The sense of the world is short,
Long and various the report,—
To love and be beloved;
Men and gods have not outlearned it,
And how oft soe'er they've turned it,
'Tis not to be improved.
“Eros” is a love poem of sorts or, one might say, a meditation on love itself, since Eros is the Greek god of sexual, or erotic, love. The first two lines of the poem present a problem, as it were; the remaining lines provide the solution to that problem.
The
problem is that life is short, and it’s meaning is uncertain. “The
sense of the world”—its perception, the smell and the taste and
the feeling and the sound and the sight of the world”—is short,”
the speaker laments, lasting, in most cases, far less than a century.
In addition to the brevity of life, the meaning of existence is unclear, although
the interpretation of its possible significance is as “long and
various” as art, philosophy, and religion can make it.
To the problem of the shortness and uncertainty of life, the speaker
offers a solution: “To love and be beloved,” he declares, is an
adventure that has defied the learning of both 'men and gods,'”
and represents something that, no matter how much it is studied,
analyzed, or considered, is “not to be improved.”
The
love of which the speaker speaks, as the title of the poem indicates,
is physical, or sexual, love—erotic love. It is fitting that the
remedy that the speaker suggests—sensual love—is physical, just as
the organs by which life itself is perceived are physical. Human
beings know the world through their eyes, noses, skin, ears, and
tongues. Likewise, through their bodies—or, more specifically,
through their sexual organs—they may experience
something—love—that is not only meaningful in itself but that has
both physical and spiritual dimensions, thereby transcending the
merely material world that is, in itself, all too short and
uncertain. The same body that perceives a short and uncertain life in
the material world within which it exists can, in becoming the
vehicle for sex and love, give life a meaning that, derived from
physical organs, is, nevertheless, spiritual in its essence, thereby
providing a means of transcending the merely material, or animal,
basis of existence and experience.
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