Analysis of The Pearl of them All



Gaily in front of the stockwhip
The horses come galloping home,
Leaping and bucking and playing
With sides all a lather of foam;
But painfully, slowly behind them,
With head to the crack of the fall,
And trying so gamely to follow
Comes limping the pearl of them all.

He is stumbling and stiff in the shoulder,
And splints from the hoof to the knee,
But never a horse on the station
Has half such a spirit as he;
Give these all the boast of their breeding
These pets of the paddock and stall,
But ten years ago not their proudest
Could live with the pearl of them all.

No journey has ever yet beat him,
No day was too heavy or hard,
He was king of the camp and the muster
And pride of the wings of the yard;
But Time is relentless to follow;
The best of us bow to his thrall;
And death, with his scythe on his shoulder,
Is dogging the pearl of them all.

I watch him go whinnying past me,
And memories come with a whirl
Of reckless, wild rides with a comrade
And laughing, gay rides with a girl —
How she decked him with lilies and love-knots
And plaited his mane at my side,
And once in the grief of a parting
She threw her arms round him and cried.
And I promised — I gave her my promise
The night that we parted in tears,
To keep and be kind to the old horse
Till Time made a burden of years;
And then for his sake and one woman’s…
So, fetch me my gun from the wall!
I have only this kindness to offer
As gift to the pearl of them all.

Here! hold him out there by the yard wing,
And don’t let him know by a sign:
Turn his head to you — ever so little!
I can’t bear his eyes to meet mine.
Then — stand still, old boy! for a moment …
These tears, how they blind as they fall!
Now, God help my hand to be steady…
Good-bye! — to the pearl of them all!


Scheme XABAXCDC EFXFBCXC XGEGDCEC FHXHIJBJXXXXICEC BKXKXCFC
Poetic Form
Metre 1001101 01011001 10010010 11101011 110010011 11101101 010110110 11001111 11100010010 01101101 110011010 11101011 111011110 11101001 111011110 11101111 110110111 11111011 1111010010 01101101 111010110 01111111 011111110 11001111 1111111 01001101 11011101 01011101 1111110011 01011111 010011010 11011101 0110110110 01111001 110111011 11101011 01111011 11111101 1110110110 11101111 111111011 01111101 1111110110 11111111 111111010 11111111 111111110 11101111
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,732
Words 361
Sentences 14
Stanzas 5
Stanza Lengths 8, 8, 8, 16, 8
Lines Amount 48
Letters per line (avg) 28
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 267
Words per stanza (avg) 72
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:48 min read
71

William Henry Ogilvie

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

All William Henry Ogilvie poems | William Henry Ogilvie Books

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