The Miracles
The Miracles - meaning Summary
Triumphant Technological Love
A speaker describes sending word to a distant beloved and marshaling modern technologies and human labor to reach her. Ships, steel, rockets, lightning, and national industry are summoned to conquer sea, storm, and distance. The poem frames this as a triumphant exertion of control and speed, but it also hints at cost: exploited workers, impersonal forces, and a final arrival that meets everyday commerce rather than transcendence.
Read Complete AnalysesI sent a message to my dear -- A thousand leagues and more to Her -- The dumb sea-levels thrilled to hear, And Lost Atlantis bore to Her. Behind my message hard I came, And nigh had found a grave for me; But that I launched of steel and flame Did war against the wave for me. Uprose the deep, by gale on gale, To bid me change my mind again -- He broke his teeth along my rail, And, roaring, swung behind again. I stayed the sun at noon to tell My way across the waste of it; I read the storm before it fell And made the better haste of it. Afar, I hailed the land at night -- The towers I built had heard of me -- And, ere my rocket reached its height, Had flashed my Love the word of me. Earth sold her chosen men of strength (They lived and strove and died for me) To drive my road a nation's length, And toss the miles aside for me. I snatched their toil to serve my needs -- Too slow their fleetest flew for me -- I tired twenty smoking steeds, And bade them bait a new for me. I sent the lightnings forth to see Where hour by hour She waited me. Among ten million one was She, And surely all men hated me! Dawn ran to meet me at my goal -- Ah, day no tongue shall tell again! And little folk of little soul Rose up to buy and sell again!
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