Analysis of The Model

Harriet Monroe 1860 (Chicago) – 1936 (Arequipa)



Have you forgotten—you, the chief,
The art-director, president,
What not, of the establishment—
Forgot how for a moment brief
The whole show, all our strife and stir,
Went out—for her?

You led me through your galleries
And dreams—the pictures new and old
And good and bad, the battles bold
You fought with principalities
And powers. We chaffed and laughed away
Such woes that day!

And built such castles domed and towered
For Art to live in by and by,
When men should know the How and Why;
For Art to live in, throned and dowered,
When the world's works and ways should be
Both fair and free.

From hope to rage and back again
We flashed, flung curses red as bombs
At the dull age, lit hecatombs
Of lies and laws and flaws, and then
Reached for the stars and plucked them down
To make man's crown.

The Truth!—that was our cry—the Truth,
Whose heart and mind, whose lips and eyes,
Her first glance and her last surprise,
Are Beauty. All the while, forsooth,
Bold Chance, the blind interpreter,
Led us—to her.

A school door swung—and she was there !
Strange, how the proud world slunk away
And left her with the waning day
Alone. All vanished unaware—
The class, the great high-windowed hall,
And we, and all.

Yes, all our plans, the futile show
Of art, wherewith rash man aspires
To breathe into the dust life's fires,
And be as God. She stood aglow
Fresh from God's hand. 'Twas all in vain

Our hope, our pain.
God beat us at the game. For her
The dim day flared with rose and gold.
A slim moon softly aureoled,
She shone apart and would not stir,
Hesitant at the rim of space,
Veiling her face.

Out in the dream she rose—afar—
With Eve, new-flowered in paradise;
With Helen, whose effulgent eyes
Men sang to through the crash of war;
With Aphrodite, foam-empearled,
Kindling the world.

The winds of doom grew soft for her,
Nor dared even touch the curls that hid
Her face in dusky gold; nor chid
With change, that recreant pillager,
Her still, immortal loveliness,
So brave to bless.

The place a temple was, and we
So brave to bless.
The place a temple was, and we,
Tricked out with odds and ends of faith—
Mere rags worn thin by life and death—
Profaned the immaculate mystery,
Looked on the truth with blasphemous eyes,
Afraid to rise.

The moment met us and was gone,
The proof of all and the despair.
We sought the dark, growing aware
Of our stript souls; and then anon
Tried all in vain to tread again
The ways of men.

The bold words died upon our lips,
The clatter of our feet grew still.
Even now—ah, does it waft your will
Through ether-seas in winged ships—
The sight of her beyond shut eyes,
The white surprise?


Scheme abxacc deedff xggbhh ixdijj kllkcc mffmnn oppoq qcebcrr xxlxbx cxbcdS HSHxxhll xmmiii tuutll
Poetic Form Tetractys  (28%)
Etheree  (28%)
Metre 11010101 0101010 11100100 01110101 011110101 1110 11111100 01010101 01010101 1110100 010110101 1111 011101010 11110101 11110101 11110101 10110111 1101 11110101 11110111 101111 11010101 11010111 1111 011110101 11011101 01100101 1101011 11010100 1110 01110111 11011101 01010101 0111001 01011101 0101 111010101 11111010 110101110 01111101 11111101 101101 11110110 01111101 011101 11010111 10010111 1001 10011101 11110010 110111 11110111 101011 1001 01111110 111010111 0101111 1111100 010101 1111 01010101 1111 01010101 11110111 11111101 100100100 110111001 0111 01011011 01110001 11011001 11011011 11011101 0111 011101101 010110111 101111111 1101011 01100111 0101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 2,620
Words 484
Sentences 26
Stanzas 13
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 5, 7, 6, 6, 8, 6, 6
Lines Amount 80
Letters per line (avg) 25
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 156
Words per stanza (avg) 37
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:26 min read
134

Harriet Monroe

Harriet Monroe was an American editor, scholar, literary critic, poet and patron of the arts. more…

All Harriet Monroe poems | Harriet Monroe Books

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