Analysis of Ovid. Trist. Lib. V. Elegy XII.

William Cowper 1731 (Berkhamsted) – 1800 (Dereham)



You bid me write to amuse the tedious hours,
And save from withering my poetic powers;
Hard is the task, my friend, for verse should flow
From the free mind, not fettered down by woe.
Restless amidst unceasing tempests tossed,
Whoe'er has cause for sorrow, I have most.
Would you bid Priam laugh, his sons all slain;
Or childless Niobe from tears refrain,
Join the gay dance, and lead the festive train?
Does grief or study most befit the mind
To this remote, this barbarous nook confined?
Could you impart to my unshaken breast
The fortitude by Socrates possessed,
Soon would it sink beneath such woes as mine,
For what is human strength to wrath divine?
Wise as he was, and Heaven pronounced him so,
My sufferings would have laid that wisdom low.
Could I forget my country, thee and all,
And e'en the offence to which I owe my fall,
Yet fear alone would freeze the poet's vein,
While hostile troops swarm o'er the dreary plain.
Add that the fatal rust of long disuse
Unfits me for the service of the Muse.
Thistles and weeds are all we can expect
From the best soil impoverished by neglect;
Unexercised, and to his stall confined,
The fleetest racer would be left behind:
The best built bark that cleaves the watery way,
Laid useless by, would moulder and decay,--
No hope remains that time shall me restore,
Mean as I was, to what I was before.
Think how a series of desponding cares
Benumbs the genius and its force impairs.
How oft, as now, on this devoted sheet,
My verse constrained to move with measured feet,
Reluctant and laborious limps along,
And proves itself a wretched exile's song.
What is it tunes the most melodious lays?
'Tis emulation and the thirst of praise,
A noble thirst, and not unknown to me,
While smoothly wafted on a calmer sea.
But can a wretch like Ovid pant for fame?
No, rather let the world forget my name.
Is it because that world approved my strain,
You prompt me to the same pursuit again?
No, let the Nine the ungrateful truth excuse,
I charge my hopeless ruin on the Muse,
And, like Perillus, meet my just desert,
The victim of my own pernicious art;
Fool that I was to be so warned in vain,
And shipwrecked once, to tempt the deep again!
Ill fares the bard in this unlettered land,
None to consult, and none to understand.
The purest verse has no admirers here,
Their own rude language only suits their ear.
Rude as it is, at length familiar grown,
I learn it, and almost unlearn my own;--
Yet to say truth, even here the Muse disdains
Confinement, and attempts her former strains,
But finds the strong desire is not the power,
And what her taste condemns, the flames devour
A part, perhaps, like this, escapes the doom,
And though unworthy, finds a friend at Rome;
But oh the cruel art, that could undo
Its votary thus! would that could perish too!


Scheme AABBCDEEEFFGGHHBBIIEEJKLLFFMMNNOOPPQQRRSSTTEUJKVWEUXXYYZZ1 1 2 2 3 4 5 5
Poetic Form Tetractys  (20%)
Metre 1111101010010 011100101010 1101111111 1011110111 100101011 111110111 111111111 11011101 1011010101 1111010101 11011100101 1101110101 01011001 1111011111 1111011101 11110100111 11001111101 1101110101 01101111111 1101110101 11011100101 1101011101 111010101 1001111101 1011010101 010011101 011011101 01111101001 1101110001 1101111101 1111111101 11010111 101001101 1111110101 1101111101 01000100101 010101011 11110101001 101000111 0101010111 1101010101 110111111 1101010111 1101110111 1111010101 11010010101 1111010101 01111110 0101110101 1111111101 011110101 11010111 110101101 0101110101 1111010111 1111110101 11101111 11111010101 0100010101 110101011010 01010101010 0101110101 0101010111 1101011101 111111101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,738
Words 511
Sentences 22
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 65
Lines Amount 65
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 2,186
Words per stanza (avg) 507
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:34 min read
84

William Cowper

William Macquarie Cowper was an Australian Anglican archdeacon and Dean of Sydney. more…

All William Cowper poems | William Cowper Books

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