Analysis of The First Flight



While there's one on his feet with a tale to repeat
And another is sampling a drink,
The eager First Flight have a girth to draw tight
Or a chain to let out by a link;
While the boisterous laugh in that circle of chaff
The opening music has drowned,
You will hear the First Flight as they whisper 'That's right!'
To the note of a favourite hound.
When a holloa makes sure that his start is secure
And dispels every doubt of a run,
When the crowd gallops straight to the obvious gate
With the latch that is never undone,
You will see the First Flight cram a topper on tight,
Catch a willing old nag by the head
And clapping on sail at the blackthorn or rail,
Take the line of the robber in red.
They thunder away over stubble and clay,
Over roots or the level o' lea,
The gallant First Flight that are soon out of sight
While the slow ones are sadly at sea.
The crash of a rail in the cream of the vale
Is to them but a matter of mirth,
And the avalanche fall of a hoof-rattled wall
But the merriest music on earth.
There are gaps, there are gates for the coward who waits,
There are roads for the fellow who fears;
To left nor to right go the gallant First Flight
Save to veer with the chase as it veers.
No field has a fence so dark-looming and dense
Or a rail so unyielding and stout
But if once the First Flight have got in it all right
You may trust them to find a way out.
Now the men who ride first may be frequently cursed
As they press on the faltering pack,
But we're all of us loth to pull up for an oath
When it comes from a field or two back;
And the Master may blame and the jealous declaim
But the weakest must go to the wall,
And it's plain the First Flight have the premier right
If the hounds may be hustled at all.
Come drink with me, then, to the big-hearted men
Who have pluck to sit down and go straight!
Whether farmer or squire may they keep out of wire
And be spared a lift home on a gate!
Fill your glasses tonight to the gallant First Flight,
Let us wish them the luck of the line
And tomorrow's recall to the best game of all,
And the wind that is better than wine!


Scheme ABCBDECEFGHGCIJIKLCLJMNMOPCPQRCRSTUTVNCNWHXHCYNY
Poetic Form
Metre 111111101101 001011001 01011101111 101111101 101001011011 01001011 111011111011 1011011 10111111101 0011001101 10111101001 101111001 111011101011 101011101 0101110111 101101001 11001101001 101101011 01011111111 101111011 01101001101 111101011 00101101101 1011011 111111101011 111101011 11111101011 111101111 11101111001 101101001 111011110111 111111011 101111111001 111101001 111111111111 111101111 001011001001 101011101 01101110011 101111011 11111101101 111111011 1010111111110 011011101 111001101011 111101101 0011101111 001111011
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,053
Words 425
Sentences 12
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 48
Lines Amount 48
Letters per line (avg) 34
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,629
Words per stanza (avg) 422
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:08 min read
61

William Henry Ogilvie

William Henry Ogilvie was a Scottish-Australian narrative poet and horseman. more…

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