Death poems

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During the War

© Philip Levine

When my brother came home from war
he carried his left arm in a black sling
but assured us most of it was still there.
Spring was late, the trees forgot to leaf out.

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But in the Wine-presses the Human Grapes Sing not nor Dance

© William Blake

 They dance around the dying and they drink the howl and groan,
 They catch the shrieks in cups of gold, they hand them to one another:
  These are the sports of love, and these the sweet delights of amorous play,
  Tears of the grape, the death sweat of the cluster, the last sigh
  Of the mild youth who listens to the luring songs of Luvah.--

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Hymn to Science

© Mark Akenside

But first with thy resistless light,
Disperse those phantoms from my sight,
Those mimic shades of thee;
The scholiast's learning, sophist's cant,
The visionary bigot's rant,
The monk's philosophy.

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The Victory

© Anna Akhmatova

Over a pier, the first beacon inflamed --
The vanguard of other sea-rangers;
The mariner cried and bared his head;
He sailed with death beside and ahead
In seas, packed with furious dangers.

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The Exile’s Secret

© Oliver Wendell Holmes

Why tell each idle guess, each whisper vain?
Enough: the scorched and cindered beams remain.
He came, a silent pilgrim to the West,
Some old-world mystery throbbing in his breast;
Close to the thronging mart he dwelt alone;
He lived; he died. The rest is all unknown.

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Dancing on the Grave of a Son of a Bitch

© Diane Wakoski

Foreword to “Dancing on the Grave of a Son of a Bitch”
This poem is more properly a “dance poem” than a song or chant because the element of repetition is created by movements of language rather than duplicating words and sounds. However, it is in the spirit of ritual recitation that I wrote it/ a performance to drive away bad spirits perhaps.
The story behind the poem is this: a man and woman who have been living together for some time separate. Part of the pain of separation involves possessions which they had shared. They both angrily believe they should have what they want. She asks for some possession and he denies her the right to it. She replies that she gave him money for a possession which he has and therefore should have what she wants now. He replies that she has forgotten that for the number of years they lived together he never charged her rent and if he had she would now owe him $7,000.
She is appalled that he equates their history with a sum of money. She is even more furious to realize that this sum of money represents the entire rent on the apartment and implies that he should not have paid anything at all. She is furious. She kills him mentally. Once and for all she decides she is well rid of this man and that she shouldn’t feel sad at their parting. She decides to prove to herself that she’s glad he’s gone from her life. With joy she will dance on all the bad memories of their life together.

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Song Of Slaves In The Desert

© John Greenleaf Whittier

WHERE are we going? where are we going,
Where are we going, Rubee?
Lord of peoples, lord of lands,
Look across these shining sands,

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Hudibras: Part 3 - Canto III

© Samuel Butler

What made thee, when they all were gone,
And none but thou and I alone,
To act the Devil, and forbear
To rid me of my hellish fear?

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Money Won’t Change It (but time will take you on)

© Cornelius Eady

You’re rich, lady, hissed the young woman at 
My mother as she bent in her garden. 
Look at what you’ve got, and it was 
Too much, the collards and tomatoes, 
A man, however lousy, taking care 
of the bills.

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Song Of Four Faries

© John Keats

Salamander.
Sweet Dusketha! paradise!
Off, ye icy Spirits, fly!
Frosty creatures of the sky!

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Eternal Friendship

© Edgar Albert Guest

Who once has had a friend has found

The link 'twixt mortal and divine;

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Spring Snow

© Michael Rosen

A kind of counter-

blossoming, diversionary,

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Harmonic Du Soir

© Lord Alfred Douglas

Now is the hour when, swinging in the breeze,
Each flower, like a censer, sheds its sweet.
The air is full of scents and melodies,
O languorous waltz ! O swoon of dancing feet!

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The Two Elizabeths

© John Greenleaf Whittier

AMIDST Thuringia's wooded hills she dwelt,
A high-born princess, servant of the poor,
Sweetening with gracious words the food she dealt
To starving throngs at Wartburg's blazoned door.

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An Epitaph on S.P.

© Benjamin Jonson

A Child of Queen Elizabeth's Chapel


Weep with me, all you that read

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On The Death Of Mrs. Throckmorton's Bullfinch

© William Cowper

Ye Nymphs, if e'er your eyes were red
With tears o'er hapless favourites shed,
  Oh, share Maria's grief!
Her favourite, even in his cage,
(What will not hunger's cruel rage?)
  Assassined by a thief.

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Beyond The Potomac

© Paul Hamilton Hayne

THEY slept on the field which their valor had won,
But arose with the first early blush of the sun,
For they knew that a great deed remained to be done,
When they passed o'er the river.

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The House of Life: 41. Through Death to Love

© Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Howbeit athwart Death's imminent shade doth soar
 One Power, than flow of stream or flight of dove
 Sweeter to glide around, to brood above.
Tell me, my heart,—what angel-greeted door
Or threshold of wing-winnow'd threshing-floor
 Hath guest fire-fledg'd as thine, whose lord is Love?

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Paradise Lost : Book X.

© John Milton


Mean while the heinous and despiteful act

Of Satan, done in Paradise; and how