Analysis of By the Window

Edward Dowden 1843 (Cork) – 1913



STILL deep into the West I gazed; the light  
Clear, spiritual, tranquil as a bird  
Wide-winged that soars on the smooth gale and sleeps,  
Was it from sun far-set or moon unrisen?  
Whether from moon, or sun, or angel’s face          
It held my heart from motion, stayed my blood,  
Betrayed each rising thought to quiet death  
Along the blind charm’d way to nothingness,  
Lull’d the last nerve that ached. It was a sky  
Made for a man to waste his will upon,         
To be received as wiser than all toil,  
And much more fair. And what was strife of men?  
And what was time?  

Then came a certain thing.  
Are intimations for the elected soul         
Dubious, obscure, of unauthentic power  
Since ghostly to the intellectual eye,  
Shapeless to thinking? Nay, but are not we  
Servile to words and an usurping brain,  
Infidels of our own high mysteries,         
Until the senses thicken and lose the world,  
Until the imprisoned soul forgets to see,  
And spreads blind fingers forth to reach the day,  
Which once drank light, and fed on angels’ food?  

It happened swiftly, came and straight was gone.         

One standing on some aery balcony  
And looking down upon a swarming crowd  
Sees one man beckon to him with finger-tip  
While eyes meet eyes; he turns and looks again—  
The man is lost, and the crowd sways and swarms.         
Shall such an one say, ‘Thus ’tis proved a dream,  
And no hand beckoned, no eyes met my own?’  
Neither can I say this. There was a hint,  
A thrill, a summons faint yet absolute,  
Which ran across the West; the sky was touch’d,         
And failed not to respond. Does a hand pass  
Lightly across your hair? you feel it pass  
Not half so heavy as a cobweb’s weight,  
Although you never stir; so felt the sky  
Not unaware of the Presence, so my soul         
Scarce less aware. And if I cannot say  
The meaning and monition, words are weak  
Which will not paint the small wing of a moth,  
Nor bear a subtile odour to the brain,  
And much less serve the soul in her large needs.         
I cannot tell the meaning, but a change  
Was wrought in me; it was not the one man  
Who came to the luminous window to gaze forth,  
And who moved back into the darkened room  
With awe upon his heart and tender hope;         
From some deep well of life tears rose; the throng  
Of dusty cares, hopes, pleasures, prides fell off,  
And from a sacred solitude I gazed  
Deep, deep into the liquid eyes of Life.


Scheme AXXBXXXXCBXBX XDXCEBXXEFX B BXXBXXBXXAGGXCDFXXBXXBXXXXXXX
Poetic Form
Metre 1101011101 1100010101 1111101101 111111111 1011111101 1111110111 0111011101 0101111100 1011111101 1101111101 1101110111 0111011111 0111 110101 1010100101 10001101010 1101001001 1011011111 101101101 10011011100 01010100101 01001010111 0111011101 1111011101 1101010111 110111100 0101010101 11110111101 1111110101 0111001101 1111111101 0111011111 1011111101 010101110 1101010111 0111011011 1001111111 111101011 111011101 1011010111 1101011101 01001111 1111011101 11011101 0111010011 1101010101 1101111011 111010010111 0111010101 1101110101 1111111101 1101110111 010101011 1101010111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,448
Words 435
Sentences 18
Stanzas 4
Stanza Lengths 13, 11, 1, 29
Lines Amount 54
Letters per line (avg) 33
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 445
Words per stanza (avg) 108
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:10 min read
65

Edward Dowden

Edward Dowden, was an Irish critic and poet. more…

All Edward Dowden poems | Edward Dowden Books

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