Analysis of Senlin: His Cloudy Destiny

Conrad Potter Aiken 1889 (Savannah, Georgia) – 1973 (Savannah, Georgia)



Senlin sat before us and we heard him.
He smoked his pipe before us and we saw him.
Was he small, with reddish hair,
Did he light his pipe with a meditative stare
And a twinkling flame reflected in blue eyes?
'I am alone': said Senlin; 'in a forest of leaves
The single leaf that creeps and falls.
The single blade of grass in a desert of grass
That none foresaw and none recalls.
The single shell that a green wave shatters
In tiny specks of whiteness on brown sands . . .
How shall you understand me with your hearts,
Who cannot reach me with your hands? . . .'

The city dissolves about us, and its walls
Are the sands beside a sea.
We plunge in a chaos of dunes, white waves before us
Crash on kelp tumultuously,
Gulls wheel over foam, the clouds blow tattered,
The sun is swallowed . . . Has Senlin become a shore?
Is Senlin a grain of sand beneath our footsteps,
A speck of shell upon which waves will roar? . . .
Senlin! we cry . . . Senlin! again . . . no answer,
Only the crash of sea on a shell-white shore.

Yet, we would say, this is no shore at all,
But a small bright room with lamplight on the wall;
And the familiar chair
Where Senlin sat, with lamplight on his hair.

Senlin, alone before us, played a music.
Was it himself he played? . . . We sat and listened,
Perplexed and pleased and tired.
'Listen!' he said, 'and you will learn a secret--
Though it is not the secret you desired.
I have not found a meaning that will praise you!
Out of the heart of silence comes this music,
Quietly speaks and dies.
Look! there is one white star above black houses!
And a tiny man who climbs toward the skies!
Where does he walk to? What does he leave behind him?
What was his foolish name?
What did he stop to say, before he left you
As simply as he came?
"Death?" did it sound like, "love and god, and laughter,
Sunlight, and work, and pain . . .?"
No--it appears to me that these were symbols
Of simple truths he found no way to explain.
He spoke, but found you could not understand him--
You were alone, and he was alone.

"He sought to touch you, and found he could not reach you,--
He sought to understand you, and could not hear you.
And so this music, which I play before you,--
Does it mean only what it seems to mean?
Or is it a dance of foolish waves in sunlight
Above a desperate depth of things unseen?
Listen! Do you not hear the singing voices
Out of the darkness of this sea?
But no: you cannot hear them; for if you heard them
You would have heard and captured me.
Yet I am here, talking of laughter.
Laughter and love and work and god;
As I shall talk of these same things hereafter
In wave and sod.
Walk on a hill and call me: "Senlin! . . . Senlin! . . ."
Will I not answer you as clearly as now?
Listen to rain, and you will hear me speaking.
Look for my heart in the breaking of a bough . . .'

Senlin stood before us in the sunlight,
And laughed, and walked away.
Did no one see him leaving the doors of the city,
Looking behind him, as if he wished to stay?
Has no one, in the forests of the evening,
Heard the sad horn of Senlin slowly blown?
For somewhere, in the worlds-in-worlds about us,
He changes still, unfriended and alone.
Is he the star on which we walk at daybreak,
The light that blinds our eyes?
'Senlin!' we cry. 'Senlin!' again . . . no answer:
Only the soulless brilliance of blue skies.

Yet we would say, this was no man at all,
But a dream we dreamed, and vividly recall;
And we are mad to walk in wind and rain
Hoping to find, somewhere, that dream again.


Scheme AABBCXDXDXEXE DFGHIJXJKJ HHBB LXIXIMLCNCAOMOKPXPAQ MMMRSRNFXFKTKTPUVU SWFWVQGQXCKC HHPX
Poetic Form
Metre 110110111 11110110111 1111101 11111101001 001001010011 110111001011 01011101 010111001011 111011 0101101110 0101110111 111011111 11011111 01001011011 1010101 1100101111011 1111 1110101110 01110110101 11011101101 0111011111 111101110 10011110111 1111111111 1011111101 000101 11111111 1010111010 11011111010 0101010 10110111010 11110101010 11110101111 11011101110 100101 11111101110 00101110101 111111111011 111101 11111101111 110111 11111101010 10101 11011111010 11011111101 1111111011 100101101 111110111111 11101101111 01110111011 1111011111 11101110101 0101011101 10111101010 11010111 111101111111 11110101 111110110 10010101 11111111010 0101 110101111 11110111011 10110111110 11110010101 11011001 010101 1111110011010 10011111111 11100101010 101111101 1100101011 11011001 1101111111 0111101 111101110 1001010111 1111111111 1011101001 0111110101 101111101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 3,505
Words 670
Sentences 89
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 13, 10, 4, 20, 18, 12, 4
Lines Amount 81
Letters per line (avg) 32
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 376
Words per stanza (avg) 99
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:18 min read
48

Conrad Potter Aiken

Conrad Potter Aiken was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American author born in Savannah Georgia whose work includes poetry short stories novels and an autobiography more…

All Conrad Potter Aiken poems | Conrad Potter Aiken Books

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