Analysis of Muley Malak

John Boyle O'Reilly 1844 (Dowth) – 1890 (Boston)



THUNDER of guns, and cries—banners and spears and blood!
Troops have died where they stood holding the vantage points—
They have raced like waves at a wall, and dashed themselves to death.

Dawn the fight begin, and noon was red with its noon.
The armies stretch afar—and the plain of Alcazar
Is drenched with Moorish blood.

On one side, Muley the King—Muley Malek the Strong.
He had seized the Moorish crown because it would fit his brows.
Hamet the Fair was king; but Muley pulled him down, because he was strong.

The fierce sun glares on the clouds of dust and battlesmoke,
The hoarsened soldiers choke in the blinding heat.
Muley the King is afield, but sick to the death.
Borne on a litter he lies, his blood on fire, his eyes
Flaming with fever light.
Hamah Tabah the Captain, stands by the curtained bed,
Telling him news of the fight—how the waves roll and rise, and clash and mingle and seethe.
And Hamah bends to the scene. He peers under arched hand—
As an eagle he stoops to the field. One hand on the hilt
Is white at the knuckles, so fiercely gripped; while the hand
That had parted the curtains before now clutches the silk and wrings.
Hamet's squadrons are moving in mass—their lines are circling the plain!
The thousands of Muley stand, like bison dazed by an earthquake;

They are stunned by the thud of the fight, they are deer without a leader;
Their charge has died like the impulse of missiles freed from the sling;
Their spears waver like shaken barley,—they are dumbstruck and ready to fly!

Hamah Tabah the Captain, in words like the pouring of pitch, has painted
The terrible scene for the sick King, and terrible answer follows.
Up from the couch of pain, disdaining the bonds of weakness;
Flinging aside disease as a wrestler flings his tunic;
Strong with the smothered flre of fever, and fiercer far than its flaming,
Rises in mail from the litter Muley Malek the King!

Down on his plunging stallion, in the eyes of the shuddered troops,
His bent plume like a smoke, and his sword like a flame,
Smelting their souls with his courage, he rides before his soldiers!
They bend from his face like the sun—their eyes are blind with shame—
They thrill as a stricken tiger thrills, gathering his limbs from a blow;
They raise their faces, and watch him, sworded and mailed and strong;
They watch him, and shout his name fiercely—'Muley, the King!'
Grimly they close their ranks, drinking his face like wine;
Strength to the arm and wrath to the soul, and power—
Fuel and fire he was—and the battle roared like a crater!

Back to the litter, his face turned from the lines, and fixed
In a stare like the faces in granite, the King
Rode straight and strong, holding his sword
Soldierly, gripped on the thigh, grim as a king in iron!

Stiff in the saddle, stark, frowning—one hand is raised,
The mailed finger is laid on the mouth:
'Silence!' the warning said to Haman Tabah the Captain.

Help from his horse they give, moving him, still unbending,
Down to the bed, and lay him within the curtains.
Mutely they answer his frown, like ridges of bronze, and sternly
Again is the mailed hand raised and laid on the lips in warning:
' Silence! ' it said, and the meaning smote through their blood like flame,
As the tremor passed through his armor and the grayness crept o'er his features—
Muley the King was dead!

Furious the struggle and long, the armies with teeth aclench
And dripping weapons shortened, like athletes whose blows have killed pain.
The soldiers of Hamet were flushed—but the spirit of Muley opposed them;
The weak of Muley grew strong when they looked at the curtained litter.
Their thought of the King was wine in the thirst of the fight;
They saw that Hamah was there, still bending over the bed;
Holding the curtains wide and taking the order that came
From the burning lips of the King, and sending it down to his soldiers;
They knew that Hamah the Captain was telling him of the onset,
How they swept like hail on the fields, and left them like sickled grain.
Back, as the waves in a tempest are flung from a cliff and scattered,
Burst and horribly broken and driven beneath with the impact,
Shivered, for once and forever, the conquered forces; King Hamet
Was slain by the sword, and the foreign monarch who helped him,
And the plain was swept by the besom of death:
There never was grander faith in a king!

Trophies and victors' crowns, bring them to bind his brow!
Circle his curtained bed—thousands and thousands, come!
It will cure him, and kill his pain—we must see him tonight again:
One glance of his


Scheme ABC XXA DXD DXCXEFXGXGBHX IJX AXXXJJ XKLKXDJXII XJXX XXX JXXJKLF XHXIEFKLXHXXAXCJ XXXX
Poetic Form
Metre 101101100101 111111100101 11111101010111 101010111111 010101001110 111101 11110111001 11101010111111 101111111101111 01111011101 0110100101 10110111101 11010111111011 101101 1101011011 10111011011010101001 011101111011 11101110111101 1110101101101 1110010011100101 1101100111110001 0101111101111 11110110111101010 111110101101101 11101101011101011 1101001101011110 01001101101001010 11011101001110 100101101001110 11010111001011110 1001101011001 111101000110101 111101011101 101111101101110 11111101111111 11101010110011101 1111001110101 111011110101 101111101111 110101101010 1001011001011010 1101011110101 001101001001 11011011 111011101010 100101101111 011011101 1001011101010 111111101110 110101101010 11101111011010 011011101101010 10110010111111 101011110001110110 10111 10001001010111 01010101111111 0101101101011011 01111111110110 1110111001101 1111111101001 10010101001011 10101101010111110 11110101101101 11111101011111 1101001011101010 1010010010011001 101100100101011 1110100101111 0011110111 1101101001 100101111111 10111100101 1111011111110101 1111
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 4,526
Words 817
Sentences 34
Stanzas 12
Stanza Lengths 3, 3, 3, 13, 3, 6, 10, 4, 3, 7, 16, 4
Lines Amount 75
Letters per line (avg) 48
Words per line (avg) 11
Letters per stanza (avg) 299
Words per stanza (avg) 68
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:05 min read
38

John Boyle O'Reilly

John Boyle O'Reilly was an Irish-born poet, journalist and fiction writer. more…

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