Analysis of Quart Pot Creek

James Brunton Stephens 1835 (Scotland) – 1902



On an evening ramble lately, as I wandered on sedately,
Linking curious fancies, modern, mediaeval, and antique—
Suddenly the sun descended, and a radiance ruby-splendid,
With the gleam of water blended, thrilled my sensitive physique—
Thrilled me, filled me with emotion to the tips of my physique,
             Fired my eye, and flushed my cheek.

Heeding not where I was going, I had wandered, all unknowing,
Where a river gently flowing caught the radiant ruby-streak;
And this new-found stream beguiling my sedateness into smiling,
Set me classically styling it with Latin names and Greek,
Names Idalian and Castalian, such as lovers of the Greek
             Roll like quids within their cheek.

On its marge was many a burrow, many a mound, and many a furrow,
Where the fossickers of fortune play at Nature's hide-and-seek;
And instead of bridge to span it, there were stepping-stones of granite,
And where'er the river ran, it seemed of hidden wealth to speak.
Presently my soul grew stronger, and I, too, was fain to speak:—
            I assumed a pose plastique.

“Stream,” said I, “I'll celebrate thee! Rhymes and rhythms galore await thee!
In the weekly ‘poet's corner’ I'll a niche for thee bespeak:
But, to aid my lucubration, thou must tell thine appellation,
Tell thy Naiad-designation—for the journal of next week—
Give thy sweet Pactolian title to my poem of next week.
             Whisper, whisper it—in Greek!”

But the river gave no token, and the name remained unspoken,
Though I kept apostrophising till my voice became a shriek;—
When there hove in sight the figure of a homeward veering digger,
Looming big, and looming bigger, and ejecting clouds of reek—
In fuliginous advance emitting clouds of noisome reek
              From a tube beneath his beak.

“Neighbour mine,” said I, “and miner,”—here I showed a silver shiner—
“For a moment, and for sixpence, take thy pipe from out thy cheek.
This the guerdon of thy fame is; very cheap indeed the same is;
Tell me only what the name is—('tis the stream whereof I speak)—
Name the Naiad-name Pactolian! Digger, I adjure thee, speak!”
             Quoth the digger, “Quart Pot Creek.”

Oh, Pol! Edepol! Mecastor! Oh most luckless poetaster!
I went home a trifle faster in a twitter of a pique;
For we cannot help agreeing that no living rhyming being
Ever yet was cursed with seeing, in his poem for the week,

Brook or river made immortal in his poem for the week,
             With such name as “Quart Pot Creek!”

*    *     *     *     *
But the river, never minding, still is winding, still is winding,
By the gardens where the Mongol tends the cabbage and the leek;
And the ruby radiance nightly touches it with farewell lightly,
But the name sticks to it tightly,—and this sensitive physique,
The already-mentioned (vide supra) sensitive physique,
              Shudders still at “Quart Pot Creek!”


Scheme ABXBBB CBCBBB DBXBBB ABEBBB EBFBBB FBXBBB DBCB BB CBABBB
Poetic Form
Metre 1110101011101010 1010010101001 10001010001001010 101110101110001 111110101011101 10110111 1011111011101010 1010101010100101 01111010110110 11100101110101 11011110101 1110111 1111100101001010010 1011101110101 0011111110101110 010010111110111 100111100111111 101011 1111101101001011 001010101011101 111111111010 1110101010111 1111101110111 1010101 1010111000101010 11111110101 1110101010101010 101010100010111 01010101111 1010111 111101011101010 10100111111111 101111110101011 11101011101111 10111101111 1010111 111111101 111010100010101 1110101011101010 101111100110101 111010100110101 1111111 1 1010101011101110 101010101010001 0010100101011110 101111100110001 00101011010001 1011111
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 2,903
Words 483
Sentences 20
Stanzas 9
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 4, 2, 7
Lines Amount 49
Letters per line (avg) 44
Words per line (avg) 10
Letters per stanza (avg) 238
Words per stanza (avg) 54
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:26 min read
116

James Brunton Stephens

James Brunton Stephens was a Scottish-born Australian poet, author of Convict Once. more…

All James Brunton Stephens poems | James Brunton Stephens Books

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