SAVITRI

 

SRI AUROBINDO

 

1954

 

Contents

 

Pre Content

 

Part One

 

BOOK ONE

 

The Book of Beginnings

 

 

BOOK TWO

 

The Book of the Traveller of the Worlds

 

 

BOOK THREE

 

The Book of the Divine Mother

 

Canto I

The Pursuit of the Unknowable

Canto II

The Adoration of the Divine Mother

Canto III

The House of the Spirit and the New Creation

Canto IV

The Vision and the Boon

 

 

Part Two

 

BOOK FOUR

 

The Book of Birth and Quest

 

BOOK FIVE

 

The Book of Love

 

 

 

BOOK SIX

 

The Book of Fate

 

 

 

BOOK SEVEN

 

The Book of Yoga

 

Canto I

The Joy of Union : The Ordeal of the ForeKnowledge of Death and the Heart's Grief

Canto II

The Parable of the Search for the Soul

Canto III

The Entry into the Inner Countries

Canto IV

The Triple Soul-Forces

Canto V

The Finding of the Soul

Canto VI

Nirvana and the Discovery of the All-Negating Absolute

Canto VII

untitled

 

 

BOOK EIGHT

 

The Book of Death

 

 

 

Part three

 

BOOK NINE

 

The Book of Eternal Night

 

Canto I

Towards the Black Void

Canto II

The Journey in Eternal Night and the Voice of the Darkness

 

 

BOOK TEN

 

The Book of the Double Twilight

 

 

 

BOOK ELEVEN

 

The Book of Everlasting Day

 

 

 

BOOK TWELVE

 

Epilogue

 

 

 

Sri Aurobindo's Letters on Savitri

 

SRI AUROBINDO'S

LETTERS ON "SAVITRI"


NOTE

 

These letters are published at the end of Savitri for their rare value as a great poet's informal self-commentary. Apropos that value, a few facts of deep personal interest may be mentioned about the coming of this poem to its close.  

 

Some months before his passing, Sri Aurobindo, as if in foreknowledge of the event, said: "I want to finish Savitri soon." The words took by utter surprise the disciple, his scribe, who had been used to the grandly patient way in which so far it had been composed and frequently retouched and amplified. Even when, in the past, composition had been extraordinarily swift—once four to five hundred lines needing hardly any change were dictated in succession—there had been no hurry in the poet's attitude to his work. But now he increased immensely the general tempo of composition and revision. There seemed a race with time. And it was almost towards the end that, after rapidly revising the long second Canto of the Book of Fate, he paused with some satisfaction. Then he inquired what still remained to be written. On being told about the Book of Death and the Epilogue entitled The Return to Earth, which were yet to be caught up into a larger utterance, he remarked:  "Oh, that? We shall see about that afterwards." 52 8i7

 

Page – 817


Savitri, as the footnote to the Book of Death indicates, was not completed in the common meaning of the term and indeed Sri Aurobindo's original plan was to give this part of the poem as well as the Epilogue a thorough recasting. But his strange remark suggests that later, for reasons of his own, he was not anxious about them and that what he had thought necessary had been done. So it is impossible to say definitely that he did not wish Savitri to be, on the whole, just as he left it after making corrections and additions in the Canto already mentioned of the Book of Fate.  

 

These corrections and additions were the last things he wrote in this epic of twenty-three thousand eight hundred and thirteen lines, over which he had spent so many years. Among them, in view of subsequent circumstances, three newly written passages in the speech of Narad stand out most significantly. The first is about the sacrifice the God-Man gives in history: 

 

He who has found his identity with God

Pays with the body's death his soul's vast light.

His knowledge immortal triumphs by his death.  

 

The second dwells on the inner meaning with which Sat departure from the earth is packed:  

 

His death is a beginning of greater life...  

A vast intention has brought two souls close  

And love and death conspire towards one great end.

 

Page – 818


For out of danger and pain heaven-bliss shall come,

Time's unforeseen event. God's secret plan.  

 

The third is the passage of seventy-two lines, absolutely the last piece of poetry dictated by Sri Aurobindo, in which, with a sound as of massive repeating bells, Narad admonishes King Aswapathy's wife when she protests against the fate of loneliness that will be her daughter Savitri's in consequence of the predestined passing of Satyavan, even as it appeared to be that of Sri Aurobindo's spiritual co-worker, the Mother, at the time the Master of the "Integral Yoga" withdrew from his body. Some lines may be quoted:  

 

As a star, uncompanioned, moves in heaven

Unastonished by the immensities of space,

Travelling infinity by its own light,

The great are strongest when they stand alone...

A day may come when she must stand unhelped

On a dangerous brink of the world's doom and hers,

Carrying the world's future on her lonely breast,

Carrying the human hope in a heart left sole

To conquer or fail on a last desperate verge.

Alone with death and close to extinction's edge,

Her single greatness in that last dire scene,

She must cross alone a perilous bridge in Time

And reach an apex of world-destiny

Where all is won or all is lost for man...

For this the silent Force came missioned down;

 

Page – 819


In her the conscious Will took human shape:  

She only can save herself and save the world...

Even though all falters and falls and sees an end

And the heart fails and only are death and night,

God-given her strength can battle against doom...

Think not to intercede with the hidden Will,

Intrude not twixt her spirit and its force

But leave her to her mighty self and Fate.

 

Page – 820