I wish it were over the terrible pain, Pang after pang again and again; First the shattering ruining blow, Then the probing steady and slow. Did I wince? I did not faint: My soul broke but was not bent; Up I stand like a blasted tree By the shore of the shivering sea. On my boughs neither leaf nor fruit, No sap in my uttermost root, Brooding in an anguish dumb On the short past and the long to come. Dumb I was when the ruin fell, Dumb I remain and will never tell: O my soul I talk with thee But not another the sight must see. I did not start when the torture stung, I did not faint when the torture wrung; Let it come tenfold if come it must But I will not groan when I bite the dust. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PLANKED WHITEFISH by CARL SANDBURG THIRD BOOK OF AIRS: SONG 27. LOVE, AND NEVER FEAR by THOMAS CAMPION WHAT SHALL IT PROFIT? by WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS TO A CHAMELEON by MARIANNE MOORE STOOD AT CLEAR by ALEXANDER ANDERSON THE ARGONAUTS (ARGONATUICA): THE MOVING ROCKS by APOLLONIUS RHODIUS |