All pause for a while on
the edge of the dark Night.
Then Savitri steps
forward to journey through that eternal Night. A mysterious terror closes on
her from all sides. Savitri vanishes into the dark. There is no path, no goal;
yet she moves on. She loses sight of the God of Death as well as of Satyavan.
But she does not lose heart; she continues to live and move.
Slowly a faint gleam
appears. It throws the Night into a bolder relief. The giant head of
Nothingness tries to stifle the ray, but in vain. The light prevails and
Savitri recovers her lost self. Once again she hears the steps of the god and
out of the darkness, Satyavan shows as a luminous shade.
Then is heard the lethal
voice of Death proclaiming that this dark Night, this Nothingness is the end and
the source of all. Where in this stark emptiness is there place for life and
love? the voice asks mockingly.
Savitri refuses to
answer. She gazes into her soul and knows that she is eternal. Then Death, the
dire god, opposes her with his endless night and calls: "Thou hast
survived the void and won a victory, but to what purpose? Thou canst only live
for a little while without Satyavan. Man is a fragile creature with death
prowling round him in all directions. The gods have burdened him with a mind
and sown in his heart an incurable unrest. He is the Cattle of the shepherd gods.
If thou still hopest to live, to love, return to the earth. But do not hope to
win back Satyavan. Still, thy unique strength deserves a reward. Choose what
thou wilt, shall give."
Savitri answers: "I
bow not to thee, master of Death, thou a black lie of Night, a grim jest upon
the immortal spirit. am conscious of the
immortality of my force; am no
supplicant at thy gates. Mine is the labour of the battling gods. If thou must
give, demand all that Satyavan had desired in his childhood."
Death scornfully grants
back to Satyavan's father his royal trappings and his eyesight that he had lost
and then warns Savitri to hasten back to the earth lest the laws she has
violated turn upon her in wrath.
Savitri answers in
disdain: "I am immortal. fear not
the eyes of Law and Fate. Give me back Satyavan so that with him I may follow
the earth's path that leads to God. Otherwise I shall pursue, whatever may
befall on the way."
Death is unmoved. He
cries out scornfully: "Dost thou forget that thou art a mere mortal? I,
Death, have created all and I destroy all. I reward, I punish. Flee back lest
the Furies strike at thee."
But Savitri replies with
equal scorn: "My God is not the God of thy imagination. My God is Love
that sweetly suffers all. To him who is irresistible I have offered my life. He
is supreme, he shall remake thy universe, Death."
For a while they journey
in silence in that trackless night. Then again Death speaks: "Wilt thou
claim immortality, thou who art but a sparkling ferment in life's sunlit mire?
Only I am eternal, I am the Vast. I am He, there is no other God. Man has no
other help than myself. I am his final refuge. Even if there were a being
witnessing all, sole and absolute, neither Satyavan nor Savitri exists beside him.
There is no Love there, nor Time nor Space. Forget Satyavan, be thou alone and
sufficient to thy soul till I, Death, shall rescue thee from life."
Savitri replies: "Death,
thou reasonest, I do not reason, I am, I love, I act, I will."
Death answers: "Know
also. When thou wilt know, then thou shalt cease to love and accept the
impermanence of things."
Savitri replies: "Only
when I have loved for ever, shall I know. Love in me knows the unchanging truth
behind all change. I know the transcendent God above, the Lord of the universe,
God the Indweller. I know my coming was a wave from God. I know that man was
born with a mind and heart to conquer thee."
Death does not answer
again. Compelled by Savitri, the three glide through the long fading night.