Analysis of Fishy-Winkle



Mistress O'Hara lives down by the sea,
A skittish and beautiful widow is she;
She has black shiny tresses, and curly buff toes,
And a heavenly tilt to the tip of her nose!

She has three little children, the eldest is four
(Nurse says he is naughty enough to be more);
The Twins are dear dumplings, and they and their brother
Are always in scrapes--
Of one kind, or another.

This morning poor Mistress O'Hara looks blue,
As indeed she has every reason to do;
For the third time this week Nurse has come in to say,
"If you please 'm, the children have all run away!"

"Oh! bother those children--well, first let us look
In the larder, to see what provisions they took;
If the pumpkin pie's gone, they are off for the day,
If they only took raisins, they're not far away."

They look in the larder, and what do you think?
Find nothing whatever to eat or to drink.
"Alack!" says the Cook; "it is just as I feared:
The whole of my dinner has clean disappeared."

"This is really too bad," says Mama, in a rage,
As she slips on her pattens and turns down the page
Of the book she is reading, and starts out to find
The darlings, to give them a piece of her mind!

She takes a big stick and makes tracks for the sea,
Where she's pretty well sure all the truants will be;
Yama-Guchi, she knows, leads the Twins by the nose,
And they patiently follow wherever he goes.

Sure enough, the first things that she sees on the shore
Are footprints, and further on several more--
And still further on there are two little rows
Of shoes, and some other superfluous clo'es.

But where are the children? The children are gone!!
Oh! doesn't poor Mistress O'Hara take on!
She weeps and she wails and she tears out her hair,
And rolls on the sands in the depths of despair.

The sand it is gritty, the sand it is dry,
It scratches her nose and gets into her eye;
Her throat feels as if she had swallowed a peck,
And the rolling soon gives her a crick in her neck.

So she picks up her pattens, her stick and her fan,
And bundles her hair up as well as she can.
Next minute it all stands on end with surprise:
She stares and she stares, disbelieving her eyes--

For there, as if just newly dropped from the skies,
Are the children, all looking as chirpy as flies;
But what flabbergasts the poor lady the most
Is the sight of a MER-BABY, dumped on a post.

Such a queer little object she never has seen,
It has eyes big as saucers, all glazy and green;
A mere speck of a nose, scarcely raised from its face,
And a mouth that meanders all over the place.

Yama-Guchi is dancing and shouting with glee--
"Did you come from the earth, or the sky, or the sea?"
While the Twins, with amazement struck utterly dumb,
Stand solemnly gazing, each sucking a thumb.

They implore it to speak, but they are not prepared
For the size of its mouth, and are horribly scared;
Making sure it is going to swallow them all--
Yet its voice when it speaks is quite squeaky and small.

"My name's Fishy-Winkle--I live in the sea,
To-day I played truant from school, for a spree;
But, oh! how I wish that I never had come,
For the tide has gone out and I cannot get home."

"Cheer up, Fishy-Winkle, and don't make a fuss,
Get into the go-cart and run off with us;
We've rations for dinner and also for tea,
You will find it much nicer than under the sea."

They bring up the go-cart and Fishy jumps down.
"The more haste, the less speed," for he falls on his crown;
No matter, he's in now; they're off and--Houp La!
They are soon out of reach of their furious Ma!

See Fishy-Winkle drive in state
Across the shining sand;
With Yama-Guchi yoked in front,
A Twin on either hand!

But soon each weary back is humped,
And bowed each jetty pate;
For Fishy, though he looks so small,
Is not a feather-weight!

At last they reach a cavern cool,
And sit down in a bunch,
Declaring they won't budge an inch,
Till they have had some lunch.

The food-stuffs are a trifle mixed,
From joggling in the cart;
There's jam spread on the slim sardine,
Salt on the pumpkin tart!

Right in the middle there appears
An unexpected guest;
Who kindly makes himself at home,
And feeds upon the best.

The children look at him with awe,
And whisper: "Who is that?"
"Why, don't you know?" says Fishy-Wink,
"That is the HADDOCK-CAT!"

The Haddock-Cat is very kind,
And when the meal is done
Cries: "Get upon my back, you four,
I'll take you for a run."

He crouches down upon the sand,
And up the children jump;
Then he gets up--contrairy wise,
The children fall down flump!!

But nothing daunted, up they get,
And cling with might and main;
I fear they must have caused that Cat
Con-si-der-able pain!

They joggled for a mile or more,
Then gasped out: "Th-that's enough:
We th-thank you kindly--now let's have
A game of Blind Man's Buff."

That was a game, the children shrieked
And laughed until they cried;
The Cat could never catch at all,
However hard he tried.

He chased them up, he chased them down,
He chased them all about;
He chased them round and round and round,
Until his strength gave out.

They led him to a shady wood,
To sniff the cooling breeze,
And watch the poly-poddy frogs
A-jumping in the trees.

The frogs were shiny, fat and green;
They sat about in rows,
And held on to the branches by
Their multifarious toes!

While there they sat, a cheerful shout
Rang out across the sea;
And Fishy-Winkle sighed and said:
"I guess they're calling me.

"The tide is in, my time is up,
I must go home again;
My brothers six are beckoning me
Across the rolling main."

The children followed in his train
As far as they could get,
Until the water got too deep,
And all their clothes too wet.

"Be sure and come again," they cried,
"To play, some other day."
And Fishy waved a friendly hand,
From very far away.

Mistress O'Hara has taken her stand,
With rage in her heart and a stick in her hand;
So fierce is her frown and so wild is her eye,
That poor Yama-Guchi feels ready to die.

Her patience is stretched to the end of its tether,
She knocks all the heads of the children together;
Then--when she's reduced them to sorrow and tears--
She repents of her harshness--the poor little dears!

She agrees to forget and forgive just once more,
And homewards they stroll by the sunshiny shore;
You can see by the picture how happy they look--
On the next page you'll see the effect on--


Scheme Text too long
Poetic Form
Metre 1001011101 01001001011 111101001011 001001101101 111101001011 11111001111 011110010110 1101 1111010 11011001011 101111001011 101111111011 111101011101 11011011111 001011101011 101011111101 111011011101 11001001111 1101011111 1101111111 0111101101 111011110001 11110101101 101111001111 01011101101 11011011101 11101110111 1111101101 011001001011 101011111101 110101101 01101111101 110110101 11101001011 11011001011 11011011101 01101001101 01111001111 11001010101 01111111001 001011001001 11110101001 01001111111 11011111101 11011001001 11111101101 101011011011 111011001 101101101101 101101011011 11111101101 011101101111 001101011001 1111001011 111101101101 101101011001 11001011001 101111111101 101111011001 101111011011 111111111001 11101011001 11111011101 11111111011 101111011011 11101001101 10101101111 11011001011 111111011001 11101101011 011011111111 11010111011 111111111001 11010101 010101 111101 011101 11110111 011101 11011111 110101 11110101 011001 01011111 111111 01110101 11001 11110101 110101 10010101 10101 11010111 010101 01011111 010111 11111101 110101 01011101 010111 11011111 111101 1110101 010101 111111 010111 11010111 011101 11111111 111101 1110111 11111101 1111110111 011111 11010101 010111 01110111 10111 11111111 111101 11110101 011111 11110101 110101 0101011 010001 01010101 110101 01110101 111 11110101 110101 01010101 111101 01101111 111101 110111001 010101 01010011 111111 01010111 011111 11010111 111101 01010101 110101 1001011001 11001001001 11101011101 111111011 010111011110 111011010010 11101111001 101101001101 101101001111 011110101 111101011011 1011110011
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 6,300
Words 1,207
Sentences 57
Stanzas 39
Stanza Lengths 4, 5, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 157
Letters per line (avg) 31
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 123
Words per stanza (avg) 30
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

6:04 min read
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    "Fishy-Winkle" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 4 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/55768/fishy-winkle>.

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