Analysis of John Robinson



AIR -- "The Drunkard"

Come listen, friends, and hear a song,
It is a doleful one,
About a young man, dead and gone --
He died far away from home.
John Robinson this young man's name,
His age I cannot tell,
And he was loved by all his friends,
And he was known full well.

His father and mother being dead,
It left him an orphan boy,
When he was with his brother
His health failed him, poor boy.
Kind friends they thought 'twould do him good
To travel for his health;
To California he did go
With his Uncle Zera French.

He was not gone but a short time
When a letter his friends received;
It told how homesick Johnny was,
How he for home did grieve.
It said that he was getting worse,
And his money was nearly gone,
And if he did not soon return
Never more would he see home.

It said, "Dear Brother, will you please
Some money to me send,
For I fear I have not got enough
To bring me back again.
The doctor says I must soon return,
If I wish my home to see,
For if I stay my life is short,
For the air disagrees with me."

His brother Will the letter read,
It made his eyes grow dim.
"Dear brother, he shall soon return,
For I will go and fetch him."
This brother dear was very kind;
With money, he went with haste
For to bring him home again,
But Oh! he went too late.

For he was sick, and very bad --
Poor boy, he thought, no doubt,
If he came home in a smoking car
His money would hold out.
He started to come back alone --
He came one-third the way --
One evening in the car alone
His spirit fled away.

No friend was near to speak to him,
Or hear his dying moan;
How sad, how sad it must have been
To die there all alone;
No loving friends to soothe his brow,
Or ease his weary form;
Poor soul, poor soul is now at rest,
For his soul to heaven has gone.

Telegraph dispatch was sent his friends --
How sad were they to hear --
How their loved one died all alone,
In a car with no one near.
The brother brought his body home
To his friends that loved him best.
He's sleeping in their grave yard now
Let peace be e'er his rest.


Scheme X XXABXCDC EFXFXXXX XXXXXAGB XXXHGIXI EJGJXXHX XKXKLMLM JLXLNXOA DXLXBONO
Poetic Form
Metre 1010 11010101 110101 01011101 1110111 11001111 111101 01111111 011111 110010101 1111101 1111110 111111 11111111 110111 1010111 1110101 11111011 10101101 1111101 111111 11111101 01101101 01111101 1011111 11110111 110111 111111101 111101 010111101 1111111 11111111 10100111 11010101 111111 11011101 1111011 11011101 1101111 1111101 111111 11110101 111111 111100101 110111 11011101 111101 11000101 110101 11111111 111101 11111111 111101 11011111 111101 11111111 11111011 10011111 110111 11111101 0011111 01011101 1111111 11001111 1111011
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,975
Words 417
Sentences 19
Stanzas 9
Stanza Lengths 1, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8
Lines Amount 65
Letters per line (avg) 24
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 170
Words per stanza (avg) 46
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:05 min read
50

Julia A Moore

Julia Ann Moore was an American poetaster. Like Scotland's William McGonagall, she is famed chiefly for writing notoriously bad poetry. more…

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