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Best Famous Flanking Poems

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

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Written by Jennifer Reeser | Create an image from this poem

Blue-Crested Cry

 We’re through, we’re through, we’re through, we’re through, we’re through
and – flanking, now, the edges of our schism –
it seems your coldness and my idealism
alone for all this time have kept us true.

Credulous I and hedonistic you:
opposed, refracting angles of a prism
who challenged sense with childish skepticism –
and every known the bulk of mankind knew.


Written by Herman Melville | Create an image from this poem

Chattanooga

 (November, 1863)

A kindling impulse seized the host
Inspired by heaven's elastic air;
Their hearts outran their General's plan,
Though Grant commanded there - 
Grant, who without reserve can dare;
And, "Well, go on and do your will,"
He said, and measured the mountain then:
So master-riders fling the rein - 
But you must know your men.

On yester-morn in grayish mist,
Armies like ghosts on hills had fought,
And rolled from the cloud their thunders loud
The Cumberlands far had caught:
Today the sunlit steeps are sought.
Grant stood on cliffs whence all was plain,
And smoked as one who feels no cares;
But mastered nervousness intense,
Alone such calmness wears.

The summit-cannon plunge their flame
Sheer down the primal wall,
But up and up each linking troop
In stretching festoons crawl - 
Nor fire a shot. Such men appal
The foe, though brave. He, from the brink,
Looks far along the breadth of slope,
And sees two miles of dark dots creep,
And knows they mean the cope.

He sees them creep. Yet here and there
Half hid 'mid leafless groves they go;
As men who ply through traceries high
Of turreted marbles show - 
So dwindle these to eyes below.
But fronting shot and flanking shell
Sliver and rive the inwoven ways;
High tops of oaks and high hearts fall,
But never the climbing stays.

Near and more near; till now the flags
Run like a catching flame;
And one flares highest, to peril nighest - 
He means to make a name:
Salvos! they give him his fame.
The staff is caught, and next the rush,
And then the leap where death has led;
Flag answered flag along the crest,
And swarms of rebels fled.

But some who gained the envied Alp,
And -eager, ardent, earnest there - 
Dropped into Death's wide-open arms,
Quelled on the wing like eagles struck in air - 
Forever they slumber young and fair,
The smile upon them as they died;
Their end attained, that end a height:
Life was to these a dream fulfilled,
And death a starry night.
Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

The Grave of the Hundered Head

 There's a widow in sleepy Chester
 Who weeps for her only son;
There's a grave on the Pabeng River,
 A grave that the Burmans shun,
And there's Subadar Prag Tewarri
 Who tells how the work was done.

A Snider squibbed in the jungle,
 Somebody laughed and fled,
And the men of the First Shikaris
 Picked up their Subaltern dead,
With a big blue mark in his forehead
 And the back blown out of his head.

Subadar Prag Tewarri,
 Jemadar Hira Lal,
Took command of the party,
 Twenty rifles in all,
Marched them down to the river
 As the day was beginning to fall.

They buried the boy by the river,
 A blanket over his face --
They wept for their dead Lieutenant,
 The men of an alien race --
They made a samadh in his honor,
 A mark for his resting-place.

For they swore by the Holy Water,
 They swore by the salt they ate,
That the soul of Lieutenant Eshmitt Sahib
 Should go to his God in state;
With fifty file of Burman
 To open him Heaven's gate.

The men of the First Shikaris
 Marched till the break of day,
Till they came to the rebel village,
 The village of Pabengmay --
A jingal covered the clearing,
 Calthrops hampered the way.

Subadar Prag Tewarri,
 Bidding them load with ball,
Halted a dozen rifles
 Under the village wall;
Sent out a flanking-party
 With Jemadar Hira Lal.

The men of the First Shikaris
 Shouted and smote and slew,
Turning the grinning jingal
 On to the howling crew.
The Jemadar's flanking-party
 Butchered the folk who flew.

Long was the morn of slaughter,
 Long was the list of slain,
Five score heads were taken,
 Five score heads and twain;
And the men of the First Shickaris
 Went back to their grave again,

Each man bearing a basket
 Red as his palms that day,
Red as the blazing village --
 The village of Pabengmay,
And the "drip-drip-drip" from the baskets
 Reddened the grass by the way.

They made a pile of their trophies
 High as a tall man's chin,
Head upon head distorted,
 Set in a sightless grin,
Anger and pain and terror
 Stamped on the smoke-scorched skin.

Subadar Prag Tewarri
 Put the head of the Boh
On the top of the mound of triumph,
 The head of his son below,
With the sword and the peacock-banner
 That the world might behold and know.

Thus the samadh was perfect,
 Thus was the lesson plain
Of the wrath of the First Shikaris --
 The price of a white man slain;
And the men of the First Shikaris
 Went back into camp again.

Then a silence came to the river,
 A hush fell over the shore,
And Bohs that were brave departed,
 And Sniders squibbed no more;
 For he Burmans said
 That a kullah's head
Must be paid for with heads five score.

There's a widow in sleepy Chester
 Who weeps for her only son;
There's a grave on the Pabeng River,
 A grave that the Burmans shun,
And there's Subadar Prag Tewarri
 Who tells how the work was done.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things