Analysis of Judith Of Bethulia

John Crowe Ransom 1888 (Pulaski) – 1974 (Gambier)



Beautiful as the flying legend of some leopard
She had not chosen yet her captain, nor Prince
Depositary to her flesh, and our defense;
A wandering beauty is a blade out of its scabbard.
You know how dangerous, gentlemen of threescore?
May you know it yet ten more.

Nor by process of veiling she grew less fabulous.
Grey or blue veils, we were desperate to study
The invincible emanations of her white body,
And the winds at her ordered raiment were ominous.
Might she walk in the market, sit in the council of soldiers?
Only of the extreme elders.

But a rare chance was the girl’s then, when the Invader
Trumpeted from the South, and rumbled from the North,
Beleaguered the city from four quarters of the earth,
Our soldiery too craven and sick to aid her—
Where were the arms could countervail this horde?
Her beauty was the sword.

She sat with the elders, and proved on their blear visage
How bright was the weapon unrusted in her keeping,
While he lay surfeiting on their harvest heaping
Wasting the husbandry of their rarest vintage—
And dreaming of the broad-breasted dames for concubine?
These floated on his wine.

He was lapped with bay-leaves, and grass and fumiter weed,
And from under the wine-film encountered his mortal vision,
For even within his tent she accomplished his derision,
Loosing one veil and another, she stood unafraid;
So he perished. Nor brushed her with even so much as a daisy?
She found his destruction easy.

The heathen have all perished. The victory was furnished.
We smote them hiding in vineyards, barns, annexes,
And now their white bones clutter the holes of foxes,
And the chieftain’s head, with grinning sockets, and varnished—
Is it hung on the sky with a hideous epitaphy?
No, the woman keeps the trophy.

May God send unto our virtuous lady her Prince!
It is stated she went reluctant to that orgy,
Yet a madness fevers our young men, and not the clergy
Nor the elders have turned them unto modesty since.
Inflamed by the thought of her nakedness with desire?
Yes, and chilled with fear and despair.


Scheme ABXACC DEEDFF CXXCGG XHHXII XJJXEE KXXKXE BEEBCC
Poetic Form
Metre 1001010101110 11110101011 010010101001 01001010111110 11110010011 1111111 111110111100 11111010110 0010001010110 001101010100 111001010010110 10100110 1011101110010 100101010101 0100101110101 10111001110 100111011 010101 1110100111110 11101010010 1111111010 100100111010 010101101110 110111 11111101011 011001101011010 110011110101010 101100101101 1110110110111010 11101010 01011100100110 11110010110 011111001110 0010111010010 111101101001 10101010 11110101001001 1110110101110 101010101101010 1010111101001 011011011010 10111001
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 2,059
Words 360
Sentences 23
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6
Lines Amount 42
Letters per line (avg) 39
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 232
Words per stanza (avg) 51
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on May 03, 2023

1:48 min read
69

John Crowe Ransom

John Crowe Ransom was an educator, scholar, literary critic, poet, essayist and editor. more…

All John Crowe Ransom poems | John Crowe Ransom Books

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