Analysis of After the Golden Wedding (Three Soliloquies)



I. The husband's.

She's not a faultless woman; no!
She's not an angel in disguise:
She has her rivals here below:
She's not an unexampled prize:

She does not always see the point
Of little jests her husband makes:
And, when the world is out of joint,
She makes a hundred small mistakes:

She's not a miracle of tact:
Her temper's not the best I know:
She's got her little faults in fact,
Although I never tell her so.

But this, my wife, is why I hold you
As good a wife as ever stepped,
And why I meant it when I told you
How cordially our feast I kept:

You've lived with me these fifty years,
And all the time you loved me dearly:
I may have given you cause for tears:
I may have acted rather queerly.

I ceased to love you long ago:
I loved another for a season:
As time went on I came to know
Your worth, my wife: and saw the reason

Why such a wife as you have been
Is more than worth the world beside;
You loved me all the time, my Queen;
You couldn't help it if you tried.

You loved me as I once loved you,
As each loved each beside the altar:
And whatsoever I might do,
Your loyal heart could never falter.

And, if you sometimes fail me, sweetest,
And don't appreciate me, dear,
No matter: such defects are meetest
For poor humanity, I fear.

And all's forgiven, all's forgot,
On this our golden wedding day;
For, see! she loves me: does she not?
So let the world e'en go its way.

I'm old and nearly useless now,
Each day a greater weakling proves me:
There's compensation anyhow:
I still possess a wife that loves me.

2. The wife's.

Dear worthy husband! good old man!
Fit hero of a golden marriage:
I'll show towards you, if I can,
And absolutely wifely carriage.

The months or years which your career
May still comprise before you perish,
Shall serve to prove that I, my dear,
Can honour, and obey, and cherish.

Till death us part, as soon he must,
(And you, my dear, should shew the way)
I hope you'll always find me just
The same as on our wedding day.

I never loved you, dearest: never!
Let that be clearly understood:
I thought you good, and rather clever,
And found you really rather good.

And, what was more, I loved another,
But couldn't get him: well, but, then
You're just as bad, my erring brother,
You most impeccable of men:--

Except for this: my love was married
Some weeks before I married you:
While you, my amorous dawdler, tarried
Till we'd been wed a year or two.

You loved me at our wedding: I
Loved some one else: and after that
I never cast a loving eye
On others: you -- well, tit for tat!

But after all I made you cheerful:
Your whims I've humoured: saw the point
Of all your jokes: grew duly tearful,
When you were sad, yet chose the joint

You liked the best of all for dinner,
And soothed you in your hours of woe:
Although a miserable sinner,
I am a good wife, as wives go.

I bore with you and took your side,
And kept my temper all the time:
I never flirted; never cried,
No ranked it as a heinous crime,

When you preferred another lady,
Or used improper words to me,
Or told a story more than shady,
Or snored and snorted after tea,

Or otherwise gave proofs of being
A dull and rather vain old man:
I still succeeded in agreeing
With all you said, (the safest plan),

Yet always strove my point to carry,
And make you do as I desired:
I'm glad my people made me marry!
They hit on just what I required.

Had love been wanted - well, I couldn't
Have given what I'd not to give;
Or had a genius asked me! wouldn't
The man have suffered? now, we live

Among our estimable neighbours
A decent and decorous life:
I've earned by my protracted labours
The title of a model wife.

But when beneath the turf you're sleeping,
And I'm sitting here in black,
Engaged, as they'll suppose, in weeping,
I shall not wish to have you back.

3. The Vicar's.

A good old couple! kind and wise!
And oh! what love for one another!
They've won, those two, life's highest prize,
Oh! let us copy them, my brother.


Scheme A BCBC DEDE FBFB GHGH XIXI BJBJ XKXK GLGL MNDN OPOP QIQI X RSRS NTNT MPMP LULU LVLV XGDG WXWX YDYD LBLB KZKZ IIII 1 R1 R I2 I2 3 X3 X A4 A4 1 5 1 5 A CLCL
Poetic Form Tetractys  (20%)
Metre 1010 1101101 11110001 11010101 11111 1111101 11010101 01011111 11010101 11010011 0110111 11010101 1110101 111111111 11011101 011111111 110010111 11111101 010111110 111101111 11110101 11111101 110101010 11111111 111101010 11011111 11110101 11110111 11011111 11111111 111101010 0010111 110111010 011011110 0101011 11011011 11010011 01010101 111010101 11111111 110111111 11010101 110101011 101010 110101111 01 11010111 110101010 11011111 0010110 01111101 110101110 11111111 11001010 11111111 01111101 1111111 011110101 110111010 1111001 111101010 01110101 011111010 11011111 111111010 11010011 011111110 11011101 11110011 11110111 111110101 11110101 11010101 11011111 110111110 1111101 111111010 11011101 110111110 011011011 10100010 11011111 11110111 01110101 11010101 11110101 110101010 11010111 110101110 11010101 11011110 01010111 110100010 11110101 11111110 011111010 111101110 111111010 111101110 11011111 110101110 01110111 011010001 01001001 11110101 01010101 110101110 0110101 011101010 11111111 01 01110101 011111010 11111101 111101110
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,814
Words 758
Sentences 39
Stanzas 31
Stanza Lengths 1, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 1, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 1, 4
Lines Amount 115
Letters per line (avg) 26
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 96
Words per stanza (avg) 24
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:57 min read
66

James Kenneth Stephen

James Kenneth Stephen was an English poet, and tutor to Prince Albert Victor, eldest son of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales. more…

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