Analysis of Night In State Street



Art thou he?—
The seer and sage, the hero and lover—yea,
The man of men, then away from the haughty
day
Come with me!

Ho—ho! to the night—
The spangled night that would the noon outstare.
Her skirts are fringed with light,
She is girdled and crowned with gems of fire that flare.
The city is dizzy with the thrill of her—
Her shining eyes and shadowy floating hair;
And curious winds her nebulous garments blur,
Blowing her moon-white limbs and bosom bare.

She beckons me—
Down the deep street she goes to keep her tryst.
Come—come—oh follow! oh see

The many-windowed walls uprear so high
They dim and quiver and float away in mist
Tangling the earth and sky.
And the pale stars go by
Like spirits masterful and still and strong,
Dragging the heavy nets of life along.

Down in the deep
Lightly the nets enmesh us with the swarm
Of huddled human things that, soft and warm,
Beat out so close the pulses of their lives.
We crowd and creep,
We jostle and push out of our halls and hives,
We chatter and laugh and weep.
Ah, do you hear
The choral of voices, each the secret hiding?
Do you see the warren of souls, each one abiding
In separate solitude, remote, austere?

Here in the glare of the street we cling together
Against the warning darkness, the still height Of the awful night.
We blow like a feather
From hope to hope along the winds of fate
Importunate.
The lettered lights that twinkle in and out
Lure us and laugh at us, beckon and flout,
Flashing their slangy symbols in our eyes,
Blurting their gaudy lies.
The bold shop-windows flaunt their empty wares—
Jewelled or tinselled shows of things,
The fripperies and furnishings
Wherein stark life will stifle her shiverings
Ere forth in the dawn she fares.

Ah, tyranny perilous!
Vain shows that master us!
See the gay girls fluttering wistfully,
Where waxen dummies grin in gowns of lace.
Watch yonder woman in black, whose dimmed eyes see
Soft baby things folded with tender grace.
And look at the children crowding and shouting there
Where dancing dolls jiggle and jerk and stare.
They hover and cling
Possessed by signs and shadows of the thing.
They moor their bark
Close to the shore and fathom not the dark—
The dark that glooms afar
Beyond the invisible star,
Beyond faith's boundaries,
The plausible was and is.

Come, ye adventurous,
Open your hearts to us!
You tiny newsboy, calling extras there,
Pitiful burden-bearer, pale with blight,
What of the night?—
The sullen night that brings you, little one,
So heavy a load of care,
While happier children sleep from sun to sun?
And you, wan youth, haggard and spent,
By mad thirst driven and rent—
Thirst of the body, thirst of the soul—
To what dark goal
Does reeling night lead you, her listless prey,
To gorge you and slay,
And hide forever from the searching day?
And you, furtive and flaunting girl,
Whose heavy-lidded eyes unfurl
Red signal fires, the while, demure,
Your brooding lips deny their lure—
Ah, does the lewd night lash you to her cave,
And will you never her ribald rage out-brave,
And rise no more forlorn
To greet the morn?

The street grows insolent.
With cries of dark delight
And gestures impudent
It rends the robe of night.
Up to the silent sky
It shouts the human cry.

The crowds push in and out
By all the open ways,
Eager to stare and shout
At vaudeville waifs of plays.
They drop their coins and laugh
At the wheezy phonograph,
They hush for the noisy drone
Of the croaking megaphone.
That litters life with jest
They pause that they may not go
On life's eternal quest.
They stifle truth with speech,
They mimic love with lust,
For the glitter of gilt they reach
And cover the gold with dust.
They stoop to the din and glare
Who have the lofty night for comrade rare.
They grope along the ground
Whose stature like the night with stars is crowned.

Oh piteous!
Oh struggle vain!
Of puppets emulous,
We strive and strain
To forge for our limbs a chain.
Come, thou deep-hearted Night, so dark and bright !
Come, holy Night, come, lawless, dissolute Night!
Come, human Night, hushing thy dreams divine!
Give me thy dreams, O Night—they shall be mine!—
Mine and this beggar's, though we lie to thee!
Mine and this harlot's, though from thee we
flee! Mine and this worldling's, though with might and right
We hide them from our s


Scheme ABABA CDCDDDDD AEA FEFFGG HIIJHXHDKKD DCDXCLLMMNOOJN PPAQAQDDKKRRDDXX PPDCCSDSTTUUBBBVVDDWWXX XCCCFD LYLYZZ1 1 2 X2 3 4 3 4 DD5 5 J6 J6 6 CC7 7 AACX
Poetic Form
Metre 111 01010100101 01111011010 1 111 11101 010111011 011111 111011111011 01011010110 01010100101 010010100101 1001110101 1101 1011111101 1111011 010101111 11010010101 100101 001111 1101000101 1001011101 1001 1001011101 1101011101 1111010111 1101 110011110101 1100101 1111 010110101010 1110101111010 010100101 100110111010 010101001110101 111010 1111010111 1 0101110001 1101111001 1011100101 11101 0111011101 111111 010100 011111001 1100111 1100100 111101 1011100100 111010111 11010011111 1101101101 011010100101 1101100101 11001 011101101 1111 1101010101 011101 01001001 011100 0100101 110100 101111 110110101 1001010111 1101 0101111101 1100111 11001011111 01111001 1111001 110101101 1111 1101110101 11101 0101010101 01100101 1101101 110100101 11010111 1101111101 01110010111 011101 1101 011100 111101 0101 110111 110101 110101 011001 110101 101101 110111 111101 10110 1110101 101010 110111 1111111 110101 110111 110111 10101111 0100111 1110101 110101111 110101 1101011111 11 1101 1101 1101 11110101 1111011101 110111011 110111101 1111111111 101111111 10111111 1101111101 1111101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,234
Words 770
Sentences 49
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 5, 8, 3, 6, 11, 14, 16, 23, 6, 19, 13
Lines Amount 124
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 305
Words per stanza (avg) 70
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:52 min read
62

Harriet Monroe

Harriet Monroe was an American editor, scholar, literary critic, poet and patron of the arts. more…

All Harriet Monroe poems | Harriet Monroe Books

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