Analysis of Jerusalem Delivered - Book 04 - part 06



'Ah! be it not pardie declared in France,
Or elsewhere told where courtesy is in prize,
That we forsook so fair a chevisance,
For or that might from fight arise;
Else, here surrender I both sword and lance,
And swear no more to use this martial guise;
For ill deserves he to be termed a knight,
That bears a blunt sword in a lady's right.'

Thus parleyed he, and with sound,
The approved what the gallant said,
Their general their knights encompassed round,
With humble grace, and earnest suit they prayed:
'I yield,' quoth he, 'and it be found,
What I have granted, let her have your aid:
Yours be the thanks, for yours the danger is,
If aught succeed, as much I, amiss.

'But if with you my words may credit find,
Oh temper then this heat misguides you so!'
Thus much he said, but they with fancy blind,
his grant, and let his counsel go.
What works not beauty, man's relenting
Is eath to move with plaints and shows of woe:
Her lips cast forth a chain of sugared words,
That captive led most of the Christian lords.

Eustace recalled her, and bespake her thus:
'Beauty's chief darling, let those be,
For such assistance shall you find in us
As with your need, or will, may best agree:'
With that she cheered her forehead dolorous,
And smiled for, that Phoebus blushed to,
And had she deigned her veil for to remove,
The God once more had fallen in love.

With that she broke the silence once again,
And gave the knight great thanks in little speech,
She said she would his handmaid poor remain,
So far as honor's laws received no breach.
Her humble gestures made the residue plain,
Dumb eloquence, persuading more than speech:
Thus women, and thus they use the guise,
To enchant the valiant, and beguile the.

And when she her enterprise had got
Some wished mean of quick and proceeding,
She to strike the iron that was hot,
For every action hath his hour of speeding:
Medea or false Circe changed not
So far the shapes of men, as her eyes spreading
Altered their hearts, and with her syren's sound
In lust, their, their hearts, in love she drowned.

All wily sleights that subtle women,
Hourly she used, to catch some lover new.
None kenned the bent of her unsteadfast bow,
For with the time her her looks renew,
From some she cast her modest eyes below,
At some her gazing glances roving flew,
And while she thus pursued her wanton sport,
She spurred the slow, and reined the forward short.

If some, as hopeless that she would be won,
Forebore to love, because they durst not move her,
On them her gentle looks to smile begun,
As who say she is kind if you dare prove her
On every heart thus shone this lustful sun,
All strove to serve, to please, to woo, to love her,
And in their hearts that chaste and bashful were,
Her eye's hot glance dissolved the frost of.

On them who durst with fingering bold assay
To the softness of her tender skin,
She looked as coy, as if she list not play,
And made as things of worth were hard to win;
Yet tempered so her deignful looks alway,
That outward scorn showed store of grace within:
Thus with false hope their longing hearts she fired,
For hardest gotten things are most.

Sometimes she walked in secret where,
To ruminate upon her discontent,
Within her eyelids the swelling tear,
Not poured forth, though sprung from sad lament,
And with this craft a thousand well near
In snares of foolish ruth and love she hent,
And kept as slaves, by which we fitly prove
That witless breedeth fruitless love.

Sometimes, as if her hope unloosed had
The chains of grief, wherein her lay fettered,
Upon her minions looked she blithe and glad,
In that lore so was she lettered;
Not glorious Titan, in his brightness clad,
The sunshine of her face in lustre bettered:
For when she list to cheer her beauties so,
She smiled away the clouds of grief and woe.

Her double charm of smiles and sugared words,
Lulled on sleep the of their senses,
Reason shall aid gainst those assaults affords,
no warrant from those sweet offences;
Cupid's deep rivers have their shallow fords,
His griefs, bring ; his losses, recompenses;
He breeds the sore, and cures us of the:
Achilles' lance that wounds and heals again.

While thus she them torments twixt frost and fire,
Twixt and grief, twixt hope and restl


Scheme ABABABCC DXDEDEFX GHGHIHJK LMLMANOP QRSRSRBT UIUIUIDD VNXNHNWW VXVXVXXP MYZYXY1 X 2 3 2 3 XCOP 4 1 4 1 4 1 HH JFKAKATQ XZ
Poetic Form
Metre 111110101 1111100101 11011101 11111101 1101011101 0111111101 1101111101 1101100101 111011 00110101 1100110101 1101010111 11110111 1111010111 1101110101 110111101 1111111101 1101110111 1111111101 11011101 111101010 1111110111 0111011101 1101110101 100100101 1110111 1101011101 1111111101 11110101 01111011 0111011101 011111001 1111010101 0101110101 111111101 1111010111 0101010101 1100010111 110011101 1010100010 01101011 111110010 111010111 1100101110110 01011111 11011110110 101101011 011110111 110111010 1011111101 11011011 110100101 1111010101 1101010101 0111010101 1101010101 1111011111 1110111110 1101011101 11111111110 11001111101 11111111110 0011110100 011101011 11111100110 101010101 1111111111 0111110111 11010111 1101111101 11111101110 11010111 01110101 110010001 01010101 111111101 011101011 0111010111 011111111 1101101 01110111 0111010110 0101011101 01111110 11001001101 0110101010 1111110101 1101011101 0101110101 11101110 1011110101 1101111 111011101 1111101 110101110 0101110101 1111111010 1011101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,190
Words 784
Sentences 18
Stanzas 13
Stanza Lengths 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 2
Lines Amount 98
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 254
Words per stanza (avg) 59
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:56 min read
73

Torquato Tasso

Torquato Tasso was an Italian poet of the 16th century, best known for his poem La Gerusalemme liberata, in which he depicts a highly imaginative version of the combats between Christians and Muslims at the end of the First Crusade, during the siege of Jerusalem. He suffered from mental illness and died a few days before he was due to be crowned as the king of poets by the Pope. Until the beginning of the 20th century, Tasso remained one of the most widely read poets in Europe. more…

All Torquato Tasso poems | Torquato Tasso Books

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