The longest word is not a word at all.
It is a secret whispered in a server’s hum,
A ghost that haunts the databases of man,
Too vast for paper and too strange for tongue.
It is a formula, a chemical decree,
A blueprint, not a spell, for what we are.
One hundred eighty-nine thousand,
eight hundred nineteen letters long
A river of code that never meets the sea,
A serpent of the alphabet that has no end,
Uncoiled, to name a single, simple thing
That needs no name to do its sacred task.
It is the definition that devoured the page,
The label is larger than life.
But in the lab, for the sake of time and breath,
They call it Titin. Not a titan, not a myth,
But something quieter, and far more profound.
Deep in the muscle, in the quiet cell,
It lives, a tiny spring, a scaffolding of grace,
The smallest anchor in a hidden place.
It is the reason that our hearts can beat,
The elasticity in every flex and strain.
It is the silent worker, the un-thanked,
The humble engine in the body’s chain,
The quiet tension that allows us to mend,
The anchor holds things that must not bend.
So let the great word sleep within its file,
A monument to our defining style,
While in our flesh, the simple spring unseen
Does all the work its name could ever mean.
And proves the longest stories we can tell.
What is often written in the smallest cell?
© 1989–2025 Steven J. Kelly
© 1989–2025 Stevie Faith
© 1989–2025 Kelly Savalas