Analysis of The Complaint Of New Amsterdam

Jacob Steendam 1615 (Kniphausen) – 1672 (Batavia)



I'm a grandchild of the Gods       
Who on th' Amstel have abodes;       
Whence their orders forth are sent       
Swift for aid and punishment.       

I, of Amsterdam, was born,       
Early of her breasts forlorn;       
From her care so quickly weaned       
Oft have I my fate bemoaned.       

From my youth up left alone,       
Naught save hardship have I known;       
Dangers have beset my way       
From the first I saw the day.       

Think you that a cause for marvel ?       
This will then the thread unravel,       
And the circumstances trace,       
Which upon my birth took place.       

Would you ask for my descent?       
Long the time was it I spent       
In the loins of warlike Mars.       
'T seems my mother, seized with fears,       

Prematurely brought me forth.       
But I now am very. loth       
To inform how this befol;       
Though 'twas thus, I know full well.       

Bacchus, too,-it is no dream,       
First beheld the daylight's beam       
From the thigh of Jupiter.       
But my reasons go too far.       

My own matter must I say,       
And not loiter by the way,       
Yen though Bacchus oft has proven       
Friend to ine in my misfortune.       

Now the mid-wife who received me,       
Was Bellona; in suspense, she       
Long did sit in trembling fear,       
For the travail was severe.       

From the moment I was born,       
Indian neighbors made me mourn.       
They pursued me night and day,       
While my mother kept away.       

But my sponsors did supply       
Better my necessity;       
They sustained my feeble life;       
They procured a bounteous wife       

As my nurse, who did not spare       
To my lips her paps to bare.       
This was Ceres; freely she       
Rendered what has nurtured me.       

Her most dearly will I prize;       
She has made my horns to rise;       
Trained my growth through tender years,       
'Midst my burdens and my cares.       

True, both simple 'twas and scant,       
What I had to feed my want.       
Oft 't was nought except Supawn       
And the flesh of buck or fawn.       

When I thus began to grow,       
No more care did they bestow.       
Yet my breasts are full and neat,       
And my hips are firmly set.       

Neptune shows me his good will;       
Merc'ry, quick, exerts his skill       
Me t'adorn with silk and gold;       
Whence I'm sought by suitors bold.       

Stricken by my cheek's fresh bloom,       
By my beauteous youthful form,       
They attempt to seize the treasure       
To enjoy their wanton pleasure.       

They, my orchards too, would plunder.       
Truly 'tis a special wonder,       
That a maid, with such a portion,       
Does not suffer more misfortune       

For, I venture to proclaim,       
No one can a maiden name,       
Who with richer land is blessed       
Than th' estate by me possessed.       

See! two streams my garden bind,       
From the East and North they wind,       
Rivers pouring in the sea,       
Rich in fish, beyond degree.       

Milk and butter; fruits to eat       
No one can enumerate;       
Ev'ry vegetable known;       
Grain tbc best that e'er was grown.       

All the blessings man e'er knew,       
Here does our Great Giver strew,       
(And a climate;ne'er more pure)       
But for me,-yet immature,       

Fraught with danger; for the Swine       
Trample down these crops of mine;       
Up-root, too, my choicest land;       
Still and dumb, the while, I stand,       

In the hope, my mother's arm       
Will protect me from the harm.       
She can succour my distress.       
Now my wish, my sole request,       

Is for men to till my land;       
So I'll not in silence stand.       
I have lab'rors almost none;       
Let my household large become;       

I'll my mother's kitchen furnish       
With my knicknacks, with my surplus;       
With tobacco, furs and grain;       
So that Prussia she'll disdain.


Scheme AABX CCXX DDEE FFGG BBXH XXFX IIJX EEKK LLMM CCEE XLNN OOLL PPHX XXCX QQRX SSTT XXJJ JJKK UUVV WWLL RXDD XXYY ZZ1 1 2 2 XV 1 1 KX XX3 3
Poetic Form Quatrain  (46%)
Metre 101101 1111111 1110111 1110100 111011 1010101 1011101 1111101 1111101 1110111 1010111 1011101 11101110 11101010 001001 1011111 1111101 1011111 001111 11110111 010111 1111101 101111 1111111 1011111 11011 1011100 1110111 1110111 0110101 11101110 11101010 10111011 110011 11101001 1001101 1010111 10010111 1011101 1110101 1110101 1010100 1011101 101011 1111111 1110111 1110101 1011101 0110111 1111111 1111101 1110011 1110101 1111111 1111011 0011111 1110111 1111101 1111101 0111101 1011111 110111 11011101 1111101 1011111 111101 10111010 10111010 11101110 10101010 10111010 11101010 1110101 1110101 1110111 111011101 1111101 1010111 1010001 1010101 1010111 111010 11001 11111011 10101101 11101101 00111 111101 1110101 1011111 1111101 1010111 0011101 1011101 111101 1111101 1111111 1110101 11111 111101 11101010 1111110 101101 1110101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,832
Words 598
Sentences 35
Stanzas 26
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 104
Letters per line (avg) 24
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 95
Words per stanza (avg) 23
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:04 min read
94

Jacob Steendam

Jacob Jacobsz Steendam was a Dutch poet and a minister. He collaborated with Pieter Corneliszoon Plockhoy.  more…

All Jacob Steendam poems | Jacob Steendam Books

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