Analysis of Sancho Sanchez

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



Sancho Sanchez lay a--dying in the house of Mariquita,
For his life ebbed with the ebbing of the red wound in his side.
And he lay there as they left him when he came from the Corrida
In his gold embroidered jacket and his red cloak and his pride.

But at cockcrow in the morning, when the convents of Sevilla
Suddenly rang loud to matins, Sanchez wakened with a cry,
And he called to Mariquita, bade her summon his cuadrilla,
That they all might stand around him in the hour when he should die.

For he thought in his bold bosom, ``I have ventured with them often,
And have led the way to honour upon every ring in Spain.
And now in this the hardest of the fields that I have fought in
I would choose that every face of them were witness of my pain.

``For their stern eyes would upbraid me if I went down to the battle
Without a friend to cheer me, or at least a fool to hiss.
And they hold it all unworthy men should die like fatted cattle
Stricken singly in the darkness at the shambles of Cadiz.''

Then he bade the lamps be lighted, and he made them bring a mirror,
Lest his cheeks should have grown paler in the watches of the night.
For he feared lest his disciples should mistrust his soul of terror,
When they came to look upon him, if they saw his face was white.

Oh, long time in the mirror did he look with awful smiling
At the eyes which gazed out at him, while the women watched him mute.
And he marked how death's white fingers had been clammily defiling
The redness of God's image and had wiped the sunburns out.

Then he spake, ``Go fetch the carmine from the side drawer of the table,
Where Mariquita keeps it.'' But, when it was not found,
``'Tis no matter,'' answered Sanchez, ``we must do what we are able.''
And he painted his cheeks' paleness with the red blood of his wound.

And anon there came a murmur as of voices and a humming
On the staircase, and he knew them by their footsteps at the door.
And he leant up on his pillow that his eyes might see them coming
In their order of the plaza as they strode across the floor.

And when they stood around him, in their stately mantas folded,
With a solemn grief outawing the brute laughter of their eyes,
You had deemed them in the lamplight to be bronzen statues moulded
Of the powers of Nature yielding a brave man in sacrifice.

But the soul of Sanchez quailed not, and he laughed in their sad faces,
Crying loud to Mariquita for the Valdepeñas wine.
``A fair pig--skin, Caballeros, blushes here for your embraces.
And I drink to you your fortune, and I pray you drink to mine.''

Then they filled their leathern flagons, and they held them up together
In a ghastly expectation till their chief should give the sign.
And the red wine in the silence flowed like blood adown the leather.
And the red blood from the pillow trickled drop by drop like wine.

Spake the Master, ``Ere I pledge you, look upon me, men, and hearken,
For I have a thing to utter, and a dying man is wise.
Death is weighing down my eyelids. Silently your faces darken.
But another torch is lighted than the daylight in my eyes.

``Life, I see it now as never I had thought to comprehend it,
Like the lines which old Manola used to write upon the sand,
And we looked on in wonder nor guessed till it was ended
The birds and trees and faces which were growing from her hand.

``Meaning was there from the outset, glorious meaning in our calling,
In the voice of emulation and our boyhood's pride of soul,
From the day when first, the capa from our father's shoulders falling,
We were seized with inspiration and rushed out upon the bull.

``Meaning was there in our courage and the calm of our demeanour,
For there stood a foe before us which had need of all our skill.
And our lives were as the programme, and the world was our arena,
And the wicked beast was death, and the horns of death were hell.

``And the boast of our profession was a bulwark against danger
With its fearless expectation of what good or ill may come,
For the very prince of darkness shall burst forth on us no stranger
When the doors of death fly open to the rolling of the drum.

``As I lay here in the darkness, I beheld a sign from Heaven:
Standing close a golden angel by the footpost of my bed,
And in his hand a letter with the seal and arms engraven
Of the glorious San Fernando which he bade me read and read.

``And the message of his master, the blessed king my patron,
Was to bid me in his honour to hold myself at need
For this very day and morning of his feast and celebration,
And in pledge of his high favour he had sent m


Scheme AAAA BCBA DEXE FXFX GAGA HAHA FAFA HIHI AJAX XKXK GKGK DJDJ AAAA HXHX CXBX GLGL DADA DADX
Poetic Form Quatrain  (67%)
Metre 1010101000111 1111010101011011 01111111111101 011010100111011 111001010101010 1001111101101 01111101011 1111101100101111 1110111011101110 011011101100101 010101010111110 1111100111010111 111111111111010 01011111110111 011110101111110 101000101010101 1110111001111010 11111110010101 1111101010111110 111110111111111 111001011111010 101111111010111 011111101111 0101110011011 1111101010111010 1111111111 111101011111110 01101111011111 011101011100010 1010111111101 01101111011111110 011010101110101 01110110110110 1010110110111 1111001111011 101011010011010 1011101101101110 1011110111 0111110111010 011111100111111 11111101111010 00100101111101 001100101111010 001110101011111 101011111011101 111011100010111 111011110011010 10101110101011 111111101111011 1011111110101 01110101111110 01010101010101 10111011001001010 00110100101111 1011101110101010 10110100110101 1011010100011101 1110101111111101 01010101001110010 00101110011101 00111001010100110 11100101111111 1010111011111110 101111101010101 111100101101110 10101010101111 0011010101011 1010010101111101 00101110011110 111101111111 111010101110010 00111111111
Closest metre Iambic octameter
Characters 4,473
Words 874
Sentences 34
Stanzas 18
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 72
Letters per line (avg) 50
Words per line (avg) 12
Letters per stanza (avg) 198
Words per stanza (avg) 48
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:22 min read
64

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

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

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