Book Seven: The Book of Yoga
Canto Six: Nirvana and the Discovery of the All-Negating Absolute
A calm slow sun looked down from tranquil heavens. A routed sullen rearguard of retreat, The last rains had fled murmuring across the woods Or failed, a sibilant whisper mid the leaves, And the great blue enchantment of the sky Recovered the deep rapture of its smile. Its mellow splendour unstressed by storm-licked heats Found room for a luxury of warm mild days, The night’s gold treasure of autumnal moons Came floating shipped through ripples of faery air. And Savitri’s life was glad, fulfilled like earth’s; She had found herself, she knew her being’s aim. Although her kingdom of marvellous change within Remained unspoken in her secret breast, All that lived round her felt its magic’s charm: The trees’ rustling voices told it to the winds, Flowers spoke in ardent hues an unknown joy, The birds’ carolling became a canticle, The beasts forgot their strife and lived at ease. Absorbed in wide communion with the Unseen The mild ascetics of the wood received A sudden greatening of their lonely muse. This bright perfection of her inner state Poured overflowing into her outward scene, Made beautiful dull common natural things And action wonderful and time divine. Even the smallest meanest work became A sweet or glad and glorious sacrament, An offering to the self of the great world Or a service to the One in each and all. |
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A light invaded all from her being’s light; |
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And made her joy a bridge twixt earth and heaven, |
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The illusion of thy soul’s reality |
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Only her soul remained, its emptied stage, |
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The vast universal suffering feel as thine: |
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And the miraculous world he has become And the diviner miracle still to be When Nature who is now unconscious God Translucent grows to the Eternal’s light, Her seeing his sight, her walk his steps of power And life is filled with a spiritual joy And Matter is the Spirit’s willing bride. Consent to be nothing and none, dissolve Time’s work, Cast off thy mind, step back from form and name. Annul thyself that only God may be.” Thus spoke the mighty and uplifting Voice, |
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Affranchised from the look of surface mind |
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Invading the small sensitive flower of the throat |
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And the common pabulum of sense and thought. |
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With raw material drawn from the outside world, |
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But only when we break through Matter’s wall |
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And the ocean silence of Infinity. |
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In that absolute stillness bare and formidable |
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Her consciousness looked on and took no part; |
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There was no soul within, no power of life. |
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A spaceless and a placeless Infinite. |
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Beings were not there, existence had no place, |
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In infinite Nothingness was the ultimate sign Or else the Real was the Unknowable. A lonely Absolute negated all: It effaced the ignorant world from its solitude And drowned the soul in its everlasting peace. End of Canto Six |
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