Analysis of A Public Dinner.

Thomas Hood 1799 (London) – 1845 (London)



"Sit down and fall to, said the Barmecide."
Arabian Nights.

At seven you just nick it,
Give card - get wine ticket;
Walk round through the Babel,
From table to table,
To find - a hard matter -
Your name in a platter;
Your wish was to sit by
Your friend Mr. Whitby,
But stewards' assistance
Has placed you at distance,
And, thanks to arrangers,
You sit amongst strangers,
But too late for mending;
Twelve sticks come attending
A stick of a Chairman,
A little dark spare man,
With bald, shining nob,
'Mid committee swell-mob;
In short, a short figure, -
You thought the Duke bigger.
Then silence is wanted,
Non Nobis is chanted;
Then Chairman reads letter,
The Duke's a regretter,
A promise to break it,
But chair, he can't take it;
Is grieved to be from us,
But sends friend Sir Thomas,
And what is far better,
A cheque in the letter.
Hear! hear! and a clatter,
And there ends the matter.

Now soups come and fish in,
And C -    -    brings a dish in;
Then rages the battle,
Knives clatter, forks rattle,
Steel forks with black handles,
Under fifty wax candles;
Your soup-plate is soon full,
You sip just a spoonful.
Mr. Roe will be grateful
To send him a plateful;
And then comes the waiter,
"Must trouble for tater";
And then you drink wine off
With somebody - nine off;
Bucellas made handy,
With Cape and bad Brandy,
Of East India Sherry,
That's very hot - very!
You help Mr. Myrtle,
Then find your mock-turtle
Went off while you lingered,
With waiter light-fingered.
To make up for gammon,
You order some salmon,
Which comes to your fauces,
With boats without sauces.
You then make a cut on
Some lamb big as mutton;
And ask for some grass too,
But that you must pass too;
It served the first twenty,
But toast there is plenty.
Then, while lamb gets coldish,
A goose that is oldish -
At carving not clever -
You're begged to dissever,
And when you thus treat it,
Find no one will eat it.
So, hungry as glutton,
You turn to your mutton,
But - no sight for laughter -
The soup it's gone after.
Mr. Green then is very
Disposed to take Sherry;
And then Mr. Nappy
Will feel very happy;
And then Mr. Conner
Requests the same honor;
Mr. Clark, when at leisure,
Will really feel pleasure;
Then waiter leans over
To take off a cover
From fowls, which all beg of,
A wing or a leg of;
And while they all peck bone,
You take to a neck-bone,
But even your hunger
Declares for a younger.
A fresh plate you call for,
But vainly you bawl for;
Now taste disapproves it,
No waiter removes it.
Still hope, newly budding,
Relies on a pudding;
But critics each minute
Set fancy agin it -
"That's queer Vermicelli."
"I say, Vizetelly,
There's glue in that jelly."
"Tarts bad altogether;
That crust's made of leather."
"Some custard, friend Vesey?"
"No - batter made easy."
"Some cheese, Mr. Foster?"
" - Don't like single Glo'ster."
Meanwhile, to top table,
Like fox in the fable,
You see silver dishes,
With those little fishes,
The whitebait delicious,
Borne past you officious;
And hear rather plainish
A sound that's champagnish,
And glimpse certain bottles
Made long in the throttles;
And sniff - very pleasant!
Grouse, partridge, and pheasant.
And see mounds of ices
For patrons and vices,
Pine-apple, and bunches
Of grapes for sweet munches,
And fruits of all virtue
That really desert you;
You've nuts, but not crack ones,
Half empty and black ones;
With oranges, sallow -
They can't be called yellow -
Some pippins well-wrinkled,
And plums almond-sprinkled;
Some rout cakes, and so on,
Then with business to go on:
Long speeches are stutter'd,
And toasts are well butter'd,
While dames in the gallery,
All dressed in fallallery,
Look on at the mummery,
And listen to flummery.
Hip, hip! and huzzaing,
And singing and saying,
Glees, catches, orations,
And lists of donations,
Hush! a song, Mr. Tinney -
"Mr. Benbow, one guinea;
Mr. Frederick Manual,
One guinea - and annual."
Song - Jocky and Jenny,
"Mr. Markham, one guinea."
"Have you all filled your glasses?"
Here's a health to good lasses.
The subscription still skinny -
"Mr. Franklin - one guinea."
Franklin looks like a ninny;
"Mr, Boreham, one guinea -
Mr. Blogg, Mr. Finney,
Mr. Tempest - one guinea,
Mr. Merrington - twenty,"
Rough music, in plenty.
Away toddles Chairman,
The little dark spare man,
Not sorry at ending,
With white sticks attending,
And some vain Tomnoddy
Votes in his own body
To fill the void seat up,
And get on his feet up,
To say, with voice squeaking,
"Unaccustomed to speaking."
Which sends you off seeking
Your hat, number thirty -
No coach - very dirty.
So hungry and fever'd
Wet-footed, spoilt-beaver'd,
Eyes aching in socket,
Ten pounds out of pocket,
To Brook Street the Upper
You haste home to supper.


Scheme AB AACCDDEFGGBXHHIJEXDDAADDAAKKDDDD LLCCMMNNCCDDOOAAFFCCAAIIBPQIAAAARRDDAAIIDDFFSFDDDDDDTTUUDDVVAAHHAACCFDDFFDDCCPPKBRRMMAAPPPBAXWWCXAAQQAAFDDDHHWWFFCCFFPBFFFFFFAAIJHHAASSHHHAAAAAADD
Poetic Form Etheree  (31%)
Metre 11011101 01001 1101111 111110 111010 110110 110110 110010 111111 111010 110010 111110 0111 110110 111110 111010 011010 010111 11101 101011 010110 110110 110110 110110 110110 0101 010111 111111 111111 111110 011110 010010 110010 011010 111010 011010 110010 110110 111110 1010110 111111 11101 1011110 11101 011010 110110 011111 11011 1110 110110 1110010 110110 111010 111110 111110 110110 111110 110110 11111 110110 111011 111110 011111 111111 110110 111110 11111 01111 110110 1111 011111 111111 11011 111110 111110 011110 1011110 011110 01101 111010 011010 010110 1011110 110110 110110 111010 111111 011011 011111 111011 110110 011010 011111 110111 110011 110011 111010 011010 110110 110011 111 111 110110 11010 111110 110110 110110 111010 11101 11110 110010 111010 111010 01010 1111 01101 0111 011010 110010 011010 110010 011110 110010 110010 11111 011110 110101 111111 110011 11001 111110 110110 011010 111011 1110111 11011 011110 1100100 1101 11101 01011 1101 010010 110010 011010 1011010 1010110 1010100 1100100 11010 1010110 1111110 101111 0010110 1010110 1011010 101110 1011010 1010110 10110 110010 01110 010111 110110 111010 0111 101110 110111 011111 111110 010110 111110 111010 111010 110010 11011 110010 111110 111010 111110
Closest metre Iambic trimeter
Characters 4,509
Words 855
Sentences 54
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 2, 32, 146
Lines Amount 180
Letters per line (avg) 20
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,183
Words per stanza (avg) 281
Font size:
 

Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:17 min read
7

Thomas Hood

Thomas Hood was a British humorist and poet. His son, Tom Hood, became a well known playwright and editor. more…

All Thomas Hood poems | Thomas Hood Books

0 fans

Discuss this Thomas Hood poem analysis with the community:

0 Comments

    Citation

    Use the citation below to add this poem analysis to your bibliography:

    Style:MLAChicagoAPA

    "A Public Dinner." Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 28 Apr. 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/56765/a-public-dinner.>.

    Become a member!

    Join our community of poets and poetry lovers to share your work and offer feedback and encouragement to writers all over the world!

    April 2024

    Poetry Contest

    Join our monthly contest for an opportunity to win cash prizes and attain global acclaim for your talent.
    2
    days
    7
    hours
    15
    minutes

    Special Program

    Earn Rewards!

    Unlock exciting rewards such as a free mug and free contest pass by commenting on fellow members' poems today!

    Browse Poetry.com

    Quiz

    Are you a poetry master?

    »
    William Blake: "Tiger Tiger, burning bright, In the forests of the _________".
    A fight
    B night
    C bites
    D knight