Sri Aurobindo
Collected Poems
CWSA.- Volume 2
Part Three. Baroda and Bengal, c. 1900 – 1909
Poems
from Ahana and Other Poems
To the Sea
Thou hast a message, thunderer, for me.
Thy monstrous billows raise, abysmal cracks
Dug deep between.
One pale boat flutters over them, hardly seen.
Call me, “Why dost thou linger on the shore
With fearful eyes
Watching my tops visit their foam-washed skies?
Dares my vast battering billows and can float.
Are there not many thousands left behind?
Nor cling like cowards to the easy shore.
What rapture lives in danger and o’erthrow.”
I am more mighty and outbillow thee.
’Tis an excuse to dally with the skies.
The bottom of the clamorous world to know.
To linger is to lose what God has planned
For man’s wide soul,
Who set eternal godhead for its goal.
Danger and difficulty like seas and made
Pain and defeat,
And put His giant snares around our feet.
With thunder and assails us with His storms,
That man may grow
King over pain and victor of o’erthrow
Matching his great
Unconquerable soul with adverse Fate.
My way to climb the heavens, thou rude great sea.
O lion, I will tame thee and disdain;
Or else below
Into thy salt abysmal caverns go,
Receive thy weight
Upon me and be stubborn as my Fate.
To measure my enormous self with thee.
Earlier edition of this work: Sri Aurobindo Birth Century Library: Set in 30 volumes.- Volume 5.- Collected Poems.- Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Asram, 1972.- 625 p.