Low Barometer

Summary


"Low Barometer" by Robert Bridges opens as a gale hammers the house and clouds race across the moon — and with the storm comes something older and darker. When the atmosphere loosens its hold, Reason finds itself tenant of a haunted mind, besieged by shapeless presences, remorse, and the unburied sins of time. Ghosts pad unseen across floors, force locked doors, and restless souls shriek through the dark until dawn or the earth itself drives them back underground.

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The south-wind strengthens to a gale,
Across the moon the clouds fly fast,
The house is smitten as with a flail,
The chimney shudders to the blast.

On such a night, when Air has loosed
Its guardian grasp on blood and brain,
Old terrors then of god or ghost
Creep from their caves to life again;

And Reason kens he herits in
A haunted house. Tenants unknown
Assert their squalid lease of sin
With earlier title than his own.

Unbodied presences, the pack’d
Pollution and remorse of Time,
Slipp’d from oblivion reënact
The horrors of unhouseld crime.

Some men would quell the thing with prayer
Whose sightless footsteps pad the floor,
Whose fearful trespass mounts the stair
Or burts the lock’d forbidden door.

Some have seen corpses long interr’d
Escape from hallowing control,
Pale charnel forms—nay ev’n have heard
The shrilling of a troubled soul,

That wanders till the dawn hath cross’d
The dolorous dark, or Earth hath wound
Closer her storm-spredd cloke, and thrust
The baleful phantoms underground.

Credits

Robert Bridges was a British poet who served as Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom from 1913 until his death in 1930, known for his careful attention to metre and sound. "Low Barometer" appears in his collection October and Other Poems (1920) and stands out among his work for its unusually dark, psychological intensity. He is also remembered as the friend and posthumous editor who brought Gerard Manley Hopkins's poetry to the world.