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Best Famous Hawker Poems

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

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Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

And One For My Dame

 A born salesman,
my father made all his dough
by selling wool to Fieldcrest, Woolrich and Faribo.
A born talker, he could sell one hundred wet-down bales of that white stuff.
He could clock the miles and the sales and make it pay.
At home each sentence he would utter had first pleased the buyer who'd paid him off in butter.
Each word had been tried over and over, at any rate, on the man who was sold by the man who filled my plate.
My father hovered over the Yorkshire pudding and the beef: a peddler, a hawker, a merchant and an Indian chief.
Roosevelt! Willkie! and war! How suddenly gauche I was with my old-maid heart and my funny teenage applause.
Each night at home my father was in love with maps while the radio fought its battles with Nazis and Japs.
Except when he hid in his bedroom on a three-day drunk, he typed out complex itineraries, packed his trunk, his matched luggage and pocketed a confirmed reservation, his heart already pushing over the red routes of the nation.
I sit at my desk each night with no place to go, opening thee wrinkled maps of Milwaukee and Buffalo, the whole U.
S.
, its cemeteries, its arbitrary time zones, through routes like small veins, capitals like small stones.
He died on the road, his heart pushed from neck to back, his white hanky signaling from the window of the Cadillac.
My husband, as blue-eyed as a picture book, sells wool: boxes of card waste, laps and rovings he can pull to the thread and say Leicester, Rambouillet, Merino, a half-blood, it's greasy and thick, yellow as old snow.
And when you drive off, my darling, Yes, sir! Yes, sir! It's one for my dame, your sample cases branded with my father's name, your itinerary open, its tolls ticking and greedy, its highways built up like new loves, raw and speedy.


Written by Rabindranath Tagore | Create an image from this poem

Vocation

 When the gong sounds ten in the morning and I walk to school by our
lane.
Every day I meet the hawker crying, "Bangles, crystal bangles!" There is nothing to hurry him on, there is no road he must take, no place he must go to, no time when he must come home.
I wish I were a hawker, spending my day in the road, crying, "Bangles, crystal bangles!" When at four in the afternoon I come back from the school, I can see through the gate of that house the gardener digging the ground.
He does what he likes with his spade, he soils his clothes with dust, nobody takes him to task if he gets baked in the sun or gets wet.
I wish I were a gardener digging away at the garden with nobody to stop me from digging.
Just as it gets dark in the evening and my mother sends me to bed, I can see through my open window the watchman walking up and down.
The lane is dark and lonely, and the street-lamp stands like a giant with one red eye in its head.
The watchman swings his lantern and walks with his shadow at his side, and never once goes to bed in his life.
I wish I were a watchman walking the streets all night, chasing the shadows with my lantern.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The Passing of Gundagai

 "I'll introduce a friend!" he said, 
"And if you've got a vacant pen 
You'd better take him in the shed 
And start him shearing straight ahead; 
He's one of these here quiet men.
"He never strikes -- that ain't his game; No matter what the others try He goes on shearing just the same.
I never rightly knew his name -- We always call him 'Gundagai!'" Our flashest shearer then had gone To train a racehorse for a race; And, while his sporting fit was on He couldn't be relied upon, So Gundagai shore in his place.
Alas for man's veracity! For reputations false and true! This Gundagai turned out to be For strife and all-round villainy The very worst I ever knew! He started racing Jack Devine, And grumbled when I made him stop.
The pace he showed was extra fine, But all those pure-bred ewes of mine Were bleeding like a butcher's shop.
He cursed the sheep, he cursed the shed, From roof to rafter, floor to shelf: As for my mongrel ewes, he said, I ought to get a razor-blade And shave the blooming things myself.
On Sundays he controlled a "school", And played "two-up" the livelong day; And many a young confiding fool He shore of his financial wool; And when he lost he would not pay.
He organised a shearers' race, And "touched" me to provide the prize.
His pack-horse showed surprising pace And won hands down -- he was The Ace, A well-known racehorse in disguise.
Next day the bruiser of the shed Displayed an opal-tinted eye, With large contusions on his head, He smiled a sickly smile, and said He's "had a cut at Gundagai!" But, just as we were getting full Of Gundagai and all his ways, A telgram for "Henry Bull" Arrived.
Said he, "That's me -- all wool! Let's see what this here message says.
" He opened it; his face grew white, He dropped the shears and turned away It ran, "Your wife took bad last night; Come home at once -- no time to write, We fear she may not last the day.
" He got his cheque -- I didn't care To dock him for my mangled ewes; His store account, we called it square, Poor wretch! he had enough to bear, Confronted by such dreadful news.
The shearers raised a little purse To help a mate, as shearers will.
"To pay the doctor and the nurse.
And, if there should be something worse, To pay the undertaker's bill.
" They wrung his hand in sympathy, He rode away without a word, His head hung down in misery .
.
.
A wandering hawker passing by Was told of what had just occurred.
"Well! that's a curious thing," he siad, "I've known that feller all his life -- He's had the loan of this here shed! I know his wife ain't nearly dead, Because he hasn't got a wife!" You should have heard the whipcord crack As angry shearers galloped by; In vain they tried to fetch him back -- A little dust along the track Was all they saw of "Gundagai".
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

Hawker the Standard Bearer

 The grey gull sat on a floating whale, 
On a floating whale sat he, 
And he told his tale of the storm and the gale, 
And the ships that he saw with steam and sail, 
As he flew by the Northern Sea.
"I have seen a sign that is strange and new, That I never before did see: A flying ship that roared as it flew, The storm and the tempest driving through, It carried a flag and it carried a crew, Now what would that be?" said he.
"And the flag was a Jack with stars displayed, A flag that is new to me; For it does not ply in the Northern trade, But it drove through the storm-wrack unafraid, Now, what is that flag?" said he.
"I have seen that flag that is starred with white," Said a southern gull, said he, "And saw it fly in a bloody fight, When the raider Emden turned in flight, And crashed on the Cocos lee.
" "And who are these folk whose flag is first Of all the flags that fly To dare the storm and the fog accurst, Of the great North Sea where the bergs are nursed, And the Northern Lights ride high?" "The Australian folk," said a lone sea-mew, "The Australian flag," said he.
"It is strange that a folk that is far and few Should fly their flag where there never flew Another flag!" said he.
"I have followed their flag in the fields of France, With its white stars flying free, And no misfortune and no mischance Could turn them back from their line of advance, Or the line that they held," said he.
"Whenever there's ever rule to break, Wherever they oughtn't to be, With a death to dare and a risk to take, A track to find or a way to make, You will find them there," said he.
"They come from a land that is parched with thirst, An inland land," said he, "On risk and danger their breed is nursed, And thus it happens their flag is first To fly in the Northern Sea.
" "Though Hawker perished, he overcame The risks of the storm and the sea, And his name shall be written in stars of flame, On the topmost walls of the Temple of Fame, For the rest of the world to see.
"

Book: Reflection on the Important Things