Analysis of Maui Victor



Unhewn in quarry lay the Parian stone,
   Ere hands, god-guided, of Praxiteles
Might shape the Cnidian Venus. Long ungrown
   The ivory was which, chiselled, robbed of ease
   Pygmalion, sculptor-lover. Now are these,
The stone and ivory, immortal made.
   The golden apples of Hesperides
Shall never, scattered, in blown dust be laid,
   Till Time, the dragon-guard, has lived his last decade.

The Cnidian Venus, Galatea's shape,
   A wondering world beheld, as we behold, --
Here, in blest isles beyond the stormy Cape,
   Where man the new land dowers with the old,
   Are neither marble shapes nor fruits of gold,
Nor white-limbed maidens, queened enchantress-wise;
   Here, Nature's beauties no vast ruins enfold,
No glamour fills her such as 'wildering lies
Where Mediterranean waters laugh to Grecian skies.

Acropolis with figure group and frieze,
   Parthenon, Temple, concepts born divine,
Where in these Isles are wonders great as these?
   Unquarried lies the stone in teeming mine,
   Bare is the land of sanctuary and shrine;
But though frail hands no god-like record set
   Great Nature's powers are lavish, and combine
In mountain dome, ice-glancing minaret,
Deep fiord, fiery fountain and lake with tree-wove carcanet.

And though the dusky race that to and fro,
   Like their own shades, pass by and leave no trace,
No age-contemning works from quick brain throw,
   They still have left what Time shall not efface, --
   The legends of an isolated race.
Not vainly Maui strove; no, not in vain
   He dared the old Mother of Death and her embrace:
That mankind might go free, he suffered pain --
And death he boldly dared, eternal life to gain.

Not death but dormancy the old womb has known,
   New love shall quicken it, new life attain:
These legends old in ivory and stone
   Shall live their recreated life again, --
   Shall wake, like Galatea, to joy and pain.
Legends and myths and wonders; what are these
   But glittering mines that long unworked have lain?
A Homer shall unlock with magic keys
Treasure for some antipodean Praxiteles!


Scheme ABABBCBCC DEDEEBEBB BFBFFGFGC HBHBBIBII AIAXIBIBB
Poetic Form
Metre 10101011 1111011 11011011 0100111111 101010111 0101000101 0101011 1101001111 110101111101 011011 0100111101 1011010101 110111101 1101011111 11110111 11010111001 110101111 1001001011101 0100110101 101010101 1011110111 11010101 1101110001 1111111011 11010110010 010111001 1110010011111 010111101 1111110111 11111111 1111111101 010111001 1101011101 110110110001 1111111101 011101010111 11110001111 1111011101 1101010001 111100101 1110101101 1001010111 1100111111 0101011101 101111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,068
Words 336
Sentences 13
Stanzas 5
Stanza Lengths 9, 9, 9, 9, 9
Lines Amount 45
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 316
Words per stanza (avg) 67
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:41 min read
38

Johannes Carl Andersen

Johannes Carl Andersen was a New Zealander clerk, poet, ethnologist, librarian, editor and historian . more…

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