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Best Famous Hazards Poems

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

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Written by Robert Graves | Create an image from this poem

Call It a Good Marriage

 Call it a good marriage - 
For no one ever questioned 
Her warmth, his masculinity,
Their interlocking views;
Except one stray graphologist
Who frowned in speculation 
At her h's and her s's, 
His p's and w's.

Though few would still subscribe
To the monogamic axiom
That strife below the hip-bones
Need not estrange the heart,
Call it a good marriage:
More drew those two together,
Despite a lack of children,
Than pulled them apart.

Call it a good marriage:
They never fought in public,
They acted circumspectly
And faced the world with pride;
Thus the hazards of their love-bed
Were none of our damned business - 
Till as jurymen we sat on 
Two deaths by suicide.


Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Finale

 Here is this vale of sweet abiding,
My ultimate and dulcet home,
That gently dreams above the chiding
of restless and impatient foam;
Beyond the hazards of hell weather,
The harceling of wind and sea,
With timbers morticed tight together
My old hulk havens happily.

The dawn exultantly discloses
My lawn lit with mimosa gold;
The joy of January roses
Is with me when rich lands are cold;
Serene with bells of beauty chiming,
This dream domain to be belongs,
By sweet conspiracy of rhyming,
And virtue of some idle songs.

I thank the gracious Lord of Living
Who gave me power and will to write:
May I be worthy of His giving
And win to merit in His sight. . . .
O merciful and mighty Master,
Though I have faltered in the past,
Your scribe I be. . . . Despite disaster
Let me be faithful to the last.
Written by Ellis Parker Butler | Create an image from this poem

The Charge of the Second Iowa Cavalry

 Comrades, many a year and day
 Have fled since that glorious 9th of May
 When we made the charge at Farmington.
 But until our days on earth are done
 Our blood will burn and our hearts beat fast
 As we tell of the glorious moments we passed,
 When we rode on the guns with a mighty shout
 And saved Paine’s army from utter rout;
 And our children in years to come will tell
 How the 2nd rose through the shot and shell
 Rode with a cheer on that 9th of May
 And held the whole rebel army at bay.

 Behind lay the swamp, a dank morass.
 A marsh - no horse nor man could pass
 Save by one road, one narrow way.
 But beyond that road our safety lay,
 In front rose the hills which the rebels held
 With his howling cannon that raked and shelled
 Our troops.
 We lay in the centre.
 Paine,
 Our general saw he must cross again
 The narrow road, or his men were lost
 The road was narrow. It must be crossed,
 And crossed in haste, and the deadly rain
 of the rebel guns "Must be stopped!" said Paine.

 Twenty-four cannon thundered and roared!
 Twenty-four cannon into us poured.
 Twenty-four cannon! A devil’s den
 Backed by full fifteen thousand men.
 Must be held at bay till our troops could pass
 In order over the dank morass.
 Up to where the cavalry stand,
 Waiting in order the word of command,
 Gallops Paine. And his mighty shout
 Rings the daring order out -
 "Take and hold that battery!
 Take it! Whatever the hazards be!"
 "Draw sabres!" They flash in the startled air.
 "Forward! Gallop! March!" Away
 We ride. We must show our steel today!

 "Gallop! Charge!" On the rebels ears
 Ring the thundering Yankee cheers!
 And on, like a wave of maddened sea,
 On - Dash the Iowa cavalry!
 Into the torrents of shot and shell
 That shrieks and screams like the fiends of hell!
 Into the torrent of shot that kills!
 Into the torrent of shell that stills
 The cheer on many a lip, we ride
 Like the onward rush of a whirling tide
 Up to the cannon’s mouth,
 Our cheers
 Curdle the blood of the cannoneers
 To right and left from his silenced guns
 In wild retreat the rebel runs.
 And the charge of the Iowa cavalry
 Rushes on!

 Can you stop the sea
 When the storm waves break on the sandy shore
 Driving the driftwood awrack? No more
 Can the rebel resist the terrible charge
 As we ride right up to their army’s marge -
 They waver - the fifteen thousand men,
 Waver and rally, and waver, and then
 Our work is done.
 Paine’s men had crossed
 The swamp while our little band was lost
 In the smoke and dust of the eager ride,
 And are safe at last on the other side.
 Then we ride back! We had saved the day
 By holding the whole rebel army at bay,
 While Paine made a hasty and safe retreat
 Over the swamp.

 We had conquered defeat!

 Comrades, many a year and day
 Have fled since that glorious 9th of May
 When we made the charge at Farmington.
 And our time on earth is almost run,
 But when we are gone our children will tell
 How we rode through rebel shots and shell.
 How we rode on the guns with a mighty shout,
 And saved Paine’s army from utter route.
 And carved in the temple of glory will be
 The roll of the 2nd Iowa Cavalry.
 The brave old 2nd, that never knew
 A deed too hard or rash to do.
 The dear old 2nd, that would have spurred
 Into Hell itself, if Hatch said the word.
Written by Thomas Hardy | Create an image from this poem

Men Who March Away

 Song of the Soldiers


What of the faith and fire within us 
Men who march away 
Ere the barn-cocks say 
Night is growing gray, 
To hazards whence no tears can win us; 
What of the faith and fire within us 
Men who march away! 

Is it a purblind prank, O think you, 
Friend with the musing eye 
Who watch us stepping by, 
With doubt and dolorous sigh? 
Can much pondering so hoodwink you? 
Is it a purblind prank, O think you, 
Friend with the musing eye? 

Nay. We see well what we are doing, 
Though some may not see -- 
Dalliers as they be -- 
England's need are we; 
Her distress would leave us rueing: 
Nay. We well see what we are doing, 
Though some may not see! 

In our heart of hearts believing 
Victory crowns the just, 
And that braggarts must 
Surely bite the dust, 
Press we to the field ungrieving, 
In our heart of hearts believing 
Victory crowns the just. 

Hence the faith and fire within us 
Men who march away 
Ere the barn-cocks say 
Night is growing gray, 
To hazards whence no tears can win us; 
Hence the faith and fire within us 
Men who march away.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

The Sacrifices

 Twin boys I bore, my joy, my care,
My hope, my life they were to me;
Their father, dashing, debonair,
Fell fighting at Gallipoli.
His daring gallantry, no doubt,
They 'herited in equal share:
So when the Second War broke out,
With eagerness they chose the air.

Said Dick: "The sea's too bally slow;
A flying ship's the one for me."
Said Peter: "Land! Foot-slogging - no!
The jolly sky's my cup of tea."
Well, Dick bailed out in Channel flight,
His foam-flailed body never found;
While Peter, with his plane alight,
Dashed down to death on Kentish ground.

Gay lads they were, and tall and fair,
And had they chosen land or sea,
Shirking the hazards of the air,
They might still have been left to me.
But nothing could I say or do
To move their scorn of sea and land;
Like eagles to the sun they flew -
Why? Only they could understand.

Hw day and night I prayed for them!
But knew that it was ll in vain;
They measured with heroic men,
Yet . . . I will never pray again.
Though time may grieve my hair to grey,
My lips will never kiss the rod. . . .
Only in dying I may say
In pity - "I forgive you, God."


Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

From The Shore

 A LONE gray bird,
Dim-dipping, far-flying,
Alone in the shadows and grandeurs and tumults
Of night and the sea
And the stars and storms.

Out over the darkness it wavers and hovers,
Out into the gloom it swings and batters,
Out into the wind and the rain and the vast,
Out into the pit of a great black world,
Where fogs are at battle, sky-driven, sea-blown,
Love of mist and rapture of flight,
Glories of chance and hazards of death
On its eager and palpitant wings.

Out into the deep of the great dark world,
Beyond the long borders where foam and drift
Of the sundering waves are lost and gone
On the tides that plunge and rear and crumble.
Written by Emile Verhaeren | Create an image from this poem

The lovely garden blossoming with flames

The lovely garden blossoming with flames that seemed to us the double or the mirror of the bright garden we carried in our hearts is crystallized in frost and gold this evening.
A great white silence has descended and sits yonder on the marble horizons, towards which march the trees in files, with their blue, immense and regular shadow beside them.
No puff of wind, no breath. Alone, the great veils of cold spread from plain to plain over the silver marshes or crossing roads.
The stars appear to live. The hoar-frost shines like steel through the translucent, frozen air. Bright powdered metals seem to snow down, in the infinite distances, from the pallor of a copper moon. Everything sparkles in the stillness.
And it is the divine hour when the mind is haunted by the thousand glances that are cast upon earth by kind and pure and unchangeable eternity towards the hazards of human wretchedness.

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry