The Beauty of Longing: Discovering Meaning in Edna St. Vincent Millay’s Feast
What if the deepest satisfaction in life isn’t found in fulfillment, but in the yearning that keeps our souls alive?
Feast
Edna St. Vincent Millay
I drank at every vine.
The last was like the first.
I came upon no wine
So wonderful as thirst.
I gnawed at every root.
I ate of every plant.
I came upon no fruit
So wonderful as want.
Feed the grape and bean
To the vintner and monger;
I will lie down lean
With my thirst and my hunger
Reflection
In Feast, Edna St. Vincent Millay turns the idea of satisfaction on its head. She suggests that the hunger for life—our unfulfilled desires, questions, and longings—are more nourishing than any feast could ever be. The poem’s rhythm mirrors the repetition of our search for meaning, reminding us that the sweetest part of the journey often lies in the yearning itself.
Millay’s words challenge the notion that happiness is found in having enough. Instead, she celebrates the quiet holiness of want—the ache that keeps our hearts seeking, learning, and alive. True joy, she implies, may not lie in quenching our thirst but in savoring the thirst itself, in the beautiful tension between what we have and what we still hope for.
Question for Readers:
Do you think it’s possible to find joy in longing, or does happiness only come when our desires are fulfilled?