Analysis of Homage To Sextus Propertius - II

Ezra Pound 1885 (Hailey) – 1972 (Venice)



I had been seen in the shade, recumbent on cushioned Helicon,
The water dripping from Bellerophon's horse,
Alba, your kings, and the realm your folk
have constructed with such industry
Shall be yawned out on my lyre with such industry.
My little mouth shall gobble in such great fountains,
'Wherefrom father Ennius, sitting before I came, hath drunk.'
I had rehearsed the Curian brothers, and made remarks
on the Horatian javelin
(Near Q. H. Flaccus' book-stall).
'Of’ royal Aemilia, drawn on the memorial raft,
'Of’ the victorious delay of Fabius, and the left-handed
battle at Cannae,
Of lares fleeing the 'Roman seat' . . .
I had sung of all these
And of Hannibal,
and of Jove protected by geese.
And Phoebus looking upon me from the Castalian tree,
Said then 'You idiot! What are you doing with that water:
‘Who has ordered a book about heroes?
'You need, Propertius, not think
'About acquiring that sort of a reputation.
'Soft fields must be worn by small wheels,
'Your pamphlets will be thrown, thrown often into a chair
'Where a girl waits alone for her lover;
'Why wrench your page out of its course?
'No keel will sink with your genius
'Let another oar churn the water,
'Another wheel, the arena; mid-crowd is as bad as mid-sea.'
He had spoken, and pointed me a place with his plectrum:

Orgies of vintages, an earthern image of Silenus
Strengthened with rushes, Tegaean Pan,
The small birds of the Cytharean mother,
their Punic faces dyed in the Gorgon's lake;
Nine girls, from as many countrysides

bearing her offerings in their unhardened hands,
Such my cohort and setting. And she bound ivy to his thyrsos;
Fitted song to the strings;
Roses twined in her hands.
And one among them looked at me with face offended,
Calliope:
'Content ever to move with white swans!
'Nor will the noise of high horses lead you ever to battle;
Nor will the public criers ever have your name;
in their classic horns,
'Nor Mars shout you in the wood at Aeonium,
Nor where Rome ruins German riches,
'Nor where the Rhine flows with barbarous blood,
and flood carries wounded Suevi.
'Obviously crowned lovers at unknown doors,
'Night dogs, the marks of a drunken scurry,
'These are your images, and from you the sorcerizing of
shut-in young ladies,
'The wounding of austere men by chicane.'
Thus Mistress Calliope,
Dabbling her hands in the fount, thus she
Stiffened our face with the backwash of Philetas the Coan.


Scheme ABXCCXXXDXXEAXFGXCHXXDXXHBXHCI BXHXB JBXJECXGIXIXEKXCKFACCX
Poetic Form
Metre 1111001111010 01010111 101100111 101011100 111111111100 110111001110 110110011111 110101100101 10010100 111111 110111001001 100100011100110 1011 11100101 111111 01100 01101011 010100111011 111100111101110 1110010110 11111 010101110010 11111111 1101111100101 1011011010 11111111 11111110 101011010 0101001011111111 1110010101111 101100111011 1011011 01110110 1101010011 1111101 1001000111 111001001110111 101101 101001 0101111111010 010 101011111 110111101110110 11010110111 01101 111100111 111101010 1101111001 0110101 10001101011 1101101010 111100011011 10110 010101111 110010 1000100111 101011011101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,360
Words 418
Sentences 21
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 30, 5, 22
Lines Amount 57
Letters per line (avg) 33
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 626
Words per stanza (avg) 139
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:05 min read
94

Ezra Pound

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

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