Works of Sri Aurobindo

open all | close all

-34_The Mother of Dreams.htm

SHORT POEMS 1902 -1930

 

The Mother of Dreams

 

 

Goddess supreme, Mother of Dream, by thy ivory doors when thou standest,

Who are they then that come down unto men in thy visions that troop,

                                   group upon group, down the path of the shadows slanting?

Dream after dream, they flash and they gleam with the flame of the stars

                                                                                                still around them;

Shadows at thy side in a darkness ride where the wild fires dance, stars glow

                                                            and glance and the random meteor glistens;

There are voices that cry to their kin who reply; voices sweet, at the heart

                                                            they beat and ravish the soul as it listens.

What then are these lands and these golden sands and these seas more

                                                                          radiant than earth can imagine?

Who are those that pace by the purple waves that race to the cliff-bound

                            floor of thy jasper shore under skies in which mystery muses,

Lapped in moonlight not of our night or plunged in sunshine that is not

                                                                                                            diurnal?

Who are they coming thy Oceans roaming with sails whose strands are not

                                                    made by hands, an unearthly wind  advances?

Why do they join in a mystic line with those on the sands linking hands in

                                                                                strange and stately dances?

Thou in the air, with a flame in thy hair, the whirl of thy wonders watching,

Holdest the night in thy ancient right, Mother divine, hyacinthine, with a

                                                                                 girdle of beauty defended.

Sworded with fire, attracting desire, thy tenebrous kingdom thou keepest,

Starry-sweet, with the moon at thy feet, now hidden now seen the clouds

                                                between in the gloom and the drift of  thy tresses.

Only to those whom thy fancy chose, O thou heart-free, is it given to see

                                                                   thy witchcraft and feel thy caresses.

Open the gate where thy children wait in their world of a beauty undarkened.

High-throned on a cloud, victorious, proud I have espied Maghavan ride

                                                            when the armies of wind are behind him;

Food has been given for my tasting from heaven and fruit of immortal

                                                                                                        sweetness;

I have drunk wine of the kingdoms divine and have heard the change of

                                  music strange from a lyre which our hands cannot master;  

Page-67


Doors have swung wide in the chambers of pride where the Gods reside and

                                            the Apsaras dance in their circles faster and faster.

For thou art she whom we first can see when we pass the bounds of the

                                                                                                             mortal,
There at the gates of the heavenly states thou hast planted thy wand enchanted

                                                                     over the head of the Yogin waving.

From thee are the dream and the shadows that seem and the fugitive lights

                                                                      that delude us;
Thine is the shade in which visions are made; sped by thy hands from

                                                                     celestial lands come the souls that rejoice for ever.

Into thy dream-worlds we pass or look in thy magic glass, then beyond thee

                                                                    we climb out of Space and Time to the peak of divine endeavour.    

Page-68