The Modern Review/Volume 21/Number 6/The Sunset of the Century

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For other versions of this work, see The Sunset of the Century.

This is a compressed transcreation of five poems of the author's Bengali compilation, Naivedya, viz. Nos. 64 for the first stanza, 65 for the second stanza, 66 for the third stanza, 68 for the fourth stanza and 93 for the fifth stanza.

3413140The Modern Review, Volume 21, Number 6 — The Sunset of the Century1917Rabindranath Tagore

THE SUNSET OF THE CENTURY

The last sun of the century sets amidst the blood-red clouds of the West
and the whirlwind of hatred.
The naked passion of self-love of Nations, in its drunken delirium of greed,
is dancing to the clash of steel and the howling verses of vengeance.

The hungry self of the Nation shall burst in a violence of fury from its own shameless
feeding.
For it has made the world its food,
And, licking it, crunching it, and swallowing it in big morsels.
It swells and swells,
Till in the midst of its unholy feast descends the sudden shaft of Heaven
piercing its heart of grossness.

The crimson glow of light on the horizon is not the light of thy dawn of peace,
my Motherland,
It is the glimmer of the funeral pyre burning to ashes the vast flesh—the self-love of
the Nation—dead under its own excess.
Thy morning waits behind the patient dark of the East,
Meek and silent.

Keep watch, India!
Bring your offerings of worship for that sacred sunrise.
Let the first hymn of its welcome sound in your voice and sing:
"Come, Peace, thou daughter of God's own great suffering.
Come with thy treasure of contentment, the sword of fortitude,
And meekness crowning thy forehead."

Be not ashamed, my brothers, to stand before the proud and the powerful
With your white robe of simpleness.
Let your crown be of humility, your freedom the freedom of the soul.
Build God's throne daily upon the ample bareness of your poverty,
And know that what is huge is not great, and pride is not everlasting.

Rabindranath Tagore.