Skip to content
← Back to poem

203-207:—

Percy Bysshe Shelley

Him, still from hope to hope the bliss pursuing

Which from the exhaustless lore of human weal

Draws on the virtuous mind, the thoughts that rise

In time-destroying infiniteness, gift

With self-enshrined eternity, etc.

 

Time is our consciousness of the succession of ideas in our mind. Vivid

sensation, of either pain or pleasure, makes the time seem long, as the

common phrase is, because it renders us more acutely conscious of our

ideas. If a mind be conscious of an hundred ideas during one minute, by

the clock, and of two hundred during another, the latter of these spaces

would actually occupy so much greater extent in the mind as two exceed

one in quantity. If, therefore, the human mind, by any future

improvement of its sensibility, should become conscious of an infinite

number of ideas in a minute, that minute would be eternity. I do not

hence infer that the actual space between the birth and death of a man

will ever be prolonged; but that his sensibility is perfectible, and

that the number of ideas which his mind is capable of receiving is

indefinite. One man is stretched on the rack during twelve hours;

another sleeps soundly in his bed: the difference of time perceived by

these two persons is immense; one hardly will believe that half an hour

has elapsed, the other could credit that centuries had flown during his

agony. Thus, the life of a man of virtue and talent, who should die in

his thirtieth year, is, with regard to his own feelings, longer than

that of a miserable priest-ridden slave, who dreams out a century of

dulness. The one has perpetually cultivated his mental faculties, has

rendered himself master of his thoughts, can abstract and generalize

amid the lethargy of every-day business;—the other can slumber over the

brightest moments of his being, and is unable to remember the happiest

hour of his life. Perhaps the perishing ephemeron enjoys a longer life

than the tortoise.

 

Dark flood of time!

Roll as it listeth thee—I measure not

By months or moments thy ambiguous course.

Another may stand by me on the brink

And watch the bubble whirled beyond his ken

That pauses at my feet. The sense of love,

The thirst for action, and the impassioned thought

Prolong my being: if I wake no more,

My life more actual living will contain

Than some gray veteran’s of the world’s cold school,

Whose listless hours unprofitably roll,

By one enthusiast feeling unredeemed.—

 

See Godwin’s “Pol. Jus.” volume 1, page 411; and Condorcet, “Esquisse

d’un Tableau Historique des Progres de l’Esprit Humain”, epoque 9.