Analysis of The Ghost - Book I

Charles Churchill 1731 (Westminster) – 1764 (Boulogne-sur-Mer)



With eager search to dart the soul,
Curiously vain, from pole to pole,
And from the planets' wandering spheres
To extort the number of our years,
And whether all those years shall flow
Serenely smooth, and free from woe,
Or rude misfortune shall deform
Our life with one continual storm;
Or if the scene shall motley be.
Alternate joy and misery,
Is a desire which, more or less.
All men must feel, though few confess.
Hence, every place and every age
Affords subsistence to the sage,
Who, free from this world and its cares,
Holds an acquaintance with the stars,
From whom he gains intelligence
Of things to come some ages hence,
Which unto friends, at easy rates.
He readily communicates.
At its first rise, which all agree on,
This noble science was Chaldean;
That ancient people, as they fed
Their flocks upon the mountain's head,
Gazed on the stars, observed their motions,
And suck'd in astrologic notions,
Which they so eagerly pursue,
As folks are apt whate'er is new,
That things below at random rove,
Whilst they're consulting things above;
And when they now so poor were grown,
That they'd no houses of their own,
They made bold with their friends the stars,
And prudently made use of theirs.
To Egypt from Chaldee it travell'd,
And Fate at Memphis was unravell'd:
The exotic science soon struck root,
And flourish'd into high repute.
Each learned priest, oh strange to tell!
Could circles make, and cast a spell;
Could read and write, and taught the nation
The holy art of divination.
Nobles themselves, for at that time
Knowledge in nobles was no crime,
Could talk as learned as the priest,
And prophesy as much, at least.
Hence all the fortune-telling crew,
Whose crafty skill mars Nature's hue,
Who, in vile tatters, with smirch'd face,
Run up and down from place to place,
To gratify their friends' desires,
From Bampfield Carew, to Moll Squires,
Are rightly term'd Egyptians all;
Whom we, mistaking, Gypsies call.
The Grecian sages borrow'd this,
As they did other sciences,
From fertile Egypt, though the loan
They had not honesty to own.
Dodona's oaks, inspired by Jove,
A learned and prophetic grove,
Turn'd vegetable necromancers,
And to all comers gave their answers.
At Delphos, to Apollo dear,
All men the voice of Fate might hear;
Each subtle priest on three-legg'd stool,
To take in wise men, play'd the fool.
A mystery, so made for gain,
E'en now in fashion must remain;
Enthusiasts never will let drop
What brings such business to their shop;
And that great saint we Whitefield call,
Keeps up the humbug spiritual.
Among the Romans, not a bird
Without a prophecy was heard;
Fortunes of empires often hung
On the magician magpie's tongue,
And every crow was to the state
A sure interpreter of Fate.
Prophets, embodied in a college
(Time out of mind your seat of knowledge;
For genius never fruit can bear
Unless it first is planted there,
And solid learning never falls
Without the verge of college walls)
Infallible accounts would keep
When it was best to watch or sleep,
To eat or drink, to go or stay,
And when to fight or run away;
When matters were for action ripe,
By looking at a double tripe;
When emperors would live or die,
They in an ass's skull could spy;
When generals would their station keep,
Or turn their backs, in hearts of sheep.
In matters, whether small or great,
In private families or state
As amongst us, the holy seer
Officiously would interfere;
With pious arts and reverend skill
Would bend lay bigots to his will;
Would help or injure foes or friends,
Just as it served his private ends.
Whether in honest way of trade
Traps for virginity were laid;
Or if, to make their party great,
Designs were form'd against the state,
Regardless of the common weal,
By interest led, which they call zeal,
Into the scale was always thrown
The will of Heaven to back their own.
England--a happy land we know,
Where follies naturally grow,
Where without culture they arise
And tower above the common size;
England, a fortune-telling host,
As numerous as the stars, could boast,--
Matrons, who toss the cup, and see
The grounds of Fate in grounds of tea,
Who, versed in every modest lore,
Can a lost maidenhead restore,
Or, if their pupils rather choose it,
Can show the readiest way to lose it;
Gypsies, who every ill can cure,
Except the ill of being poor,
Who charms 'gainst love and agues sell,
Who can in hen-roost set


Scheme Text too long
Poetic Form
Metre 11011101 100011111 010101001 1010101101 01011111 010010111 1101011 1011101001 11011101 10010100 100101111 11111101 1100101001 01010101 11111011 11010101 11110100 11111101 11011101 1100010 111111011 1101011 11010111 11010101 110101110 010110 11110001 11111011 11011101 11010101 01111101 11110111 11111101 01001111 11011110 0111011 001010111 01001101 1111111 11010101 110101010 01011010 10011111 10010111 1111101 011111 11010101 11011101 10110111 11011111 11011010 11101110 11010101 11010101 0101011 11110100 11010101 11110011 1101011 0100101 11001 011101110 1110101 11011111 110111101 11011101 01001111 111010101 01010111 11110111 0111111 11011000 01010101 01010011 101100101 1001011 010011101 01010011 100100010 111111110 11010111 01111101 01010101 01011101 01000111 11111111 11111111 01111101 11001101 11010101 11001111 1011111 110011101 11110111 01010111 01010011 10110101 1101 110101001 11110111 11110111 11111101 10010111 11010001 11111101 01010101 01010101 11011111 0101111 011101111 10010111 11010001 10110101 010010101 10010101 110010111 10110101 01110111 110100101 101101 111101011 11011111 101100111 01011101 1111011 110111
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,250
Words 766
Sentences 20
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 126
Lines Amount 126
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 3,425
Words per stanza (avg) 765
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 15, 2023

3:56 min read
97

Charles Churchill

Lieutenant General Charles Churchill was a British Army General and a Member of Parliament. more…

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