Analysis of To the King



[Upon His Majesty's Happy Return.]

The rising sun complies with our weak sight,
First gilds the clouds, then shows his globe of light
At such a distance from our eyes, as though
He knew what harm his hasty beams would do.

But your full majesty at once breaks forth
In the meridian of your reign. Your worth,
Your youth, and all the splendour of your state,
(Wrapped up, till now, in clouds of adverse fate!)
With such a flood of light invade our eyes,
And our spread hearts with so great joy surprise,
That if your grace incline that we should live,
You must not, sir! too hastily forgive.
Our guilt preserves us from the excess of joy,
Which scatters spirits, and would life destroy.
All are obnoxious! and this faulty land,
Like fainting Esther, does before you stand,
Watching your sceptre. The revolted sea
Trembles to think she did your foes obey.

Great Britain, like blind Polypheme, of late,
In a wild rage, became the scorn and hate
Of her proud neighbours, who began to think
She, with the weight of her own force, would sink.
But you are come, and all their hopes are vain;
This giant isle has got her eye again.
Now she might spare the ocean, and oppose
Your conduct to the fiercest of her foes.
Naked, the Graces guarded you from all
Dangers abroad; and now your thunder shall.
Princes that saw you, different passions prove,
For now they dread the object of their love;
Nor without envy can behold his height,
Whose conversation was their late delight.
So Semele, contented with the rape
Of Jove disguised in a mortal shape,
When she beheld his hands with lightning filled,
And his bright rays, was with amazement killed.

And though it be our sorrow, and our crime,
To have accepted life so long a time
Without you here, yet does this absence gain
No small advantage to your present reign;
For, having viewed the persons and the things,
The councils, state, and strength of Europe's kings,
You know your work; ambition to restrain,
And set them bounds, as Heaven does to the main.
We have you now with ruling wisdom fraught,
Not such as books, but such as practice, taught.
So the lost sun, while least by us enjoyed,
Is the whole night for our concern employed;
He ripens spices, fruits, and precious gums,
Which from remotest regions hither comes.

This seat of yours (from the other world removed)
Had Archimedes known, he might have proved
His engine's force fixed here. Your power and skill
Make the world's motion wait upon your will.

Much suffering monarch! the first English born
That has the crown of these three nations worn!
How has your patience, with the barbarous rage
Of your own soil, contended half an age?
Till (your tried virtue, and your sacred word,
At last preventing your unwilling sword)
Armies and fleets which kept you out so long,
Owned their great sovereign, and redressed his wrong.
When straight the people, by no force compelled,
Nor longer from their inclination held,
Break forth at once, like powder set on fire,
And, with a noble rage, their King required;
So the injured sea, which from her wonted course,
To gain some acres, avarice did force,
If the new banks, neglected once, decay,
No longer will from her old channel stay;
Raging, the late got land she overflows,
And all that's built upon't, to ruin goes.

Offenders now, the chiefest, do begin
To strive for grace, and expiate their sin.
All winds blow fair, that did the world embroil;
Your vipers treacle yield, and scorpions oil.

If then such praise the Macedonian got,
For having rudely cut the Gordian knot,
What glory's due to him that could divide
Such ravelled interests; has the knot untied,
And without stroke so smooth a passage made,
Where craft and malice such impeachments laid?

But while we praise you, you ascribe it all
To His high hand, which threw the untouched wall
Of self-demolished Jericho so low;
His angel 'twas that did before you go,
Tamed savage hearts, and made affections yield,
Like ears of corn when wind salutes the field.

Thus patience crowned, like Jobs's, your trouble ends,
Having your foes to pardon, and your friends;
For, though your courage were so firm a rock,
What private virtue could endure the shock?
Like your Great Master, you the storm withstood,
And pitied those who love with frailty showed.

Rude Indians, torturing all the royal race,
Him with the throne and dear-bought sceptre grace
That suffers


Scheme X AABX XXCCDDXXEEFFXG CCHHIXJJKXXXAALLMM NNIIOOIIPPQQRR SSTT UUVVWXXXYYXWZZGGJJ 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 KKBB6 6 7 7 8 8 XX 9 9 X
Poetic Form
Metre 0111001001 01010111011 1101111111 11010110111 1111110111 1111001111 00010011111 110101111 1111011011 11011101101 01011111101 1111011111 1111110001 10101110111 111001101 1101001101 1101010111 1011000101 111111101 11011111 0011010101 101110111 1101101111 1111011111 1101110101 1111010001 1011010101 1001010111 1001011101 10111100101 1111010111 1011010111 101011101 110010101 110100101 111111101 0111110101 011110100101 1101011101 0111111101 1101011101 1101010001 0101011101 1111010101 01111101101 1111110101 1111111101 1011111101 10111100101 111010101 1101010101 11111010101 101011111 11011111001 1011010111 1100101101 1101111101 11110101001 1111010111 1111001101 1101010101 1001111111 111100111 1101011101 110110101 11111101110 01010111010 1010111011 1111010011 1011010101 1101101101 100111110 01110111101 010101101 111101011 1111110101 1101101001 111100101 11010101001 111111101 111010101 0011110101 1101010101 1111110111 1111110011 110101011 1101110111 1101010101 1111110101 11011101101 1011110011 1111001101 1101010101 1111010101 011111101 110010010101 1101011101 110
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,352
Words 766
Sentences 33
Stanzas 12
Stanza Lengths 1, 4, 14, 18, 14, 4, 18, 4, 6, 6, 6, 3
Lines Amount 98
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 286
Words per stanza (avg) 64
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:52 min read
52

Edmund Waller

Edmund Waller, FRS was an English poet and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1624 and 1679. more…

All Edmund Waller poems | Edmund Waller Books

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