Analysis of The Virtues Of Sid Hamet The Magician’s Rod

Jonathan Swift 1667 (Dublin) – 1745 (Ireland)



The rod was but a harmless wand,
While Moses held it in his hand;
But, soon as e'er he laid it down,
Twas a devouring serpent grown.
Our great magician, Hamet Sid,
Reverses what the prophet did:
His rod was honest English wood,
That senseless in a corner stood,
Till metamorphos'd by his grasp,
It grew an all-devouring asp;
Would hiss, and sting, and roll, and twist.
By the mere virtue of his fist:
But, when he laid it down, as quick
Resum'd the figure of a stick.
So, to her midnight feasts, the hag
Rides on a broomstick for a nag,
That, rais'd by magic of her breech,
O'er sea and land conveys the witch;
But with the morning dawn resumes
The peaceful state of common brooms.
They tell us something strange and odd,
About a certain magic rod,
That, bending down its top, divines
Whene'er the soil has golden mines;
Where there are none, it stands erect,
Scorning to show the least respect:
As ready was the wand of Sid
To bend where golden mines were hid:
In Scottish hills found precious ore,
Where none e'er look'd for it before;
And by a gentle bow divine
How well a cully's purse was lined;
To a forlorn and broken rake,
Stood without motion like a stake.
The rod of Hermes was renown'd
For charms above and under ground;
To sleep could mortal eyelids fix,
And drive departed souls to Styx.
That rod was a just type of Sid's,
Which o'er a British senate's lids
Could scatter opium full as well,
And drive as many souls to hell.
Sid's rod was slender, white, and tall,
Which oft he used to fish withal;
A PLACE was fasten'd to the hook,
And many score of gudgeons took;
Yet still so happy was his fate,
He caught his fish and sav'd his bait.
Sid's brethren of the conj'ring tribe,
A circle with their rod describe,
Which proves a magical redoubt,
To keep mischievous spirits out.
Sid's rod was of a larger stride,
And made a circle thrice as wide,
Where spirits throng'd with hideous din,
And he stood there to take them in;
But when th'enchanted rod was broke,
They vanish'd in a stinking smoke.
Achilles' sceptre was of wood,
Like Sid's, but nothing near so good;
Though down from ancestors divine
Transmitted to the heroes line;
Thence, thro' a long descent of kings,
Came an HEIRLOOM, as Homer sings.
Though this description looks so big,
That sceptre was a sapless twig,
Which, from the fatal day, when first
It left the forest where 'twas nurs'd,
As Homer tells us o'er and o'er,
Nor leaf, nor fruit, nor blossom bore.
Sid's sceptre, full of juice, did shoot
In golden boughs, and golden fruit;
And he, the dragon never sleeping,
Guarded each fair Hesperian Pippin.
No hobby-horse, with gorgeous top,
The dearest in Charles Mather's shop,
Or glittering tinsel of May Fair,
Could with this rod of Sid compare.
Dear Sid, then why wert thou so mad
To break thy rod like naughty lad?
You should have kiss'd it in your distress,
And then return'd it to your mistress;
Or made it a Newmarket switch,
And not a rod for thine own breech.
But since old Sid has broken this,
His next may be a rod in piss.


Scheme Text too long
Poetic Form
Metre 01110101 11011011 111101111 100100101 10101011 01010101 11110101 11000101 11111 111101001 11010101 10110111 11111111 01010101 1101101 1101101 11110101 101010101 11010101 01011101 11110101 01010101 1101111 1011101 11111101 1110101 11010111 11110101 01011101 111011101 01010101 1101111 10010101 10110101 01110101 11010101 1111011 01010111 11101111 110010101 110100111 01110111 11110101 1111111 01110101 0101111 11110111 11110111 1101011 01011101 11010001 11100101 11110101 01010111 110111001 01111110 1111010111 11000101 01010111 11110111 1111001 01010101 11010111 1111101 11010111 1101011 11010111 11010111 1101110010 11111101 11011111 01010101 010101010 1011110 11011101 0100111 110010111 11111101 11111111 11111101 111110101 010111110 1110101 01011111 11111101 11110101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 2,933
Words 556
Sentences 18
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 86
Lines Amount 86
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 2,320
Words per stanza (avg) 554
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:55 min read
51

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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