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Best Famous Heraldic Poems

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

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Written by Thomas Hood | Create an image from this poem

The Haunted House

 Oh, very gloomy is the house of woe,
Where tears are falling while the bell is knelling,
With all the dark solemnities that show
That Death is in the dwelling!

Oh, very, very dreary is the room
Where Love, domestic Love, no longer nestles,
But smitten by the common stroke of doom,
The corpse lies on the trestles!

But house of woe, and hearse, and sable pall,
The narrow home of the departed mortal,
Ne’er looked so gloomy as that Ghostly Hall,
With its deserted portal!

The centipede along the threshold crept,
The cobweb hung across in mazy tangle,
And in its winding sheet the maggot slept
At every nook and angle.

The keyhole lodged the earwig and her brood,
The emmets of the steps has old possession,
And marched in search of their diurnal food
In undisturbed procession.

As undisturbed as the prehensile cell
Of moth or maggot, or the spider’s tissue,
For never foot upon that threshold fell,
To enter or to issue.

O’er all there hung the shadow of a fear,
A sense of mystery the spirit daunted,
And said, as plain as whisper in the ear,
The place is haunted.

Howbeit, the door I pushed—or so I dreamed--
Which slowly, slowly gaped, the hinges creaking
With such a rusty eloquence, it seemed
That Time himself was speaking.

But Time was dumb within that mansion old,
Or left his tale to the heraldic banners
That hung from the corroded walls, and told
Of former men and manners.

Those tattered flags, that with the opened door,
Seemed the old wave of battle to remember,
While fallen fragments danced upon the floor
Like dead leaves in December.

The startled bats flew out, bird after bird,
The screech-owl overhead began to flutter,
And seemed to mock the cry that she had heard
Some dying victim utter!

A shriek that echoed from the joisted roof,
And up the stair, and further still and further,
Till in some ringing chamber far aloof
In ceased its tale of murther!

Meanwhile the rusty armor rattled round,
The banner shuddered, and the ragged streamer;
All things the horrid tenor of the sound
Acknowledged with a tremor.

The antlers where the helmet hung, and belt,
Stirred as the tempest stirs the forest branches,
Or as the stag had trembled when he felt
The bloodhound at his haunches.

The window jingled in its crumbled frame,
And through its many gaps of destitution
Dolorous moans and hollow sighings came,
Like those of dissolution.

The wood-louse dropped, and rolled into a ball,
Touched by some impulse occult or mechanic;
And nameless beetles ran along the wall
In universal panic.

The subtle spider, that, from overhead,
Hung like a spy on human guilt and error,
Suddenly turned, and up its slender thread
Ran with a nimble terror.

The very stains and fractures on the wall,
Assuming features solemn and terrific,
Hinted some tragedy of that old hall,
Locked up in hieroglyphic.

Some tale that might, perchance, have solved the doubt,
Wherefore, among those flags so dull and livid,
The banner of the bloody hand shone out
So ominously vivid.

Some key to that inscrutable appeal
Which made the very frame of Nature quiver,
And every thrilling nerve and fiber feel
So ague-like a shiver.

For over all there hung a cloud of fear,
A sense of mystery the spirit daunted,
And said, as plain as whisper in the ear,
The place is haunted!

Prophetic hints that filled the soul with dread,
But through one gloomy entrance pointing mostly,
The while some secret inspiration said,
“That chamber is the ghostly!”

Across the door no gossamer festoon
Swung pendulous, --no web, no dusty fringes,
No silky chrysalis or white cocoon,
About its nooks and hinges.

The spider shunned the interdicted room,
The moth, the beetle, and the fly were banished,
And when the sunbeam fell athwart the gloom,
The very midge had vanished.

One lonely ray that glanced upon a bed,
As if with awful aim direct and certain,
To show the Bloody Hand, in burning red,
Embroidered on the curtain.


Written by Amy Lowell | Create an image from this poem

Afternoon Rain in State Street

 Cross-hatchings of rain against grey walls,
Slant lines of black rain
In front of the up and down, wet stone sides of buildings.
Below,
Greasy, shiny, black, horizontal,
The street.
And over it, umbrellas,
Black polished dots
Struck to white
An instant,
Stream in two flat lines
Slipping past each other with the smoothness of oil.
Like a four-sided wedge
The Custom House Tower
Pokes at the low, flat sky,
Pushing it farther and farther up,
Lifting it away from the house-tops,
Lifting it in one piece as though it were a sheet of tin,
With the lever of its apex.
The cross-hatchings of rain cut the Tower obliquely,
Scratching lines of black wire across it,
Mutilating its perpendicular grey surface
With the sharp precision of tools.
The city is rigid with straight lines and angles,
A chequered table of blacks and greys.
Oblong blocks of flatness
Crawl by with low-geared engines,
And pass to short upright squares
Shrinking with distance.
A steamer in the basin blows its whistle,
And the sound shoots across the rain hatchings,
A narrow, level bar of steel.
Hard cubes of lemon
Superimpose themselves upon the fronts of buildings
As the windows light up.
But the lemon cubes are edged with angles
Upon which they cannot impinge.
Up, straight, down, straight -- square.
Crumpled grey-white papers
Blow along the side-walks,
Contorted, horrible,
Without curves.
A horse steps in a puddle,
And white, glaring water spurts up
In stiff, outflaring lines,
Like the rattling stems of reeds.
The city is heraldic with angles,
A sombre escutcheon of argent and sable
And countercoloured bends of rain
Hung over a four-square civilization.
When a street lamp comes out,
I gaze at it for fully thirty seconds
To rest my brain with the suffusing, round brilliance of its globe.
Written by Victor Hugo | Create an image from this poem

The Blinded Bourbons

 ("Qui leur eût dit l'austère destineé?") 
 
 {II. v., November, 1836.} 


 Who then, to them{1} had told the Future's story? 
 Or said that France, low bowed before their glory, 
 One day would mindful be 
 Of them and of their mournful fate no more, 
 Than of the wrecks its waters have swept o'er 
 The unremembering sea? 
 
 That their old Tuileries should see the fall 
 Of blazons from its high heraldic hall, 
 Dismantled, crumbling, prone;{2} 
 Or that, o'er yon dark Louvre's architrave{3} 
 A Corsican, as yet unborn, should grave 
 An eagle, then unknown? 
 
 That gay St. Cloud another lord awaited, 
 Or that in scenes Le Nôtre's art created 
 For princely sport and ease, 
 Crimean steeds, trampling the velvet glade, 
 Should browse the bark beneath the stately shade 
 Of the great Louis' trees? 
 
 Fraser's Magazine. 
 
 {Footnote 1: The young princes, afterwards Louis XVIII. and Charles X.} 
 
 {Footnote 2: The Tuileries, several times stormed by mobs, was so 
 irreparably injured by the Communists that, in 1882, the Paris Town 
 Council decided that the ruins should be cleared away.} 
 
 {Footnote 3: After the Eagle and the Bee superseded the Lily-flowers, 
 the Third Napoleon's initial "N" flourished for two decades, but has 
 been excised or plastered over, the words "National Property" or 
 "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity" being cut in the stone profusely.} 


 




Written by Victor Hugo | Create an image from this poem

Marriage And Feasts

 ("La salle est magnifique.") 
 
 {IV. Aug. 23, 1839.} 


 The hall is gay with limpid lustre bright— 
 The feast to pampered palate gives delight— 
 The sated guests pick at the spicy food, 
 And drink profusely, for the cheer is good; 
 And at that table—where the wise are few— 
 Both sexes and all ages meet the view; 
 The sturdy warrior with a thoughtful face— 
 The am'rous youth, the maid replete with grace, 
 The prattling infant, and the hoary hair 
 Of second childhood's proselytes—are there;— 
 And the most gaudy in that spacious hall, 
 Are e'er the young, or oldest of them all 
 Helmet and banner, ornament and crest, 
 The lion rampant, and the jewelled vest, 
 The silver star that glitters fair and white, 
 The arms that tell of many a nation's might— 
 Heraldic blazonry, ancestral pride, 
 And all mankind invents for pomp beside, 
 The wingèd leopard, and the eagle wild— 
 All these encircle woman, chief and child; 
 Shine on the carpet burying their feet, 
 Adorn the dishes that contain their meat; 
 And hang upon the drapery, which around 
 Falls from the lofty ceiling to the ground, 
 Till on the floor its waving fringe is spread, 
 As the bird's wing may sweep the roses' bed.— 
 
 Thus is the banquet ruled by Noise and Light, 
 Since Light and Noise are foremost on the site. 
 
 The chamber echoes to the joy of them 
 Who throng around, each with his diadem— 
 Each seated on proud throne—but, lesson vain! 
 Each sceptre holds its master with a chain! 
 Thus hope of flight were futile from that hall, 
 Where chiefest guest was most enslaved of all! 
 The godlike-making draught that fires the soul 
 The Love—sweet poison-honey—past control, 
 (Formed of the sexual breath—an idle name, 
 Offspring of Fancy and a nervous frame)— 
 Pleasure, mad daughter of the darksome Night, 
 Whose languid eye flames when is fading light— 
 The gallant chases where a man is borne 
 By stalwart charger, to the sounding horn— 
 The sheeny silk, the bed of leaves of rose, 
 Made more to soothe the sight than court repose; 
 The mighty palaces that raise the sneer 
 Of jealous mendicants and wretches near— 
 The spacious parks, from which horizon blue 
 Arches o'er alabaster statues new; 
 Where Superstition still her walk will take, 
 Unto soft music stealing o'er the lake— 
 The innocent modesty by gems undone— 
 The qualms of judges by small brib'ry won— 
 The dread of children, trembling while they play— 
 The bliss of monarchs, potent in their sway— 
 The note of war struck by the culverin, 
 That snakes its brazen neck through battle din— 
 The military millipede 
 That tramples out the guilty seed— 
 The capital all pleasure and delight— 
 And all that like a town or army chokes 
 The gazer with foul dust or sulphur smokes. 
 The budget, prize for which ten thousand bait 
 A subtle hook, that ever, as they wait 
 Catches a weed, and drags them to their fate, 
 While gleamingly its golden scales still spread— 
 Such were the meats by which these guests were fed. 
 
 A hundred slaves for lazy master cared, 
 And served each one with what was e'er prepared 
 By him, who in a sombre vault below, 
 Peppered the royal pig with peoples' woe, 
 And grimly glad went laboring till late— 
 The morose alchemist we know as Fate! 
 That ev'ry guest might learn to suit his taste, 
 Behind had Conscience, real or mock'ry, placed; 
 Conscience a guide who every evil spies, 
 But royal nurses early pluck out both his eyes! 
 
 Oh! at the table there be all the great, 
 Whose lives are bubbles that best joys inflate! 
 Superb, magnificent of revels—doubt 
 That sagest lose their heads in such a rout! 
 In the long laughter, ceaseless roaming round, 
 Joy, mirth and glee give out a maelström's sound; 
 And the astonished gazer casts his care, 
 Where ev'ry eyeball glistens in the flare. 
 
 But oh! while yet the singing Hebes pour 
 Forgetfulness of those without the door— 
 At very hour when all are most in joy, 
 And the hid orchestra annuls annoy, 
 Woe—woe! with jollity a-top the heights, 
 With further tapers adding to the lights, 
 And gleaming 'tween the curtains on the street, 
 Where poor folks stare—hark to the heavy feet! 
 Some one smites roundly on the gilded grate, 
 Some one below will be admitted straight, 
 Some one, though not invited, who'll not wait! 
 Close not the door! Your orders are vain breath— 
 That stranger enters to be known as Death— 
 Or merely Exile—clothed in alien guise— 
 Death drags away—with his prey Exile flies! 
 
 Death is that sight. He promenades the hall, 
 And casts a gloomy shadow on them all, 
 'Neath which they bend like willows soft, 
 Ere seizing one—the dumbest monarch oft, 
 And bears him to eternal heat and drouth, 
 While still the toothsome morsel's in his mouth. 
 
 G.W.M. REYNOLDS. 


 




Written by G K Chesterton | Create an image from this poem

Variations of an Air

 Old King Cole
Was a merry old soul
And a merry old soul was he
He called for his pipe 
and he called for his bowl 
and he called for his fiddlers three


after Lord Tennyson


Cole, that unwearied prince of Colchester, 
Growing more gay with age and with long days 
Deeper in laughter and desire of life 
As that Virginian climber on our walls 
Flames scarlet with the fading of the year; 
Called for his wassail and that other weed 
Virginian also, from the western woods 
Where English Raleigh checked the boast of Spain, 
And lighting joy with joy, and piling up 
Pleasure as crown for pleasure, bade me bring 
Those three, the minstrels whose emblazoned coats 
Shone with the oyster-shells of Colchester; 
And these three played, and playing grew more fain 
Of mirth and music; till the heathen came 
And the King slept beside the northern sea. 


after W.B. Yeats


Of an old King in a story 
From the grey sea-folk I have heard 
Whose heart was no more broken 
Than the wings of a bird. 

As soon as the moon was silver 
And the thin stars began, 
He took his pipe and his tankard, 
Like an old peasant man. 

And three tall shadows were with him 
And came at his command; 
And played before him for ever 
The fiddles of fairyland. 

And he died in the young summer 
Of the world's desire; 
Before our hearts were broken 
Like sticks in a fire. 


after Walt Whitman


Me clairvoyant, 
Me conscious of you, old camarado, 
Needing no telescope, lorgnette, field-glass, opera-glass, myopic pince-nez, 
Me piercing two thousand years with eye naked and not ashamed; 
The crown cannot hide you from me, 
Musty old feudal-heraldic trappings cannot hide you from me, 
I perceive that you drink. 
(I am drinking with you. I am as drunk as you are.) 
I see you are inhaling tobacco, puffing, smoking, spitting 
(I do not object to your spitting), 
You prophetic of American largeness, 
You anticipating the broad masculine manners of these States; 
I see in you also there are movements, tremors, tears, desire for the melodious, 
I salute your three violinists, endlessly making vibrations, 
Rigid, relentless, capable of going on for ever; 
They play my accompaniment; but I shall take no notice of any accompaniment; 
I myself am a complete orchestra. 
So long.


Written by Jean Delville | Create an image from this poem

The Marmoreal Slumbers

Thus, the souls of dismal feudal lineage,
Perpetuating their pride in illustrious sepulchres,
Stretch out their long, marble sleep upon the flagstones,
Weighted with dead centuries and funereal pasts,

The heraldic and grandiose white cadavers,
With righteous hands joined in ardent rigidity,
Pallid with faith, that rise from their bosoms
With sacerdotal gestures of prayer in eternity.

Beneath a heavy mourning of shadows in the tumulous crypts,
Within the illustrious vision of their solemn brows, slumbers
The barbarous spendour of secular reigns.

And their bodies, where the original blood has congealed,
Sealed within the marbles, austerely patrician,
Are the petrified Phantoms of ancient times

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry