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Best Famous Droned Poems

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

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Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

Buddha at Kamakura

 1892
"And there is a Japanese idol at Kamakura"

Oye who treated the Narrow Way
By Tophet-flare to Judgment Day,
Be gentle when "the heathen" pray
 To Buddha at Kamakura!

To him the Way, the Law, apart,
Whom Maya held beneath her heart,
Ananda's Lord, the Bodhisat,
 The Buddha of Kamakura.

For though he neither burns nor sees,
Nor hears ye thank your Deities,
Ye have not sinned with such as these,
 His children at Kamakura,

Yet spare us still the Western joke
When joss-sticks turn to scented smoke
The little sins of little folk
 That worship at Kamakura --

The grey-robed, gay-sashed butterflies
That flit beneath the Master's eyes.
He is beyond the Mysteries
 But loves them at Kamakura.

And whoso will, from Pride released,
Contemning neither creed nor priest,
May feel the Soul of all the East
 About him at Kamakura.

Yea, every tale Ananda heard,
Of birth as fish or beast or bird,
While yet in lives the Master stirred,
 The warm wind brings Kamakura.

Till drowsy eyelids seem to see
A-flower 'neath her golden htee
The Shwe-Dagon flare easterly
 From Burmah to Kamakura,

And down the loaded air there comes
The thunder of Thibetan drums,
And droned -- "Om mane padme hums" --
 A world's-width from Kamakura.

Yet Brahmans rule Benares still,
Buddh-Gaya's ruins pit the hill,
And beef-fed zealots threaten ill
 To Buddha and Kamakura.

A tourist-show, a legend told,
A rusting bulk of bronze and gold,
S o much, and scarce so much, ye hold
 The meaning of Kamakura?

But when the morning prayer is prayed,
Think, ere ye pass to strife and trade,
Is God in human image made
 No nearer than Kamakura?


Written by Richard Wilbur | Create an image from this poem

Exeunt

 Piecemeal the summer dies;
At the field's edge a daisy lives alone;
A last shawl of burning lies
On a gray field-stone.

All cries are thin and terse;
The field has droned the summer's final mass;
A cricket like a dwindled hearse
Crawls from the dry grass.
Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

The Fury Of Sundays

 Moist, moist, 
the heat leaking through the hinges, 
sun baking the roof like a pie 
and I and thou and she 
eating, working, sweating, 
droned up on the heat. 
The sun as read as the cop car siren. 
The sun as red as the algebra marks. 
The sun as red as two electric eyeballs. 
She wanting to take a bath in jello. 
You and me sipping vodka and soda, 
ice cubes melting like the Virgin Mary. 
You cutting the lawn, fixing the machines, 
all htis leprous day and then more vodka, 
more soda and the pond forgiving our bodies, 
the pond sucking out the throb. 
Our bodies were trash. 
We leave them on the shore. 
I and thou and she 
swin like minnows, 
losing all our queens and kinds, 
losing our hells and our tongues, 
cool, cool, all day that Sunday in July 
when we were young and did not look 
into the abyss, 
that God spot.
Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

Sussex

 God gave all men all earth to love,
 But, since our hearts are small
Ordained for each one spot should prove
 Beloved over all;
That, as He watched Creation's birth,
 So we, in godlike mood,
May of our love create our earth
 And see that it is good.

So one shall Baltic pines content,
 As one some Surrey glade,
Or one the palm-grove's droned lament
 Before Levuka's Trade.
Each to his choice, and I rejoice
 The lot has fallen to me
In a fair ground-in a fair ground --
 Yea, Sussex by the sea!

No tender-hearted garden crowns,
 No bosonied woods adorn
Our blunt, bow-headed, whale-backed Downs,
 But gnarled and writhen thorn --
Bare slopes where chasing shadows skim,
 And, through the gaps revealed,
Belt upon belt, the wooded, dim,
 Blue goodness of the Weald.

Clean of officious fence or hedge,
 Half-wild and wholly tame,
The wise turf cloaks the white cliff-edge
 As when the Romans came.
What sign of those that fought and died
 At shift of sword and sword?
The barrow and the camp abide,
 The sunlight and the sward.

Here leaps ashore the full Sou'west
 All heavy-winged with brine,
Here lies above the folded crest
 The Channel's leaden line,
And here the sea-fogs lap and cling,
 And here, each warning each,
The sheep-bells and the ship-bells ring
 Along the hidden beach.

We have no waters to delight
 Our broad and brookless vales --
Only the dewpond on the height
 Unfed, that never fails --
Whereby no tattered herbage tells
 Which way the season flies --
Only our close-bit thyme that smells
 Like dawn in Paradise.

Here through the strong and shadeless days
 The tinkling silence thrills;
Or little, lost, Down churches praise
 The Lord who made the hills:
But here the Old Gods guard their round,
 And, in her secret heart,
The heathen kingdom Wilfrid found
 Dreams, as she dwells, apart.

Though all the rest were all my share,
 With equal soul I'd see
Her nine-and-thirty sisters fair,
 Yet none more fair than she.
Choose ye your need from Thames to Tweed,
 And I will choose instead
Such lands as lie 'twixt Rake and Rye,
 Black Down and Beachy Head.

I will go out against the sun
 Where the rolled scarp retires,
And the Long Man of Wilmington
 Looks naked toward the shires;
And east till doubling Rother crawls
 To find the fickle tide,
By dry and sea-forgotten walls,
 Our ports of stranded pride.

I will go north about the shaws
 And the deep ghylls that breed
Huge oaks and old, the which we hold
 No more than Sussex weed;
Or south where windy Piddinghoe's
 Begilded dolphin veers,
And red beside wide-banked Ouse
 Lie down our Sussex steers.

So to the land our hearts we give
 Til the sure magic strike,
And Memory, Use, and Love make live
 Us and our fields alike --
That deeper than our speech and thought,
 Beyond our reason's sway,
Clay of the pit whence we were wrought
 Yearns to its fellow-clay.

God gives all men all earth to love,
 But, since man's heart is smal,
Ordains for each one spot shal prove
 Beloved over all.
Each to his choice, and I rejoice
 The lot has fallen to me
In a fair ground-in a fair ground --
 Yea, Sussex by the sea!
Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

The Heart of Australia

 When the wars of the world seemed ended, and silent the distant drum, 
Ten years ago in Australia, I wrote of a war to come: 
And I pictured Australians fighting as their fathers fought of old 
For the old things, pride or country, for God or the Devil or gold. 

And they lounged on the rim of Australia in the peace that had come to last, 
And they laughed at my "cavalry charges" for such things belonged to the past; 
Then our wise men smiled with indulgence – ere the swift years proved me right – 
Saying: "What shall Australia fight for? And whom shall Australia fight?" 

I wrote of the unlocked rivers in the days when my heart was full, 
And I pleaded for irrigation where they sacrifice all for wool. 
I pictured Australia fighting when the coast had been lost and won – 
With arsenals west of the mountains and every spur its gun. 

And what shall Australia fight for? The reason may yet be found, 
When strange shells scatter the wickets and burst on the football ground. 
And "Who shall invade Australia?" let the wisdom of ages say 
"The friend of a further future – or the ally of yesterday!" 

Aye! What must Australia fight for? In the strife that never shall cease, 
She must fight for her work unfinished: she must fight for her life and peace, 
For the sins of the older nations. She must fight for her own reward. 
She has taken the sword in her blindness and shall live or die by the sword. 

But the statesman, the churchman, the scholar still peer through their glasses dim 
And they see no cloud on the future as they roost on Australia's rim: 
Where the farmer works with the lumpers and the drover drives a dray, 
And the shearer on Garden Island is shifting a hill to-day. 

Had we used the wealth we have squandered and the land that we kept from the plough, 
A prosperous Federal City would be over the mountains now, 
With farms that sweep to horizons and gardens where plains lay bare, 
And the bulk of the population and the Heart of Australia there. 

Had we used the time we have wasted and the gold we have thrown away, 
The pick of the world's mechanics would be over the range to-day – 
In the Valley of Coal and Iron where the breeze from the bush comes down, 
And where thousands of makers of all things should be happy in Factory Town. 

They droned on the rim of Australia, the wise men who never could learn; 
Our substance we sent to the nations, and their shoddy we bought in return. 
In the end, shall our soldiers fight naked, no help for them under the sun – 
And never a cartridge to stick in the breech of a Brummagem gun? 

With the Wars of the World coming near us the wise men are waking to-day. 
Hurry out ammunition from England! Mount guns on the cliffs while you may! 
And God pardon our sins as a people if Invasion's unmerciful hand 
Should strike at the heart of Australia drought-cramped on the verge of the land.


Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Statistics

 NAPOLEON shifted,
Restless in the old sarcophagus
And murmured to a watchguard:
"Who goes there?"
"Twenty-one million men,
Soldiers, armies, guns,
Twenty-one million
Afoot, horseback,
In the air,
Under the sea."
And Napoleon turned to his sleep:
"It is not my world answering;
It is some dreamer who knows not
The world I marched in
From Calais to Moscow."
And he slept on
In the old sarcophagus
While the aeroplanes
Droned their motors
Between Napoleon's mausoleum
And the cool night stars.
Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

The Song of Seven Cities

 I was Lord of Cities very sumptuously builded.
Seven roaring Cities paid me tribute from far.
Ivory their outposts were--the guardrooms of them gilded,
And garrisoned with Amazons invincible in war.

All the world went softly when it walked before my Cities--
Neither King nor Army vexed my peoples at their toil.
Never horse nor chariot irked or overbore my Cities.
Never Mob nor Ruler questioned whence they drew their spoil.

Banded, mailed and arrogant from sunrise unto sunset,
Singing while they sacked it, they possessed the land at large.
Yet when men would rob them, they resisted, they made onset
And pierced the smoke of battle with a thousand-sabred charge.

So they warred and trafficked only yesterday, my Cities.
To-day there is no mark or mound of where my Cities stood.
For the River rose at midnight and it washed away my Cities.
They are evened with Atlantis and the towns before the Flood.

Rain on rain-gorged channels raised the -water-levels round them,
Freshet backed on freshet swelled and swept their world from
 sight; 
Till the emboldened floods linked arms and, flashing forward,
 droned them--
Drowned my Seven Cities and their peoples in one night!

Low among the alders lie their derelict foundations,
The beams wherein they trusted and the plinths whereon they
 built--
 My rulers and their treasure and their unborn populations,
 Dead, destroyed, aborted, and defiled with mud and silt!

The Daughters of the Palace whom they cherished in my Cities,
My silver-tongued Princesses, and the promise of their May--
Their bridegrooms of the June-tide-all have perished in my
 Cities,
 With the harsh envenomed virgins that can neither love nor play.

 I was Lord of Cities--I will build anew my Cities,
 Seven set on rocks, above the wrath of any flood.
 Nor will I rest from search till I have filled anew my Cities
 With peoples undefeated of the dark, enduring blood.

 To the sound of trumpets shall their seed restore my Cities,
 Wealthy and well-weaponed, that once more may I behold
 All the world go softly when it walks before my Cities,
 And the horses and the chariots fleeing from them as of old!

Book: Reflection on the Important Things