Analysis of A Story. (For The Irish Delegates In Australia.)



Do you want to hear a story
With a nobler praise than "glory,"
Of a man who loved the right like heaven and loathed the wrong like hell?
Then, that story let me tell you
Once again, though it as well you
Know as I - the splendid story of the man they call Parnell!

By the wayside of the nations,
Lashed with whips and execrations,
Helpless, hopeless, bleeding, dying, she, the Maiden Nation, lay;
And the burthen of dishonour
Weighed so grievously upon her
That her very children hid their eyes and crept in shame away.

And there as she was lying
Helpless, hopeless, bleeding, dying,
All her high-born foes came round her, fleering, jeering, as they said:
"What is freedom fought and won for?
She is dead! She's down and done for!"
And her weeping children shuddered as they crouched and whispered: "Dead!"

Then suddenly up-starting,
All that throng before him parting,
See, a man with firm step breaking through that central knot that gives;
And, as by some dear lost sister,
He knelt down, and softly kissed her,
And he raised his pale, proud face, and cried: "She is not dead. She lives!

"O she lives, I say, and I here,
I am come to fight and die here
For the love my heart has for her like a slow consuming fire;
For the love of her low lying,
For the hatred deep, undying
Of the robber lords who struck and stabbed and trod her in the mire!"

Then upon that cry bewildering,
Some of them, her hapless children -
In their hearts there leaped up hope like light when night gives birth to day;
And, as mocks and threats defied him,
One by one they came beside him,
Till they stood, a band of heroes, sombre, desperate, at bay!

And the battle that they fought there,
And the bitter truth they taught there
To the blinded Sister-Nation suffering grievously alway,
All the wrong and rapine past hers,
Of her lords and her task masters,
Is not this the larger hope of all as night gives birth to day!

For the lords and liars are quaking
At the People's stern awaking
From their slumber of the ages; and the Peoples slowly rise,
And with hands locked tight together,
One in heart and soul for ever,
Watch the sun of Light and Liberty leap up into the skies!

That's the story, that's the story
With a nobler praise than "glory,"
Of the Man who loved the right like heaven and loathed the wrong like hell,
And with calm, proud exultation
Bade her stand at last a nation,
Ireland, Ireland that is one name with the name of Charles Parnell!


Scheme aAbccd eefagf hhijji hhkggk llghhx hmfnnf ooxppf hhqggq aAbmmd
Poetic Form
Metre 11111010 10101110 1011101110010111 11101111 10111111 111010101011110 1011010 11101 101010101010101 00111 11100010 101010111010101 0111110 10101010 10111110110111 11101011 11111011 001010101110101 1100110 11101110 101111101110111 01111110 11101010 011111101111111 11111011 11111011 1011111010101010 10110110 10101010 101011101010001 101110100 11101010 011111111111111 01101011 11111011 1110111011011 00101111 00101111 101010101001001 1010110 10100110 111010111111111 101010110 101011 111010100010101 01111010 10101110 101110100110101 10101010 10101110 1011101110010111 01111 10111010 10010011111011110
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,404
Words 464
Sentences 14
Stanzas 9
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6
Lines Amount 54
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 210
Words per stanza (avg) 50
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:19 min read
4

Francis William Lauderdale Adams

Francis William Lauderdale Adams was an essayist poet dramatist novelist and journalist who produced a large volume of work in his short life more…

All Francis William Lauderdale Adams poems | Francis William Lauderdale Adams Books

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