Analysis of Who Would Not Die For England!

Alfred Austin 1835 (Leeds) – 1913 (Ashford)



Who would not die for England!

This great thought,
Through centuries of Glory handed down
By storied vault in monumental fane,
And homeless grave in lone barbaric lands,
Homeless but not forgotten, so can thrill
With its imperious call the hearts of men,
That suddenly from dwarf ignoble lives
They rise to heights of nobleness, and spurn
The languid couch of safety, to embrace
Duty and Death that evermore were twin.

``Who would not die for England!''

Thus He said,
Who at the holiest of all English hearths,
The holiest and the highest, had been given
A seat, an English Princess for his Bride,-
Now at that hearth weeping her widowed tears,
Bitter and barren as the winter rain.
``It is not meet that I, whom this famed Isle,
This generous, mighty, and majestic Land,
Ennobled as her son, should not repay
Her splendid gift of kinship. Let me go,
Go where they go, Her world-researching race,
That slumber pillowed on the half-drawn sword,
And wake at whisper of her will, to greet
Duty and Death that evermore were twin.''

Who would not die for England!

And for Her
He dies, who, whether in the fateful fight,
Or in the marish jungle, where She bids,
Far from encircling fondness, far from kiss
Of clinging babes, hushes his human heart,
And, stern to every voice but Hers, obeys
Duty and Death that evermore were twin.

So across the far-off foam,
Bring him hither, bring him home,
Over avenues of wave,-
English ground,-to English grave;
Where his soldier dust may rest,
England's Flag above his breast,
And, love-tended, long may bloom
English flowers about his tomb.

Who would not die for England, that can give
A sepulture like this, 'mid hamlet crofts,
And comely cottages with old-world flowers,
And rustic seats for labour-palsied limbs,
The pensioners of Peace! I linger here,
Pondering the dark inexplicable Night,
Here by this river-girt sequestered shrine
Whose vanished walls were reared anew by Him,
Of Princes the most princely, if it be
That Wisdom, Love, and Virtue more adorn
Sarcophagus of Kings than dripping spears,
Lone wailing hearths and hecatombs of slain.
And He too died for England, He who lived
Scorning all joy save that great joy of all,
The love of one true woman, She a Queen,
Empress and Queen, yet not the more revered,
Not the more loved, for those resounding names,
Than for the lowlier titles, Gracious, Good,
The Worthiest of Women ever crowned.

Sweetest Consort, sagest Prince!
Snows on snows have melted since
England lost you;-late to learn
Worth that never can return;
Learned to know you as you were,
Known, till then, alone to Her!
Luminous as sun at noon,
Tender as the midnight moon,
Steadfast as the steered-by star,
Wise as Time and Silence are:
Deaf to vain-belittling lie,
Deaf to gibing jealousy;
Thinking only of the goal,
And, like every lofty soul,
Scanning with a far-off smile
The revilings of the vile.

Yes, He too died for England! thence withdrawn
Dim to that undiscoverable land
Where our lost loved ones dwell with wistful eyes,
And lips that look but speak not. . . . But away!
Away from these soft-whispering waves that make
A dulcet dirge around the new-delved grave,
To bluff East-Anglia, where on wind-swept lawns
The sanguine crocus peeps from underground
To feel the sun and only finds the snow;
And, whinnying on the norland blast, the surge
Leaps against iron coast with iron hoof,
As though the hosts of Denmark foamed afresh,
Caparisoned for ravin! And I see
A cradle, not a coffin, and therein
Another Child to England; and, veiled Fate
Over it bent with deep-divining gaze,
And with oracular lips, like nurse inspired,
Foretelling the fair Future.

``Another Albert shalt Thou be, so known,
So known, so honoured, and His name shall stand
The sponsor to your spotlessness, until
Dawns the full day when, conscious of your soul,
Your soul, your self, and that high mission laid
On all of such begetting, you may seize
The sceptre of your will, and, thus-wise armed
Against the sirens of disloyal sense,
Like to your pure progenitor abide
In God's stern presence, and surrender never
That last prerogative of all your race,
To live and die for England!''


Scheme A xxbxcxxdeF A xxxgxbhijkexxF A lmxxxnF ooppqqrr xxxxxmxxsxxbxxxxxxt uuddllvvwwxsxxhh xixjxpxtkxxxsfxnxl xicxxxxxglea
Poetic Form
Metre 1111110 111 1100110101 110100101 0101010101 1011010111 11010010111 1100110101 11111101 0101110101 100111001 1111110 111 11010011101 010000101110 0111010111 1111100101 1001010101 1111111111 11001000101 0101011101 010111111 1111010101 110110111 0111010111 100111001 1111110 010 1111000101 1001010111 11010010111 110111101 01110011001 100111001 1010111 1110111 101011 1011101 1110111 1010111 0110111 10100111 1111110111 01111101 01010011110 01011111 0100111101 1000101001 1111010101 1101010111 1100110111 1101010101 0100111101 11010111 0111110111 111111111 0111110101 1001110101 1011110101 110110101 0100110101 100111 1111101 1011111 1110101 1111110 1110110 1001111 101011 110111 1110101 11101001 111100 1010101 01100101 1010111 01101 1111110101 11111 11011111101 0111111101 01111100111 0101010111 11110011111 010101110 1101010101 011010101 1011011101 110111101 1110011 0101010001 0101110011 1011110101 011111010 0100110 0101011111 111101111 01011101 1011110111 1111011101 1111010111 0101110111 0101010101 1111010001 01110001010 1101001111 1101110
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,032
Words 718
Sentences 25
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 1, 10, 1, 14, 1, 7, 8, 19, 16, 18, 12
Lines Amount 107
Letters per line (avg) 30
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 296
Words per stanza (avg) 65
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:35 min read
122

Alfred Austin

Alfred Austin DL was an English poet who was appointed Poet Laureate in 1896 upon the death of Alfred, Lord Tennyson. more…

All Alfred Austin poems | Alfred Austin Books

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