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Best Famous Bromide Poems

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

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Written by Edwin Arlington Robinson | Create an image from this poem

Sainte-Nitouche

 Though not for common praise of him, 
Nor yet for pride or charity, 
Still would I make to Vanderberg 
One tribute for his memory: 

One honest warrant of a friend
Who found with him that flesh was grass— 
Who neither blamed him in defect 
Nor marveled how it came to pass; 

Or why it ever was that he— 
That Vanderberg, of all good men,
Should lose himself to find himself, 
Straightway to lose himself again. 

For we had buried Sainte-Nitouche, 
And he had said to me that night: 
“Yes, we have laid her in the earth,
But what of that?” And he was right. 

And he had said: “We have a wife, 
We have a child, we have a church; 
’T would be a scurrilous way out 
If we should leave them in the lurch.

“That’s why I have you here with me 
To-night: you know a talk may take 
The place of bromide, cyanide, 
Et cetera. For heaven’s sake, 

“Why do you look at me like that?
What have I done to freeze you so? 
Dear man, you see where friendship means 
A few things yet that you don’t know; 

“And you see partly why it is 
That I am glad for what is gone:
For Sainte-Nitouche and for the world 
In me that followed. What lives on— 

“Well, here you have it: here at home— 
For even home will yet return. 
You know the truth is on my side,
And that will make the embers burn. 

“I see them brighten while I speak, 
I see them flash,—and they are mine! 
You do not know them, but I do: 
I know the way they used to shine.

“And I know more than I have told 
Of other life that is to be: 
I shall have earned it when it comes, 
And when it comes I shall be free. 

“Not as I was before she came,
But farther on for having been 
The servitor, the slave of her— 
The fool, you think. But there’s your sin— 

“Forgive me!—and your ignorance: 
Could you but have the vision here
That I have, you would understand 
As I do that all ways are clear 

“For those who dare to follow them 
With earnest eyes and honest feet. 
But Sainte-Nitouche has made the way
For me, and I shall find it sweet. 

“Sweet with a bitter sting left?—Yes, 
Bitter enough, God knows, at first; 
But there are more steep ways than one 
To make the best look like the worst;

“And here is mine—the dark and hard, 
For me to follow, trust, and hold: 
And worship, so that I may leave 
No broken story to be told. 

“Therefore I welcome what may come,
Glad for the days, the nights, the years.”— 
An upward flash of ember-flame 
Revealed the gladness in his tears. 

“You see them, but you know,” said he, 
“Too much to be incredulous:
You know the day that makes us wise, 
The moment that makes fools of us. 

“So I shall follow from now on 
The road that she has found for me: 
The dark and starry way that leads
Right upward, and eternally. 

“Stumble at first? I may do that; 
And I may grope, and hate the night; 
But there’s a guidance for the man 
Who stumbles upward for the light,

“And I shall have it all from her, 
The foam-born child of innocence. 
I feel you smiling while I speak, 
But that’s of little consequence; 

“For when we learn that we may find
The truth where others miss the mark, 
What is it worth for us to know 
That friends are smiling in the dark? 

“Could we but share the lonely pride 
Of knowing, all would then be well;
But knowledge often writes itself 
In flaming words we cannot spell. 

“And I, who have my work to do, 
Look forward; and I dare to see, 
Far stretching and all mountainous,
God’s pathway through the gloom for me.” 

I found so little to say then 
That I said nothing.—“Say good-night,” 
Said Vanderberg; “and when we meet 
To-morrow, tell me I was right.

“Forget the dozen other things 
That you have not the faith to say; 
For now I know as well as you 
That you are glad to go away.” 

I could have blessed the man for that,
And he could read me with a smile: 
“You doubt,” said he, “but if we live 
You’ll know me in a little while.” 

He lived; and all as he foretold, 
I knew him—better than he thought:
My fancy did not wholly dig 
The pit where I believed him caught. 

But yet he lived and laughed, and preached, 
And worked—as only players can: 
He scoured the shrine that once was home
And kept himself a clergyman. 

The clockwork of his cold routine 
Put friends far off that once were near; 
The five staccatos in his laugh 
Were too defensive and too clear;

The glacial sermons that he preached 
Were longer than they should have been; 
And, like the man who fashioned them, 
The best were too divinely thin. 

But still he lived, and moved, and had
The sort of being that was his, 
Till on a day the shrine of home 
For him was in the Mysteries:— 

“My friend, there’s one thing yet,” said he, 
“And one that I have never shared
With any man that I have met; 
But you—you know me.” And he stared 

For a slow moment at me then 
With conscious eyes that had the gleam, 
The shine, before the stroke:—“You know
The ways of us, the way we dream: 

“You know the glory we have won, 
You know the glamour we have lost; 
You see me now, you look at me,— 
And yes, you pity me, almost;

“But never mind the pity—no, 
Confess the faith you can’t conceal; 
And if you frown, be not like one 
Of those who frown before they feel. 

“For there is truth, and half truth,—yes,
And there’s a quarter truth, no doubt; 
But mine was more than half.… You smile? 
You understand? You bear me out? 

“You always knew that I was right— 
You are my friend—and I have tried
Your faith—your love.”—The gleam grew small, 
The stroke was easy, and he died. 

I saw the dim look change itself 
To one that never will be dim; 
I saw the dead flesh to the grave,
But that was not the last of him. 

For what was his to live lives yet: 
Truth, quarter truth, death cannot reach; 
Nor is it always what we know 
That we are fittest here to teach.

The fight goes on when fields are still, 
The triumph clings when arms are down; 
The jewels of all coronets 
Are pebbles of the unseen crown; 

The specious weight of loud reproof
Sinks where a still conviction floats; 
And on God’s ocean after storm 
Time’s wreckage is half pilot-boats; 

And what wet faces wash to sight 
Thereafter feed the common moan:—
But Vanderberg no pilot had, 
Nor could have: he was all alone. 

Unchallenged by the larger light 
The starry quest was his to make; 
And of all ways that are for men,
The starry way was his to take. 

We grant him idle names enough 
To-day, but even while we frown 
The fight goes on, the triumph clings, 
And there is yet the unseen crown

But was it his? Did Vanderberg 
Find half truth to be passion’s thrall, 
Or as we met him day by day, 
Was love triumphant, after all? 

I do not know so much as that;
I only know that he died right: 
Saint Anthony nor Sainte-Nitouche 
Had ever smiled as he did—quite.


Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

La Nuit Blanche

 A much-discerning Public hold
 The Singer generally sings
 And prints and sells his past for gold.

 Whatever I may here disclaim,
 The very clever folk I sing to
 Will most indubitably cling to
 Their pet delusion, just the same.


I had seen, as the dawn was breaking
 And I staggered to my rest,
Tari Devi softly shaking
 From the Cart Road to the crest.
I had seen the spurs of Jakko
 Heave and quiver, swell and sink.
Was it Earthquake or tobacco,
 Day of Doom, or Night of Drink?

In the full, fresh fragrant morning
 I observed a camel crawl,
Laws of gravitation scorning,
 On the ceiling and the wall;
Then I watched a fender walking,
 And I heard grey leeches sing,
And a red-hot monkey talking
 Did not seem the proper thing.

Then a Creature, skinned and crimson,
 Ran about the floor and cried,
And they said that I had the "jims" on,
 And they dosed me with bromide,
And they locked me in my bedroom --
 Me and one wee Blood Red Mouse --
Though I said: "To give my head room
 You had best unroof the house."

But my words were all unheeded,
 Though I told the grave M.D.
That the treatment really needed
 Was a dip in open sea
That was lapping just below me,
 Smooth as silver, white as snow,
And it took three men to throw me
 When I found I could not go.

Half the night I watched the Heavens
 Fizz like '81 champagne --
Fly to sixes and to sevens,
 Wheel and thunder back again;
And when all was peace and order
 Save one planet nailed askew,
Much I wept because my warder
 Would not let me sit it true.

After frenzied hours of wating,
 When the Earth and Skies were dumb,
Pealed an awful voice dictating
 An interminable sum,
Changing to a tangle story --
 "What she said you said I said" --
Till the Moon arose in glory,
 And I found her . . . in my head;

Then a Face came, blind and weeping,
 And It couldn't wipe its eyes,
And It muttered I was keeping
 Back the moonlight from the skies;
So I patted it for pity,
 But it whistled shrill with wrath,
And a huge black Devil City
 Poured its peoples on my path.

So I fled with steps uncertain
 On a thousand-year long race,
But the bellying of the curtain
 Kept me always in one place;
While the tumult rose and maddened
 To the roar of Earth on fire,
Ere it ebbed and sank and saddened
 To a whisper tense as wire.

In tolerable stillness
 Rose one little, little star,
And it chuckled at my illness,
 And it mocked me from afar;
And its breathren came and eyed me,
 Called the Universe to aid,
Till I lay, with naught to hide me,
 'Neath' the Scorn of All Things Made.

Dun and saffron, robed and splendid,
 Broke the solemn, pitying Day,
And I knew my pains were ended,
 And I turned and tried to pray;
But my speech was shattered wholly,
 And I wept as children weep.
Till the dawn-wind, softly, slowly,
 Brought to burning eyelids sleep.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things