This is an analysis of the poem The Gardener X: Let Your Work Be, Bride that begins with:

Let your work be, bride. Listen, the
guest has come....

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: abcdeXbfcEEXffgddEEdXbghiXXdjfbaXciXefhbj
  • Stanza lengths (in strings): 41,
  • Closest metre: trochaic tetrameter
  • Сlosest rhyme: shakespearean sonnet
  • Сlosest stanza type: sonnet
  • Guessed form: unknown form
  • Metre: 11101100 111 111101010 0111001 11110111 111110110 101101 1110101 110010 100101011 11010 000111010 101111001 10110101 11110110 111001001 011 100101011 11010 11101011 110110111 11 01111010 110111011 010 11111010 11011110 11101011 1 11110111 1100111 11110100 10 1111100100 10101010 11110110 110100111 1110101 11111011 1 1110
  • Amount of stanzas: 1
  • Average number of symbols per stanza: 1273
  • Average number of words per stanza: 244
  • Amount of lines: 41
  • Average number of symbols per line: 30 (strings are less long than medium ones)
  • Average number of words per line: 6
  • Mood of the speaker:

    The punctuation marks are various. Neither mark predominates.

  • The author used lexical repetitions to emphasize a significant image; your, you, in are repeated.

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

  • summary of The Gardener X: Let Your Work Be, Bride;
  • central theme;
  • idea of the verse;
  • history of its creation;
  • critical appreciation.

Good luck in your poetry interpretation practice!

More information about poems by Rabindranath Tagore