Analysis of The Crystal Palace



With ganial foire
Thransfuse me loyre,
Ye sacred nympths of Pindus,
The whoile I sing
That wondthrous thing,
The Palace made o' windows!

Say, Paxton, truth,
Thou wondthrous youth,
What sthroke of art celistial,
What power was lint
You to invint
This combineetion cristial.

O would before
That Thomas Moore,
Likewoise the late Lord Boyron,
Thim aigles sthrong
Of godlike song,
Cast oi on that cast oiron!

And saw thim walls,
And glittering halls,
Thim rising slendther columns,
Which I poor pote,
Could not denote,
No, not in twinty vollums.

My Muse's words
Is like the bird's
That roosts beneath the panes there;
Her wing she spoils
'Gainst them bright toiles,
And cracks her silly brains there.

This Palace tall,
This Cristial Hall,
Which Imperors might covet,
Stands in High Park
Like Noah's Ark,
A rainbow bint above it.

The towers and fanes,
In other scaynes,
The fame of this will undo,
Saint Paul's big doom,
Saint Payther's Room,
And Dublin's proud Rotundo.

'Tis here that roams,
As well becomes
Her dignitee and stations,
Victoria Great,
And houlds in state
The Congress of the Nations.

Her subjects pours
From distant shores,
Her Injians and Canajians;
And also we,
Her kingdoms three,
Attind with our allagiance.

Here come likewise
Her bould allies,
Both Asian and Europian;
From East and West
They send their best
To fill her Coornucopean.

I seen (thank Grace!)
This wonthrous place
(His Noble Honor Misther
H. Cole it was
That gave the pass,
And let me see what is there).

With conscious proide
I stud insoide
And look'd the World's Great Fair in,
Until me sight
Was dazzled quite,
And couldn't see for staring.

There's holy saints
And window paints,
By Maydiayval Pugin;
Alhamborough Jones
Did paint the tones
Of yellow and gambouge in.

There's fountains there
And crosses fair;
There's water-gods with urrns:
There's organs three,
To play, d'ye see?
'God save the Queen,' by turrns.

There's Statues bright
Of marble white,
Of silver, and of copper;
And some in zinc,
And some, I think,
That isn't over proper.

There's staym Ingynes,
That stands in lines,
Enormous and amazing,
That squeal and snort
Like whales in sport,
Or elephants a-grazing.

There's carts and gigs,
And pins for pigs,
There's dibblers and there's harrows.
And ploughs like toys
For little boys,
And ilegant wheelbarrows.

For thim genteels
Who ride on wheels,
There's plenty to indulge 'em:
There's Droskys snug
From Paytersbug,
And vayhycles from Bulgium.

There's Cabs on Stands
And Shandthry danns;
There's Waggons from New York here;
There's Lapland Sleighs
Have cross'd the seas,
And Jaunting Cyars from Cork here.

Amazed I pass
From glass to glass,
Deloighted I survey 'em;
Fresh wondthers grows
Before me nose
In this sublime Musayum!

Look, here's a fan
From far Japan,
A sabre from Damasco:
There's shawls ye get
From far Thibet,
And cotton prints from Glasgow.

There's German flutes,
Marocky boots,
And Naples Macaronies;
Bohaymia
Has sent Bohay;
Polonia her polonies.

There's granite flints
That's quite imminse,
There's sacks of coals and fuels,
There's swords and guns,
And soap in tuns,
And Gingerbread and Jewels.

There's taypots there,
And cannons rare;
There's coffins fill'd with roses;
There's canvas tints,
Teeth insthrumints,
And shuits of clothes by MOSES.

There's lashins more
Of things in store,
But thim I don't remimber;
Nor could disclose
Did I compose
From May time to Novimber!

Ah, JUDY thru!
With eyes so blue,
That you were here to view it!
And could I screw
But tu pound tu,
'Tis I would thrait you to it!

So let us raise
Victoria's praise,
And Albert's proud condition,
That takes his ayse
As he surveys
This Cristial Exhibition.


Scheme AABCCB DDEFFE AAGCXG BBBHHB BBABBA EEXIIJ BBKLLM BBBNNB BBBXAB BBGOOG BBABBA FFGPPC BBGBBG AABABB PPAQQA BBCRRC BBBBBB BBSXCL BBABBA BBSBBL GGCXFM BBBLXB BBBBBB AABBBB AAABBA AEJAKJ BBGBBG
Poetic Form
Metre 111 111 110111 0111 111 0101110 1101 111 11111 11011 111 111 1101 1101 10111 111 111 111111 0111 01001 110110 1111 1101 11011 111 1101 1101011 0111 1111 0101011 1101 111 11110 1011 1101 011011 01001 0101 0111101 1111 111 0101010 1111 1101 01010 01001 0101 0101010 0101 1101 0101 0101 0101 11101 111 0110 11001 1101 1111 1101 1111 111 110101 1111 1101 0111111 1101 111 0101110 0111 1101 0101110 1101 0101 111 11 1101 110010 1101 0101 110111 1101 11111 110111 111 1101 1100110 0101 0111 1101010 111 1101 0100010 1101 1101 1100010 1101 0111 11011 0111 1101 0110 111 1111 1101011 111 11 0111 1111 011 111111 111 1101 011111 0111 1111 11011 111 0111 01011 1101 1101 01011 1111 111 010111 1101 11 0101 1 111 101 1101 111 1111010 1101 0101 010010 111 0101 1101110 1101 11 0111110 111 1101 11111 1101 1101 11111 1101 1111 1101111 0111 1111 1111111 1111 01001 0101010 1111 1101 11010
Closest metre Iambic trimeter
Characters 3,490
Words 615
Sentences 34
Stanzas 27
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6
Lines Amount 162
Letters per line (avg) 18
Words per line (avg) 4
Letters per stanza (avg) 106
Words per stanza (avg) 23
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 22, 2023

3:16 min read
143

William Makepeace Thackeray

William Makepeace Thackeray was an English novelist of the 19th century. more…

All William Makepeace Thackeray poems | William Makepeace Thackeray Books

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