To An Athlete Dying Young By A. E. Housman

Improved Essays
Glory is fleeting. This expression means no matter how popular or famous someone gets, their fame and glory do not last. According to A. E. Housman’s, “To an Athlete Dying Young”, he illustrates how precious life is and how people tend to remember public figures of great promise that dies young. Housman’s “To an Athlete Dying Young” uses metaphor throughout the entire poem to illustrate the Athlete’s glory and his view on death. The poem reveals the concept of dying at the peak of their glory, lives forever in the minds of people who remember the athlete at their prime time. Athletes during their prime time are usually faster, energetic, and spontaneous. Hence, people will recognize the Athlete’s fame and glory. But life in later years …show more content…
In the introduction, the athlete wins the race, and the townspeople carry him home on their shoulder, while everyone cheers for him. Like what most teams do when they celebrate their win. Housman uses alliteration as a figure of speech to capture the audience’s attention. For example, in line 1, “The time you won your town the race.” And line 5, road all runners.” Second through the fifth stanza, Housman uses metaphor as a figure of speech. He uses metaphors on: Line 8, “Stiller town”, he compares the cemetery to a town. Line 10, “Fields where glory does not stay”, compares the glory to a person that leaves the field. Lastly, line 13, “Eyes the shady night has shut”, compares the fame to an athlete. In those stanzas, Houseman explains why the athlete is thought to be “smart” to die young before his glory has the chance to fade. He leaves behind an unchallenged cup, where the award has not been won by anyone after his race. The word “race” in this poem has more than one meaning. Race could mean running in a sport, or trying to get things done within a given time frame, or trying to get things done before death. In between the lines, he wants the audience to think that as people grow older, our lives gets dull and tiresome. Therefore, it is “smart” to die before his glory ends. He illustrates that the laurel (the symbol of victory) fades faster than the rose (a symbol of a life span on a living …show more content…
Some young people who achieve glory, but learns it is too late, overestimates its importance. Maybe, the only way a person can capture fame and glory, and make it last, is to die young after achieving greatness; based on the Housman poem. Housman’s theme was an unexpected death which is uncertain. The contradiction shows that while life is unstable, short, and temporary, the poem reflected the ideal of the certainty in the world. Robert Hayden’s “Those Winter Sundays” is about starting a coal furnace on a cold morning and shining a pair of shoes, but the son’s regret that he never took the time to thank his father. Hayden used metonymy as a substitution of the name of an attribute for that of the thing meant. It details the father’s tireless efforts at providing for his family with little regard for himself. Hayden presented the memories of how his father helped him, expressed his love and concerns for him though his actions. Like our parents, they did the same for us. They bathe us, fed us, and placed a roof over our heads. But once in a while, we took advantage of it, and forgot to appreciate and say thank you to our parents. Maybe that’s how the main character feels in the

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Hayden’s poem “Those Winter Sundays” the speaker is a grown up man who reminds on his childhood relationship with his father. The speaker feels like he is divided in two; the child who is afraid of his dad and in the other hand, the adult who looks back at him with love, appreciation, and understanding. As an adult, he recognized his father’s job, in and out of his home as a form of love. He now sees it, because he is a gown up and is completely matured. The speaker is telling us that his father every Sunday get up early to light fires in the fireplace to warm up their home.…

    • 378 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Athlete Dying Young Poem

    • 442 Words
    • 2 Pages

    “To an Athlete Dying Young” & “Ex-Basketball Player” In Both, “To an Athlete dying Young” and “Ex basketball player”, We experience several poetic devices that compare and contrast eachother in these fairly similar poems. In the poem written by John Updike, “Ex-Basketball Player”, Flick a fictional character is stuck in a loop and his daunting past wrecks his current future. In this poem flicks past shows a young basketball player is praised for setting several records and being a country legend, but when his renown fame dissipates he is left with nothing to do, due to his lack of focus in high school and determination to be the best player.…

    • 442 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The speaker’s anger and guilt are revealed in the first two stanzas. However, Hayden’s use of the past tense and clear references to time suggest that, eventually, the speaker reaches a new point of view and expresses a forgiveness for his father.…

    • 616 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Sports both provide insights to people’s character as you get to see how they handle the threat of utter defeat or the joy of winning. In these quintessential moments of competition, athletes are raw and vulnerable, giving the viewer an insight into their true character. Novak also argues that sports show people their limits. I also agree with this, as there is a time in everyone’s life where they think they have the faintest of chances of going pro.…

    • 560 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the biography Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer, Chris McCandless goes into the Alaskan wilderness to discover himself and true happiness. The authors show the different meanings and versions of dignified death by connecting the consequences of the tragic hero to the flaws in distinct ways. In Sophocles’ Antigone,…

    • 958 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Ex basketball player essay In the poem “Ex basketball” by John White the use of nouns,simile’s, diction, and the tone all contribute to the. The poem is about an man that had all the glory and after high school and it also tell us how great he was at basketball and he has the county record of three hundred ninety points total and the narrator tells about a time that he bucketed thirty eight or forty in one game and they use an omtamatopeia and say his hands where like birds in one game then they say the only thing his hands are doing now is pumping gas,checks oil, and changes flats. They also said that he was tall standing over the idiot pump he also hangs around Mae’s luncheonette and plays pinball and now he smokes those thin kind of cigars…

    • 229 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The child-parent relationship is, perhaps, the most foundational and important relationship that any human will ever have, and as such many literary works over the centuries have examined this relationship. The two poems, “First Thanksgiving,” by Sharon Olds and “Winter Stars,” by Larry Levis are examples of two different ways that such a literary work can be done. These two poems have numerous parallels, although their similarities only serve to highlight their differences, which can be seen in the imagery the poets use, their use of memories which are superficially disconnected from the theme of the poem, and the reunions that are the topic of both poems; these differences ultimately create two poems which paint diametrically opposed pictures…

    • 1240 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    He is able to convince the reader that the way we look at African Americans in sports is wrong and it is primarily our own faults. At the end of the reading Gates finally says that, “society as a whole bears responsibility—Until colleges stop using blacks as cannon fodder in the big-business wars of…

    • 1166 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    High school is seen as some of the best years of your life. High school is a time full of laughs, drama, fun and friends. Some students main focus are their academics because they realize that the knowledge gained will carry with them forever, however, others focus on clubs and sports. In the poem, “To An Athlete Dying Young” by AE Housman, one athlete’s glory obtained in high school remained for the majority of his life. However, in the poem “Ex-Basketball Player” by John Updike, as the athlete's age grew, his fame demolished.…

    • 550 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The crack of a bat. Uproar from the crowd. Fans cheering as their favorite player makes the shot that irrefutably leads the team to victory. These are the sounds you will likely hear in any stadium or field as you watch the players coalesce and exhibit the athleticism that they have spent their entire lives honing. In today’s society, sports have become an indispensable element in aspects that make our nation unparalleled - uniting and defining us by transcending nationalities, backgrounds, and ethnicities, and instead bringing forth the immense talent of the legends and heroes that have shaped our understanding of the significance of sports - from Jim Thorpe, Michael Jordan, and Muhammad Ali, to Jackie Robinson, Babe Ruth, and LeBron James.…

    • 1530 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    As if I am proud of my thirty-fourth-place”. This was important because even though Josh did not win he could still be a winner. He made it further than anyone thought that he could. He made it to the olympics and achieved his dream and raced as hard and fast as he could. “Never let yourself look like a fool.…

    • 1245 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    A father’s love for his son is not always seen. In the poem, “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden, the narrator is talking about how he regrets not realizing and thanking his father for all the suffering and good that his father has done for him. The author uses imagery and diction to portray a better image about the narrator's regret for not noticing his father’s good deeds sooner. One of the more commonly used literary element in the poem “Those Winter Sundays” is imagery. The author uses imagery to emphasize the regrets that the speaker has about his father.…

    • 972 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Both Theodore Roethke and Robert Hayden are known for having daddy issues... The tones used and the attitudes conveyed while they address them in their works, however, is juxtaposing. Their choices in speakers make all the difference. Roethke speaks through his child persona, desperately trying to slip back into that beloved childhood memory of his papa waltzing him to bed. Hayden is also recalling a childhood memory but he is doing so from a distance, as an adult looking back.…

    • 994 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Modernist Poetry Essay

    • 975 Words
    • 4 Pages

    By the second verse, the runner is being carried “[s]houlder-high” (6) once more, but this time in a coffin. By establishing that picture of being carried in triumph early in the poem, the speaker draws a connection between death and victory. But why was Hardy’s sinking ship so macabre and Housman’s dying athlete so exultant? In both cases the glory was profound, the obstacle invincible, and the outcome absolute. But the speaker of Housman’s poem chooses to move his focus from what has been lost to what has been gained.…

    • 975 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Dylan Thomas’s 1951 poem “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night” explores the inevitable mortality that plagues mankind. Throughout the villanelle structure, the speaker leads the reader through his pleas of fighting against “that good night,” while the repeated refrains in alternating stanzas help to reinforce the ideas of not going “gentle” and “raging against” the dying light, instituting the idea that death is not something to succumb to. Not only does the poem explore how to face the inevitable, but Thomas also explores how a life should be lived by providing examples of men that have fought against death. “Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night” illuminates the relationship between life and death through its villanelle structure, as well…

    • 1453 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays