Analysis of Avis



With a golden rolling sound
Booming came a bell,
From the aery in the tower
Eagles fell;
So with regal wings
Hurled, and gleaming sound and power,
Sprang the fatal spell.

Ten a storm of burnished doves
Gleaming from the cote
Flurried by the almonry
O'er the moat,--
Fell and soared and fell
With the arc and iris eye
Burning breast and throat.

Avis heard the beaten bell
Break the quiet space,
Gathering softly in the room
Round her face;
And the sound of wings
From the deeps of rosy gloom
Rustled in the place.

Nothing moved along the wall,
Weltered on the floor;
Only in the purple deep,
Streaming o'er,
Came the dream of sound
Silent as the dale of sleep,
Where the dreams are four.

(One of love without a word,
Wan to look upon,
One of fear without a cry,
Cowering stone,
And the dower of life,
Grief without a single sigh,
Pain without a moan.)

"Avis-Avis!" Cried a voice;
Then the voice was mute.
"Avis!" Soft the echo lay
As the lute.
Where she was she fell,
Drowsy as mandragora,
Trancèd to the root.

Then she heard her mother's voice,
Tender as a dove;
Then her lover plain and sigh,
"Avis--Love!"
Like the mavis bird
Calling, calling lonelily
From the eerie grove.

Then she heard within the vast
Closure of the spell,
Rolled and moulded into one
Rounded swell,
All the sounds that ever were
Uttered underneath the sun,
Heard in heaven or hell.

In the arras moved the wind,
And the window cloth
Rippled like a serpent barred,
Gray with wrath;
In the brazier gold
The wan ghost of a rose charred
Fluttered like a moth.

Tranquil lay her darkened eyes
As the pools that keep
Auras dim of fern and frond
Dappled, deep,
Dreamy as the map of Nod;
Moveless was she as a wand
In the wind of sleep.

Then the birds began to cry
From the crannied wall,
Piping as the morning rose
Mystical,
Gray with whistling rain,
Silver with the light that flows
In the interval.

Pallid poplars cast a shade,
Twinkling gray and dun,
Where the wind and water wove
Into one
All the linnet leaves,
Greening from the mere and grove
In the undern sun.

Night fell with the ferny dusk,
Planets paled and grew,
Up, with lily and clarid turns
Throbbing through,
Rose the robin's song,
Heart of home and love that burns beating in the dew.

But she neither moved nor heard,
Trancèd was her breath;
Lip on charmèd lip was laid
(One who saith
"Love-Undone" and falls).
Silent was she as a shade
In the dells of death.


Scheme ABCBDCB XECEBFE BGHGDHG IJKCAKJ LXFMXFM NOXOBCO NPFPLBQ XBRBCRB XSTXXTS XKUKXUK FIVWXVW XRQRXQR XYXYXY LZXSXXZ
Poetic Form
Metre 1010101 10101 1010010 101 11101 10101010 10101 1011101 10101 10101 1001 10101 1010101 10101 1010101 10101 10010001 101 00111 1011101 1001 1010101 1101 1000101 1010 10111 1010111 10111 1110101 11101 1110101 1001 00111 1010101 10101 1010101 10111 1010101 101 11111 1011 11101 1110101 10101 1010101 101 10101 10101 10101 1110101 10101 101011 101 1011100 100101 101011 001101 00101 1010101 111 001001 0111011 10101 1010101 10111 111101 11 1010111 111101 00111 1010111 1011 1010101 100 11101 1010111 00100 101101 100101 1010101 011 10101 1010101 0011 111011 10101 1110011 101 10101 111011110001 1110111 11101 1111111 111 10101 1011101 00111
Closest metre Iambic trimeter
Characters 2,316
Words 449
Sentences 21
Stanzas 14
Stanza Lengths 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 6, 7
Lines Amount 97
Letters per line (avg) 19
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 133
Words per stanza (avg) 32
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:15 min read
27

Duncan Campbell Scott

Duncan Campbell Scott was a Canadian bureaucrat, Canadian poet and prose writer. more…

All Duncan Campbell Scott poems | Duncan Campbell Scott Books

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