CWSA Set of 37 volumes
Collected Poems Vol. 2 of CWSA 751 pages 2009 Edition
English
 PDF   

Editions

ABOUT

All poems in English including sonnets, lyrical poems, narrative poems, and metrical experiments in various forms.

THEME

Collected Poems

  Poems

Sri Aurobindo symbol
Sri Aurobindo

This volume consists of all poems in English including sonnets, lyrical poems, narrative poems, and metrical experiments in various forms. All such poems published by Sri Aurobindo during his lifetime are included here, as well as poems found among his manuscripts after his passing. Sri Aurobindo worked on these poems over the course of seven decades. The first one was published in 1883 when he was ten; a number of poems were written or revised more than sixty years later, in the late 1940s.

The Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo (CWSA) Collected Poems Vol. 2 751 pages 2009 Edition
English
 PDF     Poems

To a Hero-Worshipper

To a Hero-Worshipper - I

My life is then a wasted ereme,
    My song but idle wind
    Because you merely find
In all this woven wealth of rhyme
Harsh figures with harsh music wound,
The uncouth voice of gorgeous birds,
A ruby carcanet of sound,
    A cloud of lovely words?

I am, you say, no magic rod,
    No cry oracular,
    No swart and ominous star,
No Sinai thunder voicing God.
I have no burden to my song,
No smouldering word instinct with fire,
No spell to chase triumphant wrong,
    No spirit-sweet desire.

Mine is not Byron's lightning spear,
    Nor Wordsworth's lucid strain
    Nor Shelley's lyric pain,
Nor Keats', the poet without peer.
I by the Indian waters vast
Did glimpse the magic of the past,
And on the oaten pipe I play
Warped echoes of an earlier day.

To a Hero-Worshipper - II

My friend, when first my spirit woke,
    I trod the scented maze
    Of Fancy's myriad ways,

Page 41


I studied Nature like a book
Men rack for meanings: yet I find
No rubric in the scarlet rose,
No moral in the murmuring wind,
    No message in the snows.

For me the daisy shines a star,
    The crocus flames a spire,
    A horn of golden fire,
Narcissus glows a silver bar:
Cowslips, the golden breath of God,
I deem the poet's heritage,
And lilies silvering the sod
    Breathe fragrance from his page.

No herald of the sun am I
    But in a moonlit vale
    A russet nightingale
Who pours sweet song, he knows not why,
Who pours like wine a gurgling note
Paining with sound his swarthy throat,
Who pours sweet song he recks not why
Nor hushes ever lest he die.









Let us co-create the website.

Share your feedback. Help us improve. Or ask a question.

Image Description
Connect for updates