Analysis of Donna Mi Prega

Ezra Pound 1885 (Hailey) – 1972 (Venice)



Because a lady asks me, I would tell
Of an affect that comes often and is fell
And is so overweening; Love by name.
E'en its deniers can now hear the truth,
I for the nonce to them that know it call,
Having no hope at all
that man who is base in heart
Can bear his part of wit
into the light of it,
And save they know't aright from nature's source
I have no will to prove Love's course
or say
Where he takes rest; who maketh him to be;
Or what his active virtu is, or what his force;
Nay, nor his very essence or his mode;
What his placation; why he is in verb,
Or if a man have might
To show him visible to men's sight.
In memory's locus taketh he his state Place
Formed there in manner as a mist of light
Upon a dusk that is come from Mars and stays.
Love is created, hath a sensate name,
His modus takes from soul, from heart his will;
From form seen doth he start, that, understood,
Taketh in latent intellect
As in a subject ready
place and abode,
Yet in that place it ever is unstill,
Spreading its rays, it tendeth never down
By quality, but is its own effect unendingly
Not to delight, but in an ardour of thought
That the base likeness of it kindleth not.
It is not virtu, but perfection's source
Lying within perfection postulate
Not by the reason, but ‘tis felt, I say.
Beyond salvation, holdeth its judging force,
Maintains intention reason's peer and mate;
Poor in discernment, being thus weakness' friend,
Often his power meeteth with death in the end
Be he withstayed
or from true course
bewrayed
E'en though he meet not with hate or villeiny
Save that perfection fails, be it but a little;
Nor can man say he hath his life by chance
Or that he hath not stablished seigniory
Or loseth power, e'en lost to memory.

He comes to be and is when will's so great
It twists itself from out all natural measure;
Leisure s adornment puts he then never on,
Never thereafter, but moves changing state,
Moves changing colour, or to laugh or weep
Or wries the face with fear and little stays,
Yea, resteth little
yet is found the most
Where folk of worth be host.
And his strange property sets sighs to move
And wills man look into unformed space
Rousing there thirst
that breaketh into flame.
None can imagine love
that knows not love;
Love doth not move, but draweth all to him;
Nor doth he turn
for a whim
to find delight
Nor to seek out, surely,
great knowledge or slight.
Look drawn from like,
delight maketh certain in seeming
Nor can in covert cower,
beauty so near,
Not yet wild-cruel as darts,
So hath man craft from fear
in such his desire
To follow a noble spirit,
edge, that is, and point to the dart,
Though from her face indiscernible;
He, caught, falleth
plumb the spike of the targe.
Who well proceedeth, form not seeth,
following his own emanation.
There, beyond colour, essence set apart,
In midst of darkness light light giveth forth
Beyond all falsity, worthy of faith, alone
That in him solely is compassion born.

Safe may'st thou go my canzon whither thee pleaseth
Thou art so fair attired that every man and each
Shall praise thy speech
So we have sense or glow with reason's fire,
To stand with other
hast thou no desire.


Scheme AABCDDEFFGGHIGJXKKLKMBXXXIJANAXXGOHGOPPEGENQXRI ORXOXMQSSXLXBTTUXUKIKXXRRXRRXEACXCXEXXX CVVRRR
Poetic Form
Metre 0101011111 11011110011 0111111 111111101 1101111111 101111 1111101 111111 010111 0111111101 11111111 11 111111111 11110111111 1111010111 11111101 110111 111100111 0110101111 1101010111 01011111101 110101011 1101111111 111111101 1001010 1000110 1001 101111011 101111101 11001111011 1101101111 101101111 1111111 100101010 1101011111 0101011101 010101101 10010101101 10110111001 111 1111 1 1111111111 110101111010 1111111111 1111111 11101111100 1111011111 110111110010 101010111101 1001011101 110111111 1101110101 1110 11101 111111 0111001111 011101011 1011 11011 110101 1111 111111111 1111 101 1101 111110 11011 1111 01110010 1101010 1011 1111011 111111 011010 11001010 11101101 11011 111 101101 111111 10011010 101110101 0111011101 011100101101 10110010101 11111111011 1111011100101 1111 1111111110 11110 111010
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,069
Words 592
Sentences 14
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 47, 39, 6
Lines Amount 92
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 820
Words per stanza (avg) 197
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 17, 2023

3:01 min read
135

Ezra Pound

Ezra Weston Loomis Pound was an American expatriate poet and critic of the early modernist movement. more…

All Ezra Pound poems | Ezra Pound Books

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