Analysis of My Only Title

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt 1840 (Petworth House) – 1922 (United Kingdom)



My only title to her grace
Is her sad, too silent face;
All my right to call her mine
The twin tears that on it shine,
Tears that tell of griefs long hid
In the shadows of each lid,
And of doubts that wound her sore
Our twin lives shall meet no more.
Nay, my right and title this,
That she gave me one shy kiss
'Twixt the dawning and the day,
Benediction on my way,
When the vain world was asleep
And no ear to hear us weep,
And that once my fingers pressed
The warm treasures of her breast,
Just a moment, and the truth
Learned of her close--hidden youth
With its joys and sweetnesses
Deep beyond all wit to guess,
All but mine, and what might be
Were she wholly joined with me.

Such my title is and treasure,
Such my glory beyond measure,
Such my thought for the new years,
Burdened with what doubts and fears,
Yet one day to claim her mine.
Here, beyond this shadowy Rhine,
Far from her and journeying still,
Feel I her young pulses thrill,
Her warm body nestled close
To my own with all its woes.
And I know that some far hour
I shall call to her with power,
When the sun is fast in prison
And the midnight stars have risen
Clear and kind in a warm sky,
And the shepherd's hour is nigh,
In a language she shall heed,
``Life is fleeting, love hath need.
Time it is tears should not be.
Come, my love, and dwell with me.''
And I know that without stay,
'Twixt the dawning and the day,
When the vain world is asleep
And no ear to hear her weep,
She shall dry her tears and come;
And we too through Christendom
And beyond this shadowy Rhine,
With its fields of corn and wine,
And the snow--clad Alps and Rome,
And the blue sea capped with foam,
And far--famed Constantinople
With its domes of pearl and opal,
And the sea of Marmora,
Where the dolphins sport and play,
And the utmost isles of Greece
Guarding still their golden fleece,
As when Paris to them came
With his Helen all aflame
On their glorious honeymoon;
And so on from noon to noon
Journeying still and still beyond,
Fond as they and yet more fond,
To the ancient tearless East
Shall be borne as to a feast,
And sit down there our lives long,
With Love's silence for our song
And Love's guile for our disguise,
While I teach her to be wise.
And my title to her grace
Shall the smiles be on her face,
Her blue eyes, where no tears be,
Being wholly joined with me.


Scheme aabbccddeeFfgghhiiaxjj kkllbbmmxxkknnooppjjfFggqqbbrrssdfttuuvvwwxxyyzzaajj
Poetic Form
Metre 11010101 1011101 1111101 0111111 1111111 001111 0111101 10111111 1110101 1111111 1010001 010111 1011101 0111111 0111101 0110101 1010001 1101101 11101 1011111 1110111 0110111 11101010 11100110 1111011 1011101 1111101 10111001 11001001 1101101 0110101 1111111 01111110 11110110 10111010 0011110 1010011 00101011 0010111 1110111 1111111 1110111 0111011 1010001 1011101 0111101 1110101 0111100 00111001 1111101 0011101 0011111 0110010 11111010 00111 1010101 001111 1011101 1110111 1110101 1110010 0111111 10010101 1110111 101011 1111101 01111011 11101101 01111001 1110111 0110101 1011101 0111111 1010111
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 2,260
Words 456
Sentences 10
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 22, 52
Lines Amount 74
Letters per line (avg) 24
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 901
Words per stanza (avg) 227
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:17 min read
109

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt was an English poet and writer. more…

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