Analysis of O'Hara, J.P.

Henry Lawson 1867 (Grenfell) – 1922 (Sydney)



James Patrick O'Hara the Justice of Peace,
He bossed the P.M. and he bossed the police;
A parent, a deacon, a landlord was he—
A townsman of weight was O’Hara, J.P.

He gave out the prizes, foundation-stones laid,
He shone when the Governor’s visit was paid;
And twice re-elected as Mayor was he—
The flies couldn’t roost on O’Hara, J.P.

Now Sandy M‘Fly, of the Axe-and-the-Saw,
Was charged with a breach of the licensing law—
He sold after hours whilst talking too free
On matters concerning O’Hara, J.P.

And each contradicted the next witness flat,
Concerning back parlours, side-doors, and all that;
‘Twas very conflicting, as all must agree—
‘Ye’d better take care!’ said O’Hara, J.P.

But ‘Baby,’ the barmaid, her evidence gave—
A poor, timid darling who tried to be brave—
‘Now, don’t be afraid—if it’s frightened ye be—
‘Speak out, my good girl,’ said O’Hara, J.P.

Her hair was so golden, her eyes were so blue,
Her face was so fair and her words seemed so true—
So green in the ways of sweet women was he
That she jolted the heart of O’Hara, J P.

He turned to the other grave Justice of Peace,
And whispered, ‘You can’t always trust the police;
‘I’ll visit the premises during the day,
‘And see for myself,’ said O’Hara, Jay Pay.
(
Case postponed
.)

’Twas early next morning, or late the same night—
‘’Twas early next morning’ we think would be right—
And sounds that betokened a breach of the law
Escaped through the cracks of the Axe-and-the-Saw.
And Constable Dogherty, out in the street,
Met Constable Clancy a bit off his beat;
He took him with finger and thumb by the ear,
And led him around to a lane in the rear.

He pointed a blind where strange shadows were seen—
Wild pantomime hinting of revels within—
‘We’ll drop on M‘Fly, if you’ll listen to me,
‘And prove we are right to O’Hara, J. P.’’

But Clancy was up to the lay of the land,
He cautiously shaded his mouth with his hand—
‘Wisht, man! Howld yer whisht! or it’s ruined we’ll be,
‘It’s the justice himself—it’s O’Hara, J.P.’

They hish’d and they whishted, and turned themselves round,
And got themselves off like two cats on wet ground;
Agreeing to be, on their honour as men,
A deaf-dumb-and-blind institution just then.

Inside on a sofa, two barmaids between,
With one on his knee was a gentleman seen;
And any chance eye at the keyhole could see
In less than a wink ’twas O’Hara, J.P.

The first in the chorus of songs that were sung,
The loudest that laughed at the jokes that were sprung,
The guest of the evening, the soul of the spree—
The daddy of all was O’Hara, J.P.

And hard-cases chuckled, and hard-cases said
That Baby and Alice conveyed him to bed—
In subsequent storms it was painful to see
Those hard-cases side with the sinful J.P.

Next day, in the court, when the case came in sight,
O’Hara declared he was satisfied quite;
The case was dismissed—it was destined to be
The final case of O’Hara, J.P.

The law and religion came down on him first—
The Christian was hard but his wife was the worst!
Half ruined and half driven crazy was he—
It made an old man of O’Hara, J. P.

Now, young men who come from the bush, do you hear?
Who know not the power of barmaids and beer—
Don’t see for yourself! from temptation steer free,
Remember the fall of O’Hara, J.P.


Scheme AABC DDBC EEBC FFBC GGBC HHBB AAXC X IIEEJJKL MXBB NNBC OOPP MMBC QQBC RRBC IIBC SSBB KLBC
Poetic Form Tetractys  (24%)
Metre 11001001011 11011011001 0100100111 0101110101 11101001011 11101001011 01101011011 011110101 1101101001 11101101001 11101011011 1100100101 0101001101 0101111011 11001011101 1101110101 1100101001 01101011111 11101111011 1111110101 01111001011 01111001111 11001111011 111001101011 11101011011 0101111001 11001001001 0111101011 1 101 1 11011011011 11011011111 011101101 01101101001 010011001 11001001111 11111001101 01101101001 1100111101 1101011001 1111111011 01111101011 11011101101 11001011111 11111111011 10100110101 1101101011 01011111111 0101111111 0110101011 0110101101 11111101001 0101110111 0110110101 01001011101 01011101101 01101001101 0101110101 01101001101 11001001111 01001111011 1110110101 11001101101 0100111101 01101111011 010110101 01001011111 01011111101 11001101011 11111101011 11111101111 1110101101 11101101011 0100110101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 3,350
Words 612
Sentences 41
Stanzas 17
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 7, 8, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 75
Letters per line (avg) 33
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 144
Words per stanza (avg) 35
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:04 min read
39

Henry Lawson

Henry Lawson 17 June 1867 - 2 September 1922 was an Australian writer and poet Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period more…

All Henry Lawson poems | Henry Lawson Books

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