Hi Honora,
Absolutely agree the first line is not your classic ip The first word BRACED is obviously meant to be stressed. Your scanning is exactly like mine - she seems to be using a trochaic foot . According to Bygraves (Approaching Poetry) this is done by poets to vary the rhythm. But I think that Baillie deliberately breaks the rules in the first word - maybe to hint that this is not a standard hearth and home God/Country type poem. If you are losing the plot then so am I!
Voice? Well it depends doesnt it. If you see the poem as a kind of Eulogy of the British Army (and you can easily read it this way) then the voice would be admiring - awed by the horse and the serenity of the great British soldier who dares to mount him.
If on the other hand you read the poem as satiric -( have you read all the threads yet!!! ) you'll see that some of us think the poem was anti war so the voice is satirical - and its up to you prove it - think slant lines - odd rhyming and so on -
I found this essay about another of her poems
Baillie's Ahalya Baee is a combination of authority and domesticity far superior to the warring rulers around her. She represents what may be assessed as the epitome of womanhood for Baillie, but she is ultimately a victim in the patriarchal arena of war and confirms that women's commitment to sustaining life directly contrasts with men's engagement in war and violence. In Baillie's conflict of genders, man prevails in the physical world, but woman prevails in the spiritual—according to this feminist octogenarian, the sublime state'
Ref
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Metaphor? I see her description of the horse as a metaphor for a weapon.
Sorry about the rough reference very busy rushing trying to get it in by tomorrow! Good luck
ginnyfly