|
A Shropshire Lad: XIX To An Athlete Dying Young
| | XIX | | | Q |
| To An Athlete Dying Young | | C |
| V | The time you won your town the race | | | |
| V | We chaired you through the market-place; | | | |
| V | Man and boy stood cheering by, | | | |
| And home we brought you shoulder-high. | | | |
| | | | | |
| To-day, the road all runners come, | 5 | | Q |
| Shoulder-high we bring you home, | | | |
| And set you at your threshold down, | | | |
| Townsman of a stiller town. | | | |
| | | | | |
| V | Smart lad, to slip betimes away | | | |
| V | From fields where glory does not stay, | 10 | | |
| V | And early though the laurel grows | | | |
| V | It withers quicker than the rose. | | | |
| | | | | |
| V | Eyes the shady night has shut | | | Q |
| V | Cannot see the record cut, | | C | |
| V | And silence sounds no worse than cheers | 15 | | |
| V | After earth has stopped the ears: | | | |
| | | | | |
| V | Now you will not swell the rout | | | |
| V | Of lads that wore their honours out, | | | |
| V | Runners whom renown outran | | | Q |
| V | And the name died before the man. | 20 | | |
| | | | | |
| V | So set, before the echoes fade, | | | |
| V | The fleet foot on the sill of shade, | | | |
| V | And hold to the low lintel up | | | |
| The still-defended challenge-cup. | | | |
| | | | | |
| V | And round that early-laurelled head | 25 | | |
| V | Will flock to gaze the strengthless dead, | | | |
| V | And find unwithered on its curls | | | |
| V | The garland briefer than a girl's. | | | |
|
Key: V: Textual Variation. C: Commentary. Q: Question. Glossary
ASL XVIII "To An Athlete Dying Young"
Top ▲ Glossary
| Line | Word | Glossary |
| 11 | laurel | 1. A small evergreen tree that grows in southern Europe and has glossy aromatic leaves and dark purple or black berries.
2. The leaves of the laurel woven into a wreath and used as a mark of honor or victory in ancient times, for example, to crown the winners of athletic events
|
| 17 | rout | 1. A noisy and disorganized group of people
|
Top ▲ Variations
| Line |
Text |
Textual variation |
| 1 | d1 | time] <day> |
| 1 | d2 | your] <the> |
| 2 | d1 | <They> We chaired you <in> \ through / the market-place |
| 3 | d1 | Man and boy] <And while the crowd> \ < [?Where] market-folk |
| 9 | d1 | Smart] Wise |
| 9 | d1 | slip] steal |
| 9 | d2 | Smart lad,] Wise lad, \ Well done, / → |
| 10 | d1 | glory does] victory will |
| 10 | d2 | victory \ glory / will |
| 11 | d2 | <And glory for the runner braids> → And early though the laurel grows |
| 12 | d2 | <A chaplet briefer than a maid's> It withers sooner \ lasts no <longer> better / than <the> \ a / rose |
| 13 | d1 | Shut [?your eyes and keep] them shut → Now the eye that night has shut |
| 13 | D2d1 | <He> \ The man / whose eye the night has shut → Eyes the shady \ cloudy / night has shut |
| 13 | D2d2 | <Now the eye that> \ Eyes the cloudy / night has shut |
| 13 | D2d3 | Eyes the night has filled with smoke |
| 14 | d1 | Cannot see the] And never see your |
| 14 | D2d1 | <Never sees his record cut> → Never \ Will never / see the record cut |
| 14 | D2d2 | Will never see the record cut |
| 14 | D2d3 | <Never> \ Will never / see the record broke [ → Cannot see the record cut ] |
| 15 | D2d1 | sounds no worse than] <is the same as> |
| 16 | D2d2 | After] <Now that> |
| 16 | D2d1 | the] <his> |
| 17 | D2d1 | <And> <n> Now you will \ <have> / \ shall / not joined \ <swelled> / \ swell / the throng No fear you now should join the throng |
| 17 | D2d2 | Now you will not] No fear you now should \ <Now you'll never> |
| 18 | D2d1 | wore their honours out] lived \ stayed / a <day> \ spell / too long |
| 19 | D1 | Runners] Of runners |
| 20 | D1 | And] \ <Or> / |
| 20 | D1 | died] die<s>d |
| 21 | D1 | So now with ribboned breast invade <So, now with laurel<s> undecayed> \ <before the laurels fade> / \ <unbeaten, unafraid> / , \ So set, before its echoes fade, / |
| 22 | D1 | First in the race, \ Unbeaten yet, / the sill of shade, → <Set foot upon> \ The fleet foot on / the sill of shade |
| 23 | D1 | low] <dark> |
| 25 | D1 | that early-laurelled] your early-laurelled \ that young and laurelled / |
| 25 | D2d2 | that]<your> |
| 26 | D1 | flock to gaze] throng to gaze \ come and gaze / |
| 27 | D1 | find unwithered on] yet unfaded round |
| 28 | D1 | The] \ <Your> / |
| 28 | D1 | garland] garland<s> |
Top ▲ Questions
| Line |
Question |
| 5 | How does the poet develop the contrast between the last time that the athlete was carried home shoulder-high and when that happens again, "To-day"? |
| 13 | Why do you think the poet changed the word "cloudy" from the drafts to "shady" in the final version? |
| 13-14 | It is clear from the drafts that Housman experimented a great deal with these lines. Consider the alternatives suggested in the drafts:
a. Shut your eyes and keep them shut
And never see your record cut
b. Now the eye that night has shut
Never sees his record cut
c. He / The man whose eye the night has shut
Will never see the record cut
d. Eyes the night has filled with smoke
Will never see the record broke
What are the merits of each and how is the final line, "Eyes the shady night has shut," superior to the others?
|
| 17 | Why do you think the poet returned in the final version to the word "swell", which was replaced with "join" after the first draft? What different ideas does the word suggest? |
| 17-18 | Once again, consider the possible alternatives to these lines, formed from the various drafts:
a. Now you have not joined the throng
Of those who lived a day too long
b. No fear you now should join the throng
Of those who stayed a spell / too long
c. Now you'll never join the throng
Of those who stayed a spell too long
What are the merits of each and how is the final line, "Now you will not swell the rout," superior to the others?
|
| 19 | The poet removes the repetition of the word "Of" at the beginning of the line and thereby shortens it by one syllable. What is the effect on the meaning and tone of this two-fold change? |
| Whole poem | This poem is one of a number that consider the untimely or early death of youth. What message do you think this particular poem carries? |
|