Analysis of He Loves And He Rides Away



'Twas in that island summer where
They spin the morning gossamer,
And weave the evening mist,
That, underneath the hawthorn-tree,
I loved my love, and my love loved me,
And there we lay and kissed,
And saw the happy ships upon the yielding sea.

Soft my heart, and warm his wooing,
What we did seemed, while 'twas doing,
Beautiful and wise;
Wiser, fairer, more in tune,
Than all else in that sweet June,
And sinless as the skies
That warmed the willing earth thro' all the languid noon.

Ah that fatal spell!
Ere the evening fell
I fled away to hide my frightened face,
And cried that I was born,
And sobbed with love and scorn,
And in the darkness sought a darker place,
And blushed, and wept, and blushed, and dared not think of morn.

Day and night, day and night,
And I saw no light,
Night and day, night and day,
And in my woe I lay
And dreamed the dreams they dream who cannot sleep:
My speech was withered, and I could not pray;
My tears were frozen, and I could not weep.

I saw the hawthorn rise
Between me and the skies,
I felt the shadow was from pole to pole,
I felt the leaves were shed,
I felt the birds were dead,
And on the earth I snowed the winter of my soul.

Like to the hare wide eyed,
That with her throbbing side
Pressed to the rock awaits the coming cry,
In my despair I sate
And waited for my fate;
And as the hunted hare returns to die,
And with her latest breath
Regains her native heath,

So, when I heard the feet of destiny
Near and more near, and caught the yelp of death,
Toward the sounding sea,
Toward my hawthorn-tree,
Under the ignorant stars I darkly crept:
'There,' I said, 'they'll find me dead,
Lying within my maidenhead.'
And at my own unwonted voice, I wept;
And for my great heart-ache,
Within a little brake
I lay me weary down and weary slept,
Nor ever oped mine eyes till morn had left the lake.

Her morning bath was o'er,
And on the golden shore
She stood like Flora with her floral train,
And all her track was seen
Among the watery sheen,
That blushed, and wished, and blushing wished again,
And parted still, and closed, with pleasure that had been.

Oh the happy isle,
The universal smile
That met, as love meets love, the smile of day,
And touched and lit delight
Within the common light,
Till all the joy of life was ecstacy,
And morn's wild maids ran each her flowery way,
And shook her dripping locks o'er hill, and dale, and lea!
'At least,' I said, 'my tree is sear and blight,
My tree, my hawthorn-tree!'

With downcast eyes of fear
I drew me near and near,
Dazed with the dewy glory of the hour,
Till under-foot I see
A flower too dear to me:
I pause, and raise my full eyes from the flower,
And lo! my hawthorn-tree!

As a white-limbed may,
In some illumined bay,
Flings round her shining charms in starry rain,
And with her body bright
Dazzles the waters white,
That fall from her fair form, and flee in vain,
Dyed with the dear unutterable sight,
And circle out her beauty thro' the circling main,

So my hawthorn-tree
Stood and seemed to me
The very face that smiled the summer smile:
All lesser light-bearers
Did light their lamps at hers-
She lit her own at heaven's, and looked the while
A purer sweeter sun,
Whence beauty was begun,
And blossomed from her blossoms thro' the blossoming isle.
Then I took heart, and as I looked upon
Her unstained white, I said, 'I am not wholly vile.'

Thus my hawthorn-tree
Was my witness unto me,
And so I answered my impleading sin
Till blossom-time was o'er,
And with the autumn roar
Mine unrebuked accuser entered in,
And I fell down convinced, and strove with shame no more.

Some time after came to me,
An image of the hawthorn-tree,
And bore the old sweet witness; and I heard,
And from among the dead
I lifted up my head,
As one lifts up to hear a little bird,
And finds the night is past and all the east is red.

Small and fair, choice and rare,
Snowy pale with moonlight hair,
My little one blossoms and springs!
Like joy with woe singing to it,
Like love with sorrow to woo it,
So my witty one so my pretty one sings!
And I see the white hawthorn-tree and the bright summer bird singing thro' it,
And my heart is prouder than kings!

While I look on her I seem
Once again in the sweet dream
Of that enchanted day,


Scheme ABCDDCD EEFGGFG HHIJJIJ KKLLMLM FFNOON PPQRRQSX DSDDTOCTUUTU BVWXXXY ZZLKKFLDKD 1 1 BDDBD LLWKKWKW DDZ2 2 Z3 3 ZXZ DDYBVYV DD4 OO4 O AA5 6 6 5 6 5 7 7 D
Poetic Form
Metre 10110101 11010100 010101 101011 111101111 011101 010101010101 11101110 11111110 10001 1010101 1110111 01101 110101110101 11101 10101 1101111101 011111 011101 0001010101 010101011111 101101 01111 101101 001111 0101111101 1111001111 1101001111 11011 011001 110111111 110101 110101 010111010111 110111 110101 1101010101 010111 010111 0101010111 010101 010101 1111011100 1011010111 010101 01111 10010011101 1111111 100111 01111111 011111 010101 1111010101 110111111101 0101110 010101 1111010101 010111 0101001 1101010101 010101110111 10101 00101 1111110111 010101 010101 11011111 01111101001 0101011010101 1111111101 11111 11111 111101 11010101010 110111 0101111 11011111010 01111 10111 010101 1101010101 010101 10101 1110110101 110111 0101010101001 1111 10111 0101110101 110110 111110 11011100101 010101 110101 0101010101001 1111011101 001111111101 1111 1110101 01110111 1101110 010101 11010100 011101011111 1110111 1101011 0101110011 010101 110111 1111110101 010111010111 101101 101111 11011001 11111011 11110111 11101111011 01101110011011011 01111011 1111011 1010011 1101011
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,094
Words 806
Sentences 21
Stanzas 16
Stanza Lengths 7, 7, 7, 7, 6, 8, 12, 7, 10, 7, 8, 11, 7, 7, 8, 3
Lines Amount 122
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 203
Words per stanza (avg) 50
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:02 min read
39

Sydney Thompson Dobell

Sydney Thompson Dobell, English poet and critic, was born at Cranbrook, Kent. more…

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