Originally posted by french frank
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The poet looks around him at Ludlow fair and sees hundreds of lads from all over, but among them "few that will carry their looks or their truth [presumably their youthful idealism or something like it] to the grave". That must mean that they'll get old and these things will fade away. These are the ones who won't die young. The "fortunate fellows" are those that will "die in their glory and never be old". The army reference has to be seen in a different light too. In 1896, Britain had a small, professional army. The mass recruitment drives didn't begin before the Second Boer War a couple of years later, and conscription wasn't introduced until 1916. So to an extent joining the army and serving in foreign parts was genuinely attractive to Victorian country lads, and a real option. Housman wrote several poems about just this (nos. 3, 4, 22 & 34 in A Shropshire Lad, for instance, as well as On the idle hill of summer, which GSKB set) but I can detect no concern at their plight - quite the opposite, in fact.
But this is - of course - my take on it. We simply can't imagine how differently the poem might have been viewed had WW1 not happened.
You smile upon your friend to-day,
To-day his ills are over;
You hearken to the lover's say,
And happy is the lover.
'Tis late to hearken, late to smile,
But better late than never:
I shall have lived a little while
Before I die forever.
Interestingly, only nine songs were sung at the first performance on May 16th 1911 in Oxford (On the idle hill of summer probably hadn't been written yet). But The lads in their hundreds had definitely been written, yet it wasn't sung (by Campbell McInnes accompanied by the composer). Nor was it included in the selection sung by Adrian Boult (accompanied by Hugh Allen) a few days later.
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