Analysis of The Giant Puffball

Edmund Charles Blunden 1896 (London) – 1974 (Long Melford)



From what sad star I know not, but I found
Myself new-born below the coppice rail,
No bigger than the dewdrops and as round,
In a soft sward, no cattle might assail.

And so I gathered mightiness and grew
With this one dream kindling in me, that I
Should never cease from conquering light and dew
Till my white splendour touched the trembling sky.

A century of blue and stilly light
Bowed down before me, the dew came again,
The moon my sibyl worshipped through the night,
The sun returned and long abode; but then

Hoarse drooping darkness hung me with a shroud
And switched at me with shrivelled leaves in scorn.
Red morning stole beneath a grinning cloud,
And suddenly clambering over dike and thorn

A half-moon host of churls with flags and sticks
Hallooed and hurtled up the partridge brood,
And Death clapped hands from all the echoing thicks,
And trampling envy spied me where I stood;

Who haled me tired and quaking, hid me by,
And came again after an age of cold,
And hung me in the prison-house adry
From the great crossbeam. Here defiled and old

I perish through unnumbered hours, I swoon,
Hacked with harsh knives to staunch a child's torn hand;
And all my hopes must with my body soon
Be but as crouching dust and wind-blown sand.
  


Scheme ABAB CDCD EFEF GHGH IXIX DJCJ KLKL
Poetic Form Quatrain  (86%)
Metre 1111111111 11101011 110101011 0011110101 01110101 1111100111 11011100101 1111101001 010011011 1101101101 0111010101 0101010111 1101011101 011111101 1101010101 0100110101 0111111101 10110101 01111101001 0101011111 11110010111 0101101111 011001011 10111101 110111011 1111110111 0111111101 1111010111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 1,234
Words 231
Sentences 6
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 28
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 141
Words per stanza (avg) 32
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:09 min read
2

Edmund Charles Blunden

Edmund Charles Blunden (1 November 1896 – 20 January 1974) was an English poet, author and critic. Like his friend Siegfried Sassoon, he wrote of his experiences in World War I in both verse and prose. For most of his career, Blunden was also a reviewer for English publications and an academic in Tokyo and later Hong Kong. He ended his career as Professor of Poetry at the University of Oxford. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature six times.  more…

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