Work poems

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To the Right Honourable William, Earl of Dartmouth

© Phillis Wheatley

Hail, happy day, when, smiling like the morn,

Fair Freedom rose New-England to adorn:

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The War Budget

© Jessie Pope

To foot the bill it's only fair
That everyone should do their share,
And since we all are served the same,
Pay and look pleasant that's the game.

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The Lady Of La Garaye - Part I

© Caroline Norton

So, till the day when over Dinan's walls
The Autumn sunshine of my story falls;
And the guests bidden, gather for the chase,
And the smile brightens on the lovely face
That greets them in succession as they come
Into that high and hospitable home.

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One Hundred and Three

© Henry Lawson

They shut a man in the four-by-eight, with a six-inch slit for air,
Twenty-three hours of the twenty-four, to brood on his virtues there.
And the dead stone walls and the iron door close in as an iron band
On eyes that followed the distant haze far out on the level land.

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Cora

© Charles Harpur

The spring it came, with never a storm,
 And nine times came and went,
Till its whole spirit with her form
 In budding beauty blent.

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The Fishermen

© Emile Verhaeren

The spot is flaked with mist, that fills,
Thickening into rolls more dank,
The thresholds and the window-sills,
And smokes on every bank.

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New Morality

© George Canning


But say,-indignant does the Muse retire,
Her shrine deserted, and extinct its fire?
No pious hand to feed the sacred flame,
No raptured soul a Poet's charge to claim.

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Wages

© Norman Rowland Gale

My lass, when God

to suffer sent me,

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A Song Of Impossibilities

© Winthrop Mackworth Praed

LADY, I loved you all last year,

How honestly and well --

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Old Mother Laidinwool

© Rudyard Kipling

Old Mother Laidinwool had nigh twelve months been dead.
She heard the hops was doing well, an' so popped up her head
For  said  she:  "The  lads  I've picked  with  when  I  was young and fair,
They're bound to be  at hopping and  I'm bound to meet 'em  there!"

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Music's Duel

© Richard Crashaw

Now westward Sol had spent the richest beams

Of noon's high glory, when, hard by the streams

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Ulster 1912

© Rudyard Kipling

"Their webs shall not become garments, neither shall they cover themselves with their works: their works are works of inquity and the act of violence is in their hands." - Isaiah lix. 6.


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De Bell Of St. Michel

© William Henry Drummond

Go 'way, go 'way, don't ring no more, ole bell of Saint Michel,
For if you do, I can't stay here, you know dat very well,
No matter how I close ma ear, I can't shut out de soun',
It rise so high 'bove all de noise of dis beeg Yankee town.

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My Chinee Cook.

© James Brunton Stephens

THEY who say the bush is dull are not so very far astray,

For this eucalyptic cloisterdom is anything but gay;

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Pen-Y-GWRYDD: To Tom Hughes, Esq.,

© Charles Kingsley

There is no inn in Snowdon which is not awful dear,

Excepting Pen-y-gwrydd (you can't pronounce it, dear),

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Lara. A Tale

© George Gordon Byron

Proud Otho on the instant, reddening, threw
His glove on earth, and forth his sabre flew.
"The last alternative befits me best,
And thus I answer for mine absent guest."

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The Mountain Of The Lovers

© Paul Hamilton Hayne

I.
LOVE scorns degrees! the low he lifteth high,
The high he draweth down to that fair plain
Whereon, in his divine equality,

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Madonna Of The Evening Flowers

© Amy Lowell

Then I see you,
Standing under a spire of pale blue larkspur,
With a basket of roses on your arm.
You are cool, like silver,
And you smile.
I think the Canterbury bells are playing little tunes.

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'The Aeneid of Virgil: Book 6

© Publius Vergilius Maro

HE said, and wept; then spread his sails before  

The winds, and reach’d at length the Cumæan shore:  

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The Question Whither

© George Meredith

I

When we have thrown off this old suit,