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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
BLACK ROSES, by WILLIAM HERVEY ALLEN JR. Poet Analysis First Line: His hard-horn eyes Last Line: This is a place of wonder. Alternate Author Name(s): Allen, Hervey Subject(s): Death; Dead, The | |||
His hard-horn eyes Glitter with pictures Of the cloud-piled skies; Wide eyes that little limn Heaven, unseen by him; Beside the river road to hell The dream slave lies. Here where the swart demons go, Pass and repass to and fro, Tread very Soft -- speak low. Shrill are the dog-voiced winds And shrill, Straining through cedars At the mouth of hell, An eyeless socket in the hill; And the dark river slips, Sucked through red granite lips, Into low moonless halls Down to a cavern land it falls; Spills with a black, lightless thunder, Where darkness crouches on the dragon hills An earth-mile under. Backward, flung back upon the humid winds Stumbles the mile-deep thunder; Out of the earth is born As haggard as a shout from solitude, The dampened, copper clamor of a horn. Near here no farmer plants the kindly corn! Only the sodden dreamer hears the sound Of the infernal horns bray underground, While fitfully comes, Rumbled like trundled drums, The river's voice, The mile-deep thunder -- Speak very soft, speak low; This is a place of wonder! Tread very soft -- tread slow -- For here black roses grow In ground unholy, Flowers of darkness That have sought the light, One blue-leafed seedling From the world below Of night and shadowy trees and voiceless birds, Of vast, dim meadows and of monstrous herds -- Petals of midnight which are come To prophesy against the sun, With seed pods dangerous to all things bright, Dull blossoms from the tree of melancholy. Lean very low -- lean low -- To hear from dreamer's lips How fiendishly appears A webb-foot being at the mouth of hell To prune the ebon rose with leaden shears; And how that demon strews Jet petals round the dreamer once, and twice Cupped like the sloughed scales of an asp, And hears the dreamer's soul down cavern roads, Cold, in a damp-smooth clasp. He bears the dreamer's soul asleep; He bears the swarthy roses deep -- Deep down the pounding cataracts, Along the river hurled Through leafless tracts Within a starless world, Into a city drowned With shadows drooping down From balconies of blindness In a murky town. Signals of flapping blackness float In folds of darkness from the walls, And a gigantic watchman rests His bony hands upon a drum, Waiting for sunrise that will never come; The eyeless serpents rustle in the moat; And silence calls. Then where the dead waters flow Down to the last pit below There is a noise of boulder stones, Cast up by blurting fountains; Washed down by the cataracts with grumbling tones, That rumble dismally among the subterranean mountains. And down the crags Along whose face The grey clouds hang Like rags in space -- The cowled dreams sit And listen to the thunder, thunder, thunder Of the black river and the stones. Tread very soft -- speak low -- This is a place of wonder. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A FRIEND KILLED IN THE WAR by ANTHONY HECHT FOR JAMES MERRILL: AN ADIEU by ANTHONY HECHT TARANTULA: OR THE DANCE OF DEATH by ANTHONY HECHT CHAMPS D?ÇÖHONNEUR by ERNEST HEMINGWAY NOTE TO REALITY by TONY HOAGLAND CHRISTMAS EPITHALAMIUM by WILLIAM HERVEY ALLEN JR. |
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