Analysis of Ode To A Child



BRIGHT as a morn of spring,
That jubilates along the earth,
With clouds, and winds, and flowers rejoicing,
And all the creatures that on wing
Scarce dip the ground in their ethereal mirth.
Whilst the dew'd sunlight and the gold-flushed rain
Wed midway in the air;
And from the twain
Is ever born that fairy gossamer,
The iridescent bridge that spans the skies.
Yea, e'en in such wild glory dost thou glow
Soul-fresh exuberant child!
And drops of heavenly freshness gleam
On red, red lips, in dark-orbed eyes,
Like morning dews that glimmering show
On winter moss and heath'ry wild,
And soft-cropped grasses undefiled,
In all the shifting splendour of a dream.

Oh, thou, that in thy glee
Know'st of no ending yet, and no beginning,
Making the hours melodious with thy play,
Like grasshoppers, that through the livelong day
Hopping on the new-mown hay,
Sun-struck trill their roundelay;
Or the cricket, chirping cheerly
Late at night, at morning early,
With a little baby-singing
Like an echo faintly ringing
From the distant summer leas;
And with tremulous murmurs clinging
Round the hearth, like clustering bees
Humming round the linden trees.

And yet athwart thy soul,
At times, perchance, I seem to see
The hid existence of far off events,
Trailing their slumb'rous shadows silently.
For in the dusky deeps
Of thy large eyes
Sometime the veilèd outline of a still
And mute-born vision sleeps
As in the hollows of a hill,
With dim and darksome rents
The dreamful shadow of the morning lies,
And softly, slowly, ever down doth roll,
Till lost in mystic deeps it flees our watchful eyes.

Yet from that silent trance
Quick leap'st thou back into thy playfulness,
As waters darkened by the drifting cloud
Into the swift sweet sunlight crowd,
Where dashed with dewy gold they dance
In unbedimmèd sprightliness;
Till with their blithesome strain
They make the brooding mountains loud
And fling their merriment across the voiceless plain.
And buzzing lightly, here and there,
Thou, like a little curious fly
That fusses through the air,
Dost pry and spy
With thy keen inquisitive eye;
Poking fatly-dimpled fingers
Into corner, box, and closet,
Where, perchance, there hidden lingers
Some deposit,
To be carried off triumphantly.
And with many questions, ever
Rippling like a restless river,
Puzzling many an older brain,
Dost thou hour by hour increase thy store
Of marvellous lore.
Thus a squirrel darting deftly
Up and down autumnal trees,
Sees its hoard of chesnuts growing swiftly
In a heap upon the leaf-strewn leas.

Yea, open art thou to each influence
That strikes on thy soft spirit from without
Thy spirit not yet frozen, nor shut out
From nature's kindling breath
By selfish aims, nor dulled the sense
By hot desires; alas, too oft the death
Of man's spiritual vision. No, thy soul
Is yet all clear and bright
And lieth naked 'neath the eye of heaven
As a small mountain pool--
A pure and azure pool,
To whom its food is given
By dews, and rains, and snows all lily-white,
That softly fall
Through many a summer's day and winter's night;
And whose unspotted breast
Glasses each pageant of the outer world,
The cloud with pinions to the blast unfurled,
The mountains' haughty crest,
The slanting beam of twilight skies
That like a golden ladder lies
Stretching across perchance for angel hosts
To slide
Down to the earth with heavenly boon;
And glasses too the hurrying mists that glide
Like gliding ghosts,
And stars, and all the mildness of the moon.

As yet 'tis early January with thee!
Warm-cradled doth the summer leaf
Lie folded in the winter leaf
On the blank tree.
And folded in the earth the seed
The future mother of some glorious weed,
Or flower blowing gorgeously,
Or cedar branching wondrously,
Lies slumbering; its whole destiny
Of great or lowly, foul or fair,
In this minutest space surely foreshadowed there.
But let the west wind, ocean-born,
Floating towards the meads of morn,
But once spread out his wild and vasty wing
Setting the sap a-cantring; till new life
Works wonders: then thy being
Will strangely stir, as at the sound
Of sounding drum and fife
The war-horse paws the ground.
And through thy sweet pure veins
Life like a waterfall will grandly bound.

But now the Psyche of thy being
Still shyly doth essay her delicate wing,
Like to that airy nurseling of the sun
When first it breaketh through its dun


Scheme ABAABCDCEFGHIFGHHI JAKKKGGJAALALL MJNJFFOXONFMF PXQQPFCQCDRDRRSXSXJEECTTJLJL XUUVXVMWXYYXWXWZ1 1 ZFF2 3 4 3 2 4 J5 5 J6 6 GGJDD7 7 A8 A9 8 9 X9 AAXD
Poetic Form Tetractys  (26%)
Metre 110111 110101 1101010010 01010111 11010101001 101100111 11001 0101 1101110100 001011101 11101110111 1101001 011100101 11110111 110111001 1101011 011101 010101101 111011 111110101010 100100100111 11011011 1010111 11111 1010101 11111010 10101010 11101010 1010101 011001010 10111001 1010101 010111 11011111 0101011101 10111100 10011 1111 10111101 011101 10010101 11011 01110101 0101010111 1101011110101 111101 11111011100 1101010101 0101111 11110111 0111 11111 11010101 0111010101 01010101 110101001 110101 1101 11101001 1011010 01101010 10111010 1010 111010100 01101010 100101010 100101101 11101100111 111 10101010 1010101 111111010 001010111 1101111100 1111110101 1101110111 110101 11011101 11010011101 11100010111 111101 0110101110 101101 010101 1111110 1101011101 1101 11001010101 0111 1011010101 011110101 010101 0101111 11010101 1001011101 11 110111001 01010100111 1101 010101101 1111010011 1110101 11000101 1011 01000101 01010111001 110101 110101 110011100 11110111 0111100101 11011101 10010111 111111011 100101111 1101110 11011101 110101 011101 011111 110101101 110101110 11010101001 111101101 11111111
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,222
Words 744
Sentences 19
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 18, 14, 13, 28, 27, 21, 4
Lines Amount 125
Letters per line (avg) 28
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 495
Words per stanza (avg) 106
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 22, 2023

3:46 min read
139

Mathilde Blind

Mathilde Blind, was a German-born British poet. Her work was praised by Matthew Arnold and French politician and historian Louis Blanc. more…

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