The Boar of the Year (1884)
by Rudyard Kipling
4239387The Boar of the Year1884Rudyard Kipling

In the shade of the trees by the lunch-tent
the old Haileyburian sat,—
A full fourteen-stone in the saddle,
and the best of hard riders at that,—
And he shouted aloud as we passed him:
"I'll wait till the claret-cup cools.
There's a sounder broke loose in the open!
Ride, boys, for the love of your Schools!"

Bull-huge in the mists of the morn
at the head of his sounder he stood—
Our quarry—and watched us awhile,
and we thirsted aloud for his blood;
Then over the brawn of his shoulder
looked back as we galloped more near—
Then fled for the far-away cover;
and we followed the Boar of the Year!

There was Cheltenham perched on an Arab—
so rich are these thrice-born R.E.'s;
Then Rugby—his mount was a Waler,
and a couple of O.U.S.C.s,
And the rest of the field followed after.
They were older and wiser, perhaps—
For we flew over tats at the nullahs,
but they scrambled through by the gaps.

Away like a bird went the Arab—
head and tail in the air, which is wrong:
For a pig-sticker worthy his salt
looks down as he gallops along;
And the Arab was new to the business.
What wonder that Cheltenham fell
In the grip of a buffalo-wallow,
and sat down to rest him a spell?
Then Rugby shot forward the first
of us three, for to reason it stands
That a coachy Artillery charger
has the legs of a mere fourteen-hands.

But he jinked, and the Waler went wide;
but the country-breds wheeled and we flew
O'er the treacherous black-cotton furrows—
spears up, riding all that we knew.
Now a beast with a mouth like a brickbat
can't turn to a turn of the wrist—
And the Waler took furlongs to turn in;
and the rest of the run Rugby missed.
So we shed him and spread him and left him,
after manifold jinkings and chouses,
And the issue was narrowed to this:
"Ride, boys, for the love of your Houses!"

Dull-white on the slate of his hide
ran a spear-scar from shoulder to chine:
And a pig that is marked by the spear
is seldom the sweetest of swine.
When he stopped in the shade of the reh-grass
that fringes the river-bed's marge,
The lift of his rust-red back-bristles
had warned us: Look out for the charge!

And we got it! Right-wheel, best foot foremost—
with a quick sickle sweep of the head
That missed the off-hock of my pony
and tore through a tussock instead,
He made for the next horse's belly—
the jungle-pig's deadliest trick—
And he caught the spear full in the shoulder,
and the bamboo broke short at the nick:
Then the prettiest mare in the Province
let out with her ever-quick heels,
And the sound of the Ancient his death-grunt
was drowned in her feminine squeals!

And which of the Houses got first-spear?
With sorrow unfeigned be it said,
I jabbed at his quarters and missed, and—
I rode for the Black and the Red;
And he for the Black and the Yellow,
and his was the first and last spear
That ended the hunt by the river,
and won you the Boar of the Year.

So we drank in the shade of the lunch-tent
to the Barrack that stands by the Sea—
We drank to the health of its fellows—
to all who have been and may be.
And Cheltenham joined in the chorus
and Rugby re-echoed the cheer
On the day that we rode for the College,
and won you the Boar of the Year!

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in 1884, before the cutoff of January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1936, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 87 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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