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Best Famous Fallen Angel Poems

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

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Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

The Fallen Angels

 They come on to my clean
sheet of paper and leave a Rorschach blot.
They do not do this to be mean,
they do it to give me a sign
they want me, as Aubrey Beardsley once said,
to shove it around till something comes.
Clumsy as I am,
I do it.
For I am like them -
both saved and lost,
tumbling downward like Humpty Dumpty
off the alphabet.

Each morning I push them off my bed
and when they get in the salad
rolling in it like a dog,
I pick each one out
just the way my daughter
picks out the anchoives.
In May they dance on the jonquils,
wearing out their toes,
laughing like fish.
In November, the dread month,
they suck the childhood out of the berries
and turn them sour and inedible.

Yet they keep me company.
They wiggle up life.
They pass out their magic
like Assorted Lifesavers.
They go with me to the dentist
and protect me form the drill.
At the same time,
they go to class with me
and lie to my students.

O fallen angel,
the companion within me,
whisper something holy
before you pinch me
into the grave.


Written by Robert Burns | Create an image from this poem

247. Ode Sacred to the Memory of Mrs. Oswald of Auchencruive

 DWELLER in yon dungeon dark,
 Hangman of creation! mark,
 Who in widow-weeds appears,
 Laden with unhonour’d years,
 Noosing with care a bursting purse,
 Baited with many a deadly curse?


STROPHE View the wither’d Beldam’s face;
 Can thy keen inspection trace
Aught of Humanity’s sweet, melting grace?
 Note that eye, ’tis rheum o’erflows;
 Pity’s flood there never rose,
 See these hands ne’er stretched to save,
 Hands that took, but never gave:
 Keeper of Mammon’s iron chest,
 Lo, there she goes, unpitied and unblest,
She goes, but not to realms of everlasting rest!


ANTISTROPHEPlunderer of Armies! lift thine eyes,
 (A while forbear, ye torturing fiends;)
Seest thou whose step, unwilling, hither bends?
No fallen angel, hurl’d from upper skies;
 ’Tis thy trusty quondam Mate,
 Doom’d to share thy fiery fate;
 She, tardy, hell-ward plies.


EPODE And are they of no more avail,
Ten thousand glittering pounds a-year?
 In other worlds can Mammon fail,
 Omnipotent as he is here!


O, bitter mockery of the pompous bier,
 While down the wretched Vital Part is driven!
The cave-lodged Beggar,with a conscience clear,
 Expires in rags, unknown, and goes to Heaven.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things