Analysis of Gold

John Drinkwater 1882 ( Leytonstone, London, ) – 1937 ( London)



There is a castle on a hill,
So far into the sky,
That birds that from the valley-beds
Up to the turrets fly,
Climbing towards the sun can feel
The clouds go tumbling by.

But always far above the clouds
The sun is shining there,
It shines for ever on those walls;
And the great boughs that bear
Harvests of never fading fruit
Are golden everywhere.

Who journeys to that castled crest
Finds, with his journey done,
All ages and all colours in
Cascades of light that run
Over the broad weirs of the air
For ever from the sun.

Two things are silver: flower of plum
When April yet is cold;
And willowed floods that of the moon
Quiet leases hold.
That castle in the sky alone
Of living things is gold.

Between unfathomable blue
And the bright belts of green,
Midway the plains of heaven and earth,
Rock-borne it stands between
Woods and the sky, a golden world
Where only gold is seen.

Old carvers in the stone have cut
Forests and wraths and herds,
And these are gold: the dials tell
The sun in golden words;
The very jackdaws, from the towers
Wheeling, are golden birds.

The minting of the sun is on
The gravel everywhere,
The yellow walls are fleeces washed
In pools of sunny air,
That coming to that castle place
All men are Jasons there.

Trancelike to stand upon that hill
When the deep summer sings,
Gold-clad, gold-hearted, and gold-voiced,
And sings and sings and sings,
Is as to wait a rising world
In flight of golden wings.

And I have walked with love that way,
And on that golden crest
The sun was happy for my love,
For she is golden-tressed.
Red gold, that of all golden things
The great sun marks for best.

O golden castle of the sky
Hereafter gold can be
Only your image when the sun
Transfigured her for me,
Till she was golden-clouded Jove,
And I her Danae.

Hereafter in the chambered night
When linked love is told,
One thought shall spare to climb that hill
Into the sunbright fold,
For a great summer noon when love
Was gold, and gold, and gold.
  


Scheme ABXBXB XCXCDC EFXFCF XGXGXG XHXHIH XJXJXJ XCXCXC AKXKIK XELDKE BMFMLF XGAGLG
Poetic Form
Metre 11010101 110101 11110101 110101 10010111 0111001 1110101 011101 11110111 001111 10110101 11010 1101111 111101 1100110 011111 10011101 110101 111101011 110111 0111101 10101 11000101 110111 01010001 001111 10111001 111101 10010101 110111 11000111 100101 01110101 010101 01011010 101101 01010111 01010 01011101 011101 11011101 11111 1110111 101101 11110011 010101 11110101 011101 01111111 011101 01110111 111101 11111101 011111 11010101 010111 10110101 1011 11110101 0101 01000101 11111 11111111 01011 10110111 110101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,928
Words 375
Sentences 14
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6
Lines Amount 66
Letters per line (avg) 23
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 140
Words per stanza (avg) 33
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:52 min read
17

John Drinkwater

John Drinkwater (1 June 1882 – 25 March 1937) was an English poet and dramatist. more…

All John Drinkwater poems | John Drinkwater Books

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