Complete Works. Rabindranath Tagore

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Complete Works - Rabindranath Tagore


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winging to build their nests in my heart against the warmth of its April, and I am content to wait for the merry season.

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      They knew the way and went to seek you along the narrow lane, but

       I wandered abroad into the night for I was ignorant.

      I was not schooled enough to be afraid of you in the dark, therefore I came upon your doorstep unaware.

      The wise rebuked me and bade me be gone, for I had not come by the lane.

      I turned away in doubt, but you held me fast, and their scolding became louder every day.

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      I brought out my earthen lamp from my house and cried, "Come, children, I will light your path!"

      The night was still dark when I returned, leaving the road to its silence, crying, "Light me, O Fire! for my earthen lamp lies broken in the dust!"

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      No: it is not yours to open buds into blossoms.

      Shake the bud, strike it; it is beyond your power to make it blossom.

      Your touch soils it, you tear its petals to pieces and strew them in the dust.

      But no colours appear, and no perfume.

      Ah! it is not for you to open the bud into a blossom.

      He who can open the bud does it so simply.

      He gives it a glance, and the life-sap stirs through its veins.

      At his breath the flower spreads its wings and flutters in the wind.

      Colours flush out like heart-longings, the perfume betrays a sweet secret.

      He who can open the bud does it so simply.

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      Sudâs, the gardener, plucked from his tank the last lotus left by the ravage of winter and went to sell it to the king at the palace gate.

      There he met a traveller who said to him, "Ask your price for the last lotus,—I shall offer it to Lord Buddha."

      Sudâs said, "If you pay one golden mâshâ it will be yours."

      The traveller paid it.

      At that moment the king came out and he wished to buy the flower, for he was on his way to see Lord Buddha, and he thought, "It would be a fine thing to lay at his feet the lotus that bloomed in winter."

      When the gardener said he had been offered a golden mâshâ the king offered him ten, but the traveller doubled the price.

      The gardener, being greedy, imagined a greater gain from him for whose sake they were bidding. He bowed and said, "I cannot sell this lotus."

      In the hushed shade of the mango grove beyond the city wall Sudâs stood before Lord Buddha, on whose lips sat the silence of love and whose eyes beamed peace like the morning star of the dew-washed autumn.

      Sudâs looked in his face and put the lotus at his feet and bowed his head to the dust.

      Buddha smiled and asked, "What is your wish, my son?"

      Sudâs cried, "The least touch of your feet."

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      Make me thy poet, O Night, veiled Night!

      There are some who have sat speechless for ages in thy shadow; let me utter their songs.

      Take me up on thy chariot without wheels, running noiselessly from world to world, thou queen in the palace of time, thou darkly beautiful!

      Many a questioning mind has stealthily entered thy courtyard and roamed through thy lampless house seeking for answers.

      From many a heart, pierced with the arrow of joy from the hands of the Unknown, have burst forth glad chants, shaking the darkness to its foundation.

      Those wakeful souls gaze in the starlight in wonder at the treasure they have suddenly found.

      Make me their poet, O Night, the poet of thy fathomless silence.

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      I will meet one day the Life within me, the joy that hides in my life, though the days perplex my path with their idle dust.

      I have known it in glimpses, and its fitful breath has come upon me, making my thoughts fragrant for a while.

      I will meet one day the Joy without me that dwells behind the screen of light—and will stand in the overflowing solitude where all things are seen as by their creator.

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      This autumn morning is tired with excess of light, and if your songs grow fitful and languid give me your flute awhile.

      I shall but play with it as the whim takes me,—now take it on my lap, now touch it with my lips, now keep it by my side on the grass.

      But in the solemn evening stillness I shall gather flowers, to deck it with wreaths, I shall fill it with fragrance; I shall worship it with the lighted lamp.

      Then at night I shall come to you and give you back your flute.

      You will play on it the music of midnight when the lonely crescent moon wanders among the stars.

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      The poet's mind floats and dances on the waves of life amidst the voices of wind and water.

      Now when the sun has set and the darkened sky draws upon the sea like drooping lashes upon a weary eye it is time to take away his pen, and let his thoughts sink into the bottom of the deep amid the eternal secret of that silence.

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      The night is dark and your slumber is deep in the hush of my being.

      Wake, O Pain of Love, for I know not how to open the door, and I stand outside.

      The hours wait, the stars watch, the wind is still, the silence is heavy in my heart.

      Wake, Love, wake! brim my empty cup, and with a breath of song ruffle the night.

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