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Best Famous Decoyed Poems

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

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Written by William Topaz McGonagall | Create an image from this poem

A Tribute to Mr Murphy and the Blue Ribbon Army

 All hail to Mr Murphy, he is a hero brave,
That has crossed the mighty Atlantic wave,
For what purpose let me pause and think-
I answer, to warn the people not to taste strong drink. 

And, I'm sure, if they take his advice, they never will rue
The day they joined the Blue Ribbon Army in the year 1882;
And I hope to their colours they will always prove true,
And shout, Hurrah ! for Mr Murphy and the Ribbon of Blue. 

What is strong drink? Let me think-- I answer 'tis a thing
From whence the majority of evils spring,
And causes many a fireside with boisterous talk to ring,
And leaves behind it a deadly sting. 

Some people do say it is good when taken in moderation,
But, when taken to excess, it leads to tribulation,
Also to starvation and loss of reputation,
Likewise your eternal soul's damnation. 

The drunkard, he says he can't give it up,
For I must confess temptation's in the cup;
But he wishes to God it was banished from the land,
While he holds the cup in his trembling hand. 

And he exclaims in the agony of his soul --
Oh, God, I cannot myself control
From this most accurs'd cup!
Oh, help me, God, to give it up! 

Strong drink to the body can do no good;
It defiles the blood, likewise the food,
And causes the drunkard with pain to groan,
Because it extracts the marrow from the bone: 

And hastens him on to a premature grave,
Because to the cup he is bound a slave;
For the temptation is hard to thole,
And by it he will lose his immortal soul. 

The more's the pity, I must say,
That so many men and women are by it led astray,
And decoyed from the paths of virtue and led on to vice
By drinking too much alcohol and acting unwise. 

Good people all, of every degree,
I pray, ye all be warned by me:
I advise ye all to pause and think,
And never more to taste strong drink. 

Because the drunkard shall never inherit the kingdom of God
And whosoever God loves he chastens with his rod:
Therefore, be warned, and think in time,
And don't drink any more whisky, rum, or wine. 

But go at once-- make no delay,
And join the Blue Ribbon Army without dismay,
And rally round Mr Murphy, and make a bold stand,
And help to drive the Bane of Society from our land. 

I wish Mr Murphy every success,
Hoping he will make rapid progress;
And to the Blue Ribbon Army may he always prove true,
And adhere to his colours-- the beautiful blue.


Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

Death is like the insect

 Death is like the insect
Menacing the tree,
Competent to kill it,
But decoyed may be.

Bait it with the balsam,
Seek it with the saw,
Baffle, if it cost you
Everything you are.

Then, if it have burrowed
Out of reach of skill --
Wring the tree and leave it,
'Tis the vermin's will.
Written by Marianne Moore | Create an image from this poem

He Digesteth Harde Yron

 Although the aepyornis
or roc that lived in Madagascar, and
the moa are extinct,
the camel-sparrow, linked
with them in size--the large sparrow
Xenophon saw walking by a stream--was and is
a symbol of justice.

This bird watches his chicks with
a maternal concentration-and he's
been mothering the eggs
at night six weeks--his legs
their only weapon of defense.
He is swifter than a horse; he has a foot hard
as a hoof; the leopard

is not more suspicious.How
could he, prized for plumes and eggs and young
used even as a riding-beast, respect men
hiding actor-like in ostrich skins, with the right hand
making the neck move as if alive
and from a bag the left hand strewing grain, that ostriches

might be decoyed and killed!Yes, this is he
whose plume was anciently
the plume of justice; he
whose comic duckling head on its
great neck revolves with compass-needle nervousness
when he stands guard,

in S-like foragings as he is
preening the down on his leaden-skinned back.
The egg piously shown
as Leda's very own
from which Castor and Pollux hatched,
was an ostrich-egg.And what could have been more fit
for the Chinese lawn it

grazed on as a gift to an
emperor who admired strange birds, than this
one, who builds his mud-made
nest in dust yet will wade
in lake or sea till only the head shows.

. . . . . . .

Six hundred ostrich-brains served
at one banquet, the ostrich-plume-tipped tent
and desert spear, jewel-
gorgeous ugly egg-shell
goblets, eight pairs of ostriches
in harness, dramatize a meaning
always missed by the externalist.

The power of the visible
is the invisible; as even where
no tree of freedom grows,
so-called brute courage knows.
Heroism is exhausting, yet
it contradicts a greed that did not wisely spare
the harmless solitaire

or great auk in its grandeur;
unsolicitude having swallowed up
all giant birds but an alert gargantuan
little-winged, magnificently speedy running-bird.
This one remaining rebel
is the sparrow-camel.
Written by Victor Hugo | Create an image from this poem

The Father's Curse

 ("Vous, sire, écoutez-moi.") 
 
 {LE ROI S'AMUSE, Act I.} 


 M. ST. VALLIER (an aged nobleman, from whom King Francis I. 
 decoyed his daughter, the famous beauty, Diana of 
 Poitiers). 
 
 A king should listen when his subjects speak: 
 'Tis true your mandate led me to the block, 
 Where pardon came upon me, like a dream; 
 I blessed you then, unconscious as I was 
 That a king's mercy, sharper far than death, 
 To save a father doomed his child to shame; 
 Yes, without pity for the noble race 
 Of Poitiers, spotless for a thousand years, 
 You, Francis of Valois, without one spark 
 Of love or pity, honor or remorse, 
 Did on that night (thy couch her virtue's tomb), 
 With cold embraces, foully bring to scorn 
 My helpless daughter, Dian of Poitiers. 
 To save her father's life a knight she sought, 
 Like Bayard, fearless and without reproach. 
 She found a heartless king, who sold the boon, 
 Making cold bargain for his child's dishonor. 
 Oh! monstrous traffic! foully hast thou done! 
 My blood was thine, and justly, tho' it springs 
 Amongst the best and noblest names of France; 
 But to pretend to spare these poor gray locks, 
 And yet to trample on a weeping woman, 
 Was basely done; the father was thine own, 
 But not the daughter!—thou hast overpassed 
 The right of monarchs!—yet 'tis mercy deemed. 
 And I perchance am called ungrateful still. 
 Oh, hadst thou come within my dungeon walls, 
 I would have sued upon my knees for death, 
 But mercy for my child, my name, my race, 
 Which, once polluted, is my race no more. 
 Rather than insult, death to them and me. 
 I come not now to ask her back from thee; 
 Nay, let her love thee with insensate love; 
 I take back naught that bears the brand of shame. 
 Keep her! Yet, still, amidst thy festivals, 
 Until some father's, brother's, husband's hand 
 ('Twill come to pass!) shall rid us of thy yoke, 
 My pallid face shall ever haunt thee there, 
 To tell thee, Francis, it was foully done!... 
 
 TRIBOULET (the Court Jester), sneering. The poor man 
 raves. 
 
 ST. VILLIER. Accursed be ye both! 
 Oh Sire! 'tis wrong upon the dying lion 
 To loose thy dog! (Turns to Triboulet) 
 And thou, whoe'er thou art, 
 That with a fiendish sneer and viper's tongue 
 Makest my tears a pastime and a sport, 
 My curse upon thee!—Sire, thy brow doth bear 
 The gems of France!—on mine, old age doth sit; 
 Thine decked with jewels, mine with these gray hairs; 
 We both are Kings, yet bear a different crown; 
 And should some impious hand upon thy head 
 Heap wrongs and insult, with thine own strong arm 
 Thou canst avenge them! God avenges mine! 
 
 FREDK. L. SLOUS. 


 





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