Analysis of Is Moral Tinder Cause to Fret?
Karl Constantine FOLKES 1935 (Portland)
The ethics of censorship,
Should it be partisan,
Made a political spectacle?
A spectator’s mockery,
(Addison and Steele be grieved!).
A bourgeois public spectacle.
A constitutional mess —
Let none of us digress:
Public officials as elected servants,
Electing to displease…
For sake of argument,
Their agenda split on party lines,
Can we name this ethical?
And so we find these savvy tattlers,
Debating idly in weak defense,
Tattling with prejudicial chattering,
Behaving like old country squires,
Beguiling us as civilized beings,
Their tongue waxing religiously,
In pursuit of public popularity,
(Milton would call this Paradise Lost),
The pleasure of a vile imagination,
Condescending to the fairer sex.
This today is our anthology,
Scripted for public consumption.
Ethics made a spectacle
(Addison and Steele, beware!),
By a House divided by barbed debate,
With “rules for thee, but not for me.”
Is not this ethics all gone wrong?
Let us observe without reserve:
A life made mockery by some threat,
Is moral tinder, cause to fret!
Scheme | XAB CXB DDX XXX BDX XXX CCX AXC ABX XCX XEE |
---|---|
Poetic Form | |
Metre | 010110 111100 100100100 0100100 1000111 00110100 001001 111101 10010101010 010101 111100 101011101 1111100 01111101 010100101 11010100 010111010 010111010 11100100 0011100100 10111101 0101010010 01010101 1011100100 10110010 1010100 1000101 1010101101 11111111 11110111 11010101 011100111 11010111 |
Closest metre | Iambic tetrameter |
Characters | 1,063 |
Words | 207 |
Sentences | 11 |
Stanzas | 11 |
Stanza Lengths | 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3 |
Lines Amount | 33 |
Letters per line (avg) | 25 |
Words per line (avg) | 5 |
Letters per stanza (avg) | 75 |
Words per stanza (avg) | 15 |
About this poem
Recalling the historical journalistic commentaries of eighteenth century British newspaper critics Joseph Addison and Richard Steele, we take note that Congressional House censorship is a serious matter in the United States of America, especially when it abuses moral authority, and especially when it is based on unethical behavior within the hallowed halls of Congress. This poem is a public commentary of outcry concerning the partisan politicization of parliamentary procedures in governmental operations in America or elsewhere abroad. Let all be shamed. more »
Written on November 17, 2021
Submitted by karlcfolkes on November 17, 2021
Modified by karlcfolkes on September 12, 2022
- 1:02 min read
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"Is Moral Tinder Cause to Fret?" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 16 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/114198/is-moral-tinder-cause-to-fret%3F>.
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