Analysis of Moses: A Story Of The Nile (extract)



Moses sought again the presence of the king:
And Pharaoh's brow grew dark with wrath,
And rising up in angry haste, he said
Defiantly, 'If thy God be great, show
Us some sign or token of his power.'
Then Moses threw his rod upon the floor,
And it trembled with a sign of life;
The dark wood glowed, then changed into a thing
Of glistening scales and golden rings, and green
And brown and purple stripes; a hissing, hateful
Thing, that glared its fiery eye, and darting forth
From Moses' side, lay coiled and panting
At the monarch's feet. With wonder open-eyed
The king gazed on the changed rod, then called
For his magicians — wily men, well versed
In sinful lore — and bade them do the same.
And they, leagued with the powers of night, did
Also change their rods to serpents; then Moses'
Serpent darted forth, and with a startling hiss
And angry gulp, he swallowed the living things
That coiled along his path. And thus did Moses
Show that Israel's God had greater power
Than those dark sons of night.
But not by this alone
Did God his mighty power reveal: He changed
Their waters; every fountain, well and pool
Was red with blood, and lips, all parched with thirst,
Shrank back in horror from the crimson draughts.
And then the worshiped Nile grew full of life:
Millions of frogs swarmed from the stream — they clogged
The pathway of the priests and filled the sacred
Fanes, and crowded into Pharaoh's bed, and hopped
Into his trays of bread, and slumbered in his
Ovens and his pans.

There came another plague, of loathsome vermin;
They were gray and creeping things, that made
Their very clothes alive with dark and sombre
Spots — things of loathsome in the land, they did
Suspend the service of the temple; for no priest
Dared to lift his hand to any god with one
Of those upon him. And then the sky grew
Dark, as if a cloud were passing o'er its
Changeless blue; a buzzing sound broke o'er
The city, and the land was swarmed with flies.
The Murrain laid their cattle low; the hail
Cut off the first fruits of the Nile; the locusts
With their hungry jaws, destroyed the later crops,
And left the ground as brown and bare as if a fire
Had scorched it through.
Then angry blains
And fiery boils did blur the flesh of man
And beast; and then for three long days, nor saffron
Tint, nor crimson flush, nor soft and silvery light
Divided day from morn, nor told the passage
Of the hours; men rose not from their seats, but sat
In silent awe. That lengthened night lay like a burden
On the air, — a darkness one might almost gather
In his hand, it was so gross and thick. Then came
The last dread plague — the death of the first born.


Scheme AXXXBXCAXXXAXXDEFGXXGBHXXXDXCXXXXX XXBFXIJXBXXXXBJGXIHXXIBEX
Poetic Form
Metre 10101010101 0111111 0101010111 0100111111 1111101110 1101110101 011010111 0111110101 11001010101 01010101010 111110010101 110111010 1011110101 011101111 1101010111 0101011101 0111010111 10111110110 10101010101 01011100101 11011101110 1110111010 111111 111101 11110100111 11010010101 1111011111 1101010101 0101011111 1011110111 0110101010 1010011101 0111110101 10011 11010111010 101010111 1101011101 1111000111 010101010111 11111110111 1101101011 11101010101 110101110 0100011111 011110101 11011101010 11101010101 0101110111010 1111 1101 01001110111 01011111110 111011101001 01011111010 101011111111 0101110111010 10101011110 01111110111 0111011011
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,594
Words 494
Sentences 14
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 34, 25
Lines Amount 59
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,030
Words per stanza (avg) 246
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 21, 2023

2:29 min read
76

Frances Ellen Watkins Harper

Frances Ellen Watkins Harper born to free parents in Baltimore Maryland was an African American abolitionist and poet more…

All Frances Ellen Watkins Harper poems | Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Books

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