Analysis of The Precinct. Rochester

Amy Lowell 1874 (Brookline) – 1925 (Brookline)



The tall yellow hollyhocks stand,
Still and straight,
With their round blossoms spread open,
In the quiet sunshine.
And still is the old Roman wall,
Rough with jagged bits of flint,
And jutting stones,
Old and cragged,
Quite still in its antiquity.
The pear-trees press their branches against it,
And feeling it warm and kindly,
The little pears ripen to yellow and red.
They hang heavy, bursting with juice,
Against the wall.
So old, so still!

The sky is still.
The clouds make no sound
As they slide away
Beyond the Cathedral Tower,
To the river,
And the sea.
It is very quiet,
Very sunny.
The myrtle flowers stretch themselves in the sunshine,
But make no sound.
The roses push their little tendrils up,
And climb higher and higher.
In spots they have climbed over the wall.
But they are very still,
They do not seem to move.
And the old wall carries them
Without effort, and quietly
Ripens and shields the vines and blossoms.

A bird in a plane-tree
Sings a few notes,
Cadenced and perfect
They weave into the silence.
The Cathedral bell knocks,
One, two, three, and again,
And then again.
It is a quiet sound,
Calling to prayer,
Hardly scattering the stillness,
Only making it close in more densely.
The gardener picks ripe gooseberries
For the Dean's supper to-night.
It is very quiet,
Very regulated and mellow.
But the wall is old,
It has known many days.
It is a Roman wall,
Left-over and forgotten.

Beyond the Cathedral Close
Yelp and mutter the discontents of people not mellow,
Not well-regulated.
People who care more for bread than for beauty,
Who would break the tombs of saints,
And give the painted windows of churches
To their children for toys.
People who say:
'They are dead, we live!
The world is for the living.'

Fools! It is always the dead who breed.
Crush the ripe fruit, and cast it aside,
Yet its seeds shall fructify,
And trees rise where your huts were standing.
But the little people are ignorant,
They chaffer, and swarm.
They gnaw like rats,
And the foundations of the Cathedral are honeycombed.

The Dean is in the Chapter House;
He is reading the architect's bill
For the completed restoration of the Cathedral.
He will have ripe gooseberries for supper,
And then he will walk up and down the path
By the wall,
And admire the snapdragons and dahlias,
Thinking how quiet and peaceful
The garden is.
The old wall will watch him,
Very quietly and patiently it will watch.
For the wall is old,
It is a Roman wall.


Scheme axbcdxeafxfxxdg ghijjfKfchxjdglxfx fxxxxmmhxxfxxKnoxDb xnxfxxxixp xxlpxxxa xgqjxdeqxxxoD
Poetic Form
Metre 0110101 101 11110110 00101 01101101 111111 0101 101 11010100 0111110011 01011010 01011011001 11101011 0101 1111 0111 01111 11101 01001010 1010 001 111010 1010 01010101001 1111 010111011 0110010 011111001 111101 111111 0011101 01100100 10101010 010011 1011 1001 1101010 001011 111001 0101 110101 1011 10100010 1010110110 01001110 1011011 111010 10100010 10111 111101 110101 1100010 0100101 1010001110110 11100 10111111110 1110111 0101010110 111011 1011 11111 0111010 11110111 101101101 11111 011111010 1010101100 1101 1111 000101001011 01100101 11100101 1001001010010 111110110 0111110101 101 00101001 10110010 0101 011111 101000100111 10111 110101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 2,367
Words 437
Sentences 34
Stanzas 6
Stanza Lengths 15, 18, 19, 10, 8, 13
Lines Amount 83
Letters per line (avg) 23
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 320
Words per stanza (avg) 72
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:11 min read
36

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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