Analysis of The Vanguard



They say, in all kindness, I’m out of the hunt—
Too old and too deaf to be sent to the Front.
A scribbler of stories, a maker of songs,
To the fireside and armchair my valour belongs!
Yet in campaigns all hopeless, in bitterest strife,
I have been at the Front all the days of my life.
Oh, your girl feels a princess, your people are proud,
As you march down the street, ’midst the cheers of the crowd;
And the Nation’s behind you and cloudless your sky,
And you come back to Honour, or gloriously die;
While for each thing that brightens, and each thing that cheers,
I have starved in the trenches these forty long years.

The cities were silent, the people were glum,
No sound of a bugle, no tap of a drum;
Our enemies mighty and Parliaments sour,
Our Land’s lovers few, and no Man of the Hour.
The Girl turned her nose up (maybe ’twas before),
And they voted us Cracked when we marched to the war.

Our army was small and ’twas scattered afar,
And our headquarters down where the Poor People are.
But I knew the great hearts of the Jims and the Bills,
And we signalled by wireless as old as the hills.
There were songs that could reach to our furthermost wing,
And Sorrow and Poverty taught me to sing.

Our War Hymn the war hymn that ever prevails—
Oh, we sang it of old when we marched from Marseilles!
And our army traditions are cherished with pride
In streets and in woods where we triumphed, or died;
Where, rebel or loyal, by farmhouse and town,
The chorus waxed faint as they volleyed us down.

No V.C. comes to us, no rest nor release,
Though hardest of all is this fighting in peace.
Small honour to wife or to daughter or son,
Though noblest of all are the deeds that are done.
But we never are conquered, we never can die,
For we live through the ages, my army and I!


Scheme AABBCCDDEEFF GGHHII XHJJKK XXLLMM NNOOEE
Poetic Form
Metre 11011011101 11011111101 01011001011 1010011101 100111001001 111101101111 111101011011 111101101101 001001101011 011111110001 111111001111 111001011011 01001001001 11101011101 1010010010010 1011010111010 01101110101 011011111101 101011011001 010101101101 111011101001 011011011101 10111111011 01001001111 101101111001 1111111111010 0101001011011 01001111011 1101101101 0101111111 1111111101 11011111001 1111111011 11011101111 111011011011 111101011001
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 1,772
Words 343
Sentences 17
Stanzas 5
Stanza Lengths 12, 6, 6, 6, 6
Lines Amount 36
Letters per line (avg) 38
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 275
Words per stanza (avg) 68
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:43 min read
35

Henry Lawson

 · 1867 · Grenfell

Henry Lawson 17 June 1867 - 2 September 1922 was an Australian writer and poet Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period more…

All Henry Lawson poems | Henry Lawson Books

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