Analysis of My Army, O, My Army!

Henry Lawson 1867 (Grenfell) – 1922 (Sydney)



My Army, O, my army! The time I dreamed of comes!
I want to see your colours; I want to hear your drums!
I heard them in my boyhood when all men’s hearts seemed cold;
I heard them as a Young Man—and I am growing old!
My army, O, my army! The signs are manifold!
My army, O, my army! My army and my Queen!
I used to sing your battle-songs when I was seventeen!
They came to me from ages, they came from far and near;
They came to me from Paris, they came to me from Here!—
They came when I was marching with the Army of the Rear.

My Queen’s dark eyes were flashing (oh, she was younger then!);
My Queen’s Red Cap was redder than the reddest blood of men!
My Queen marched like an Amazon, with anger manifest—
Her dark hair darkly matted from a knifegash in her breast
(For blood will flow where milk will not—her sisters knew the rest).

My legions ne’er were listed, they had no need to be;
My army ne’er was trained in arms—’twas trained in misery!
It took long years to mould it, but war could never drown
The shuffling of my army’s feet in the hunger-haunted town—
A little child was murdered, and so Tyranny went down.

My army kept no order, my army kept no time;
My army dug no trenches, yet died in dust and slime;
Its troops were fiercely ignorant, as to the manner born;
Its clothes were rags and tatters, or patches worn and torn—
Ah, me! It wore a uniform that I have often worn!

The faces of my army were ghastly as the dead;
My army’s cause was Hunger, my army’s cry was “Bread!”
It called on God and Mary and Christ of Nazareth;
It cried to kings and courtesans that fainted at its breath—
Its women beat their poor, flat breasts where babes had starved to death.

My army! My army—I hear the sound of drums
Above the roar of battles—and, lo! my army comes!
Nor creed of man may stay it—nor war, nor nation’s law—
The pikes go through the firing-lines as pitchforks go through straw—
Like pitchforks through the litter, while empires stand in awe.


Scheme AABBBCCDXD EEFFF GGHHH IIJJJ KKXLL AAMMX
Poetic Form
Metre 1101110011111 111111111111 111011111111 1111011011101 110111001110 1101110110011 11111101111101 1111110111101 1111110111111 11111101010101 1111010111101 11111101010111 111111011010 011101101001 11111111010101 1101010111111 11011101110100 1111111111101 01011110010101 01011100110011 1101110110111 1101110110101 11010100110101 1101010110101 1111010111101 0101110010101 11111011111 1111010011100 111101110111 11011111111111 110110110111 0101110011101 1111111111101 0111010111111 1110101100101
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 1,988
Words 381
Sentences 25
Stanzas 6
Stanza Lengths 10, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5
Lines Amount 35
Letters per line (avg) 43
Words per line (avg) 11
Letters per stanza (avg) 249
Words per stanza (avg) 63
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:54 min read
56

Henry Lawson

Henry Lawson 17 June 1867 - 2 September 1922 was an Australian writer and poet Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period more…

All Henry Lawson poems | Henry Lawson Books

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