Analysis of The True Sportsman



The real ones, the right ones, the straight ones and the true,
The pukka, peerless sportsmen-their numbers are but few;
The men who keep on playing though the sun be in eclipse,
The men who go on losing with a laugh upon their lips.
The men who care but little for the laurels of renown;
The men who turn their horses back to help the man that's down;
The fearless and the friendly ones, the courtly and the kind;
The men whose lion courage is with gentleness combined.
My notion of a sportsman ? - I'll try, then, to define.
For preference well bred, of course, of some clean- living line;
With pride of place and ancestry whose service was the King's;
With all a noble knight's contempt for low, left- handed things.
Not the ‘good sport' who burdens us with cheap and futile chat
Of the 'pedigree' of this one and the ‘outside chance' of that,
But a man who loves good horses just to handle them and ride
Where the fences call to valour and the English grass lies wide.
All the best and truest sportsmen I have lived with and have known
Have a changeless faith within them which their simple hearts enthrone,
Believing in the God that made the green fields passing fair,
The God that gave good courage - and to every man his share.
And all the truest sportsmen I have met have had this gift:
A love of all the classic books that lighten and uplift;
And all have loved red woodlands, swift birds and coloured flowers;
And all have played with children and counted not the hours.
And I think when God has gathered all the men that He has made,
The perfect British sportsman may stand forward unafraid;
For, brave and kind and courtly, and clean of heart and hand,
No life than his seems nearer to the life our Maker planned.


Scheme AABBCCDDEEFFGGHHICJJKKLLMMNN
Poetic Form
Metre 011011011001 011010110111 01111101011001 01111101010111 01111101010101 01111101110111 01000101010001 01110101110001 1101010111101 11001111111101 11110100110101 11010101111101 10111101110101 101001110011111 101111101110101 10101110010111 101010101111011 1011011111011 01000111011101 011111001100111 01010101111111 01110101110010 0111111101010 01111100101010 011111101011111 0011010111001 1101010011101 111111010110101
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 1,733
Words 322
Sentences 10
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 28
Lines Amount 28
Letters per line (avg) 48
Words per line (avg) 11
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,351
Words per stanza (avg) 321
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:37 min read
75

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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