Analysis of On Hearing that Constantinople Was Swallowed Up by an Earthquake

Amelia Opie 1769 (Norwich, England) – 1853 (Norwich, England)



[A Report, though false, at that time generally believed.]

Fallen are thy towers, Byzantium! towers that stood
Before the Turk's dread fury, when he came,
The crescent sparkling amidst Christian blood,
And to the reeking den of Moloch turned
Sophia's holy fane! Where, where are now,
Imperial city, the late proud remains
Of thy brave founder's greatness, when he clothed
In worldly grandeur pure Religion's form;
Then placed beside him, placed upon a throne,
The lowly Nazarene's meek simple child!....
He, wandering then upon a Christian land,
Stranger at home had been, nor known again
His artless rites, his followers, in the domes
Filled with the sparkling shrine, the rich-robed priests,
And pomp of earthly greatness........But not long
Lived there his name....Science and art, farewell!
The foe of light and love, Mohammed, comes,
And Constantine's proud race exists no more.

But, sons of Mahomet, the towers he built,
Though by your anger spared, have fallen now,
And crushed your bloody race! A mightier arm
Than his who raised, or spared, yon domes came forth;
From the hot sable rolling cloud it came,
And crumbled them to dust!....The wind, the air,
Seem in strict silence bound, but smiling still
Appears the face of day; assassin-like,
Smiling, though conscious of intended death.
But Nature trembles at her own repose;
The brute creation dread forebodings shake;
While man alone is bold.....But see where now
The labouring ocean, in fantastic shapes
And sudden swells, her heaving bosom rears;
Like the mad Pythia, when the Delphian god
Spoke by her fraudful lips....But here, alas!
A real God that world of waters moves
To do his dreadful bidding!....
Hark! he comes!
The thunder's roar, the rush of winds proclaim
The Mighty One is near....But oh! when past
His power, and those he spared raised up their heads,
Where was the eye could bear upon the waste
To gaze, and mark the ruin stretching wide!
Oh! ye were blest, ye victims, ye who fell
Deep in the yawning chasm!...."Where are now,"
The sad survivor cries, "my peaceful home,
The sacred mosque I loved, the child, the wife
I clasped but now; the city towering high,
Proud in its strength?....Disperse, thou gloomy cloud,
And let me gaze on them!" The cloud's dispersed;
But he beholds no city, he can trace
No vestige of his home: a putrid lake
Or barren ground replace them, and proclaim,
Devouring earthquake, thy resistless power.

England! blest country, from such woes as these
Thy temperate clime preserves thee; lightly felt,
If ever, by thy comfort-breathing shores,
The earthquake desolating distant lands:
And....thou hast cause to lift thy voice most high,
In the great choir of nations hymning praise.
But ye, who wander from your native shores,
While haply such calamity draws near
As sunk Byzantium; ye, whose eager hearts
Anticipate a glad return to scenes
Ye shall behold no more, for ever swept
From off the earth, unconscious heirs of woe;
For you I mourn!....Methinks I see the cheek
Flushed with delight, chastized perhaps by fear,
When your own land approaches....See the eye
Misty with tears ope wide its eager lid
To catch the well-known objects! Horrid change!
Fear pales that glowing cheek, and dries that eye,
"It is our native shore,....but where are gone
The fanes, the spires, erewhile our city's pride?"
I hear you cry. "The pilot is deceived,
And hope deceived us too....'Tis not our land!"
But soon the mournful certainty ye guess,
And leap to shore; and there ye call in vain
On all ye loved....Throughout the silent streets
That yet remain, perhaps some meagre form
May trembling steal along, and tell the tale;
While on the ruins some lone maniac sits,
And, as he points to where the chasm yawned,
Boasts of the treasures earth preserves for him;
Or, while a sudden beam of reason darts,
Screams his discordant anguish, and commands
Earth to give back his children!....

Angel of woe, that from the eternal hand
Receivest thy dread commission, going forth
To flap thy sable pinions o'er the world,
And shed unnumbered evils, which appear
To piety's uplifted eye as good
Concealed in evil's garb;....angel of woe,
Upon thy awful power I've pondered oft,
In all its dark varieties, I've sought
The horrid path where Madness stalks along
In fancied majesty, or from his cell
Sends the loud shriek, or more afflicting laugh;
And, as I hurried from the o'erwhelming scene,
Have shuddering owned thy awful presence there ,....


Scheme A BCXXDXXEXXFXXXGHIX XDXJCKXXXXLDXXXXXXICXXXMHDXXNXXXLCX XXOPNXOQRXXSXQNXXNXMAFXXXEXXXXRPX FJXQBSXXGHXXK
Poetic Form Tetractys  (21%)
Metre 00111111100001 10111001001011 0101110111 0101001101 010101111 11011111 01001001101 1111010111 0100110101 1101110101 01011101 11001010101 1011111101 1111100001 1101010111 01110111 1111011 0111010101 01110111 111101011 1111011101 01110101001 1111111111 1011010111 010111101 1011011101 0101110101 1011010101 110110101 01010111 110111111 011000101 0101010101 10110010101 11011101 011111101 1111010 111 011011101 010111111 11001111111 1101110101 1101010101 1101110111 10010111 0101011101 0101110101 11110101001 10111101 0111110101 111110111 1101110101 110111001 010011110 1011011111 1101011101 1101110101 011101 111111111 0011011011 1111011101 111010011 11010011101 010010111 1101111101 110110111 11111101 110110111 1111101 1011111101 1101110101 1111010111 1110101111 0101110101 1111010101 01011111101 1101010011 0111011101 11110101 110101111 11001010101 1101011101 0111110101 1101010111 1101011101 1101010001 1111110 10111100101 111010101 1111011001 01110101 11100111 0101111 01110101101 0111010011 0101110101 0101001111 1011110101 011101011 11001110101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,330
Words 761
Sentences 42
Stanzas 5
Stanza Lengths 1, 18, 35, 33, 13
Lines Amount 100
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 687
Words per stanza (avg) 148
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:51 min read
62

Amelia Opie

Amelia Opie, née Alderson, was an English author who published numerous novels in the Romantic Period of the early 19th century, through to 1828. Opie was also a leading abolitionist in Norwich, England. Amelia Opie's was the first of 187,000 names presented to the British Parliament on a petition from women to stop slavery. more…

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