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POETRY: To an Athlete Dying Young Posted: 01 Jun 2010 09:00 AM PDT If you watched Meryl Streep in Out of Africa (circa 1985) or Krusty the Clown's retirement speech on the Simpsons, then you've heard this poem. It's a classic English poem titled To an Athlete Dying Young by A. E. Housman. In a way, it is controversial as it can be interpreted as "better to die in the glory of youth, rather than resting your laurels" which eventually wither away (as stated in the last stanza). I am sure Jesse Owens can relate as he struggled to find a job after a huge ticker tape parade in NYC! That's a pretty strong message to today's youth! One of the books that draws a similar parallel to youthful innocence and adulthood is The Catcher in the Rye, written by J.D. Salinger who died on January 27, 2010. That book is all about Holden Caulfield not wanting to grow up, and for good reasons. The events that take place in NYC is the reason many schools ban this book. For me, growing up in Canada, it was required reading in the 9th Grade. The Original MarathonThere's a lot of literature that runs parallels between Victory and Death. A good example is Pheidippides and the Marathon. Run 40 km (24 miles) in the heat with no shoes, say "Rejoice, We Conquer" to the King, and die. Legends are made from stories like this. By dying young, you never grow up and stay in eternal life forever. Several decades ago, there was a survey study done by Dr. Gabe Mirkin asking over 100 athletes "Would you take a magic pill to guarantee an Olympic gold medal, but it could kill you in a year from now?" The number of "YES" will absolutely shock you. Over half said "yes". (Source here, pages 88-89) Then there was Flo-Jo. 4 medals in 1988 (3 Golds and one silver, but barely missing out on a 4th Gold in the 4×400m relay) and dies suddenly 10 years later. Now we have no proof if her drug allegation has any co-incidence to her early death. I feel terrible for her husband and children… no one should lose a life that early. But the questions surrounding her controversy never goes away… along with faulty wind reading meters. Here is that poem:
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