Melancholy. A Fragment.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1772 (Ottery St Mary) – 1834 (Highgate)
Stretched on a mouldered Abbey's broadest wall,
Where ruining ivies propped the ruins steep--
Her folded arms wrapping her tattered pall,
Had Melancholy mused herself to sleep.
The fern was pressed beneath her hair,
The dark green adder's tongue was there;
And still as past the flagging sea-gale weak,
The long lank leaf bowed fluttering o'er her cheek.
That pallid cheek was flushed: her eager look
Beamed eloquent in slumber! Inly wrought,
Imperfect sounds her moving lips forsook,
And her bent forehead worked with troubled thought.
Strange was the dream-----
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Submitted on May 13, 2011
Modified on March 05, 2023
- 28 sec read
- 134 Views
Quick analysis:
Scheme | XAXA BBCC DEDEX |
---|---|
Closest metre | Iambic pentameter |
Characters | 560 |
Words | 92 |
Stanzas | 3 |
Stanza Lengths | 4, 4, 5 |
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"Melancholy. A Fragment." Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 12 Jun 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem/34282/melancholy.--a-fragment.>.
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