Analysis of The Ol' Tunes



YOU kin talk about yer anthems
An' yer arias an' sich,
An' yer modern choir-singin'
That you think so awful rich;
But you orter heerd us youngsters
In the times now far away,
A-singin' o' the ol' tunes
In the ol'-fashioned way.
There was some of us sung treble
An' a few of us growled bass,
An' the tide o' song flowed smoothly
With its 'comp'niment o' grace;
There was spirit in that music,
An' a kind o' solemn sway,
A-singin' o' the ol' tunes
In the ol'-fashioned way.
I remember oft o' standin'
In my homespun pantaloons—
On my face the bronze an' freckles
O' the suns o' youthful Junes—
Thinkin' that no mortal minstrel
Ever chanted sich a lay
As the ol' tunes we was singin'
In the ol'-fashioned way.
The boys 'ud always lead ,as,
An' the girls 'ud all chime in,
Till the sweetness o' the singin'
Robbed the list'nin' soul o' sin;
An' I used to tell the parson
'Twas as good to sing as pray,
When the people sung the ol' tunes
In the ol'-fashioned way.
How I long ag'in to hear 'em
Pourin' forth from soul to soul,
With the treble high an' meller,
An' the bass's mighty roll;
But the times is very diff'rent,
An' the music heerd to-day
Ain't the singin' o' the ol' tunes
In the ol'-fashioned way.
Little screechin' by a woman,
Little squawkin' by a man,
Then the organ's twiddle-twaddle,
Jest the empty space to span, —
An' ef you should even think it,
'T isn't proper fur to say
That you want to hear the ol' tunes
In the ol'-fashioned way.
But I think that some bright mornin',
When the toils of life air o'er,
An' the sun o' heaven arisin'
Glads with light the happy shore,
I shall hear the angel chorus,
In the realms of endless day,
A-singin' o' the ol' tunes
In the ol'-fashioned way.


Scheme abcbdeFEghijkeFEcflfgecEmccccefEnopoqefEccgcrefEcpcsteFE
Poetic Form
Metre 11101110 1110011 1110101 1111101 1111110 0011101 011011 001101 11111110 1011111 10111110 11111 11100110 1011101 011011 001101 1010111 01110 11101110 1011101 10111010 1010101 1011111 001101 011111 1011110 1010101 101111 11111010 1111111 10101011 001101 11110111 111111 10101110 1010101 10111011 1010111 1011011 001101 1011010 101101 1011010 1010111 11111011 11010111 11111011 001101 1111111 10111110 1011101 1110101 11101010 0011101 011011 001101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,656
Words 323
Sentences 8
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 56
Lines Amount 56
Letters per line (avg) 22
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,256
Words per stanza (avg) 321
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:41 min read
102

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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