Analysis of The Man to Follow

William Henry Ogilvie 1869 (Scotland) – 1963



Apart from the crowd with its banter and mirth,
Sitting loose on his mare with an eye to the whins,
He has looked to his curb, he has tightened his girth,
He has marked out a place where the big double thins.
Here's a good one to follow,
To follow, to follow-
A good one to follow when business begins.
'Mid the murmur of meeting, the laugh and the joke,
'Mid the trampling of horses, the cheer and the rate,
He has caught the low whimper when Challenger spoke
And has seen the raised hat of the man by the gate.
He's the right one to follow,
To follow, to follow,
The right one to follow and trust with your fate.
When they tumble from covert, each hound giving tongue,
When they carry it, confident, over the plough,
When the hurrying Field down the headland is strung,
Here's the man for your money! You follow him now!
He's the right one to follow,
To follow, to follow,
So bundle and after him! Never mind how!
Ere the gay coffee-housers are into their stride
He is over the hedge with a trifle to spare
And down in his saddle and ready to ride,
For whoever may miss it he means to be there!
This right one to follow,
To follow, to follow,
This lean lashing lad on the bonny blood mare.
If you're riding a horse that can gallop and jump,
That can creep through a cat-hole or spread at a ditch,
If you don't mind a thorn-scratch, a bruise, or a bump,
A drain or a double and Devil care which,
Here's the right one to follow,
To follow, to follow-
The man that's a wizard, the mare that's a witch!


Scheme ababcCbdedeCCefgfgCCghihicCijkjkcCk
Poetic Form
Metre 01101111001 101111111101 111111111011 111101101101 1011110 110110 01111011001 101011001001 101011001001 111011011001 011011101101 1011110 110110 01111001111 111011011101 111011001001 10100110111 101111011011 1011110 110110 11001011011 10110110111 111001101011 01011001011 101011111111 111110 110110 11101101011 111001111001 111101111101 111101101101 01101001011 1011110 110110 01101001101
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 1,507
Words 293
Sentences 12
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 35
Lines Amount 35
Letters per line (avg) 33
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,148
Words per stanza (avg) 291
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:30 min read
80

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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