Analysis of At San Giovanni Del Lago



I leaned upon the rustic bridge,
And watched the streamlet make
Its chattering way past zigzag ridge
Down to the silent lake.

The sunlight flickered on the wave,
Lay quiet on the hill;
Italian sunshine, bright and brave,
Though 'twas but April still.

I heard the distant shepherd's shout,
I heard the fisher's call;
The lizards glistened in and out,
Along the crannied wall.

Hard-by, in rudely frescoed niche,
Hung Christ upon the tree;
Round Him the Maries knelt, and each
Was weeping bitterly.

A nightingale from out the trees
Rippled, and then was dumb;
But in the golden bays the bees
Kept up a constant hum.

Two peasant women of the land,
Barefoot, with tresses black,
Came slowly toward me from the strand,
With their burdens on their back:

Two wicker crates with linen piled,
Just newly washed and wrung;
And, close behind, a little child
That made the morning young.

Reaching the bridge, each doffed her load,
Resting before they clomb,
Along the stony twisting road,
Up to their mountain home.

Shortly the child, just half its height,
Stooped 'neath her mother's pack,
And strove and strove with all her might
To lift it on her back.

Thereat my heart began to smile:
Haply I speak their tongue:
``Can you,'' I said, ``not wait awhile?
You won't be always young.

``Why long to share the toil you see,
Why hurry on the years,
When life will one long season be
Of labour and of tears?

``Be patient with your childhood. Work
Will come full soon enough.
From year to year, from morn till murk,
Life will be hard and rough.

``And yours will grow, and haply I,
Revisiting this shore,
In years to come will see and sigh
You are a child no more.

``Yours then will be the moil, the heat,
Yours be the strain and stress.
Pray Heaven Love then attend your feet
To make life's burden less.''

Thus as I spoke, with steadfast stare
She clung between the two,
Scarce understanding, yet aware
That the sad words were true.

Down from the mother's face a tear
Fell to her naked feet.
``But now unto the Signor, dear,
Your poesy repeat.''

Without demur the little maid
Spread out her palms, and lo!
From lips that lisped, yet unafraid,
Sweet verse began to flow.

She told the story that we all
Learn at our mother's knee,
Of Eve's transgression, Adam's fall,
And Heaven's great clemency:

How Jesus was by Mary's hands
In the rough manger laid,
And by rich Kings from far-off lands
Was pious homage paid:

Then how, though cruel Herod slew
The suckling babes, and thought
To baffle God, Christ lived and grew,
And in the temple taught.

She raised her hands to suit the rhyme,
She clasped them on her heart;
There never lived the city mime
So well had played the part.

When she broke off, I was too choked
With tenderness to speak.
And so her little form I stroked,
And kissed her on the cheek;

And took a sweetmeat that I had,
And put it in her mouth.
O then she danced like a stream that's glad
When it hurries to the south.

She danced, she skipped, she kissed ``good-bye,''
She frolicked round and round:
The pair resumed their packs, and I
Sate rooted to the ground.

``A rivederla!'' Then the three
Went winding up the hill.
Ah! they have long forgotten me;
But I remember still.


Scheme ABAB CDCD EFEF XGXG HIHI JKJK LMLM NINX OKOK PMPM GXGX QRQR STST UVUV WXWX WUXU YZYZ FGFG 1 Y1 Y X2 X2 3 4 3 4 5 6 5 6 7 8 7 8 S9 S9 GDGD
Poetic Form Quatrain  (96%)
Etheree  (28%)
Metre 11010101 01011 110011101 110101 0110101 110101 0101101 111101 11010101 110101 01010001 01011 11010101 110101 1101101 110100 01001101 100111 10010101 110101 11010101 11101 110011101 1110111 11011101 110101 01010101 110101 10011101 100111 01010101 111101 10011111 110101 01011101 111101 1110111 11111 11111101 11111 11110111 110101 11111101 11011 1101111 111101 11111111 111101 0111011 010011 01111101 110111 11110101 110101 110110111 111101 1111111 110101 1010101 101101 11010101 110101 11100101 1101 01010101 110101 1111101 110111 11010111 1110101 11010101 0101100 11011101 001101 01111111 110101 11110101 010101 11011101 000101 11011101 111101 11010101 111101 11111111 110011 01010111 010101 0101111 011001 111110111 1110101 11111111 11101 01011101 110101 01101 110101 11110101 110101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 3,078
Words 583
Sentences 33
Stanzas 25
Stanza Lengths 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 100
Letters per line (avg) 25
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 98
Words per stanza (avg) 23
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:57 min read
63

Alfred Austin

Alfred Austin DL was an English poet who was appointed Poet Laureate in 1896 upon the death of Alfred, Lord Tennyson. more…

All Alfred Austin poems | Alfred Austin Books

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