Analysis of Griselda: A Society Novel In Verse - Chapter V

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt 1840 (Petworth House) – 1922 (United Kingdom)



Griselda's madness lasted forty days,
Forty eternities! Men went their ways,
And suns arose and set, and women smiled,
And tongues wagged lightly in impeachment wild
Of Lady L.'s adventure. She was gone,
None knew by whom escorted or alone,
Or why or whither, only that one morning,
Without pretext, or subterfuge, or warning,
She had disappeared in silence from L. House,
Leaving her lord in multitudinous
And agonised conjecture of her fate:
So the tale went. And truly less sedate
Than his wont was in intricate affairs,
Such as his Garter or his lack of heirs,
Lord L. was seen in this new tribulation.
Griselda long had been his life's equation,
The pivot of his dealings with the world,
The mainstay of his comfort, all now hurled
To unforeseen confusion by her flight:
There was need of action swift and definite.
Where was she? Who could tell him? Divers visions
Passed through his fancy--thieves, and street collisions,
And all the hundred accidents of towns,
From broken axle trees to broken crowns.
In vain he questioned; no response was made
More than the fact that, as already said,
My lady, unattended and on foot,
(A sad imprudence here Lord L. took note),
Had gone out dressed in a black morning gown
And dark tweed waterproof, 'twixt twelve and one,
Leaving no orders to her maid, or plan
About her carriage to or groom or man.
Such was in sum the downstairs' evidence.
The hall porter, a man of ponderous sense,
Averred her ladyship had eastward turned
From the front door, and some small credit earned
For the suggestion that her steps were bent
To Whitechapel on merciful intent,
A visit of compassion to the poor,
A clue which led to a commissioner
Being sent for in hot haste from Scotland Yard.
And so the news was bruited abroad.

It reached my ears among the earliest,
And from Lord L. himself, whose long suppressed
Emotion found its vent one afternoon
On me, the only listener left in town.
His thoughts now ran on ``a religious craze
Of his poor wife's,'' he said, ``in these last days
Indulged beyond all reason.'' The police
Would listen to no talk of casualties,
Still less of crime, since they had nothing found
In evidence above or under ground,
But held the case to be of simpler kind,
Home left in a disordered state of mind.
Lord L. had noticed, now they talked of it,
Temper less equable and flightier wit,
``A craving for religious services
And sacred music.'' Something was amiss,
Or why were they in London in September?
Griselda latterly, he could remember,
Had raved of a conventual retreat
In terms no Protestant would deem discreet
As the sole refuge in a world of sin
For human frailty, grief's best anodyne.
``The Times was right. Rome threatened to absorb us:
The convents must be searched by habeas corpus.''

And so I came to help him. I had guessed
From his first word the vainness of his quest,
And half was moved to serve him in a strait
Where her fair fame I loved was in debate,
Yet held my peace, nor hazarded a word
Save of surprise at the strange case I heard,
Till, fortune aiding, I should find the clue
My heart desired to do what I would do.
And not in vain. Night found me duly sped,
Lord L.'s ambassador accredited,
With fullest powers to find and fetch her home,
If need should be, from the Pope's jaws in Rome.

Gods! what a mission! First my round I went
Through half the slums of Middlesex and Kent,
Surrey and Essex--this to soothe Lord L.,
Though witless all, as my heart told too well;
The hospitals no less and casual wards,
Each house as idly as his House of Lords,
And only at the week's end dared to stop
At the one door I knew still housing hope,
Young Manton's chambers. There, with reddened cheek
I heard the answer given I came to seek.
Manton was gone, his landlady half feared
He too, in some mishap, and disappeared,--
Proof all too positive. His letters lay
A fortnight deep untouched upon the tray.
She could not forward them or risk a guess
As to his last or likeliest address.
He was in Scotland often at this season,
``But not without his guns''--a cogent reason.
And leaving, too, his valet here in town,
Perplexed of what to do or leave undone.
Abroad? Perhaps. If so, his friends might try
As a best chance the Paris Embassy.
He had been there last Spring, and might be now.

Paris! It was enough, I made my bow,
And took my leave. I seemed to touch the thread
Of the blind labyrinth 'twas mine to tread.
Where should they be, in truth, these too fond lovers,
But in


Scheme AABBCXDDXAEEFFGGHHXXIIJJXKXXLGMMXXNNOOXPXX XQXLAAXXRRSSTTXXPPUUVCWW QQEEXXYYKXZZ OO1 1 2 2 XX3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 GGLGXX7 7 KKXV
Poetic Form
Metre 11010101 1011111 0101010101 0111000101 1101010111 1111010101 11110101110 011110110 1101010111 100101 01010101 1011010101 1111010001 1111011111 1111011010 111111010 0101110101 011110111 101010101 11111010100 11111111010 11110101010 0101010011 1101011101 0111010111 1101110101 1100010011 0101011111 1111001101 011101101 1011010111 0101011111 1101011100 01100111001 1011101 1011011101 1001010101 11110001 0101010101 0111100100 10110111101 01011101 1111010100 0111011101 010111101 11010100101 1111110101 1111111111 010111001 11011111000 1111111101 0100011101 11011111001 1100010111 1111011111 10110001001 0101010100 010110101 11010100010 1111010 1110101 0111001101 1011000111 11010111 01111101011 010111110010 0111111111 111101111 0111111001 1011111001 11111101 1101101111 1101011101 11010111111 0101111101 1101000100 11010110101 1111101101 1101011111 110111001 1001011111 1101111111 0101101001 1111011111 0101011111 1011111101 11101111 11010101111 101111011 11011001 1111001101 011010101 1111011101 111111001 11010101110 11011101010 0101101101 0111111101 0101111111 1011010100 1111110111 1011011111 0111111101 101101111 11110111110 10
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,346
Words 816
Sentences 49
Stanzas 5
Stanza Lengths 42, 24, 12, 23, 5
Lines Amount 106
Letters per line (avg) 33
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 695
Words per stanza (avg) 162
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:06 min read
81

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt was an English poet and writer. more…

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