Like one who solves some curious alphabet On desert stele . . . and then solves a word . . . Though the God's whispering I never heard, And though my eyes were cruelly unwet (Harshly encountering so much to do), I know how ineradicably absurd That Man is but a function of the Two, Physics and Chemistry -- that we can spell By atom and motion (or by twitch and cell) The ineffable Adventure I've been through . . . I know Love, Pain, and Power are spirit-things, My act a more than Mine or Now or Near; One with the Will that suffers, conquers, sings, @3I@1 was the mystic Voice I could not hear. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE VISIONARY by EMILY JANE BRONTE THE SELF-UNSEEING by THOMAS HARDY BILLY IN THE DARBIES, FR. BILLY BUDD by HERMAN MELVILLE UPON THE SAME by DECIMUS MAGNUS AUSONIUS URANIA; THE WOMAN IN THE MOON: THE THIRD CANTO, OR FULL MOON by WILLIAM BASSE TO TERRAUGHTY, ON HIS BIRTHDAY by ROBERT BURNS THE FALL OF THE LEAVES by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON ADVICE TO THE REVERENDS ON THEIR PREACHING SLOWLY by JOHN BYROM |