Analysis of The Pastoral, The Elegy, The Ode, And The Epigram



As A fair nymph, when rising from her bed,
With sparkling diamonds dresses not her head,
But without gold, or pearl, or costly scents,
Gathers from neighboring fields her ornaments:
Such, lovely in its dress, but plain withal,
Ought to appear a perfect Pastoral.
Its humble method nothing has of fierce,
But hates the rattling of a lofty verse;
There native beauty pleases and excites,
And never with harsh sounds the ear affrights.

But in this style a poet, often spent
In rage, throws by his rural instrument,
And vainly, when disordered thoughts abound,
Amidst the eclogue makes the trumpet sound;
Pan flies alarmed into the neighboring woods,
And frighted nymphs dive down into the floods.

Opposed to this, another, low in style,
Makes shepherds speak a language low and vile;
His writings, flat and heavy, without sound,
Kissing the earth and creeping on the ground;
You'd swear that Randal, in his rustic strains,
Again was quavering to the country swains,
And changing, without care of sound or dress,
Strephon and Phyllis into Tom and Bess.

'Twixt these extremes 'tis hard to keep the right:
For guides take Virgil and read Theocrite;
Be their just writings, by the gods inspired,
Your constant pattern, practiced and admired.
By them alone you'll easy comprehend
How poets without shame may condescend
To sing of gardens, fields, of flowers and fruit,
To stir up shepherds and to tune the flute;

Of love's rewards to tell the happy hour,
Daphne a tree, Narcissus make a flower,
And by what means the eclogue yet has power
To make the woods worthy a conqueror;
This of their writings is the grace and flight;
Their risings lofty, yet not out of sight.

The Elegy, that loves a mournful style,
With unbound hair weeps at a funeral pile;
It paints the lover's torments and delights,
A mistress flatters, threatens, and invites;
But well these raptures if you'll make us see,
You must know love as well as poetry.

I hate those lukewarm authors, whose forced fire
In a cold style describes a hot desire;
That sigh by rule, and raging in cold blood,
Their sluggish muse whip to an amorous mood.
Their transports feigned appear but flat and vain;
They always sigh, and always hug their chain,
Adore their prisons and their sufferings bless,
Make sense and reason quarrel as they please.
'Twas not of old in this affected tone
That smooth Tibullus made his amorous moan;
Nor Ovid, when, instructed from above,
By nature's rule he taught the art of love.
The heart in elegies forms the discourse.

The Ode is bolder and has greater force;
Mounting to heaven in her ambitious flight,
Amongst the gods and heroes takes delight;
Of Pisa's wrestlers tells the sinewy force,
And sings the lusty conqueror's glorious course;
To Simois's streams does fierce Achilles bring,
And makes the Ganges bow to Britain's king.
Sometimes she flies like an industrious bee,
And robs the flowers by nature's chemistry;
Describes the shepherd's dances, feasts, and bliss,
And boasts from Phyllis to surprise a kiss,
When gently she resists with feigned remorse,
That what she grants may seem to be by force.
Her generous style at random oft will part,
And by a brave disorder shows her art.

Unlike those fearful poets whose cold rime
In all their raptures keeps exactest time;
That sing the illustrious hero's mighty praise--
Lean writers!--by the terms of weeks and days,
And dare not from least circumstances part,
But take all towns by strictest rules of art.
Apollo drives those fops from his abode;
And some have said that once the humorous god,
Resolving all such scribblers to confound,
For the short Sonnet ordered this strict bound,
Set rules for the just measure and the time,
The easy-running and alternate rime;
But above all, those licenses denied
Which in these writings the lame sense supplied,
Forbade a useless line should find a place,
Or a repeated word appear with grace.
A faultless sonnet, finished thus, would be
Worth tedious volumes of loose poetry.
A hundred scribbling authors, without ground,
Believe they have this only phoenix found,
When yet the exactest scarce have two or three,
Among whole tomes, from faults and censure free;
The rest, but little read, regarded less,
Are shoveled to the pastry from the press.
Closing the sense within the measured time,
'Tis hard to fit the reason to the rime.

The Epigram, with little art composed,
Is one good sentence in a distich closed.
These points, that by Italians first were prized,
O


Scheme AABXCCXXDB XXEEXX CCEEXBFF GAHHIIJJ KKKKGG CCDDLL KKXXMMFXNNOOP PGGPPQQLLRRPPSS TTUUSSXXEETTVVWWLLEELLFFTT XXXX
Poetic Form
Metre 1011110101 1101010101 1011111101 10110010100 110011111 1101001100 1101010111 1101010101 1101010001 010111011 1011010101 0111110100 0101010101 010110101 11010101001 011110101 0111010101 1101010101 1101010011 1001010101 1111001101 01110010101 0100111111 101001101 1101111101 11110011 11110101010 11010100010 110111001 110011101 11110111001 1111001101 11011101010 10010101010 0111011110 1101100100 1111010101 111011111 0100110101 10111101001 110101001 010110001 111111111 1111111100 11111101110 00110101010 1111010011 11011111001 1011011101 11101111 01110011001 1101010111 1111010101 111111001 111010101 1101110111 01011010 0111001101 10110000101 0101010101 1110101001 010101001001 111110101 0101011101 01111101001 01010110100 0101010101 0111010101 1101011101 1111111111 01001110111 0101010101 0111010111 0111111 110010010101 1101011101 011111001 1111110111 0101111101 01111101001 0101110101 1011010111 1110110001 0101001001 1011110001 1011001101 0101011101 1001010111 011010111 11001011100 01010010011 0111110101 110111111 0111110101 0111010101 1101010101 1001010101 1111010101 010110101 111100011 1111010101 1
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,340
Words 759
Sentences 22
Stanzas 10
Stanza Lengths 10, 6, 8, 8, 6, 6, 13, 15, 26, 4
Lines Amount 102
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 353
Words per stanza (avg) 76
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:51 min read
83

Nicholas Boileau-Despreaux

Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux (French: [nikɔlɑ bwalo depʁeo]; 1 November 1636 – 13 March 1711), often known simply as Boileau (UK: , US: ), was a French poet and critic. He did much to reform the prevailing form of French poetry, in the same way that Blaise Pascal did to reform the prose. He was greatly influenced by Horace.  more…

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