Analysis of Griselda: A Society Novel In Verse - Chapter IV

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt 1840 (Petworth House) – 1922 (United Kingdom)



How shall I take up this vain parable
And ravel out its issue? Heaven and Hell,
The principles of good and evil thought,
Embodied in our lives, have blindly fought
Too long for empire in my soul to leave
Much for its utterance, much that it can grieve.
A soldier on the battlefield of life,
I have grown callous to the signs of strife,
And feel the wounds of others and my own
With scarce a tremor and without a groan.
I have seen many perish in their sins,
Known much of frailty and inconsequence,
And if I laughed once, now I dare not be
Other than sad at man's insanity.
Therefore, in all humility of years,
Colder and wiser for hopes drowned in tears,
And seeking no more quarries for my mirth,
Who most need pity of the sons of earth,
I dip in kindlier ink my chastened pen,
And fill of my lost tale what leaves remain.

Years passed. Griselda from my wandering sight
Had waned and vanished, like a meteor bright,
Leaving no pathway in my manhood's heaven
Save only memories vaguely unforgiven
Of something fair and sad, which for a day
Had lit its zenith and had gone its way.
Rome and the Prince, the tale that I had heard,
Griselda's beauty--all that once had stirred
My curious thought to wonder and regret,
In the vexed problem of her woman's fate,
Had yielded place to the world's work--day cares,
The wealth it covets and the toil it dares.
I was no more a boy, when idle chance
And that light favour which attends romance
Brought me once more within the transient spell
Of other days, and dreams of Lady L.

'Twas in September--(I have always found
That month in my life's record dangerous ground,
Whether it be due to some unreasoned stress
Of the mad stars which dog our happiness,
Or whether, since in truth most things are due
To natural causes, if our blindness knew,
To the strong law of Nature's first decay,
Warning betimes of time that cannot stay,
And summer perishing, and hours to come,
Lit by less hope in the year's martyrdom;
And so we needs must seize at any cost
Fleet pleasure's hem lest all our day be lost)--
'Twas in September, at a country house
In the Midland shires, where I had come, God knows,
Without a fancy but of such light sort
As manhood ventures in the realms of sport
With that dear god of slaughter England's sons
Adore with incense--smoke and roar of guns,
That this new chapter opens. Who had guessed
So rare a phoenix housed in such a nest?

For we, in truth, were no wise company,
Men strong and joyous, keen of hand and eye,
And shrewd for pleasure, but whose subtlest wit
Was still to jest at life while using it,
And jest at love, as at a fruit low hung
To all men's lips, no matter whence it sprung.
A fool's philosophy, yet dear to youth
Bred without knowledge of the nobler truth,
And seeming wisdom, till the bitter taste
Of grief has come to cure its overhaste.
Naught was there, in the scene nor in the parts
Played by the actors, worthy serious hearts,
Or worthy her whose passion trod a stage
High o'er the frailties of our prurient age,
Griselda and her unattained fair dream
Of noble deeds and griefs unknown to them.
How came she there? Our hostess was a woman
Less famed for wisdom than a heart all human
Rich in life's gifts, a wealthy generous soul,
But still too fair and still too bountiful.
The rest, mad hoydens of the world, whose worth
Lay mired with folly, earthiest of the earth.
How came she there? When I, unconscious all
Of such high presence at our festival,
Heard her name bandied in the general hum
Of hungry tongues, which told the guests had come,
And saw in converse with our host the form,
Familiar once in sunshine and in storm,
Of her who was to me the type and sign
Of all things noble, not to say Divine,
Breathing the atmosphere of that vain house,
My heart stopped beating. Half incredulous,
I looked and questioned in my neighbours' eyes,
Seeking the sense of this supreme surprise.
My thought took words, as at the table set
Men's lips were loosed, discoursing while they ate,
And each to each. Beside me, of the crew
Of gilded youths who swelled the retinue
Of our fair hostess in her daily lot
Of hunting laughter when field sports were not,
Sat one, a joyous boy, whom fashion's freak,
A mad--cap purse--string and a beardless cheek,
Had set pre--eminent in pleasure's school
To play the hero and to play the fool
For those few years which are the summer's day
Of fashion's foils ere they are cast away.
Young Jerry Manton! Happy fortune's son!
What heights of vanity your


Scheme Text too long
Poetic Form
Metre 1111111100 01011101001 0100110101 01001011101 11110001111 11110011111 010101011 1111010111 0101110011 1101000101 1111010011 1111001 0111111111 1011110100 101010011 1001011101 0101110111 1111010111 110111101 0111111101 111111001 11010101001 101101110 11010010010 1101011101 1111001111 1001011111 11011111 11001110001 0011010101 1101101111 0111000111 1111011101 011110101 1111010101 1101011101 100101111 11011011001 101111111 10111110100 1101011111 110010110101 1011110101 101111101 01010001011 1111001100 0111111101 1111110111 1001010101 0011111111 0101011111 111000111 1111110101 0110110111 1111010111 1101010101 1101011100 1101011101 011101111 1111111101 0111110111 1111110111 0101001111 1011010101 0101010101 11111111 1110011001 11010101001 1100110101 1100101101001 100111 1101010111 111110101010 11110101110 10110101001 1111011100 011110111 111101101 111111101 11110110100 10110001001 1101110111 01010110101 010101001 1011110101 1111011101 100101111 1111010100 110100111 1001110101 1111110101 11011111 0111011101 110111010 11011000101 1101011101 1101011101 011110011 111100011 1101001101 1111110101 1101111101 1101010101 1111001
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,364
Words 824
Sentences 25
Stanzas 4
Stanza Lengths 20, 16, 20, 48
Lines Amount 104
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 875
Words per stanza (avg) 206
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:13 min read
76

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

Wilfrid Scawen Blunt was an English poet and writer. more…

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