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Human Life

Topics: classic

If dead, we cease to be; if total gloom     Swallow up life's brief flash for aye, we fare     As summer-gusts, of sudden birth and doom,     Whose sound and motion not alone declare,     But are their whole of being! If the breath     Be Life itself, and not its task and tent,     If even a soul like Milton's can know death;     O Man! thou vessel purposeless, unmeant,     Yet drone-hive strange of phantom purposes!     Surplus of Nature's dread activity,     Which, as she gazed on some nigh-finished vase,     Retreating slow, with meditative pause,     She formed with restless hands unconsciously.     Blank accident! nothing's anomaly!     If rootless thus, thus substanceless thy state,     Go, weigh thy dreams, and be thy hopes, thy fears,     The counter-weights! Thy laughter and thy tears     Mean but themselves, each fittest to create     And to repay the other! Why rejoices     Thy heart with hollow joy for hollow good?     Why cowl thy face beneath the mourner's hood?     Why waste thy sighs, and thy lamenting voices,     Image of Image, Ghost of Ghostly Elf,     That such a thing as thou feel'st warm or cold?     Yet what and whence thy gain, if thou withhold     These costless shadows of thy shadowy self?     Be sad! be glad! be neither! seek, or shun!     Thou hast no reason why ! Thou canst have none;     Thy being's being is contradiction.

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"If dead, we cease to be; if total gloom..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Samuel Taylor Coleridge delivers a powerful performance in "Human Life"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"Well, they are gone, and here must I remain,     T..."

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