the Light of the Supreme
Re: This Author must have been ... incongruousness
by RY Deshpande
Putting Sri Aurobindo in the Dryden-Ruskin-Virginia Woolf is a case of misjudgement-misapplication of criteria. Luckily nowhere in the Lives we have comparison of Sri Aurobindo’s poetry with the latest genre of poetry. Let us take an example from one of the latest annual collections of poems with Sri Aurobindo’s Who or Invitaion. We need not add any further comment about these two sets of composition, except indicate the incongruousness of such dissimilar areas of prose and poetry belonging to different genres. ~ RYD
Here’s Gavin Ewart’s The Process of Ageing: In everything living the process of ageing, like loving and giving, is roaring and raging. A terrible lion and worthy of hymning on someone’s Mount Zion, where daylight is dimming. We all have an inkling— the hair that is graying, the skin that is wrinkling, are certainly saying with voices too truthful —though your voice may falter— ‘You’re no longer youthful, you’re starting to alter!’ It’s quite universal, the fate we are facing, there’s no reversal— but life is replacing our tiredness and stiffness with new unworn bodies Of promise and ifness, through Venus (a goddess). Before the last breathing and final bereavement the poet wants wreathing— a little achievement acclaimed in some quarters, the giving of pleasure to grandsons and daughters— growing old at their leisure.
Here is Sri Aurobindo’s Who: In the blue of the sky, in the green of the forest, Whose is the hand that has painted the glow? When the winds were asleep in the womb of the ether, Who was it roused them and bade them to blow? He is lost in the heart, in the cavern of Nature, He is found in the brain where He builds up the thought: In the pattern and bloom of the flowers He is woven, In the luminous net of the stars He is caught. In the strength of a man, in the beauty of woman, In the laugh of a boy, in the blush of a girl; The hand that sent Jupiter spinning through heaven, Spends all its cunning to fashion a curl. These are His works and His veils and His shadows; But where is He then? by what name is He known? Is He Brahma or Vishnu? a man or a woman? Bodied or bodiless? twin or alone? We have love for a boy who is dark and resplendent, A woman is lord of us, naked and fierce. We have seen Him a-muse on the snow the mountains, We have watched Him at work in the heart the spheres. We will tell the whole world His ways and His cunning: He has rapture torture and passion and pain; He delights in our sorrow and drives us to weeping, Then lures with His joy and His beauty again. All music is only the sound of His laughter; All beauty the smile of His passionate bliss; Our lives are His heart-beats, our rapture the bridal Of Radha and Krishna, our love is their kiss. He is strength that is loud in the blare of the trumpets, And He rides in the car and He strikes in the spears; He slays without stint and is full of compassion; He wars for the world and its ultimate years In the sweep of the worlds, in the surge of the ages, Ineffable, mighty, majestic and pure, Beyond the last pinnacle seized by the thinker He is throned in His seats that for ever endure. The Master of man and his infinite Lover, He is close to our hearts, had we vision to see; We are blind with our pride and the pomp of our passions, We are bound in our thoughts where we hold ourselves free. It is He in the sun who is ageless and deathless, And into the midnight His shadow is thrown; When darkness was blind and engulfed within darkness, He was seated within it immense and alone. And here is 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 misadventure have made me a friend. Who would live largely? Who would live freely? Here to the wind-swept uplands ascend. I am the lord of tempest and mountain, I am the Spirit of freedom and pride. Stark must he be and a kinsman to danger Who shares my kingdom and walks at my side.
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