Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Convincing Poems

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

Search and read the best famous Convincing poems, articles about Convincing poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Convincing poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Heather McHugh | Create an image from this poem

Ghazal of the Better-Unbegun

 Too volatile, am I?too voluble?too much a word-person?
I blame the soup:I'm a primordially
stirred person.
Two pronouns and a vehicle was Icarus with wings.
The apparatus of his selves made an ab- surd person.
The sound I make is sympathy's:sad dogs are tied afar.
But howling I become an ever more un- heard person.
I need a hundred more of you to make a likelihood.
The mirror's not convincing-- that at-best in- ferred person.
As time's revealing gets revolting, I start looking out.
Look in and what you see is one unholy blurred person.
The only cure for birth one doesn't love to contemplate.
Better to be an unsung song, an unoc- curred person.
McHugh, you'll be the death of me -- each self and second studied! Addressing you like this, I'm halfway to the third person.


Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

A Truthful Song

 THE BRICKLAYER:
 I tell this tale, which is strictly true,
 Just by way of convincing you
 How very little, since things were made,
 Things have altered in building trade.
A year ago, come the middle of March, We was building flats near the Marble Arch, When a thin young man with coal-black hair Came up to watch us working there.
Now there wasn't a trick in brick or stone Which this young man hadn't seen or known; Nor there wasn't a tool from trowel to maul But this young man could use 'em all! Then up and spoke the plumbyers bold, Which was laying the pipes for the hot and cold: "Since you with us have made so free, Will you kindly say what your name might be? " The young man kindly answered them: "It might be Lot or Methusalem, Or it might be Moses (a man I hate), Whereas it is Pharaoh surnamed the Great.
"Your glazing is new and your plumbing's strange, But otherwise I perceive no change; And in less than a month if you do as I bid I'd learn you to build me a Pyramid!" THE SAILOR: I tell this tale, which is stricter true, Just by way of convincing you How very little, since things was made, Things have altered in the shipwright's trade.
In Blackwall Basin yesterday A China barque re-fitting lay, When a fat old man with snow-white hair Came up to watch us working there.
Now there wasn't a knot which the riggers knew But the old man made it--and better too; Nor there wasn't a sheet, or a lift, or a brace, But the old man knew its lead and place.
Then up and spoke the caulkyers bold, Which was packing the pump in the afterhold: "Since you with us have made so free, Will you kindly tell what your name might be? " The old man kindly answered them: "It might be Japheth, it might be Shem, Or it might be Ham (though his skin was dark), Whereas it is Noah, commanding the Ark.
"Your wheel is new and your pumps are strange, But otherwise I perceive no change; And in less than a week, if she did not ground, I'd sail this hooker the wide world round! " BOTH: We tell these tales, which are strictest true, Just by way of convincing you How very little, since things was made, Any thing alters in any one's trade!
Written by Yves Bonnefoy | Create an image from this poem

The house where I was born (05)

 In the same dream
I am lying in the hollow of a boat,
My forehead and eyes against the curved planks
Where I can hear the undercurrents
Striking the bottom of the boat.
All at once, the prow rises up, And I think that we’ve come to the estuary, But I keep my eyes against the wood That smells of tar and glue.
Too vast, too luminous the images That I have gathered in my sleep.
Why rediscover, outside, The things that words tell me of, But without convincing me, I desire a higher or less somber shore.
And yet I give up this ground that stirs Beneath the body waking to itself, I get up, I go from room to room in the house, They are endless now, I can hear the cries of voices behind doors, I am seized by these sorrows that knock Against the ruined casings, I hurry on, The lingering night is too heavy for me, Frightened, I go into a room cluttered with desks, Look, I’m told, this was your classroom, See on the walls the first images you looked at, Look, the tree, look, there, the yelping dog, And the geography map on the yellow wall, This fading of names and forms, This effacing of mountains and rivers By the whiteness that freezes language.
Look, this was your only book.
The Isis of the plaster On the wall of this room, which is pealing away, Never had, nor ever will have anything other To open for you, to close on you.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The Army Mules

 Oh the airman's game is a showman's game, for we all of us watch him go 
With his roaring soaring aeroplane and his bombs for the blokes below, 
Over the railways and over the dumps, over the Hun and the Turk, 
You'll hear him mutter, "What ho, she bumps," when the Archies get to work.
But not of him is the song I sing, though he follow the eagle's flight, And with shrapnel holes in his splintered wing comes home to his roost at night.
He may silver his wings on the shining stars, he may look from the throne on high, He may follow the flight of the wheeling kite in the blue Egyptian sky, But he's only a hero built to plan, turned out by the Army schools, And I sing of the rankless, thankless man who hustles the Army mules.
Now where he comes from and where he lives is a mystery dark and dim, And it's rarely indeed that the General gives a D.
S.
O.
to him.
The stolid infantry digs its way like a mole in a ruined wall; The cavalry lends a tone, they say, to what were else but a brawl; The Brigadier of the Mounted Fut like a cavalry Colonel swanks When he goeth abroad like a gilded nut to receive the General's thanks; The Ordnance man is a son of a gun and his lists are a standing joke; You order, "Choke arti Jerusalem one" for Jerusalem artichoke.
The Medicals shine with a number nine, and the men of the great R.
E.
, Their Colonels are Methodist, married or mad, and some of them all the three; In all these units the road to fame is taught by the Army schools, But a man has got to be born to the game when he tackles the Army mules.
For if you go where the depots are as the dawn is breaking grey, By the waning light of the morning star as the dust cloud clears away, You'll see a vision among the dust like a man and a mule combined -- It's the kind of thing you must take on trust for its outlines aren't defined, A thing that whirls like a spinning top and props like a three legged stool, And you find its a long-legged Queensland boy convincing an Army mule.
And the rider sticks to the hybrid's hide like paper sticks to a wall, For a "magnoon" Waler is next to ride with every chance of a fall, It's a rough-house game and a thankless game, and it isn't a game for a fool, For an army's fate and a nation's fame may turn on an Army mule.
And if you go to the front-line camp where the sleepless outposts lie, At the dead of night you can hear the tramp of the mule train toiling by.
The rattle and clink of a leading-chain, the creak of the lurching load, As the patient, plodding creatures strain at their task in the shell-torn road, Through the dark and the dust you may watch them go till the dawn is grey in the sky, And only the watchful pickets know when the "All-night Corps" goes by.
And far away as the silence falls when the last of the train has gone, A weary voice through the darkness: "Get on there, men, get on!" It isn't a hero, built to plan, turned out by the modern schools, It's only the Army Service man a-driving his Army mules.
Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

The rainbow never tells me

 The rainbow never tells me
That gust and storm are by,
Yet is she more convincing
Than Philosophy.
My flowers turn from Forums -- Yet eloquent declare What Cato couldn't prove me Except the birds were here!


Written by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe | Create an image from this poem

FAITHFUL ECKART

 "OH, would we were further! Oh, would we were home,
The phantoms of night tow'rd us hastily come,

The band of the Sorceress sisters.
They hitherward speed, and on finding us here, They'll drink, though with toil we have fetch'd it, the beer, And leave us the pitchers all empty.
" Thus speaking, the children with fear take to flight, When sudden an old man appears in their sight: "Be quiet, child! children, be quiet! From hunting they come, and their thirst they would still, So leave them to swallow as much as they will, And the Evil Ones then will be gracious.
" As said, so 'twas done! and the phantoms draw near, And shadowlike seem they, and grey they appear, ~Yet blithely they sip and they revel The beer has all vanish'd, the pitchers are void; With cries and with shouts the wild hunters, o'erjoy'd, Speed onward o'er vale and o'er mountain.
The children in terror fly nimbly tow'rd home, And with them the kind one is careful to come: "My darlings, oh, be not so mournful!-- "They'll blame us and beat us, until we are dead.
"-- "No, no! ye will find that all goes well," he said; "Be silent as mice, then, and listen! "And he by whose counsels thus wisely ye're taught, Is he who with children loves ever to sport.
The trusty and faithful old Eckart.
Ye have heard of the wonder for many a day, But ne'er had a proof of the marvellous lay,-- Your hands hold a proof most convincing.
" They arrive at their home, and their pitchers they place By the side of their parents, with fear on their face, Awaiting a beating and scolding.
But see what they're tasting: the choicest of beer! Though three times and four times they quaff the good cheer The pitchers remain still unemptied.
The marvel it lasts till the dawning of day; All people who hear of it doubtless will say: "What happen'd at length to the pitchers?" In secret the children they smile, as they wait; At last, though, they stammer, and stutter, and prate, And straightway the pitchers were empty.
And if, children, with kindness address'd ye may be, Whether father, or master, or alderman he, Obey him, and follow his bidding! And if 'tis unpleasant to bridle the tongue, Yet talking is bad, silence good for the young-- And then will the beer fill your pitchers! 1813.
Written by Thomas Hardy | Create an image from this poem

Embarcation

 Southampton Docks: October 1899 


Here, where Vespasian's legions struck the sands, 
And Cendric with the Saxons entered in, 
And Henry's army lept afloat to win 
Convincing triumphs over neighboring lands,

Vaster battalions press for further strands, 
To argue in the selfsame bloody mode 
Which this late age of thought, and pact, and code, 
Still fails to mend.
--Now deckward tramp the bands, Yellow as autumn leaves, alive as spring; And as each host draws out upon the sea Beyond which lies the tragical To-be, None dubious of the cause, none murmuring, Wives, sisters, parents, wave white hands and smile, As if they knew not that they weep the while.
Written by Czeslaw Milosz | Create an image from this poem

On Angels

 All was taken away from you: white dresses,
wings, even existence.
Yet I believe you, messengers.
There, where the world is turned inside out, a heavy fabric embroidered with stars and beasts, you stroll, inspecting the trustworthy seems.
Shorts is your stay here: now and then at a matinal hour, if the sky is clear, in a melody repeated by a bird, or in the smell of apples at close of day when the light makes the orchards magic.
They say somebody has invented you but to me this does not sound convincing for the humans invented themselves as well.
The voice -- no doubt it is a valid proof, as it can belong only to radiant creatures, weightless and winged (after all, why not?), girdled with the lightening.
I have heard that voice many a time when asleep and, what is strange, I understood more or less an order or an appeal in an unearthly tongue: day draw near another one do what you can.
Written by Russell Edson | Create an image from this poem

Conjugal

 A man is bending his wife.
He is bending her around something that she has bent herself around.
She is around it, bent as he has bent her.
He is convincing her.
It is all so private.
He is bending her around the bedpost.
No, he is bending her around the tripod of his camera.
It is as if he teaches her to swim.
As if he teaches acrobatics.
As if he could form her into something wet that he delivers out of one life into another.
And it is such a private thing the thing they do.
He is forming her into the wallpaper.
He is smoothing her down into the flowers there.
He is finding her nipples there.
And he is kissing her pubis there.
He climbs into the wallpaper among the flowers.
And his buttocks move in and out of the wall.
Written by Isaac Watts | Create an image from this poem

Hymn 115

 Conviction of sin by the law.
Rom.
7:8,9,14,24.
Lord, how secure my conscience was, And felt no inward dread! I was alive without the law, And thought my sins were dead.
My hopes of heav'n were firm and bright, But since the precept came With a convincing power and light, I find how vile I am.
[My guilt appeared but small before, Till terribly I saw How perfect, holy, just, and pure, Was thine eternal law.
Then felt my soul the heavy load, My sins revived again I had provoked a dreadful God, And all my hopes were slain.
] I'm like a helpless captive, sold Under the power of sin I cannot do the good I would, Nor keep my conscience clean.
My God, I cry with every breath For some kind power to save, To break the yoke of sin and death, And thus redeem the slave.

Book: Shattered Sighs