Analysis of Fling Out The Flag



(For the Australian Labour Federation)

FLING out the Flag! Let her flap and rise in the rush of the eager air,
With the ring of the wild swan's wings as she soars from the swamp and
her reedy lair.
Fling out the Flag! And let friend and foe behold, for gain or loss,
The sign of our faith and the fight we fight, the Stars of the Southern
Cross!
Oh! Blue's for the sky that is fair for all, whoever, wherever he be,
And Silver's the light that shines on all for hope and for liberty,
And that's the desire that burns in our hearts, for ever quenchless and
bright,
And that's the sign of our flawless faith and the glorious fight we fight!
What is the wealthiest land on earth, if the millions suffer and cry,
And all but the happy selfish Few would fain curse God and die?
What are the glorious Arts, as they sit and sing on their jewelled thrones,
If their hands are wet with blood and their feet befouled with festering
bones?
What are the splendid Sciences, driving Nature with a bit of steel,
If only the Rich can mount the car and the Poor are dragged at the
wheel?
Wealth is a curse, and Art a mock, and Science worse than a lie,
When they're but the gift of the greedy Thieves, the leeches that suck
men dry!
Nay, brothers, nay! it is not for this — for a land of wealth and woe —
That we hoped and trusted all these years, that we toiled and struggled
so!
It is not for a race of taskmasters and pitiful cringing slaves,
That our strength and skill raised up happy homes and dreamed of
fearless graves.
It is not for a Cause that is less than for all, that is not for Truth but a lie,
That we raise our faces and grip our hands, and lift our voices high,
As we fling out the Flag that friend and foe may see, for gain or loss,
The sign of our faith and the fight we fight, the Stars of the Southern
Cross!
As the sky above is fair for all, whoever, wherever he be,
As the blessèd stars on all shed their light of hope and of liberty:
So let the earth, this fertile earth, this well-loved Southern land,
Be fair to all, be free to all, from strand to shining strand!
Let boy and girl and woman and man in it at least be sure,
That all can earn their daily bread with hearts as proud as pure;
Let man and woman and girl and boy in it for ever be
Heirs to the best this world can give, happy, fearless, free!
Fling out the Flag! Let her flap and rise in the rush of the eager air,
With the ring of the wild swan's wings as she soars from the swamp and
her reedy lair!
Fling out the Flag! and let friend and foe behold, for gain or loss,
The sign of our faith and the fight we fight, the Stars of the Southern
Cross!
Oh! Blue's the sky that is fair for all, whoever, wherever he be,
And Silver's the light that shines on all, for hope and for liberty;
And that's the desire that burns in our hearts, for ever quenchless and
bright,
And that's the sign of our flawless faith, and the glorious fight we fight.


Scheme x ABACDCeEBFFggcxxhxhgxgixijxjggcDCeekklleeABACDCeEBFF
Poetic Form
Metre 100101010 11011010100110101 101101111111010 0101 110101101011111 01110100111011010 1 111011111101001011 0100111111101100 01001011010111010 1 010111010100100111 11010011110101001 011010101111101 1101001111011111 111111101111100 1 11010100101010111 1100111010011110 1 110101010101101 111011010101011 11 1101111111011101 111010111111010 1 111101110100101 11010111101011 101 11110111111111111101 1111010011010110101 1111011101111111 01110100111011010 1 10101111101001011 10111111111101100 11011101111101 11111111111101 110101001011111 11111101111111 110100101011101 1101111110101 11011010100110101 101101111111010 0101 110101101011111 01110100111011010 1 11011111101001011 0100111111101100 01001011010111010 1 010111010100100111
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 2,872
Words 579
Sentences 23
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 1, 52
Lines Amount 53
Letters per line (avg) 42
Words per line (avg) 11
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,120
Words per stanza (avg) 289
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:57 min read
136

Francis William Lauderdale Adams

Francis William Lauderdale Adams was an essayist poet dramatist novelist and journalist who produced a large volume of work in his short life more…

All Francis William Lauderdale Adams poems | Francis William Lauderdale Adams Books

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