Analysis of Rooks

Charles Hamilton Sorley 1895 (Aberdeen) – 1915 (Hulluch, Lens)



There where the rusty iron lies,
The rooks are cawing all the day.
Perhaps no man, until he dies,
Will understand them, what they say.

The evening makes the sky like clay.
The slow wind waits for night to rise.
The world is half content. But they

Still trouble all the trees with cries,
That know, and cannot put away,
The yearning to the soul that flies
From day to night, from night to day.


Scheme ABAB BAB ABAB
Poetic Form
Metre 11010101 0111101 01110111 1011111 01010111 01111111 01111011 11010111 11010101 01010111 11111111
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 400
Words 77
Sentences 7
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 4, 3, 4
Lines Amount 11
Letters per line (avg) 28
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 101
Words per stanza (avg) 25
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

23 sec read
85

Charles Hamilton Sorley

Captain Charles Hamilton Sorley was a British Army officer and Scottish war poet who fought in the First World War, in which he was killed in action during the Battle of Loos in October 1915. more…

All Charles Hamilton Sorley poems | Charles Hamilton Sorley Books

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