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Housman’s poem combines multiple genres. It’s short and expresses personal feelings, so it’s a lyric. As the poem mourns a dead person, it’s an elegy. The speaker directly addresses the athlete, which makes the work read like a letter or an epistolary poem. Viewed through the context of Housman’s sexuality and relationship with Moses Jackson, the poem becomes a love poem.
Although the speaker doesn’t divulge identifying information, it’s practical to think of the speaker as male. The poem is a part of the collection A Shropshire Lad, which indicates that the poem details the experiences of a boy or young man from Shropshire, England. Peter Parker refers to the speakers in the collection as a “generic Lad” (Line 10). More so, assigning the speaker in the poem a male gender adds multiple twists and complicates longstanding tropes about women and men.
The speaker is enamored with the young athlete in the title, and the athlete’s death compels the speaker to write the poem. The speaker engages in a dialogue with the dead man—an indication of intimacy or closeness. At the same time, the speaker remains vague about the nature of his relationship with the athlete.
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By A. E. Housman
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