Analysis of My Birthday



Let the sun summon all his beams to hold
Bright pageant in his court, the cloud-paved sky
Earth trim her fields and leaf her copses cold;
Till the dull month with summer-splendours vie.
It is my Birthday;—and I fain would try,
Albeit in rude, in heartfelt strains to praise
My God, for He hath shielded wondrously
From harm and envious error all my ways,
And purged my misty sight, and fixed on heaven
my gaze.

Not in that mood, in which the insensate crowd
Of wealthy folly hail their natal day,—
With riot throng, and feast, and greetings loud,
Chasing all thoughts of God and heaven away.
Poor insect! feebly daring, madly gay,
What! joy because the fulness of the year
Marks thee for greedy death a riper prey?
Is not the silence of the grave too near?
Viewest thou the end with glee, meet scene for
harrowing fear?

Go then, infatuate! where the festive hall,
The curious board, the oblivious wine invite;
Speed with obsequious haste at Pleasure's call,
And with thy revels scare the far-spent night.
Joy thee, that clearer dawn upon thy sight
The gates of death;—and pride thee in thy sum
Of guilty years, and thy increasing white
Of locks; in age untimely frolicksome,
Make much of thy brief span, few years are yet to
come!

Yet wiser such, than he whom blank despair
And fostered grief's ungainful toil enslave;
Lodged in whose furrowed brow thrives fretful care,
Sour graft of blighted hope; who, when the wave
Of evil rushes, yields,—yet claims to rave
At his own deed, as the stern will of heaven.
In sooth against his Maker idly brave,
Whom e'en the creature-world has tossed and
driven,
Cursing the life he mars, 'a boon so kindly given.'

He dreams of mischief; and that brainborn ill
Man's open face bears in his jealous view.
Fain would he fly his doom; that doom is still
His own black thoughts, and they must aye
pursue.
Too proud for merriment, or the pure dew
Soft glistening on the sympathising cheek;
As some dark, lonely, evil-natured yew,
Whose poisonous fruit—so fabling poets speak—
Beneath the moon's pale gleam the midnight hag
doth seek.

No! give to me, Great Lord, the constant soul,
Nor fooled by pleasure nor enslaved by care;
Each rebel-passion (for Thou canst) controul,
And make me know the tempter's every snare.
What, though alone my sober hours I wear,
No friend in view, and sadness o'er my mind
Throws her dark veil?—Thou but accord this
prayer,
And I will bless Thee for my birth, and find
That stillness breathes sweet tones, and solitude is
kind.

Each coming year, O grant it to refine
All purer motions of this anxious breast;
Kindle the steadfast flame of love divine,
And comfort me with holier thoughts possest;
Till this worn body slowly sink to rest,
This feeble spirit to the sky aspire,—
As some long-prisoned dove toward her nest—
There to receive the gracious full-toned lyre,
Bowed low before the Throne 'mid the bright
seraph choir.


Scheme ABABBCDCEC FGFGGHGHIH DJDJJKJKLK MNMNNENXEE DLDBLLOLOXO DMDMMPXIPXP QRQARSRSJI
Poetic Form
Metre 1011011111 1100110111 110101011 101111011 111101111 0100101111 11111101 11010010111 01110101110 11 101101011 1101011101 1101010101 10111101001 111010101 110101101 111101011 1101010111 110111111 1001 1101010101 0100100100101 1101001111 0111010111 1111010111 0111011011 1101010101 11010101 11111111111 1 1101111101 01011101 1011011101 10111011101 1101011111 11111011110 0101110101 1110101110 10 1001110111010 111100111 1101101101 1111111111 11110111 01 11111011 11001011 1111010101 1100111101 010111011 11 1111110101 1111010111 110101111 0111011001 11011101011 11010101011 101111011 1 0111111101 1101110101 1 1101111101 1101011101 100111101 0101110011 1111010111 1101010101 1111010101 1101010111 110101101 110
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,907
Words 516
Sentences 22
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 10, 10, 10, 10, 11, 11, 10
Lines Amount 72
Letters per line (avg) 31
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 324
Words per stanza (avg) 72
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 14, 2023

2:36 min read
77

John Henry Newman

 · 1801 · London
 · 1890 · Edgbaston

Blessed John Henry Newman CO, also referred to as Cardinal Newman, was an important figure in the religious history of England in the 19th century. more…

All John Henry Newman poems | John Henry Newman Books

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