Analysis of From 'Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris'

Duncan Campbell Scott 1862 (Ottawa) – 1947



HERE Morris, on the plains that we have loved,
Think of the death of Akoose, fleet of foot,
Who, in his prime, a herd of antelope
From sunrise, without rest, a hundred miles
Drove through rank prairie, loping like a wolf,
Tired them and slew them, ere the sun went down.
Akoose, in his old age, blind from the smoke
Of tepees and the sharp snow light, alone
With his great grandchildren, withered and spent,
Crept in the warm sun along a rope
Stretched for his guidance. Once when sharp autumn
Made membranes of thin ice upon the sloughs,
He caught a pony on a quick return
Of prowess, and, all his instincts cleared and quickened,
He mounted, sensed the north and bore away
To the Last Mountain Lake where in his youth
He shot the sand-hill-cranes with his flint arrows.
And for these hours in all the varied pomp
Of pagan fancy and free dreams of foray
And crude adventure, he ranged on entranced,
Until the sun blazed level with the prairie,
Then paused, faltered and slid from off his pony.
In a little bluff of poplars, hid in the bracken,
He lay down; the populace of leaves
In the lithe poplars whispered together and trembled,
Fluttered before a sunset of gold smoke,
With interspaces, green as sea water,
And calm as the deep water of the sea.

There Akoose lay, silent amid the bracken,
Gathered at last with the Algonquin Chieftains.
Then the tenebrous sunset was blown out,
And all the smoky gold turned into cloud wrack.
Akoose slept forever amid the poplars,
Swathed by the wind from the far-off Red Deer
Where dinosaurs sleep, clamped in their rocky tombs.
Who shall count the time that lies between
The sleep of Akoose and the dinosaurs?
Innumerable time, that yet is like the breath
Of the long wind that creeps upon the prairie
And dies away with the shadows at sundown.

What we may think, who brood upon the theme,
Is, when the old world, tired of spinning, has fallen
Asleep, and all the forms, that carried the fire
Of life, are cold upon her marble heart–
Like ashes on the altar–just as she stops,
That something will escape of soul or essence,–
The sum of life, to kindle otherwhere:
Just as the fruit of a high sunny garden,
Grown mellow with autumnal sun and rain,
Shrivelled with ripeness, splits to the rich heart,
And looses a gold kernel to the mould,
So the old world, hanging long in the sun,
And deep enriched with effort and with love,
Shall, in the motions of maturity,
Wither and part, and the kernel of it all
Escape, a lovely wraith of spirit, to latitudes
Where the appearance, throated like a bird,
Winged with fire and bodied all with passion,
Shall flame with presage, not of tears, but joy.


Scheme XXABXCDXXAXXXXEXXXEXFFGXXDHF GXXXBXXXXXFC XGHIXXFGXIXGXFXXXGX
Poetic Form
Metre 1101011111 110111111 101101110 110110101 111101101 10101110111 101111101 110011101 111101001 100110101 1111011110 111110101 110110101 110011101010 1101010101 1011011011 11011111110 01110010101 11010011110 0101011101 01011101010 1110011111 001011110010 111010011 001110010010 100101111 1111110 0110110101 1111001010 10111001010 101001111 01010110111 110100101 1101101111 1101101101 111011101 01110010 010001111101 10111101010 010110111 1111110101 1101110110110 010101110010 1111010101 11010101111 11010111110 01111101 11011011010 1101010101 11111011 0100110101 1011101001 0101110011 1001010100 10010010111 010101110110 1001010101 11100101110 1111011111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,599
Words 480
Sentences 18
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 28, 12, 19
Lines Amount 59
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 690
Words per stanza (avg) 159
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:24 min read
45

Duncan Campbell Scott

Duncan Campbell Scott was a Canadian bureaucrat, Canadian poet and prose writer. more…

All Duncan Campbell Scott poems | Duncan Campbell Scott Books

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