Analysis of In A Time Of Dearth

Amy Lowell 1874 (Brookline) – 1925 (Brookline)



Before me,
On either side of me,
I see sand.
If I turn the corner of my house,
I see sand,
Long, brown
Lines and levels of flat
Sand.

If I could only see a caravan
Heave over the edge of it:
The camels wobbling and swaying,
Stepping like ostriches,
With rocking palanquins
Whose curtains conceal
Languors and faintnesses,
Muslins tossed aside,
And a disorder of cushions.
The swinging curtains would pique and solace me.
But I only see sand,
Long, brown sand -
Sand.

If I could only see a herd of Arab horses
Galloping,
Their manes and tails pulled straight
By the speed of their going;
Their bodies sleek and round
Like bellying sails.
They would beat the sand with their fore feet,
And scatter it with their hind feet,
So that it whirled in a cloud of orange,
And the sun through it
Was clip-edged, without rays, and dun.
But I only see sand,
Long, brown, hot sand -
Sand.

If I could only see a mirage,
Blue-white at the horizon,
With palm-trees about it;
Tall, windless palm-trees, grouped about a-glitter.
If I could strain toward it,
And think of the water creeping round my ankles,
Tickling under my knees,
Leeching up my sides,
Spreading over my back.
But I only feel the grinding beneath my feet.
And I only see sand,
Long, dry sand,
Scorching sand -
Sand.

If a sand-storm would only come
And spit against my windows,
Snapping upon them, and ringing their vibrations;
Swirling over the roof;
Seeping under the door-jamb;
Suffocating me and making me struggle for air.
But I only see sand -
Sand lying dead in the sun.
Lines and lines of sand -
Sand.

I will paste newspapers over the windows to shut out the sand;
I will fit them into one another, and fasten the corners.
Then I will strike matches
And read of politics and murders and festivals
Three years old.
But I shall not see the sand any more,
And I can read
While my matches last.


Scheme aaBcBxxB xdexcxcxfaBbB gexexxhhxdiBbB xidxdjxxxhbbbB xxfxxxBibB bxgjxxxx
Poetic Form
Metre 011 110111 111 111010111 111 11 101011 1 111101010 1100111 010100010 101100 1101 11001 101 1101 00010110 01010110101 111011 111 1 1111010111010 100 110111 1011110 110101 111 111011111 01011111 1111001110 00111 11101101 111011 1111 1 111101001 1110010 111011 1111101010 1111011 011010101110 11011 1111 101011 111010100111 011011 111 101 1 10111101 0101110 100110101010 101001 1010011 100101011011 111011 1101001 10111 1 111101001011101 1111011010010010 111110 011100100100 111 1111101101 0111 11101
Closest metre Iambic trimeter
Characters 1,788
Words 343
Sentences 19
Stanzas 6
Stanza Lengths 8, 13, 14, 14, 10, 8
Lines Amount 67
Letters per line (avg) 21
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 239
Words per stanza (avg) 57
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:43 min read
115

Amy Lowell

Amy Lawrence Lowell was an American poet of the imagist school from Brookline, Massachusetts who posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1926. more…

All Amy Lowell poems | Amy Lowell Books

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