We have gone too far; we do not know how to stop by Edna St. Vincent Millay
For my dearest Jennifer, on her birthday, I always post an ESVM poem. This (untitled) poem is in the “Poems Which Have Not Appeared in Any of the Previous Volumes” section of her Collected Poems. I do love her (rather negative) commentary on the human race, with which (sadly) I often agree.
We have gone too far; we do not know how to stop
By Edna St. Vincent Millay
We have gone too far; we do not know how to stop: impetus
Is all we have. And we share it with the pushed Inert.
We are clever,—we are as clever as monkeys; and some of us
Have intellect, which is our danger, for we lack intelligence
And have forgotten instinct.
Progress—progress is the dirtiest word in the language—who ever told us—
And made us believe it—that to take a step forward was necessarily, was always
A good idea?
In this unlighted cave, one step forward
That step can be the down-step into the Abyss.
But we, we have no sense of direction; impetus
Is all we have; we do not proceed, we only
Roll down the mountain,
Like disbalanced boulders, crushing before us many
Delicate springing things, whose plan it was to grow.
Clever, we are, and inventive,—but not creative;
For, to create, one must decide—the cells must decide—what form,
What colour, what sex, how many petals, five, or more than five,
Or less than five.
But we, we decide nothing: the bland Opportunity
Presents itself, and we embrace it,—we are so grateful
When something happens which is not directly War;
For we think—although of course, now, we very seldom
Clearly think—
That the other side of War is Peace.
We have no sense; we only roll downhill. Peace
Is the temporary beautiful ignorance that War
Somewhere progresses.
