Analysis of The Curse of Mother Flood



Wizened the wood is, and wan is the way through it;
White as a corpse is the face of the fen;
Only blue adders abide in and stray through it—
Adders and venom and horrors to men.
Here is the “ghost of a garden” whose minister
Fosters strange blossoms that startle and scare.
Red as man’s blood is the sun that, with sinister
Flame, is a menace of hell in the air.
Wrinkled and haggard the hills are—the jags of them
Gape like to living and ominous things:
Storm and dry thunder cry out in the crags of them—
Fire, and the wind with a woe in its wings.
Never a moon without clammy-cold shroud on it
Hitherward comes, or a flower-like star!
Only the hiss of the tempest is loud on it—
Hiss, and the moan of a bitter sea bar.
Here on this waste, and to left and to right of it,
Never is lisp or the ripple of rain:
Fierce is the daytime and wild is the night of it,
Flame without limit and frost without wane!
Trees half alive, with the sense of a curse on them,
Shudder and shrink from the black heavy gale;
Ghastly, with boughs like the plumes of a hearse on them:
Barren of blossom and blasted with bale.

Under the cliff that stares down to the south of it—
Back by the horns of a hazardous hill,
Dumb is the gorge with a grave in the mouth of it
Still, as a corpse in a coffin is still.
Never there hovers a hope of the Spring by it—
Never a glimmer of yellow and green:
Only the bat with a whisper of wing by it
Flits like a life out of flesh and unseen.
Here are the growths that are livid and glutinous,
Speckled, and bloated with poisonous blood:
This is the haunt of the viper-breed mutinous:
Cursed with the curse of weird Catherine Flood.

He that hath looked on it—hurried aghast from it,
Hair of him frozen with horror straightway,
Chased by a sudden strange pestilent blast from it—
Where is the speech of him—what can he say?
Hath he not seen the fierce ghost of a hag in it?
Heard maledictions that startle the stars?
Dumb is his mouth as a mouth with a gag in it—
Mute is his life as a life within bars.
Just the one glimpse of that grey, shrieking woman there
Ringed by a circle of furnace and fiend!
He that went happy and healthy and human there—
Where shall the white leper fly to be cleaned?

Here, in a pit with indefinite doom on it,
Here, in the fumes of a feculent moat,
Under an alp with inscrutable gloom on it,
Squats the wild witch with a ghoul at her throat!
Black execration that cannot be spoken of—
Speech of red hell that would suffocate Song,
Starts from this terror with never a token of
Day and its loveliness all the year long.
Sin without name to it—man never heard of it—
Crime that would startle a fiend from his lair,
Blasted this Glen, and the leaf and the bird of it—
Where is there hope for it, Father, O where?

Far in the days of our fathers, the life in it
Blossomed and beamed in the sight of the sun:
Yellow and green and the purple were rife in it,
Singers of morning and waters that run.
Storm of the equinox shed no distress on it,
Thunder spoke softly, and summer-time left
Sunset’s forsaken bright beautiful dress on it—
Blessing that shone half the night in the cleft.
Hymns of the highlands—hosannas from hills by it,
Psalms of great forests made holy the spot:
Cool were the mosses and clear were the rills by it—
Far in the days when the Horror was not.

Twenty miles south is the strong, shining Hawkesbury—
Spacious and splendid, and lordly with blooms.
There, between mountains magnificent, walks bury
Miles of their beauty in green myrtle glooms.
There, in the dell, is the fountain with falls by it—
Falls, and a torrent of summering stream:
There is the cave with the hyaline halls by it—
Haunt of the echo and home of the dream.
Over the hill, by the marvellous base of it,
Wanders the wind with a song in its breath
Out to the sea with the gold on the face of it—
Twenty miles south of the Valley of Death.


Scheme ABABCDCDEFEFAGAGAHAHEIEI AJAJAKAKFLXL AXAXAMAMDNDN AOAOPQPQADAD ARARASASATAT CXXFAUAUAVAV
Poetic Form
Metre 100110110111 1101101101 10110100111 101001011 110110101100 1011011001 111110111100 1101011001 100100110111 1111001001 101101100111 10001101011 100101101111 11101011 100110101111 1001101011 111101101111 1011101011 11010110111 1011001011 110110110111 1001101101 101110110111 1011001011 100111110111 1101101001 110110100111 1101001011 101100110111 1001011001 100110101111 1101111001 1101111001 1001011001 110110101100 1101111001 111111100111 111101101 1101011111 1101111111 111101110101 1111001 111110110101 1111101011 101111110101 1101011001 111100100101 1101101111 100110100111 10011011 101110100111 1011101101 111101101 111111101 111101100101 10111011 101111110111 1111001111 101100100111 1111111011 1001110100101 1001001101 100100100101 1011001011 11010110111 1011001011 10101100111 1011101001 1101011111 1111011001 100100100111 1001101011 1011101101 100100111 101100100110 1111001101 100110101111 10010111 1101101111 1101001101 1001101111 1001101011 110110110111 1011101011
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 3,850
Words 748
Sentences 28
Stanzas 6
Stanza Lengths 24, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12
Lines Amount 84
Letters per line (avg) 36
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 502
Words per stanza (avg) 124
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 06, 2023

3:44 min read
113

Henry Kendall

Thomas Henry Kendall was a nineteenth-century Australian author and bush poet, who was particularly known for his poems and tales set in a natural environment setting. more…

All Henry Kendall poems | Henry Kendall Books

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