Friday, January 3, 2003

To An Athlete Dying Young Comments

Rating: 3.8

The time you won your town the race
We chaired you through the market-place;
Man and boy stood cheering by,
And home we brought you shoulder-high.
...
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Alfred Edward Housman
COMMENTS
Michael Walker 01 August 2019

An elegy which still holds up; precise rhyme and meter, and a fine comparison between athletics and the end of life: ' Today, the road all runners come, Shoulder-high we bring you home'. Very moving to me.

1 0 Reply
Fakboy 07 June 2018

Fak you all BITCHES

1 4 Reply
Sylvaonyema Uba 08 March 2017

Well written poem Sylvs

0 1 Reply
Jasmine Cline 18 May 2016

THIS IS REALLY INSPIRING

1 1 Reply
Thabani Khumalo 16 June 2015

I have a vision to write like this, only if god would bless me enough to.u

2 4 Reply
Sossi Khachadourian 28 December 2014

One of my favorites!

2 3 Reply
Rajnish Manga 28 December 2014

Two extremes of life and death have been described to bring home the factor of uncertainty. Great emotional poem.

3 2 Reply
Gangadharan Nair Pulingat 27 December 2014

Silence sounds no worse than cheers...... The ups and downs of life describes in the poem and it is having some spiritual contexts also.Highly accepted poem and likes it.

3 1 Reply
Goodness Tchibueze 28 December 2012

All we labor for is vanity...like a madman running after nothing.I love this!

6 4 Reply
Cs Vishwanathan 28 December 2010

To me the poetry of AE Housman are a glory of the English letters. His innate astringent scepticism showed a side of the English cultural countenance normally kept shrouded by the Victorians. In his poems rhyme, rhythm, emotion, statements, and stylistic precision all dovetail into each other so seamlessly that the whole poem is converted into an object of beauty. He is the GOYA of the English poetry.

7 5 Reply
Michael Pruchnicki 28 December 2009

Think of the slave who rode in the chariot with the conquering hero and whispered words of wisdom into his ear, 'Beware the glory that is yours now will soon vanish! ' Today you're a hero! Tomorrow you're a Zero! Like a young girl whose beauty will eventually fade as she ages, so a young athlete dying young will outlive his brief day in the sun! No arthritis will ever slow him down! No sudden cardiac arrest will terminate his career so suddenly. I think it was General George Patton who longed to be killed in battle with the last bullet fired in the last war! A noble aspiration!

9 3 Reply
Joseph Poewhit 28 December 2009

Captures the moment of GLORY well, for the runner.

6 5 Reply
Ramesh T A 28 December 2009

A wonderful tribute to a winning athlete died young! It may be very interesting to young sportsmen of the world!

6 2 Reply
Holt Louque 07 October 2009

How could this warrior add to the afore mentioned commentaries? Yes, Out of Africa is one of the all-time greatest films. 'Under the veneer of armor of every Warrior, beats the Heart of a true Romantic.' HRL

8 5 Reply
Susan Richardson 20 June 2006

Surely the whole point is what was, not what could have been? Ultimately to have lost the challenge cup and for the laurel to have withered, as better, younger athletes usurp his position. An early death ensures this will never happen. Ditto the Meryl Streep ref. I too can never read this without hearing the halting Danish accent. Brilliant film, fantastic score, wonderful poetry!

9 2 Reply
Richard Terrify 24 November 2005

There's a scene in the movie Out Of Africa where this poem, or part of it, is read at the burial of Robert Redfords character. I thought it was one of the most beautiful tributes to a figure admired, not only an athlete. Of course, I cannot read it without hearing the Danish accent Meryl Streep used in the film, but what a voice to hear in your head when recalling a favorite poem. I owe this movie a debt of gratitude for making me aware of this fine poem.

9 2 Reply
Tom Green 12 December 2004

I think this is one of the most beautiful poems I have ever read. It is so virile yet so soft, so bold yet so shy, so promissory yet so fatal. We can all relate to the golden child athelete who we really never had a full chance to appreciate and savor him because an early death. Then those who are left will only remenber and think about what could have been.

17 1 Reply
Alfred Edward Housman

Alfred Edward Housman

Worcestershire
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