When Coldness Wraps This Suffering Clay
When Coldness Wraps This Suffering Clay - meaning Summary
Immortality and Timeless Perception
The poem meditates on the soul’s fate after death, asking whether the mind wanders through space or instantly apprehends all time. Byron imagines an unembodied consciousness that perceives past and future in a single, timeless glance, free from earthly passions. The soul becomes a passive, eternal observer for whom ages pass like moments, retaining awareness yet forgetting the experience of dying. The tone is speculative and metaphysical.
Read Complete AnalysesWhen coldness wraps this suffering clay, Ah! whither strays the immortal mind? It cannot die, it cannot stay, But leaves its darken’d dust behind. Then, unembodied, doth it trace By steps each planet’s heavenly way? Or fill at once the realms of space, A thing of eyes, that all survey? Eternal, boundless, undecay’d, A thought unseen, but seeing all, All, all in earth or skies display’d, Shall it survey, shall it recall: Each fainter trace that memory holds So darkly of departed years, In one broad glance the soul beholds, And all, that was, at once appears. Before Creation peopled earth, Its eye shall roll through chaos back; And where the farthest heaven had birth, The spirit trace its rising track. And where the future mars or makes, Its glance dilate o’er all to be, While sun is quench’d or system breaks, Fix’d in its own eternity. Above or Love, Hope, Hate, or Fear, It lives all passionless and pure: An age shall fleet like earthly year; Its years as moments shall endure. Away, away, without a wing, O’er all, through all, its thought shall fly, A nameless and eternal thing, Forgetting what it was to die.
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