Analysis of The Tower of Doctrine - (from the History of Graunde Amoure)



I loked about, and sawe a craggy roche
Farre in the west, neare to the element;
And as I dyd then unto it approche,
Upon the toppe I sawe refulgent
The royall tower of Morall Document,
Made of fine copper, with turrettes fayre and hye,
Which against Phebus shone so marveylously;

That for the very perfect bryghtnes,
What of the tower and of the cleare sunne,
I coulde nothyng beholde the goodliness
Of that palaice whereas Doctrine did wonee;
Tyll at the last, with mysty wyndes donne,
The radiant bryghtnes of golden Phebus
Auster gan cover with clowde tenebrus.

Then to the tower I drewe nere and nere,
And often mused of the great hyghnes
Of the craggy rocke, whiche quadrant did appeare;
But the fayre tower so much of ryches
Was all about sexangled doubtles,
Gargeyled with greyhounds and with many lyons,
Made of fyne golde, with divers sundry dragons.

The little 'turretts' with ymages of golde
About was set, whiche with the wynde aye moved.
With propre vices that I did well beholde,
About the towers in sundry wyse they hoved,
Wyth goodly pypes in their mouthes ituned,
That with the wynde they pyped a daunce,
Iclipped Amour de la hault plesaunce.

The toure was great, of marvelous wyndes,
To whyche there was no way to passe but one,
Into the toure for to have an intres;
A grece there was, ychesyled all of stone
Out of the rocke, on whiche men dyd gone
Up to the toure; an in lykewise dyd I,
Wyth bothe the grayhoundes in my company:

Tyll that I that I came to a ryall gate,
Where I sawe stondynge the goodly portres,
Whiche axed me from whence I came a-late?
To whome I gan in every thynge expresse
All myne adventure, chaunce, and busynesse,
And eke my name I tolde her every dell.
When she herde this, she lyked me ryght well.

Her name, she sayd, was called Countenaunce:
Into the 'base' courte she dyd me then lede,
Where was a fountayne depred of pleasance,
A noble sprynge, a ryall conduytehede,
Made of fyne golde enameled with reed,
And on the toppe foure dragons blewe, and stoute
Thys dulcet water in foure partyes dyd spout.

Of whyche there flowed foure ryvers ryght clere,
Sweter than Nylus or Ganges was theyr odoure,
Tygrys or Eufrates unto them no pere.
I dyd than taste the aromatyke lycoure,
Fragraunt of fume, swete as any floure,
And in my mouthe it had a marveylous cent
Of divers spyces; I knewe not what it ment.

And after thys father forth me brought
Dame Countenaunce into a goodly hall:
Of jasper stones it was wonderly wrought,
The wyndowes cleare, depured all of crystall,
And in the roufe on hye over all
Of golde was made a ryght crafty vyne;
Instede of grapes the rubies there did shyne.

The flore was paved with berall clarified,
With pillers made of stones precious,
Like a place of pleasure so gayely glorified,
It might be called a palaice glorious,
So muche delectable and solacious.
The hall was hanged, hye and circuler,
With cloth of arras in the rychest maner.

That treated well of a ful noble story,
Of the doubty waye to the tower perillous;
Howe a noble knyght should wynne the victory
Of many a serpente foule and odious:
***


Scheme ABABCDE FGFGGFF HFHFFFF XXBBBFF FGFGGDG IFIFFEE FBFBXJJ HHHHHCB KEKEEGG LFLFFHH HFHF
Poetic Form
Metre 1101010101 1001110100 011111011 0101111 0101011100 1111011100 10110111 11010011 1101001011 111101 111011011 11011111 0100111010 10110111 1101011101 01011011 1010111011 101101111 110111 111011010 11111101010 01011111 0111110111 111011111 01010010111 11010111 11011101 111111 011111001 1111111111 010111111 01111111 110111111 110110111 110101100 11111110011 11110101 111111101 1111010011 11010101 01111101001 111111111 0111111 0101111111 1101111 01010011 111101011 0101110101 1101001111 11111111 111110111 11110111 1111011 11111101 001111011 1101111111 010110111 11010101 1101111001 0111111 000110101 111101101 111010111 01111110 1111110 1011101110 111101100 11010001 0111001 111100110 11011011010 101110101 10101110100 1100110100 1
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 3,021
Words 560
Sentences 14
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 5
Lines Amount 75
Letters per line (avg) 32
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 222
Words per stanza (avg) 51
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:48 min read
79

Stephen Hawes

Stephen Hawes was a popular English poet during the Tudor period who is now little known. more…

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    "The Tower of Doctrine - (from the History of Graunde Amoure)" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 29 Apr. 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/35775/the-tower-of-doctrine---%28from-the-history-of-graunde-amoure%29>.

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