Swami Vivekananda
Behold, the dark
clouds melt away,
That gathered
thick at night, and hung
So like a gloomy
pall above the earth!
Before thy magic
touch, the world
Awakes. The
birds in chorus sing.
The flowers
raise their star-like crowns —
Dew-set, and
wave thee welcome fair.
The lakes are
opening wide in love
Their hundred
thousand lotus-eyes
To welcome thee,
with all their depth.
All hail to
thee, thou Lord of Light!
A welcome new to
thee, today,
O Sun! Today
thou sheddest Liberty!
Bethink thee how
the world did wait,
And search for
thee, through time and clime.
Some gave up
home and love of friends,
And went in
quest of thee, self-banished,
Through dreary
oceans, through primeval forests,
Each step a
struggle for their life or death;
Then came the day
when work bore fruit,
And worship,
love, and sacrifice,
Fulfilled,
accepted, and complete.
Then thou,
propitious, rose to shed
The light
of Freedom on mankind.
Move on, O Lord,
in thy resistless path!
Till thy high
noon o’erspreads the world.
Till every land
reflects thy light,
Till men and
women, with uplifted head,
Behold their
shackles broken, and
Know, in
springing joy, their life renewed!
Swami
Vivekananda’s death occurred on the 4th of July, 1902. On the 4th of July, 1898, he was
travelling with some American disciples in Kashmir, and as part of a celebration of the anniversary of the
American Declaration of Independence he prepared the following poem, to be
read aloud at the morning breakfast.