Analysis of The Junk and the Dhow

Rudyard Kipling 1865 (Mumbai) – 1936 (London)



"An Unqualified Pilot"

Once a pair of savages found a stranded tree.
 (One-piecee stick -pidgin -- two piecee man.
Straddle-um-paddle-um-push -um off to sea.
That way Foleign Debbil-boat began.)
But before, and before, and ever so long before
Any shape of sailing-craft was known,
The Junk and Dhow had a stern and a bow,
And a mast and a sail of their own--ahoy! alone!
As they crashed across the Oceans on their own!

Once there was a pirate-ship, being blown ashore--
 (Plitty soon pilum up, s'posee no can tack..
Seven-piecee stlong man pullum sta'boa'd oar.
That way bling her head alound and sail-o back.)
But before, and before, an ever so long before
Grand Commander Noah took the wheel,
The Junk and the Dhow, though they look like anyhow,
Had rudders reaching deep below their keel--ahoy! akeel!
As they laid the Eastern Seas beneath their keel!

Once there was galliot yawing in a tide.
 (Too much foolee side-slip. How can stop?
Man catchee tea box lid--lasha longaside.
That way make her plenty glip and sail first-chop.)
But before and before, and ever so long before
And such contrivances were used,
The whole Confucian sea-board had standardized the lee-board.
And hauled it up or dropped it as they choosed--or chose--or
chused!
According to the weather, when they cruised!

Once there was a caravel in a beam-sea roll--
 (Ca'qo shiftee--alla dliftee-no can livee long.
S'posum' nail-o boa'd acloss--makee ploper hol'?
That way ca'qo sittum still, an' ship mo' stlong.)
But before, and before, and ever so long before
Any square-rigged vessel hove in sight,
The Canton deep-sea craft carried bulkheads fore and aft,
And took good care to keep 'em water-tight-atite-atite!
From Amboyna to the Great Australian Bight!

Once there was a sailor-man singing just this way--
 (Too muchee yowl-o, sickum best flend!
Singee all-same pullee lope--haul and belay!
Hully up and coilum down an'-- bite off end!)
But before, and before, and ever so long before
Any sort of chanty crossed our lips,
The Junk and the Dhow, though they look like anyhow,
Were the Mother and the Father of all Ships--ahoy!--a'ships
And of half the new inventions in our Ships!
From Tarifa to Formosa in our Ships!
From Socotra to Selankhor of the windlass and the anchor,
And the Navigators Compass in our Ships--ahoy!--our Ships!
(O, hully up and coilum down and--bite--off--end!)


Scheme a bcbcDefee dgdgdhFhh xiaiDjxdaj xxhgDkxak xahlDmFmmmxml
Poetic Form
Metre 101010 101110010101 1111111 10110111111 1111101 1010010101101 101110111 0101101001 0010011110101 11101010111 111010110101 11111111 101111011 1110110111 1010011101101 101010101 01001111110 111010111011 11101010111 11111001 11111111 1111111 11101010111 1010010101101 01010001 0101011110011 0111111111111 1 0101010111 11101000111 111011111 11111111 111111111 1010010101101 101110101 010111101101 011111110111 111010101 111010110111 1111111 11111101 110111111 1010010101101 101111101 01001111110 001000101110101 011010100101 1110100101 111110100010 0010010010101101 1110110111
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 2,325
Words 402
Sentences 36
Stanzas 6
Stanza Lengths 1, 9, 9, 10, 9, 13
Lines Amount 51
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 301
Words per stanza (avg) 65
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on May 02, 2023

2:03 min read
103

Rudyard Kipling

Joseph Rudyard Kipling was an English short-story writer, poet, and novelist chiefly remembered for his tales and poems of British soldiers in India and his tales for children. more…

All Rudyard Kipling poems | Rudyard Kipling Books

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