Analysis of The Town Down by the River
Said the Watcher by the Way
To the young and the unladen,
To the boy and to the maiden,
"God be with you both to-day.
First your song came ringing,
Now you come, you two--
Knowing naught of what you do,
Or of what your dreams are bringing.
"O you children who go singing
To the Town down the River,
Where the millions cringe and shiver,
Tell me what you know to-day;
Tell me how far you are going,
Tell me how you find your way.
O you children who are dreaming,
Tell me what you dream to-day."
"He is old and we have heard him,"
Said the boy then to the maiden;
"He is old and heavy laden
With a load we throw away.
Care may come to find us,
Age may lay us low;
Still, we seek the light we know,
And the dead we leave behind us.
"Did he think that he would blind us
Into such a small believing
As to live without achieving,
When the lights have led so far?
Let him watch or let him wither,--
Shall he tell us where we are?
We know best, who go together,
Downward, onward, and so far."
Said the Watcher by the Way
To the fiery folk that hastened
To the loud and the unchastened,
"You are strong, I see, to-day.
Strength and hope may lead you
To the journey's end,--
Each to be the other's friend
If the Town should fail to need you.
"And are ravens there to feed you
In the Town down the River,
Where the gift appalls the giver
And youth hardens day by day?
O you brave and you unshaken,
Are you truly on your way?
And are sirens in the River,
That you come so far to-day?"
"You are old and we have listened,"
Said the voice of one who halted;
"You are sage and self-exalted,
But your way is not our way.
You that cannot aid us
Give us words to eat.
Be assured that they are sweet,
And that we are as God made us.
"Not in vain have you delayed us,
Though the river still be calling
Through the twilight that is falling
And the Town be still so far.
By the whirlwind of your wisdom
Leagues are lifted as leaves are;
But a king without a kingdom
Fails us, who have come so far."
Said the Watcher by the Way
To the slower folk who stumbled,
To the weak and the world-humbled,
"Tell me how you fare to-day.
Some with ardor shaken,
All with honor scarred,
Do you falter, finding hard
The far chance that you have taken?
"Or, do you at length awaken
To an antic retribution,
Goading to a new confusion
The drugged hopes of yesterday?
O you poor mad men that hobble,
Will you not return or stay?
Do you trust, you broken people,
To a dawn without the day?"
"You speak well of what you know not,"
Muttered one; and then a second:
"You have begged, and you have beckoned,
But you see us on our way.
Who are you to scold us,
Knowing what we know?
Jeremiah, long ago,
Said as much as you have told us.
"As we are, then, you behold us:
Derelicts of all conditions,
Poets, rogues, and sick physicians,
Plodding forward from afar;
Forward now into the darkness
Where the men before us are;
Forward, onward, out of grayness,
To the light that shone so far."
Said the Watcher by the Way
To some aged ones who lingered,
To the shrunken, the claw-fingered,
"So you come for me to-day."--
"Yes, to give you warning;
You are old," one said;
"You have hairs on your head,
Fit for laurel, not for scorning.
"From the first of early morning
We have toiled along to find you;
We, as others, have maligned you,
But we need your scorn to-day.
By the light that we saw shining,
Let us not be lured alway;
Let us hear no River calling
When to-morrow is to-day."
"But your lanterns are unlighted
And the Town is far before you:
Let us hasten, I implore you,"
Said the Watcher by the Way.
"Long have I waited,
Longer have I known
That the Town would have its own,
And the call be for the fated.
"In the name of all created.
Let us hear no more my brothers;
Are we older than all others?
Are the planets in our way?"--
"Hark," said one; I hear the River,
Calling always, night and day."--
"Forward, then! The lights are shining,"
Said
Scheme | Abbacddc ceeacaca xbbafgbf fccheheh Aiiadjjd deeabaea iklafmmf fcchnhnh Aooabppb bbbaqaqa xiiafbgf frrhfhfh Assacttc cddacaca iddAkbbl kuuaeact |
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Poetic Form | |
Metre | 1010101 101001 10101010 1111111 111110 11111 1011111 11111110 11101110 1011010 10101010 1111111 11111110 1111111 11101110 1111111 11101111 10111010 11101010 1011101 111111 11111 1110111 00111011 11111111 01101010 11101010 1011111 11111110 1111111 11111010 1010011 1010101 101001110 101001 1111111 101111 1011 1110101 10111111 01101111 0011010 10101010 0110111 11101010 1110111 01100010 1111111 11101110 10111110 11101010 11111101 111011 11111 1011111 01111111 10111011 10101110 1011110 0011111 1011110 1110111 10101010 1111111 1010101 10101110 10100110 1111111 111010 11101 1110101 01111110 11111010 1110010 10101010 011110 11111110 1110111 11111010 1010101 11111111 10101010 11101110 11111101 111111 10111 010101 11111111 11111011 1011010 10101010 1010101 10101010 1010111 1010111 1011111 1010101 1111110 10100110 1111111 111110 11111 111111 1110111 10111010 11101111 11101011 1111111 10111110 111111 11111010 1110111 111011 00111011 11101011 1010101 11110 10111 1011111 00111010 00111010 11111110 11101110 10100101 11111010 101101 10101110 1 |
Closest metre | Iambic tetrameter |
Characters | 3,895 |
Words | 785 |
Sentences | 40 |
Stanzas | 16 |
Stanza Lengths | 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8 |
Lines Amount | 128 |
Letters per line (avg) | 23 |
Words per line (avg) | 6 |
Letters per stanza (avg) | 184 |
Words per stanza (avg) | 48 |
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Submitted on May 13, 2011
Modified on April 26, 2023
- 3:52 min read
- 152 Views
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"The Town Down by the River" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 21 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/10070/the-town-down-by-the-river>.
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