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Best Famous Foreigners Poems

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

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Written by Randall Jarrell | Create an image from this poem

Losses

 It was not dying: everybody died.
It was not dying: we had died before In the routine crashes-- and our fields Called up the papers, wrote home to our folks, And the rates rose, all because of us.
We died on the wrong page of the almanac, Scattered on mountains fifty miles away; Diving on haystacks, fighting with a friend, We blazed up on the lines we never saw.
We died like aunts or pets or foreigners.
(When we left high school nothing else had died For us to figure we had died like.
) In our new planes, with our new crews, we bombed The ranges by the desert or the shore, Fired at towed targets, waited for our scores-- And turned into replacements and worke up One morning, over England, operational.
It wasn't different: but if we died It was not an accident but a mistake (But an easy one for anyone to make.
) We read our mail and counted up our missions-- In bombers named for girls, we burned The cities we had learned about in school-- Till our lives wore out; our bodies lay among The people we had killed and never seen.
When we lasted long enough they gave us medals; When we died they said, "Our casualties were low.
" The said, "Here are the maps"; we burned the cities.
It was not dying --no, not ever dying; But the night I died I dreamed that I was dead, And the cities said to me: "Why are you dying? We are satisfied, if you are; but why did I die?"


Written by Ogden Nash | Create an image from this poem

Goody for Our Side and Your Side Too

 Foreigners are people somewhere else,
Natives are people at home;
If the place you’re at
Is your habitat,
You’re a foreigner, say in Rome.
But the scales of Justice balance true, And tit leads into tat, So the man who’s at home When he stays in Rome Is abroad when he’s where you’re at.
When we leave the limits of the land in which Our birth certificates sat us, It does not mean Just a change of scene, But also a change of status.
The Frenchman with his fetching beard, The Scot with his kilt and sporran, One moment he May a native be, And the next may find him foreign.
There’s many a difference quickly found Between the different races, But the only essential Differential Is living different places.
Yet such is the pride of prideful man, From Austrians to Australians, That wherever he is, He regards as his, And the natives there, as aliens.
Oh, I’ll be friends if you’ll be friends, The foreigner tells the native, And we’ll work together for our common ends Like a preposition and a dative.
If our common ends seem mostly mine, Why not, you ignorant foreigner? And the native replies Contrariwise; And hence, my dears, the coroner.
So mind your manners when a native, please, And doubly when you visit And between us all A rapport may fall Ecstatically exquisite.
One simple thought, if you have it pat, Will eliminate the coroner: You may be a native in your habitat, But to foreigners you’re just a foreigner.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

Only a Jockey

 Out in the grey cheerless chill of the morning light, 
Out on the track where the night shades still lurk, 
ere the first gleam of the sungod's returning light 
Round come the racehorses early at work.
Reefing and pulling and racing so readily, Close sit the jockey-boys holding them hard, "Steady the stallion there -- canter him steadily, Don't let him gallop so much as a yard.
" Fiercely he fights while the others run wide of him, Reefs at the bit that would hold him in thrall, Plunges and bucks till the boy that's astride of him Goes to the ground with a terrible fall.
"Stop him there! Block him there! Drive him in carefully, Lead him about till he's quiet and cool.
Sound as a bell! though he's blown himself fearfully, Now let us pick up this poor little fool.
"Stunned? Oh, by Jove, I'm afraid it's a case with him; Ride for the doctor! keep bathing his head! Send for a cart to go down to our place with him" -- No use! One long sigh and the little chap's dead.
Only a jockey-boy, foul-mouthed and bad you see, Ignorant, heathenish, gone to his rest.
Parson or Presbyter, Pharisee, Sadducee, What did you do for him? -- bad was the best.
******* and foreigners, all have a claim on you; Yearly you send your well-advertised hoard, But the poor jockey-boy -- shame on you, shame on you, "Feed ye My little ones" -- what said the Lord? Him ye held less than the outer barbarian, Left him to die in his ignorant sin; Have you no principles, humanitarian? Have you no precept -- "Go gather them in?" Knew he God's name? In his brutal profanity That name was an oath -- out of many but one.
What did he get from our famed Christianity? Where has his soul -- if he had any -- gone? Fourteen years old, and what was he taught of it? What did he know of God's infinite Grace? Draw the dark curtain of shame o'er the thought of it Draw the shroud over the jockey-boy's face.
Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

Some such Butterfly be seen

 Some such Butterfly be seen
On Brazilian Pampas --
Just at noon -- no later -- Sweet --
Then -- the License closes --

Some such Spice -- express and pass --
Subject to Your Plucking --
As the Stars -- You knew last Night --
Foreigners -- This Morning --
Written by Jerome Rothenberg | Create an image from this poem

I AM NOT A NATIVE OF THIS PLACE

 I am not a native of this palce.
(Yosimasu G.
) nor yet a stranger.
With the rst of you I hunt for shade my boots half off to let the air through.
My head is on my shoulders & is real.
I plant cucumbers twice a year & count the bounty.
Often I read the papers standing.
I am clean & pure.
I carry buckets from the pond more than my arms can bear.
Under a full moon fish appear like flies in amber.
The words of foreigners invade my thoughts.
The hungry hordes surround me wailing through their beards.
My fingers tingle feigning speech.
I havea a feeling that my tongue speaks words because my throat keeps burning.


Written by Constantine P Cavafy | Create an image from this poem

Poseidonians

 The Poseidonians forgot the Greek language
after so many centuries of mingling
with Tyrrhenians, Latins, and other foreigners.
The only thing surviving from their ancestors was a Greek festival, with beautiful rites, with lyres and flutes, contests and wreaths.
And it was their habit toward the festival's end to tell each other about their ancient customs and once again to speak Greek names that only few of them still recognized.
And so their festival always had a melancholy ending because they remebered that they too were Greeks, they too once upon a time were citizens of Magna Graecia; and how low they'd fallen now, what they'd become, living and speaking like barbarians, cut off so disastrously from the Greek way of life.

Book: Shattered Sighs