Analysis of Bone and Sinew and Brain



YE white-maned waves of the Western Sea,
That ride and roll to the strand,
Ye strong-winged birds, never forced a-lee
By the gales that sweep toward land,
Ye are symbols of death, and of hope that saves,
As ye swoop in your strength and grace,
As ye roll to the land like the billowed graves
Of a past and puerile race.

Cry, 'Presto, change!' and the lout is lord,
With his vulgar blood turned blue;
Go dub your knight with a slap of a sword,
As the kings in Europe do;
Go grade the lines of your social mode
As you grade the palace wall,—
The people forever to bear the load,
And the gilded vanes o'er all.

But the human blocks will not lie as still
As the dull foundation stones,
But will rise, like a sea, with an awful will,
And ingulf the golden thrones;
For the days are gone when a special race
Took the place of the gilded vane;
And the merit that mounts to the highest place
Must have bone and sinew and brain.

Let the cant of ' the march of mind ' be heard,
Of the time to come, when man
Shall lose the mark of his brawn and beard
In the future's leveling plan:
'Tis the dream of a mind effeminate,
The whine for an easy crown;
There is no meed for the good and great
In the weakling's leveling down.

A nation's boast is a nation's bone,
As well as its might of mind;
And the culture of either of these alone
Is the doom of a nation signed.
But the cant of the ultra-suasion school
Unsinews the hand and thigh,
And preaches the creed of the weak to rule,
And the strong to struggle and die.

Our schools are spurred to the fatal race,
As if health were the nation's sin,
Till the head grows large, and the vampire face
Is gorged on the limbs so thin.
Our women have entered the abstract fields,
And avaunt with the child and home:
While the rind of science a pleasure yields
Shall they care for the lives to come?
And they ape the manners of manly times
In their sterile and worthless life,
Till the man of the future augments his crimes
With a raid for a Sabine wife.

Ho, white-maned waves of the Western Sea,
That ride and roll to the strand!
Ho, strong-winged birds, never blown a-lee
By the gales that sweep toward land!
Ye are symbols both of a hope that saves,
As ye swoop in your strength and grace,
As ye roll to the land like the billowed graves
Of a suicidal race.
Ye have hoarded your strength in equal parts;
For the men of the future reign
Must have faithful souls and kindly hearts,
And bone and sinew and brain.


Scheme aBaBcDCd efefghgh ixiadjdj xkxkxlxl mnmnopop dqdqrxrxstst aBaBcDCdujuj
Poetic Form
Metre 111110101 1101101 111110101 10111011 11101101111 11101101 11110110101 1010011 11100111 1110111 1111101101 1010101 110111101 1110101 0100101101 00101101 1010111111 1010101 11110111101 010101 1011110101 10110101 00101110101 1110101 1011011111 1011111 110111101 00101001 1011010100 0111101 111110101 0011001 010110101 1111111 00101101101 10110101 1011010101 10101 0100110111 00111001 1011110101 11100101 1011100101 1110111 10101100011 0110101 1011100101 11110111 0110101101 01100101 1011010111 10110011 111110101 1101101 111110101 10111011 1110110111 11101101 11110110101 100101 1110110101 10110101 111010101 010101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 2,432
Words 477
Sentences 15
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 12, 12
Lines Amount 64
Letters per line (avg) 29
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 269
Words per stanza (avg) 68
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:24 min read
143

John Boyle O'Reilly

John Boyle O'Reilly was an Irish-born poet, journalist and fiction writer. more…

All John Boyle O'Reilly poems | John Boyle O'Reilly Books

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