This is an analysis of the poem The Old-Fashioned Cooks that begins with:

Poets have sung of the old-fashioned glories
The old-fashioned pictures that hung on the wall,...

Elements of the verse: questions and answers

The information we provided is prepared by means of a special computer program. Use the criteria sheet to understand greatest poems or improve your poetry analysis essay.

  • Rhyme scheme: ababcdcd efefgdgd dedebdXd ghghcdcd
  • Stanza lengths (in strings): 8,8,8,8,
  • Closest metre: trochaic pentameter
  • Сlosest rhyme: shakespearean sonnet
  • Сlosest stanza type: tercets
  • Guessed form: unknown form
  • Metre: 10110011010 01101011101 011010011010 01101011001 010111111010 01101011101 010010010110 11111001101 111111110110 01111111101 1010010110110 11111001111 111111010010 1101101111 110111011010 11011011101 111010010110 01011101001 010110011011 11111101011 1011011011010 11011011011 1101111110100 0111011101 110110011010 11001111101 010010010010 11011101001 111010111010 11101111111 111010011010 11101011101
  • Amount of stanzas: 4
  • Average number of symbols per stanza: 396
  • Average number of words per stanza: 74
  • Amount of lines: 32
  • Average number of symbols per line: 49 (strings are more long than medium ones)
  • Average number of words per line: 9
  • Mood of the speaker:

    The punctuation marks are various. Neither mark predominates.

  • The author used lexical repetitions to emphasize a significant image; old, fashioned, i, and, to, they, us, with are repeated.

    The poet used anaphora at the beginnings of some neighboring lines. The same words the, they are repeated.

    The poet repeated the same word cooks at the end of some neighboring stanzas. The poetic device is a kind of epiphora.

If you write a school or university poetry essay, you should Include in your explanation of the poem:

  • summary of The Old-Fashioned Cooks;
  • central theme;
  • idea of the verse;
  • history of its creation;
  • critical appreciation.

Good luck in your poetry interpretation practice!

More information about poems by Edgar Albert Guest