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Best Famous Be Afraid Be Very Afraid Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Be Afraid Be Very Afraid poems. This is a select list of the best famous Be Afraid Be Very Afraid poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Be Afraid Be Very Afraid poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of be afraid be very afraid poems.

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Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Funk

 When your marrer bone seems 'oller,
And you're glad you ain't no taller,
 And you're all a-shakin' like you 'ad the chills;
When your skin creeps like a pullet's,
And you're duckin' all the bullets,
 And you're green as gorgonzola round the gills;
When your legs seem made of jelly,
And you're squeamish in the belly,
 And you want to turn about and do a bunk:
For Gawd's sake, kid, don't show it!
Don't let your mateys know it --
 You're just sufferin' from funk, funk, funk.

Of course there's no denyin'
That it ain't so easy tryin'
 To grin and grip your rifle by the butt,
When the 'ole world rips asunder,
And you sees yer pal go under,
 As a bunch of shrapnel sprays 'im on the nut;
I admit it's 'ard contrivin'
When you 'ears the shells arrivin',
 To discover you're a bloomin' bit o' *****;
But, my lad, you've got to do it,
And your God will see you through it,
 For wot 'E 'ates is funk, funk, funk.

So stand up, son; look gritty,
And just 'um a lively ditty,
 And only be afraid to be afraid;
Just 'old yer rifle steady,
And 'ave yer bay'nit ready,
 For that's the way good soldier-men is made.
And if you 'as to die,
As it sometimes 'appens, why,
 Far better die a 'ero than a skunk;
A-doin' of yer bit,
And so -- to 'ell with it,
 There ain't no bloomin' funk, funk, funk.


Written by Dorothy Parker | Create an image from this poem

The Homebody

 There still are kindly things for me to know,
Who am afraid to dream, afraid to feel-
This little chair of scrubbed and sturdy deal,
This easy book, this fire, sedate and slow.
And I shall stay with them, nor cry the woe
Of wounds across my breast that do not heal;
Nor wish that Beauty drew a duller steel,
Since I am sworn to meet her as a foe.

It may be, when the devil's own time is done,
That I shall hear the dropping of the rain
At midnight, and lie quiet in my bed;
Or stretch and straighten to the yellow sun;
Or face the turning tree, and have no pain;
So shall I learn at last my heart is dead.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things