Shall it be after the long misery Of easeless pillows, and the waste of flesh In sickness, till some worn and widening mesh Frays out at last, and lets the soul go free? Or, shall some violent accident suddenly Dismiss it, or some black cloud in the brain Lower till life maddens against life amain? Where, in what land, or on what lonely sea? When, in the light of what unrisen sun? Under what fatal planet? There is none Can tell, or know aught but that it shall be: The one thing certain which all other things Have taught my being in its inmost springs To feel the sole impossibility. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LADY OF MYSTERY by G. W. BLOEMENDAL VERSES WRITTEN UNDER FERGUSSON'S PORTRAIT by ROBERT BURNS NOTRE DAME DE ROUEN by WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER TO MR. MURRAY (1) by GEORGE GORDON BYRON PHI BETA KAPPA POEM; HARVARD, 1914 by BLISS CARMAN THE SYCOPHANTIC FOX AND THE GULLIBLE RAVEN by GUY WETMORE CARRYL |