Food poems

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Georgic 4

© Publius Vergilius Maro

Of air-born honey, gift of heaven, I now

Take up the tale. Upon this theme no less

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Legend

© Stephen Vincent Benet

The trees were sugared like wedding-cake
With a bright hoar frost, with a very cold snow,
When we went begging for Jesus' sake,
Penniless children, years ago.

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The Roman: A Dramatic Poem

© Sydney Thompson Dobell

SCENE I.
A Plain in Italy-an ancient Battle-field. Time, Evening.
Persons.-Vittorio Santo, a Missionary of Freedom. He has gone out, disguised as a Monk, to preach the Unity of Italy, the Overthrow of Austrian Domination, and the Restoration of a great Roman Republic.--A number of Youths and Maidens, singing as they dance. 'The Monk' is musing.
Enter Dancers.

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Of The Nature Of Things: Book VI - Part 03 - Extraordinary And Paradoxical Telluric Phenomena

© Lucretius

In chief, men marvel nature renders not

Bigger and bigger the bulk of ocean, since

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Otho The Great - Act II

© John Keats

SCENE I. An Ante-chamber in the Castle.

Enter LUDOLPH and SIGIFRED.

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England! The Time Is Come When Thou Should’st Wean

© William Wordsworth

ENGLAND! the time is come when thou should'st wean
Thy heart from its emasculating food;
The truth should now be better understood;
Old things have been unsettled; we have seen

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Winter Cares

© Kristijonas Donelaitis

"Of course, the fire consumes a lot of kindling wood,
When we warm up the house or cook a boiling pot.
Just think what kind of food we'd have to eat each day,
If there were no wood to burn and no helpful fire.
We'd have naught but sodden, sour swill to eat, like swine.

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Sensuality

© Kenneth Slessor

FEELING hunger and cold, feeling
Food, feeling fire, feeling
Pity and pain, tasting
Time in a kiss, tasting

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Verses On A Cat

© Percy Bysshe Shelley

I.
A cat in distress,
Nothing more, nor less;
Good folks, I must faithfully tell ye,

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The Ring And The Book - Chapter VI - Giuseppe Caponsacchi

© Robert Browning

Again the morning found me. “I will work,
“Tie down my foolish thoughts. Thank God so far!
“I have saved her from a scandal, stopped the tongues
“Had broken else into a cackle and hiss
“Around the noble name. Duty is still
“Wisdom: I have been wise.” So the day wore.

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Marmion: Canto III. - The Inn

© Sir Walter Scott

I.

The livelong day Lord Marmion rode:

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The Mind’s Diet

© Oliver Wendell Holmes

No life worth naming ever comes to good
If always nourished on the selfsame food;
The creeping mite may live so if he please,
And feed on Stilton till he turns to cheese,
But cool Magendie proves beyond a doubt,
If mammals try it, that their eyes drop out.

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Kinu Goala’s Alley – English Translation

© Rabindranath Tagore

This is the alley

Named after Kinu the milkman.

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Griselda: A Society Novel In Verse - Chapter II

© Wilfrid Scawen Blunt

'Twas thus she comforted her soul. And then,
She had found a friend, a phoenix among men,
Which made it easier to compound with life,
Easier to be a woman and a wife.

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Natural Theology

© Andrew Lang

So Qing, King Nqsha's Bushman hunter, spoke,
  Beside the camp-fire, by the fountain fair,
When all were weary, and soft clouds of smoke
  Were fading, fragrant, in the twilit air:
And suddenly in each man's heart there woke
  A pang, a sacred memory of prayer.

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Expostulation

© William Cowper

Why weeps the muse for England? What appears

In England's case to move the muse to tears?

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Virgils Gnat

© Edmund Spenser

And whatsoeuer other flowre of worth,
And whatso other hearb of louely hew
The iouyous Spring out of the ground brings forth,
To cloath her selfe in colours fresh and new;
He planted there, and reard a mount of earth,
In whose high front was writ as doth ensue.

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Tired

© Augusta Davies Webster

No not to-night, dear child; I cannot go;
I'm busy, tired; they knew I should not come;
you do not need me there. Dear, be content,
and take your pleasure; you shall tell me of it.
There, go to don your miracles of gauze,
and come and show yourself a great pink cloud.

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Give Your Heart To The Hawks

© Robinson Jeffers

I

The apples hung until a wind at the equinox,

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Of The Nature Of Things: Book II - Part 04 - Absence Of Secondary Qualities

© Lucretius

Next, they who deem that feeling objects can
From feeling objects be create, and these,
In turn, from others that are wont to feel