Analysis of To Queen Victoria In England



An Address on her Jubilee Year

MADAM, you have done well! Let others with praise unholy,
Speech addressed to a woman who never breathed upon earth,
Daub you over with lies or deafen your ears with folly,
I will praise you alone for your actual imminent worth.
Madam, you have done well! Fifty years unforgotten
Pass since we saw you first, a maiden simple and pure.
Now when every robber Landlord, Capitalist rotten,
Hated oppressors, praise you — Madam, we are quite sure!
Never once as a foe, open foe, to the popular power,
As nobler kings and queens, have you faced us, fearless and bold:
No, but in backstairs fashion, in the stealthy twilight hour,
You have struggled and struck and stabbed, you have bartered and
bought and sold!
Melbourne, the listless liar, the gentleman blood-beslavered,
Disraeli, the faithless priest of a cynical faith outworn —
These were dear to your heart, these were the men you favoured,
Those whom the People loved were fooled and flouted and torn!
Never in one true cause, for your people's sake and the light's sake,
Did you strike one honest blow, did you speak one noble word:
No, but you took your place, for the sake of wrong and the night's sake,
Ever with blear-eyed wealth, with the greasy respectable herd.
Not as some robber king, with a resolute minister slave to you,
Did you swagger with force against us to satisfy your greed:
No, but you hoarded and hid what your loyal people gave to you,
Golden sweat of their toil, to keep you a queen indeed!
Pure at least was your bed? pure was your Court? — We know not.
Were the white sepulchres pure? Gather men thorns of grapes?
Your sons and your blameless Spouse's, certes, as Galahads show not.
Round you gather a crowd of horrible hypocrite shapes!
Never, sure, did one woman produce in such sixes and dozens
Such intellectual canaille as this that springs from you;
Sons, daughters, grandchildren, with uncles, aunts and cousins,
Not a man or a woman among them — a wretched crew!
Madam, you have done well! You have fed all these to repletion —
You have put up a gilded calf beside a gilded cow,
And bidden men and women behold the forms of human completion —
Albert the Good, Victoria the Virtuous, for ever — and now!
But what to you were our bravest and best, man of science and poet,
Struggling for Light and Truth, or the Women who would be free?
Carlyle, Darwin, Huxley, Spencer, Arnold? We know it —
Tennyson slavers your hand; Burdett-Coutts fawns at your knee!
Good, you were good, we say. You had no wit to be evil.
Your purity shines serene over virgins mangled and dead.
You wasted not our substance in splendour, in riot or revel —
You quietly sat in the shade and grew fat on our wealth instead.
Madam, you have done well! To you, we say, has been given
A wit past the wit of women, a supercomputable worth.
Of you we can say, if not 'of such are the Kingdom of Heaven,'
Of such (alas for us!), of such are the Kingdom of Earth!


Scheme X ABABCDCDEFEXFFCFCGHGHIJIJKLKLMIMICXCCXAXANONOCBCB
Poetic Form
Metre 1110101 10111111011010 10110101101011 11101111011110 111101111001001 1011111011 1111110101001 11100101100010 1001011101111 1011011011010010 11010111111001 1101100010110 1110010111100 101 1001010010011 0100111010011 101111100111 1101010101001 100111111010011 11111011111101 111111101110011 101111101001001 1111011010100111 11101101111011 1111001111010111 1011111110101 1111111111111 00111101111 1101101011111 1110011100101 1011110010110010 101001111111 110101101010 10110100110101 1011111111111 11110101010101 01010100101110010 10010100010011001 111101010011110010 100110110101111 110101010111 1001111011111 11011111111110 110010110101001 1101101001010110 11001001011110101 10111111111110 01101110011 1111111111010110 11011111101011
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 2,919
Words 540
Sentences 31
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 1, 49
Lines Amount 50
Letters per line (avg) 46
Words per line (avg) 11
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,143
Words per stanza (avg) 268
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:43 min read
30

Francis William Lauderdale Adams

Francis William Lauderdale Adams was an essayist poet dramatist novelist and journalist who produced a large volume of work in his short life more…

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