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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
SHEEPDOG TRIALS IN HYDE PARK; FOR ROBERT FROST, by CECIL DAY LEWIS Poem Explanation Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: A shepherd stands at one end of the arena Last Line: Controlled woolgathering is my work too Alternate Author Name(s): Blake, Nicolas Subject(s): Animals; Dogs; Shepherds & Sheperdesses | |||
A shepherd stands at one end of the arena. Five sheep are unpenned at the other. His dog runs out In a curve to behind them, fetches them straight to the shepherd, Then drives the flock round a triangular course Through a couple of gates and back to his master: two Must be sorted there from the flock, then all five penned. Gathering, driving away, shedding and penning Are the plain words for the miraculous game. An abstract game. What can the sheepdog make of such Simplified terrain?-no hills, dales, bogs, walls, tracks, Only a quarter-mile plain of grass, dumb crowds Like crowds on hoardings around it, and behind them Traffic or mounds of lovers and children playing. Well, the dog is no landscape-fancier: his whole concern Is with his master's whistle, and of course With the flock-sheep are sheep anywhere for him. The sheep are the chanciest element. Why, for instance, Go through this gate when there's on either side of it No wall or hedge but huge and viable space? Why not eat the grass instead of being pushed around it? Like a blob of quicksilver on a tilting board The flock erratically runs, dithers, breaks up, Is reassembled: their ruling idea is the dog; And behind the dog, though they know it not yet, is a shepherd. The shepherd knows that time is of the essence But haste calamitous. Between dog and sheep There is always an ideal distance, a perfect angle; But these are constantly varying, so the man Should anticipate each move through the dog, his medium. The shepherd is the brain behind the dog's brain, But his control of dog, like dog's of sheep, Is never absolute-that's the beauty of it. For beautiful it is. The guided missiles, The black-and-white angels follow each quirk and jink of The evasive sheep, play grandmother's-steps behind them, Freeze to the ground, or leap to head off a straggler Almost before it knows that it wants to stray, As if radar-controlled. But they are not machines- You can feel them feeling mastery, doubt, chagrin: Machines don't frolic when their job is done. What's needfully done in the solitude of sheep-runs- Those rough, real tasks become this stylized game, A demonstration of intuitive wit Kept natural by the saving grace of error. To lift, to fetch, to drive, to shed, to pen Are acts I recognize, with all they mean Of shepherding the unruly, for a kind of Controlled woolgathering is my work too | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BATTLE OF BRITAIN by CECIL DAY LEWIS BIRTHDAY POEM FOR THOMAS HARDY by CECIL DAY LEWIS FOR THE INVESTITURE by CECIL DAY LEWIS HAIL TEESSIDE! by CECIL DAY LEWIS O DREAMS, O DESTINATIONS by CECIL DAY LEWIS THE SITTING by CECIL DAY LEWIS THEN AND NOW by CECIL DAY LEWIS DEPARTURE IN THE DARK by CECIL DAY LEWIS MAPLE AND SUMACH by CECIL DAY LEWIS |
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