Analysis of The Author Upon Himself



By an old ——pursued,
A crazy prelate, and a royal prude;
By dull divines, who look with envious eyes
On ev'ry genius that attempts to rise;
And pausing o'er a pipe, with doubtful nod,
Give hints, that poets ne'er believe in God.
So clowns on scholars as on wizards look,
And take a folio for a conj'ring book.
Swift had the sin of wit, no venial crime:
Nay, 'twas affirm'd, he sometimes dealt in rhyme;
Humour and mirth had place in all he writ;
He reconcil'd divinity and wit:
He moved and bow'd, and talk'd with too much grace;
Nor show'd the parson in his gait or face;
Despised luxurious wines and costly meat;
Yet still was at the tables of the great;
Frequented lords; saw those that saw the queen;
At Child's or Truby's, never once had been;
Where town and country vicars flock in tribes,
Secured by numbers from the laymen's gibes;
And deal in vices of the graver sort,
Tobacco, censure, coffee, pride, and port.
But, after sage monitions from his friends,
His talents to employ for nobler ends;
To better judgments willing to submit,
He turns to politics his dang'rous wit.
And now, the public Int'rest to support,
By Harley Swift invited, comes to court;
In favour grows with ministers of state;
Admitted private, when superiors wait:
And Harley, not ashamed his choice to own,
Takes him to Windsor in his coach alone.
At Windsor Swift no sooner can appear,
But St. John comes, and whispers in his ear:
The waiters stand in ranks: the yeomen cry,
Make room, as if a duke were passing by.
Now Finch alarms the lords: he hears for certain
This dang'rous priest is got behind the curtain.
Finch, famed for tedious elocution, proves
That Swift oils many a spring which Harley moves.
Walpole and Aislaby, to clear the doubt,
Inform the Commons, that the secret's out:
'A certain doctor is observed of late
To haunt a certain minister of state:
From whence with half an eye we may discover
The peace is made, and Perkin must come over.'
York is from Lambeth sent, to show the queen
A dang'rous treatise writ against the spleen;
Which, by the style, the matter, and the drift,
'Tis thought could be the work of none but Swift.
Poor York! the harmless tool of others' hate;
He sues for pardon, and repents too late.
Now angry Somerset her vengeance vows
On Swift's reproaches for her ******* spouse:
From her red locks her mouth with venom fills,
And thence into the royal ear instils.
The queen incensed, his services forgot,
Leaves him a victim to the vengeful Scot.
Now through the realm a proclamation spread,
To fix a price on his devoted head.
While innocent, he scorns ignoble flight;
His watchful friends preserve him by a sleight.
By Harley's favour once again he shines;
Is now caress'd by candidate divines,
Who change opinions with the changing scene:
Lord! how were they mistaken in the dean!
Now Delawar again familiar grows;
And in Swift's ear thrusts half his powder'd nose.
The Scottish nation, whom he durst offend,
Again apply that Swift would be their friend.
By faction tired, with grief he waits awhile,
His great contending friends to reconcile;
Performs what friendship, justice, truth require:
What could he more, but decently retire?


Scheme AABBCCDDEEFFGGHIJKLLMMNNFFMMIIOOPQRRSSTTUUIIVVJJWWIIXYZB1 1 2 2 3 3 4 BJJ5 5 6 6 7 7 V8
Poetic Form
Metre 11101 0101000101 1111111001 111010111 01010011101 1111010101 1111011101 01011011 110111111 1101101101 101110111 110010001 1101011111 1101001111 01010010101 1111010101 1001111101 111110111 1101010101 011101011 0101010101 011010101 11011111 1101011101 1101010101 11110111 010101101 1101010111 011110011 01010101001 0101011111 1111001101 1101110101 1111010011 010101011 1111010101 11010111110 1111101010 1111000101 11110011101 1011101 010101011 0101010111 1101010011 11111111010 01110101110 1111011101 011010101 1101010001 1111011111 1101011101 1111000111 110100101 111101 1011011101 010101011 011110001 1101010101 110100101 1101110101 1100110101 1101011101 110110111 110111001 1101010101 1101010001 11010101 0011111101 0101011101 0101111111 11010111101 110101110 0111010110 1111110001
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 3,100
Words 558
Sentences 23
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 74
Lines Amount 74
Letters per line (avg) 33
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 2,461
Words per stanza (avg) 555
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 01, 2023

2:53 min read
122

Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift was an Anglo-Irish satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer, poet and cleric who became Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. more…

All Jonathan Swift poems | Jonathan Swift Books

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