Analysis of Tilly
James Joyce 1882 (Rathgar) – 1941 (Zürich)
He travels after a winter sun,
Urging the cattle along a cold red road,
Calling to them, a voice they know,
He drives his beasts above Cabra.
The voice tells them home is warm.
They moo and make brute music with their hoofs.
He drives them with a flowering branch before him,
Smoke pluming their foreheads.
Boor, bond of the herd,
Tonight stretch full by the fire!
I bleed by the black stream
For my torn bough!
Scheme | XXXA XXXX XAXX |
---|---|
Poetic Form | |
Metre | 110100101 10010010111 10110111 1111011 0111111 1101110111 111101001011 1111 11101 01111010 111011 1111 |
Closest metre | Iambic tetrameter |
Characters | 408 |
Words | 79 |
Sentences | 7 |
Stanzas | 3 |
Stanza Lengths | 4, 4, 4 |
Lines Amount | 12 |
Letters per line (avg) | 27 |
Words per line (avg) | 6 |
Letters per stanza (avg) | 107 |
Words per stanza (avg) | 26 |
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Submitted on May 13, 2011
Modified on April 08, 2023
- 23 sec read
- 421 Views
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"Tilly" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 4 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/20194/tilly>.
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