Analysis of Renunciation

Mathilde Blind 1841 (Mannheim) – 1896 (London)



When ich Dich liebe was geht es Dich an?

I.
THE air is full of the peal of bells,
The rhythmical pealing of marriage bells;
But athwart and above their ringing--
Throbbing clear like the light of a star
Lost in the sunrise--I hear afar
The skylark's jubilant singing.

II.
The clouds all woollen and white on high,
Like flocks of heavenly sheep go by,
Go through heaven's sapphire meadows;
While here on the earth's green meadows, deep
In sapphire flowers, our earthly sheep
Loll in their loitering shadows.

III.
Come, we will sit by the wayside here,
They must cross this field to the chapel, dear,
The loved by the side for her lover.
Grey, through the glimmer of vernal green,
Its time-worn tower may just be seen
Through the yews which curtain it over.

IV.
Nay, little brother, why should I pine?
Dare a violet ask that the sun should shine,
The shining sun shine for it solely?
Lowly it lifteth its meek blue eye,
And yields up its soul to the sun on high,
Nor asks for love, loving so wholly.

V.
He passed by the garden where, snow-white and red,
I tended the flowers which give us our bread,
And watered my lilies and roses;
He passed and repassed both early and late,
And lingering, often would lean on the gate
While I tied for him one of my posies.

VI.
Day after day would he pass this way,
And his smiling was sweet as the flowers of May,
Or the scent of the bee-haunted clover;
And a softer flame seemed to light up his eye
Than the lily-white moon's in the rose-hued sky,
Ere the blush of the May-day is over.

VII.
Aye, day after day he would stop on his way,
While the trees were in leaf and the meadows were gay,
And the curled little lambs were grazing;
As he went, or returned in the waning light
From the smoke-capped city whose lamps by night
Turn the black clouds red with their blazing.

VIII.
It's a year to-day when the young sun sets
Since I gave him that first bunch of violets
From the root on the grave of our mother.
Though thou seest them not with the bodily eye,
The language of flowers much better than I
I know that thou knowest, my brother.

IX.
Violets--then golden daffodils
Which the light of the sun like a wine-cup fills--
Tall tulips like flames upspringing--
Golden-brown wallflowers bright as his locks--
Marigolds--balsams--and perfumed stocks
Whose scent's like a blackbird's singing.

X.
You see, my darling, I never forget!
Aye, those were your own very words--ere yet
Our father lost his all in yon city,
Where the people, they say, in their struggle for gold,
Become like wild beasts, and the feeble and old
Are trampled upon without pity.

XI.
Poor father was better to-day: for the smile
Of the sun seemed to gladden him too for awhile
As he sat by the bright little casement,
With buttercups heaped on his knees without stint,
Which, deeming them childishly fresh from the mint,
He counted in chuckling amazement.

XII.
The air is full of the peal of bells--
The rhythmical pealing of marriage bells!
And there floats o'er the fields, o'er the fallows,
Borne on the wind with the wind-blown chimes,
From the old house hidden in older limes,
A chatter of maidens and swallows.

XIII.
Ah, give me the flowers!--the last year was all
In tune with the flowers from the spring to the fall,
And with singing of birds in the bowers;
And once--ah, look not so angry, dear!--
He whispered so softly I scarce could hear,
'You yourself are the flower of all flowers!'

XIV.
But oh, when the wind was loud in the trees,
When the fluttering petals snowed down on the leas,
And the dim sun went out like an ember,
He stood by the gate all drenched with the mist,
And I gave him my last Christmas rose, which he kissed
For the last time that last of November.

XV.
Say, could he help if a hope as sweet
As the wild thyme had sprouted under his feet?
If his face in my heart is enfolden,
As the sun-smit globes of the summer rain
Reflect and hold and refract again
The sun, the eternally golden.

XVI.
He cometh, he cometh, oh brother, there!
Ah would that you saw the glint of his hair,
For he looks like that saint in the story
Whom you loved so to hear of in days of old,
Till he lit up your dreams with his curls of gold,
Exhaling a mystical glory.

XVII.
The unseen wings of the morning air
Fan his brow and ruffle his hair
As he steps with a stately measure;
White daisies under his f


Scheme a bCCdeed bbbfggf bhijkkj lmmnbbn looxppc bqqjbbj lqqdrrd lxxjbbj cssdttd xuunvvn nwwoxxx cCCfyyf czz1 ih1 l2 2 j3 3 j l4 4 axxx l5 5 nvvn l5 5 jl
Poetic Form
Metre 111111111 1 011110111 0111101 101001110 101101101 10011101 0110010 1 011100111 111100111 11101001 11101111 01001010101 1011001 1 11111011 1111110101 011011010 110101101 111101111 101110110 1 110101111 10100110111 0101111100 10111111 0111110111 111110110 1 11101011101 110010111101 010110010 110111001 01001011101 111111111 1 110111111 011011101011 1011011010 00101111111 10101100111 1011011110 1 11101111111 10100100101 001101010 11110100101 1011101111 101111110 1 1011110111 11111111100 10110111010 11111101001 01011011011 11111110 1 10011010 10110110111 110111 10111111 1010011 1110110 1 1111011001 1101110111 10101110110 101011011011 01111001001 110010110 1 11011011101 101111011101 111101101 1101111011 11111101 110010010 1 011110111 0111101 01110011001 110110111 1011100101 010110010 1 11101001111 011010101101 0110110010 011111101 1101101111 10110101110 1 1110111001 101001011101 0011111110 1110111101 011111101111 1011111010 1 111110111 10111101011 11101111 1011110101 01010101 010010010 1 1101101101 1111101111 1111110010 11111110111 11111111111 1010010 1 001110101 11101011 111101010 1101011
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,196
Words 808
Sentences 45
Stanzas 18
Stanza Lengths 1, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 5
Lines Amount 118
Letters per line (avg) 28
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 186
Words per stanza (avg) 45
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:05 min read
56

Mathilde Blind

Mathilde Blind, was a German-born British poet. Her work was praised by Matthew Arnold and French politician and historian Louis Blanc. more…

All Mathilde Blind poems | Mathilde Blind Books

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