Awhile on the chill dreadful edge of Night
All stood as if a world were doomed to die
And waited on the eternal silence' brink…
Hungry beyond, the night desired her soul.
But still in its lone niche of templed strength
Motionless, her flame-bright spirit, mute, erect,
Burned like a torch-fire from a windowed room
Pointing against the darkness' sombre breast.
The Woman first affronted the Abyss
Daring to journey through the eternal Night.
Armoured with light she advanced her foot to plunge
Into the dread and hueless vacancy;
Immortal, unappalled her spirit faced
The danger of the ruthless eyeless waste… more »
|
|||||
|
Create a free Reader Account
to post comments. Login
Get free daily SCIY Notable SCIY Topics
Search
Recent Visitors
RY Deshpande - Sep 6, 06:26AM
Vladimir - Sep 6, 03:09AM
ronjon - Sep 5, 09:26PM
rakesh - Sep 5, 09:53AM
Cristian - Sep 3, 03:42AM
Vikas - Sep 2, 11:14PM
thinkactlove - Sep 2, 08:46AM
Subhada - Sep 2, 05:38AM
Isabelle - Aug 30, 06:58AM
Sekhar - Aug 25, 03:03PM
The Best of SCIY
Category Folders (below) Click folder names for contained articles, Click 'Main Page' to return. Month Archive
|
Saturday, April 26
by
RY Deshpande
on April 26, 2008 10:36PM (PDT)
Saturday, April 19
by
RY Deshpande
on April 19, 2008 09:03PM (PDT)
At first in a blind stress of woods she moved
With strange inhuman paces on the soil, Journeying as if upon an unseen road. Around her on the green and imaged earth The flickering screen of forests ringed her steps. Its thick luxurious obstacle of boughs Besieged her body pressing dimly through In a rich realm of whispers palpable, And all the murmurous beauty of the leaves Rippled around her like an emerald robe. But more and more this grew an alien sound, And her old intimate body seemed to her A burden which her being remotely bore. Herself lived far in some uplifted scene Where to the trance-chained vision of pursuit, Sole presences in a high spaceless dream, The luminous spirit glided stilly on And the great shadow travelled vague behind. Still with an amorous crowd of seeking hands Softly entreated by their old desires Her senses felt earth's close and gentle air… more » Friday, April 18
by
RY Deshpande
on April 18, 2008 06:33AM (PDT)
These 111 photographs of the Samadhi, seven inches by ten inches in size, taken at different times of the day and from different angles, have been collected and printed on art paper in this volume. They evoke the presence of this sacred place with its atmosphere of deep peace and serenity. Many of the photographs capture the beauty of the floral decorations and designs that are created twice daily on the Samadhi. A short introduction records how the care of the Samadhi and its environs developed from December 1950 to the present and includes many of the Mother's instructions on how things were to be kept and arranged.
more »
Thursday, April 17
by
RY Deshpande
on April 17, 2008 06:22AM (PDT)
![]() This pencil-sketch of Arjava, with the caption below it,
is by Amal Kiran drawn on a piece of paper. It is kept by him as a frontispiece
in his copy of Poems by Arjava (J A
Chadwick) published in 1941. The copy contains, in Amal’s hand, Sri Aurobindo’s
comments on a fairly large number of poems. These poems were mostly written during
the 1930s. It is significant to note that Arjava the logician-philosopher started
writing poetry after joining the Ashram. Saturday, April 12
by
RY Deshpande
on April 12, 2008 08:09PM (PDT)
The dim and awful godhead rose erect
From his brief stooping to his touch on earth, And like a dream that wakes out of a dream, Forsaking the poor mould of that dead clay, Another luminous Satyavan arose, Starting upright from the recumbent earth As if someone over viewless borders stepped Emerging on the edge of unseen worlds. In the earth's day the silent marvel stood Between the mortal woman and the god. Such seemed he as if one departed came Wearing the light of a celestial shape Splendidly alien to the mortal air… Between two realms he stood, not wavering, But fixed in quiet strong expectancy… But now the impulse of the Path was felt Moving from the Silence that supports the stars To touch the confines of the visible world. Luminous he moved away… more » Sunday, April 6
by
RY Deshpande
on April 6, 2008 06:29AM (PDT)
The two opposed each other with their eyes,
Woman and universal god: around her, Piling their void unbearable loneliness Upon her mighty uncompanioned soul, Many inhuman solitudes came close. Vacant eternities forbidding hope Laid upon her their huge and lifeless look, And to her ears silencing earthly sounds, A sad and formidable voice arose Which seemed the whole adverse world's. “Unclasp,” it cried, “Thy passionate influence and relax, O slave Of Nature, changing tool of changeless Law, Who vainly writhst rebellious to my yoke, Thy elemental grasp; weep and forget. Entomb thy passion in its living grave. Leave now the once-loved spirit's abandoned robe: Pass lonely back to thy vain life on earth.” It ceased, she moved not and it spoke again… more » Friday, April 4
by
Rich
on April 4, 2008 02:08PM (PDT)
![]() This is the first part of a longer meditation on the future bodies. I have entitled this section “Goodbye To All That” which is the title of Robert Graves autobiography in which he recounts his experiences in the trenches in WWI. What he is saying goodbye to is the passing of an era: of the naive, carefree, class based culture of Edwardian England, which did not survive the war. Sri Aurobindo wrote the passages referenced here at about the time the Edwardian era ended and the great war began. Because our views and valorization of nature are cultural constructions, to appreciate why Sri Aurobindo extrapolates a certain form of naturalism into the future body we must first excavate his conceptions of “what is natural.” The context of his writing referenced here on evolution and the future body seems to flow naturally out of a post-romantic protestant view of Nature he must have been exposed to growing up in England which lived on well into the Edwardian era. To the British upper classes it was a view of nature as pristine, which they enjoyed in well manicured English country gardens, not yet smeared with the blood of the trenches. Above all nature was clearly distinct from the machinery given to us by culture. In forming his view of nature Sri Aurobindo took account of Ruskin's, Carlyle's, and Arnold's critique of industrialism. This view of nature was certainly valuable for sacramentalizing nature at a time when the Industrial Revolution was rapidly desecrating it. Today however, the interpenetration of nature by information technologies and genetic engineering has added enough complexity to what it means to be natural/human that we can no longer escape environments which are increasingly mediated by technology. Electricity undergirds much of our phenomenological experience of the world, bio-technology sustains our physical presence in it. In such a brave new world the continuity of the already developed evolutionary form with all its biological naturalism seems to be a reality to which we have already said goodbye But, what is important for us in Sri Aurobindo's vision of the future body .... more » |
SCIY Index & Page Views
View SCIY Slide Shows
Recent Articles
What is SCIY ?
ronjon
September 6 Quote of the Day
ronjon
September 5 Quote of the Day
ronjon
September 4 Quote of the Day
ronjon
September 3 Quote of the Day
ronjon
September 2 Quote of the Day
ronjon
Recent Comments
Full text of Comments
Recent Book Reviews
Recommended Links
|
|||
|
|||||

