Analysis of Dick Whittington And His Cat.



Versified by Mrs. Clara Doty Bates.

Dick, as a little lad, was told
That the London streets were paved with gold.
He never, in all his life, had seen
A place more grand than the village green;
So his thoughts by day, and his dreams by night,
Pictured this city of delight,
Till whatever he did, wherever he went,
His mind was filled with discontent.

There was bitter taste to the peasant bread,
And a restless hardness to his bed;
So, after a while, one summer day,
Little Dick Whittington ran away.
Yes--ran away to London city!
Poor little lad! he needs your pity;
For there, instead of a golden street,
The hot, sharp stones abused his feet.

So tired he was he was fit to fall,--
Yet nobody cared for him at all;
He wandered here, and he wandered there,
With a heavy heart, for many a square.
And at last, when he could walk no more,
He sank down faint at a merchant's door.
And the cook--for once compassionate--
Took him in at the area-gate.

And she gave him bits of broken meat,
And scattered crusts, and crumbs, to eat;
And kept him there for her commands
To pare potatoes, and scour pans,
To wash the kettles and sweep the room;
And she beat him dreadfully with the broom;
And he staid as long as he could stay,
And again, in despair, he ran away.

Out towards the famous Highgate Hill
He fled, in the morning gray and chill;
And there he sat on a wayside stone,
And the bells of Bow, with merry tone,
Jangled a musical chime together,
Over the miles of blooming heather:
"Turn, turn, turn again, Whittington,
Thrice Lord Mayor of London town!"

And he turned--so cheered he was at that--
And, meeting a boy who carried a cat,
He bought the cat with his only penny,--
For where he had slept the mice were many.
Back to the merchant's his way he took,
To the pans and potatoes and cruel cook,
And he found Miss Puss a fine device,
For she kept his garret clear of mice.

The merchant was sending his ship abroad,
And he let each servant share her load;
One sent this thing, and one sent that,
And little Dick Whittington sent his cat.
The ship sailed out and over the sea,
Till she touched at last at a far country;
And while she waited to sell her store,
The captain and officers went ashore.

They dined with the king; the tables fine
Groaned with the meat and fruit and wine;
But, as soon as the guests were ranged about,
Millions of rats and mice came out.
They swarmed on the table, and on the floor,
Up from the crevices, in at the door,
They swept the food away in a breath,
And the guests were frightened almost to death!

To lose their dinners they thought a shame.
The captain sent for the cat. She came!
And right and left, in a wonderful way,
She threw, and slew, and spread dismay.
Then the Moorish king spoke up so bold:
"I will give you eighteen bags of gold,
If you will sell me the little thing."
"I will!" and the cat belonged to the king.

When the good ship's homeward voyage was done,
The money was paid to Dick Whittington;
At his master's wish 'twas put in trade;
Each dollar another dollar made.
Richer he grew each month and year,
Honored by all both far and near;
With his master's daughter for a wife,
He lived a prosperous, noble life.

And the tune the Bow-bells sang that day,
When to Highgate Hill he ran away,--
"Turn, turn, turn again, Whittington,
Thrice Lord Mayor of London town,"--
In the course of time came true and right,
He was Mayor of London, and Sir Knight;
And in English history he is known,
By the name of Sir Richard Whittington!


Scheme x aabbccdd eeffgghh iijjkkxx hhxxllff mmnnooPQ rrggsstt xxrrggkk uuvvkkww xxffaayy ppzz1 1 2 2 ffpqccnp
Poetic Form
Metre 111010101 11010111 101010111 110011111 011110101 1111101111 10110101 1101101011 11111001 1110110101 001010111 110011101 101100101 110111010 110111110 110110101 01110111 1101111111 1111111 110101101 1010111001 011111111 111110101 001110100 110101001 011111101 01010111 01111001 110100101 110100101 0111100101 011111111 0010011101 10101011 110010101 01111011 001111101 1001001010 100111010 11101100 11101101 011111111 0100111001 1101111010 1111101010 110101111 10100100101 011110101 111110111 0101101101 011110101 11110111 0101100111 011101001 1111110110 011101101 0100100101 111010101 11010101 1111010101 10110111 1110100101 1101000101 110101001 001010111 111101101 010110111 0101001001 11010101 101011111 111101111 111110101 1100101101 1011101011 0101111100 111011101 110010101 10111101 10111101 111010101 110100101 001011111 11111101 11101100 11101101 001111101 1110110011 0010100111 1011110100
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 3,425
Words 675
Sentences 29
Stanzas 12
Stanza Lengths 1, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8
Lines Amount 89
Letters per line (avg) 30
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 222
Words per stanza (avg) 55
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 26, 2023

3:23 min read
31

Clara Doty Bates

Clara Doty Bates was an American author. She was well known as a writer and published a number of volumes of poetry and juvenile literature. Many of these works were illustrated, the designs being furnished by her sister more…

All Clara Doty Bates poems | Clara Doty Bates Books

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