Analysis of Off the Ground

Walter de la Mare 1873 (Charlton, London) – 1956 (Twickenham)



Three jolly Farmers
Once bet a pound
Each dance the others would
Off the ground.
Out of their coats
They slipped right soon,
And neat and nicesome
Put each his shoon.
One--Two--Three!
And away they go,
Not too fast,
And not too slow;
Out from the elm-tree's
Noonday shadow,
Into the sun
And across the meadow.
Past the schoolroom,
With knees well bent,
Fingers a flicking,
They dancing went.
Up sides and over,
And round and round,
They crossed click-clacking
The Parish bound;
By Tupman's meadow
They did their mile,
Tee-to-tum
On a three-barred stile.
Then straight through Whipham,
Downhill to Week,
Footing it lightsome,
But not too quick,
Up fields to Watchet
And on through Wye,
Till seven fine churches
They'd seen slip by --
Seven fine churches,
And five old mills,
Farms in the valley,
And sheep on the hills;
Old Man's Acre
And Dead Man's Pool
All left behind,
As they danced through Wool.
And Wool gone by,
Like tops that seem
To spin in sleep
They danced in dream:
Withy -- Wellover --
Wassop -- Wo --
Like an old clock
Their heels did go.
A league and a league
And a league they went,
And not one weary,
And not one spent.
And log, and behold!
Past Willow-cum-Leigh
Stretched with its waters
The great green sea.
Says Farmer Bates,
'I puffs and I blows,
What's under the water,
Why, no man knows !'
Says Farmer Giles,
'My mind comes weak,
And a good man drownded
Is far to seek. '
But Farmer Turvey,
On twirling toes,
Up's with his gaiters,
And in he goes:
Down where the mermaids
Pluck and play
On their twangling harps
In a sea-green day;
Down where the mermaids
Finned and fair,
Sleek with their combs
Their yellow hair. . . .
Bates and Giles --
On the shingle sat,
Gazing at Turvey's
Floating hat.
But never a ripple
Nor bubble told
Where he was supping
Off plates of gold.
Never an echo
Rilled through the sea
Of the feasting and dancing
And minstrelsy.
They called -- called -- called;
Came no reply:
Nought but the ripples'
Sandy sigh.
Then glum and silent
They sat instead,
Vacantly brooding
On home and bed,
Till both together
Stood up and said: --
'Us knows not, dreams not,
Where you be,
Turvey, unless
In the deep blue sea;
But axcusing silver --
And it comes most willing --
Here's us two paying our forty shilling;
For it's sartin sure, Turvey,
Safe and sound,
You danced us a square, Turvey,
Off the ground.'


Scheme Text too long
Poetic Form
Metre 11010 1101 110101 101 1111 1111 0101 1111 111 00111 111 0111 11011 11 0101 00101 101 1111 10010 1101 11010 0101 1111 0101 111 1111 111 10111 1111 1111 1011 1111 1111 0111 110110 1111 10110 0111 10010 01101 1110 0111 1101 11111 0111 1111 1101 1101 11 11 1111 1111 01001 00111 01110 0111 01001 1111 11110 0111 1101 11011 110010 1111 1101 1111 00111 1111 11001 1101 1111 0011 1101 101 1111 00111 1101 101 1111 1101 101 10101 1011 101 110010 1101 1111 1111 10110 1101 1010010 01 1111 1101 11010 101 11010 1101 110 1101 11010 1101 11111 111 0101 00111 1110 011110 11110101010 1110101 101 1110101 101
Closest metre Iambic dimeter
Characters 2,344
Words 428
Sentences 23
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 113
Lines Amount 113
Letters per line (avg) 16
Words per line (avg) 4
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,780
Words per stanza (avg) 428
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:10 min read
118

Walter de la Mare

Walter John de la Mare was an English poet short story writer and novelist best remembered for his works for children and The Listeners He was born in Kent and was educated at St Pauls Cathedral School His first book Songs of Childhood was published under the name Walter Ramal His 1921 novel Memoirs of a Midget won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction more…

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