Analysis of Life's Tragedy

Paul Laurence Dunbar 1872 (Dayton) – 1906



It may be misery not to sing at all,
And to go silent through the brimming day;
It may be misery never to be loved,
But deeper griefs than these beset the way.

To sing the perfect song,
And by a half-tone lost the key,
There the potent sorrow, there the grief,
The pale, sad staring of Life's Tragedy.

To have come near to the perfect love,
Not the hot passion of untempered youth,
But that which lies aside its vanity,
And gives, for thy trusting worship, truth.

This, this indeed is to be accursed,
For if we mortals love, or if we sing,
We count our joys not by what we have,
But by what kept us from that perfect thing.


Scheme XAXA XBXB XCBC ADXD
Poetic Form Quatrain 
Metre 11110011111 0111010101 11110010111 1101110101 110011 01011101 101010101 0111011100 111110011 10110111 1111011100 011110101 11011111 1111011111 1110111111 1111111011
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 628
Words 124
Sentences 5
Stanzas 4
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 16
Letters per line (avg) 30
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 120
Words per stanza (avg) 31
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 14, 2023

37 sec read
178

Paul Laurence Dunbar

Paul Laurence Dunbar was a seminal American poet of the late 19th and early 20th centuries Dunbar gained national recognition for his 1896 Lyrics of a Lowly Life one poem in the collection being Ode to Ethiopia more…

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