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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE CLOUD, by EDWIN MUIR Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: One late spring evening in bohemia Subject(s): Travel; Journeys; Trips | |||
One late spring evening in Bohemia, Driving to the Writers' House, we lost our way In a maze of little winding roads that led To nothing but themselves, Weaving a rustic web for thoughtless travellers. No house was near, nor sign or sound of life: Only a chequer-board of little fields, Crumpled and dry, neat squares of powdered dust. At a sudden turn we saw A young man harrowing, hidden in dust; he seemed A prisoner walking in a moving cloud Made by himself for his own purposes; And there he grew and was as if exalted To more than man, yet not, not glorified: A pillar of dust moving in dust; no more. The bushes by the roadside were encrusted With a hard sheath of dust. We looked and wondered; the dry cloud moved on With its interior image. Presently we found A road that brought us to the Writers' House, And there a preacher from Urania (Sad land where hope each day is killed by hope) Praised the good dust, man's ultimate salvation, And cried that God was dead. As we drove back Late to the city, still our minds were teased By the brown barren fields, the harrowing, The figure walking in its cloud, the message From far Urania. This was before the change; And in our memory cloud and message fused, Image and thought condensed to a giant form That walked the earth clothed in its earthly cloud, Dust made sublime in dust. And yet it seemed unreal And lonely as things not in their proper place. And thinking of the man Hid in his cloud we longed for light to break And show that his face was the face once broken in Eden, Beloved, world-without-end lamented face; And not a blindfold mask on a pillar of dust. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...RICHARD, WHAT'S THAT NOISE? by RICHARD HOWARD LOOKING FOR THE GULF MOTEL by RICHARD BLANCO RIVERS INTO SEAS by LYNDA HULL DESTINATIONS by JOSEPHINE JACOBSEN THE ONE WHO WAS DIFFERENT by RANDALL JARRELL THE CONFESSION OF ST. JIM-RALPH by DENIS JOHNSON SESTINA: TRAVEL NOTES by WELDON KEES |
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