Analysis of A Capital Ship

Charles Edward Carryl 1841 (New York) – 1920



A capital ship for an ocean trip
Was the 'Walloping Window Blind'
No wind that blew dismayed her crew
Or troubled the captain's mind
The man at the wheel was made to feel
Contempt for the wildest blow-ow-ow
Tho' it oft appeared when the gale had cleared
That he'd been in his bunk below
So, blow ye winds, heigh-ho
A-roving I will go
I'll stay no more on England's shore
So let the music play-ay-ay
I'm off for the morning train
To cross the raging main
I'm off to my love with a boxing glove
10,000 miles away
The bos'un's mate was very sedate
Yet fond of amusement too
He played hop-scotch with the starboard watch
While the captain tickled the crew
The gunner he was apparently mad
For he sat on the after ra-ra-rail
And fired salutes with the captain's boots
In the teeth of a booming gale
The captain sat on the commodore's hat
And dined in a royal way
Off pickles & figs & little roast pigs
And gunners bread each day
The cook was Dutch and behaved as such
For the diet he served the crew-ew-ew
Was a couple of tons of hot-cross buns
Served up with sugar and glue
Then we all fell ill as mariners will
On a diet that's rough and crude
And we shivered and shook as we dipped the cook
In a tub of his gluesome food
All nautical pride we cast aside
And we ran the vessel asho-o-ore
On the Gulliby Isles where the poopoo smiles
And the rubbily ubdugs roar
Composed of sand was that favored land
And trimmed with cinnamon straws
And pink and blue was the pleasing hue
Of the ticke-toe teaser's claws
We sat on the edge of a sandy ledge
And shot at the whistling bee-ee-ee
While the rugabug bats wore waterproof hats
As they dipped in the shining sea
On rugabug bark from dawn till dark
We dined till we all had grown
Uncommonly shrunk when a Chinese junk
Came up from the Torrible Zone
She was stubby and square, but we didn't much care
So we cherrily put to sea-ea-ea
And we left all the crew of the junk to chew
On the bark of the rubabug tree.


Scheme ABCBDEFEEEGHIIJHKCLCMNONPHQHRSTCUVWVXGYGZ1 C1 2 S3 4 5 6 7 6 8 SC4
Poetic Form
Metre 0100111101 10100101 11110101 1100101 011011111 011010111 1110110111 11101101 111111 010111 11111101 11010111 1110101 110101 1111110101 101 01111001 1110101 111110101 10101001 0101101001 1111010111 0100110101 00110101 010110101 0100101 11011011 010111 011100111 1010110111 1010111111 1111001 1111111001 10101101 01100111101 0011111 110011101 011010111 10111011 00111 011111101 0111001 010110101 101111 1110110101 011010111 10111101 11100101 1111111 1111111 100110011 111011 111001111011 11111111 01110110111 1011011
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,900
Words 378
Sentences 2
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 56
Lines Amount 56
Letters per line (avg) 27
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,531
Words per stanza (avg) 375
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 05, 2023

1:57 min read
141

Charles Edward Carryl

Charles Edward Caryl was an American children's literature author. more…

All Charles Edward Carryl poems | Charles Edward Carryl Books

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