War poems

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As A Strong Bird On Pinious Free

© Walt Whitman

. As a strong bird on pinions free,
  Joyous, the amplest spaces heavenward cleaving,
  Such be the thought I'd think to-day of thee, America,
  Such be the recitative I'd bring to-day for thee.

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His Youth

© Wilcox Ella Wheeler

Dying? I am not dying. Are you mad?
You think I need to ask for heavenly grace?
\I\ think \you\ are a fiend, who would be glad
To see me struggle in death's cold embrace.

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Idyll VII. Harvest-Home

© Theocritus

  He spake and paused; and thereupon spake I.
  "I too, friend Lycid, as I ranged the fells,
  Have learned much lore and pleasant from the Nymphs,
  Whose fame mayhap hath reached the throne of Zeus.
  But this wherewith I'll grace thee ranks the first:
  Thou listen, since the Muses like thee well.

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Riddles By Dr. Swift And His Friends

© Jonathan Swift

FROM Venus born, thy beauty shows;
But who thy father, no man knows:
Nor can the skilful herald trace
The founder of thy ancient race;

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Wine, Women, And Song

© Eugene Field

Ovarus mine,

  Plant thou the vine

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The King's Job

© Rudyard Kipling

The Tudor Monarchy


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Fit The Second - The Bellman's Speech

© Lewis Carroll

"What's the good of Mercator's North Poles and Equators,
Tropics, Zones, and Meridian Lines?"
So the Bellman would cry: and the crew would reply
"They are merely conventional signs!

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Andrew Rykman’s Prayer

© John Greenleaf Whittier

Andrew Rykman's dead and gone;
You can see his leaning slate
In the graveyard, and thereon
Read his name and date.

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Dedication

© Algernon Charles Swinburne

THE SEA gives her shells to the shingle,

  The earth gives her streams to the sea;

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Safari, Rift Valley by Roy Jacobstein: American Life in Poetry #116 Ted Kooser, U.S. Poet Laureate 2

© Ted Kooser

It's the oldest kind of story: somebody ventures deep into the woods and comes back with a tale. Here Roy Jacobstein returns to America to relate his experience on a safari to the place believed by archaeologists to be the original site of human life. And against this ancient backdrop he closes with a suggestion of the brevity of our lives.


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The Last Bison

© Charles Mair

A gentle vale, with rippling aspens clad,
Yet open to the breeze, invited rest.
So there I lay, and watched the sun's fierce beams
Reverberate in wreathed ethereal flame;
Or gazed upon the leaves which buzzed o'erhead,
Like tiny wings in simulated flight.

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Three Verse Passages From A Prose Meditation

© Thomas Parnell

On verdurd trees ye silver blossoms grow
Whose leaves atop their perfect whiteness show
& faintly streak with stains of red below
The western breeze steales ore ye shady grove
to sigh near roses as insnard by love.

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Recollection

© Ada Cambridge

A wave-worn boulder, with green sea-moss wrapping
 A silken mantle o'er its jagged sides;
And silvery, seething waters softly lapping
 Through gulfs and channels hollow'd by the tides:

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The Bakchesarian Fountain

© Alexander Pushkin


Has treason scaled the harem's wall,
Whose height might treason's self appal,
And slavery's daughter fled his power,
To yield her to the daring Giaour?

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Sonnet 76: She Comes, And Straight Therewith

© Sir Philip Sidney

She comes, and straight therewith her shining twins do move
Their rays to me, who in her tedious absence lay
Benighted in cold woe; but now appears my day,
The only light of joy, the only warmth of love.

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Poem For The Two Hundred And Fiftieth Anniversary Of The Founding Of Harvard College

© Oliver Wendell Holmes

Thou whose bold flight would leave earth's vulgar crowds,
And like the eagle soar above the clouds,
Must feel the pang that fallen angels know
When the red lightning strikes thee from below!

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A Panegyric Of The Dean In The Person Of A Lady In The North

© Jonathan Swift

Resolved my gratitude to show,
Thrice reverend Dean, for all I owe,
Too long I have my thanks delay'd;
Your favours left too long unpaid;

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Deborah

© Thomas Parnell

O King subdu'd! O Woman born to fame!
O Wake my fancy for the glorious theme,
O wake my fancy with the sense of praise,
O wake with warblings of triumphant lays.
The Land you rise in sultry suns invade,
But where you rise to sing you'le find a shade.

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The Curtain

© Gamaliel Bradford

Others may seem gay and certain,
Steering one unbroken line.
But lift up the heart's dim curtain,
It might prove as frail as mine.

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The Year Clock

© William Barnes

We zot bezide the leafy wall,
Upon the bench at evenfall,
While aunt led off our minds wrom ceare
Wi' veairy teales, I can't tell where,