Analysis of The Ballad Of The Hanged Men



Men my brothers who after us live,
have your hearts against us not hardened.
For—if of poor us you take pity,
God of you sooner will show mercy.
You see us here, attached.
As for the flesh we too well have fed,
long since it's been devoured or has rotted.
And we the bones are becoming ash and dust.

Of our pain let nobody laugh,
but pray God
            would us all absolve.

If you my brothers I call, do not
scoff at us in disdain, though killed
we were by justice.  Yet ss you know
all men are not of good sound sense.
Plead our behalf since we are dead naked
with the Son of Mary the Virgin
that His grace be not for us dried up
preserving us from hell's fulminations.

We're dead after all.  Let no soul revile us,
but pray God
            would us all absolve.

Rain has washed us, laundered us,
and the sun has dried us black.
Worse—ravens plucked our eyes hollow
and picked our beards and brows.
Never ever have we sat down, but
this way, and that way, at the wind's
good pleasure ceaselessly we swing 'n swivel,
more nibbled at than sewing thimbles.

Therefore, think not of joining our guild,
but pray God
            would us all absolve.

Prince Jesus, who over all has lordship,
care that hell not gain of us dominion.
With it we have no business, fast or loose.

People, here be no mocking,
but pray God
            would us all absolve.


Scheme xxaaxxxx xBC xdefxxgf hBC hxexxxxf dBC gxx xBC
Poetic Form
Metre 111011011 111011110 111111110 111101110 111101 110111111 11110101110 01011010101 1101111 111 11101 111101111 11100111 101101111 11111111 11001111110 101110010 111111111 0101111 11101111011 111 11101 1111101 0011111 110110110 0110101 101011111 11011101 11010011110 11011101 111110101 111 11101 110110111 1111111010 1111110111 1011110 111 11101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,322
Words 252
Sentences 19
Stanzas 8
Stanza Lengths 8, 3, 8, 3, 8, 3, 3, 3
Lines Amount 39
Letters per line (avg) 26
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 125
Words per stanza (avg) 32
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 19, 2023

1:16 min read
139

François Villon

François Villon born in Paris in 1431 and disappeared from view in 1463, is the best known French poet of the late Middle Ages. more…

All François Villon poems | François Villon Books

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