Analysis of At Shelley’s Grave



Beneath this marble, mute of praise,
Is hushed the heart of One
Who, whilst it beat, had eagle's gaze
To stare upon the sun.
Equal in flight
To any height,
He lies where they that crawl but come,
Sleeping most sound,-Cor Cordium.

No rippling notes announcing spring,
No bloom-evoking breeze,
No fleecy clouds that earnest bring
Of summer on the seas,
Avail to wake
The heart whose ache
Was to be tender overmuch
To Nature's every tone and touch.

The insolence of stranger drum,
Vexing the broad blue air,
To smite a nation's clamour dumb,
Or spur a rash despair,
Which once had wrung
That prophet tongue
To challenge force or cheer the slave,
Rolls unrebuked around his grave.

The cruel clarion's senseless bray,
The lamb's half-human bleat,
Patter of shower on sward or spray,
Or clang of mailèd feet,
Are weak alike
To stir or strike
The once swift voice that now is dumb
To war's reveil, cicala's hum.

Oh wake, dead heart! come back! indeed
Come back! Thy thunderous brow
And levin shafts the world did need
Never so much as now.
The chain, the rack,
The hopes kept back
By those whom serfs are forced to trust,
Might well reanimate thy dust.

Nay, Poet, rest thou quiet there,
'Neath sunshine, wind, and rain;
At least if thou canst scarce repair,
Thou dost not share our pain.
It is enough
That cold rebuff
And calumny of knave and dunce
Did vex thy tender spirit once.

Where was the marvel, though thy corse
Submitted to the pyre,
Thy heart of hearts should foil the force
Of the sea-wind-blown fire?
It was but just
That what was dust
Should own the cradle whence it came-
But when did flame e'er feed on flame?

Or rather say the sacred torch,
The while it did illume
Thy heart, did also so far scorch,
Was nought left to consume?
That ardent zeal
For human weal
Had searched and parched it o'er and o'er,
Till, lava like, 'twould burn no more.

I snatch the banner from thy grave,
I wave the torch on high;
'Spite smiling tyrant, crouching slave,
The Cause shall never die!
Sceptre and cowl
May smite or scowl,
Serfs hug the chains they half deserve-
Right cannot miss, howe'er it swerve!

Alas! you failed, who were so strong:
Shall I succeed, so weak?
Life grows still shorter, art more long;
You sang-I scarce can speak.
Promethean fire
Within your lyre
Made manly words with music mate,
Whilst I am scarce articulate.

He sang too early to be heard;
The world is drowsy still;
And only those whose sleep is stirred
By lines that streak the hill,
Or the first notes
Of matin throats,
Have heard his strain 'mid hush of night,
And known it harbinger of Light.

But when the Day shall come whose dawn
He early did forbode,
When men by Knowledge shall be drawn,
Not driven by the goad,
This spot apart,
Where sleeps his heart,
Deaf to all clamour, wrong, or rage,
Shall be their choicest pilgrimage.


Scheme ABABCCDD EFEFGGHH DIDIJJKK LCLXMMDD NONOPPQQ IRIRSSAX TUTUQQVV HDHXWWUX KXKXYYZZ 1 2 1 2 UX3 3 4 5 4 5 6 6 CC 7 C7 X8 8 XX
Poetic Form
Metre 01110111 110111 11111101 110101 1001 1101 11111111 101111 110010101 110101 11011101 110101 0111 0111 111101 110100101 01001101 100111 1101011 110101 1111 1101 11011101 110111 0101101 011101 101101111 111111 1101 1111 01111111 11111 11111101 1111001 01010111 101111 0101 0111 11111111 11111 11011101 11101 11111101 1111101 1101 1101 01001101 11110101 11010111 0101010 11111101 1011110 1111 1111 11010111 111110111 11010101 01111 11110111 111101 1101 1101 1101110010 11011111 11010111 110111 11010101 011101 1001 1111 11011101 11011011 01111011 110111 11110111 111111 110 0111 11011101 1111010 11110111 011101 01011111 111101 1011 111 11111111 01110011 11011111 11011 11110111 110101 1101 1111 1111111 11110100
Closest metre Iambic trimeter
Characters 2,716
Words 512
Sentences 25
Stanzas 12
Stanza Lengths 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8
Lines Amount 96
Letters per line (avg) 23
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 182
Words per stanza (avg) 42
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:37 min read
77

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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    Who wrote "Ode to the West Wind" that inspired a political and moral change?
    A Sylvia Plath
    B William Shakespeare
    C Ted Hughes
    D Percy Shelley