Analysis of Cloris Charmes

Anne Killigrew 1660 (London) – 1685 (London)



Dissolved by EUDORA.
Not that thy Fair Hand
Should lead me from my deep Dispaire,
Or thy Love, Cloris, End my Care,
And back my Steps command :
But if hereafter thou Retire,
To quench with Tears, thy Wandring Fire,
This Clue I'll leave behinde,
By which thou maist untwine
The Saddest Way,
To shun the Day,
That ever Grief did find.

First take thy Hapless Way
Along the Rocky Northern Shore,
Infamous for the Matchless Store
Of Wracks within that Bay.
None o're the Cursed Beach e're crost,
Unless the Robb'd, the Wrack'd, or Lost
Where on the Strand lye spread,
The Sculls of many Dead.
Their mingl'd Bones,
Among the Stones,
Thy Wretched Feet must tread.
The Trees along the Coast,
Stretch forth to Heaven their blasted Arms,
As if they plaind the North-winds harms,
And Youthful Verdure lost.
There stands a Grove of Fatal Ewe,
Where Sun nere pierc't, nor Wind ere blew.
In it a Brooke doth fleet,
The Noise must guide thy Feet,

For there's no Light,
But all is Night,
And Darkness that you meet.
Follow th' Infernal Wave,
Until it spread into a Floud,
Poysoning the Creatures of the Wood,
There twice a day a Slave,
I know not for what Impious Thing,
Bears thence the Liquor of that Spring.
It adds to the sad Place,
To hear how at each Pace,
He curses God,
Himself, his Load,
For such his Forlorn Case.
Next make no Noyse, nor talk,
Until th' art past a Narrow Glade,
Where Light does only break the Shade;
'Tis a Murderers Walk.
Observing this thou need'st not fear,
He sleeps the Day or Wakes elsewhere.

Though there's no Clock or Chime,
The Hour he did his Crime,
His Soul awakes,
His Conscience quakes
And warns him that's the Time.
Thy Steps must next advance,
Where Horrour, Sin, and Spectars dwell,
Where the Woods Shade seems turn'd Hell,
Witches here Nightly Dance,
And Sprights joyn with them when they call,
The Murderer dares not view the Ball.
For Snakes and Toads conspire,
To make them up a Quire.
And for their Light,
And Torches bright,
The Fiends dance all on fire.
Press on till thou descrie
Among the Trees sad, gastly, wan,
Thinne as the Shadow of a Man,
One that does ever crie,

She is not; and she ne're will be,
Despair and Death come swallow me,
Leave him; and keep thy way,
No more thou now canst stray
Thy Feet do stand,
In Sorrows Land,
It's Kingdomes every way.
Here Gloomy Light will shew
Reard like a Castle to the Skie,
A Horrid Cliffe there standing nigh
Shading a Creek below.
In which Recess there lies a Cave,
Dreadful as Hell, still as the Grave.
Sea-Monsters there abide,
The coming of the Tide,
No Noise is near,
To make them fear,
God-sleep might there reside.

But when the Boysterous Seas,
With Roaring Waves resumes this Cell,
You'd swear the Thunders there did dwell.
So lowd he makes his Plea;
So Tempests bellow under ground,
And Ecchos multiply the Sound!
This is the place I chose,
Changeable like my Woes,
Now calmly Sad,
Then Raging Mad,
As move my Bitter Throwes.
Such Dread besets this Part,
That all the Horrour thou hast past,
Are but Degrees to This at last.
The sight must break thy Heart :
Here Bats and Owles that hate the Light
Fly and enjoy Eternal Night.
Scales of Serpents, Fish-bones,
Th' Adders Eye, and Toad-stones,
Are all the Light,
Hath blest my Sight,
Since first began my Groans.

When thus I lost the Sense,
Of all the heathful World calls Bliss,
And held it Joy, those Joys to miss,
When Beauty was Offence :
Celestial Strains did read the Aire,
Shaking these Mansions of Despaire;
A Form Divine and bright,
Stroke Day through all that Night
As when Heav'ns Queen
In Hell was seen,
With wonder and affright!
The Monsters fled for fear,
The Terrors of the Cursed Wood
Dismantl'd were, and where they stood,
No longer did appear.
The Gentle Pow'r, which wrought this thing,
Eudora was, who thus did sing.
Dissolv'd is Cloris spell,
From whence thy Evils fell,
Send her this Clue,
'Tis there most due
And thy Phantastick Hell.


Scheme ABACBDEBFGGX GHHGBIJJKKJXLLIMMNN OONPBQPRRSSXXSTUUTVC WWKXWXYYXZZEDOOEAFFA 1 1 GGBBGMRXXPP2 2 VV2 XYY1 3 3 4 4 5 5 K6 7 7 6 OOKKOOK X8 8 KAAOOFFBVQQVRRYYMMY
Poetic Form
Metre 011010 11111 1111111 1111111 011101 11010101 11111110 11111 11111 0101 1101 110111 111101 01010101 1001011 110111 111011111 01010111 110111 011101 1101 0101 110111 010101 111101101 11110111 01011 11011101 11111111 010111 011111 1111 1111 010111 10110101 01110101 1010101 110101 111110101 11010111 111011 111111 1101 0111 111011 111111 0111110101 11110101 101001 010111111 1101111 111111 0101111 111 1101 011101 111101 111011 1011111 101101 01111111 010011101 1101010 111101 0111 0101 0111110 11111 0101111 1101101 111101 111011111 01011101 110111 111111 1111 0101 111001 110111 11010101 01011101 100101 01011101 10111101 110101 010101 1111 1111 111101 11011 11010111 11010111 111111 1110101 011001 110111 100111 1101 1101 111101 11111 1101111 11011111 011111 11011101 10010101 111011 1111011 1101 1111 110111 111101 1101111 01111111 11011 01011101 1011011 010101 111111 1111 0111 11001 010111 0101011 01000111 110101 010111111 01011111 01111 111101 1011 1111 0111
Closest metre Iambic trimeter
Characters 3,778
Words 708
Sentences 31
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 12, 19, 20, 20, 18, 22, 22
Lines Amount 133
Letters per line (avg) 23
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 432
Words per stanza (avg) 101
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:38 min read
42

Anne Killigrew

Anne Killigrew was an English poet. more…

All Anne Killigrew poems | Anne Killigrew Books

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