I. WHEN from Eternity were separate The curdled element And gathered forces, and the world began, The Spirit that was shut and darkly blent Within this being, did the whole distress With blind desire after spaciousness. Into this yearning, strictly bound by Fate And closely natured, came like an open'd grate At last the Mind of Man, Letting the sky in, and a faculty To light the cell with lost Eternity. II. So commerce with the Infinite was regained: For upward grew Man's ken, Laying foundations deep in the ancient fen Where other life helpless and prone remained. With knowledge painfully quarried and hewn fair, Platforms of lore, and many a hanging stair Of strong imagination, Man has raised His Wisdom like the watch-towers of a town; That he, though fastened down By Fate, be with its cruelty not amazed, But be of outer vastness greatly aware. III. This, then, is yours: to build exultingly High, and yet more high, The knowledgeable towers above base wars And shameful surges reaching up to lay Dishonouring hands upon your work, and drag Down from uprightness your desires, to lag Among low places with a common gait. That so Man's mind, not conquered by his clay, May sit above his fate, Inhabiting the purpose of the stars, And trade with his Eternity. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ON THE EXPECTED GENERAL RISING OF THE FRENCH NATION IN 1792 by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD THE LOVE OF GOD by ELIZA SCUDDER A THREAD OF HAIR by CHRISTOPHER BANNISTER OUR SCARLET KING by HAROLD MARTIN BOWMAN MELANCHOLIA by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES SEA AND SHORE by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON |