War poems

 / page 294 of 504 /
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from The Emigrants: A Poem

© Charlotte Turner Smith

[Disillusion with the French Revolution]


  So many years have passed,

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'Siena Mi Fe'; Disfecemi Maremma'

© Ezra Pound

Among the pickled foetuses and bottled bones,
Engaged in perfecting the catalogue,
I found the last scion of the
Senatorial families of Strasbourg, Monsieur Verog.

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Facing into It

© Hugo Williams

for Larry Levis


So it is here, then, after so long, and after all—

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The Yellowhammer's Nest

© John Clare

Just by the wooden brig a bird flew up,


Frit by the cowboy as he scrambled down

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The Song of a Prison

© Henry Lawson

’Tis a song of the weary warders, whom prisoners call “the screws”—
A class of men who I fancy would cleave to the “Evening News.”
They look after their treasures sadly. By the screw of their keys they are known,
And they screw them many times daily before they draw their own.

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Eclogue 4: Pollio

© Publius Vergilius Maro

Muses of Sicily, essay we now
A somewhat loftier task! Not all men love
Coppice or lowly tamarisk: sing we woods,
Woods worthy of a Consul let them be.

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To A Scientific Friend

© Horace Smith

You say 'tis plain that poets feign,

  And from the truth depart;

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Fame

© Marjorie Lowry Christie Pickthall

HAVE I played fellowship with night, to see

The allied armies break our gates at dawn

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The Sunken Garden

© Walter de la Mare

Speak not — whisper not;

Here bloweth thyme and bergamot;

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Unknown Girl in the Maternity Ward

© Anne Sexton

Child, the current of your breath is six days long. 

You lie, a small knuckle on my white bed; 

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To Sir George Howland Beaumont, Bart From the South-West Coast Or Cumberland 1811

© William Wordsworth

FAR from our home by Grasmere's quiet Lake,
From the Vale's peace which all her fields partake,
Here on the bleakest point of Cumbria's shore
We sojourn stunned by Ocean's ceaseless roar;

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The Pet-Lamb

© William Wordsworth

THE dew was falling fast, the stars began to blink;
I heard a voice; it said, "Drink, pretty creature, drink!"
And, looking o'er the hedge, before me I espied
A snow-white mountain-lamb with a Maiden at its side.

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Earlier Poems : Burial Of The Minnisink

© Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

On sunny slope and beechen swell,
The shadowed light of evening fell;
And, where the maple's leaf was brown,
With soft and silent lapse came down,
The glory, that the wood receives,
At sunset, in its golden leaves.

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A Une Femme

© Paul Verlaine

To you these lines for the consoling grace
Of your great eyes wherein a soft dream shines,
For your pure soul, all-kind!-to you these lines
From the black deeps of mine unmatched distress.

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Lisy's Parting With Her Cat

© James Thomson

The dreadful hour with leaden pace approached,

Lashed fiercely on by unrelenting fate,

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The Mariner's Cave

© Jean Ingelow

Once on a time there walked a mariner,
 That had been shipwrecked;-on a lonely shore,
And the green water made a restless stir,
 And a great flock of mews sped on before.
He had nor food nor shelter, for the tide
Rose on the one, and cliffs on the other side.

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The Magyar's New-Year-Eve

© Sydney Thompson Dobell

By Temèsvar I hear the clarions call:
The year dies. Let it die. It lived in vain.
Gun booms to gun along the looming wall,
Another year advances o'er the plain.
The Despot hails it from his bannered keep:
Ah, Tyrant, is it well to break a bondsman's sleep?

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An Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland, Considered as the Subject of Poetry

© William Taylor Collins

Home, thou return'st from Thames, whose Naiads long

  Have seen thee ling'ring, with a fond delay,

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Preface

© Wilfred Owen

  This book is not about heroes. English Poetry is not yet fit to speak

  of them. Nor is it about deeds or lands, nor anything about glory, honour,

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from The Shepheardes Calender: April

© Edmund Spenser

THENOT  & HOBBINOLL
Tell me good Hobbinoll, what garres thee greete?
What? hath some Wolfe thy tender Lambes ytorne?
Or is thy Bagpype broke, that soundes so sweete?
Or art thou of thy loved lasse forlorne?