Prometheus
by George Gordon, Lord Byron
(composed: July 1816)
- Titan! to whose immortal eyes
- The sufferings of mortality,
- Seen in their sad reality,
- Were not as things that gods despise;
- What was thy pitys recompense?
- A silent suffering, and intense;
- The rock, the vulture, and the chain,
- All that the proud can feel of pain,
- The agony they do not show,
- The suffocating sense of woe,
- Which speaks but in its loneliness,
- And then is jealous lest the sky
- Should have a listener, nor will sigh
- Until its voice is echoless.
- Titan! to thee the strife was given
- Between the suffering and the will,
- Which torture where they cannot kill;
- And the inexorable Heaven,
- And the deaf tyranny of Fate,
- The ruling principle of Hate,
- Which for its pleasure doth create
- The things it may annihilate,
- Refusd thee even the boon to die:
- The wretched gift Eternity
- Was thineand thou hast borne it well.
- All that the Thunderer wrung from thee
- Was but the menace which flung back
- On him the torments of thy rack;
- The fate thou didst so well foresee,
- But would not to appease him tell;
- And in thy Silence was his Sentence,
- And in his Soul a vain repentance,
- And evil dread so ill dissembled,
- That in his hand the lightnings trembled.
- Thy Godlike crime was to be kind,
- To render with thy precepts less
- The sum of human wretchedness,
- And strengthen Man with his own mind;
- But baffled as thou wert from high,
- Still in thy patient energy,
- In the endurance, and repulse
- Of thine impenetrable Spirit,
- Which Earth and Heaven could not convulse,
- A mighty lesson we inherit:
- Thou art a symbol and a sign
- To Mortals of their fate and force;
- Like thee, Man is in part divine,
- A troubled stream from a pure source;
- And Man in portions can foresee
- His own funereal destiny;
- His wretchedness, and his resistance,
- And his sad unallied existence:
- To which his Spirit may oppose
- Itselfand equal to all woes,
- And a firm will, and a deep sense,
- Which even in torture can descry
- Its own concenterd recompense,
- Triumphant where it dares defy,
- And making Death a Victory.
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