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Best Famous Hs Poems

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

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Written by Helen Hunt Jackson | Create an image from this poem

Songs of Battle

 Old as the world--no other things so old; 
Nay, older than the world, else, how had sprung 
Such lusty strength in them when earth was young?-- 
Stand valor and its passion hot and bold, 
Insatiate of battle. How, else, told 
Blind men, born blind, that red was fitting tongue 
Mute, eloquent, to show how trumpets rung 
When armies charged adn battle-flags unfurled? 
Who sings of valor speaks for life, for death, 
Beyond all death, and long as life is life, 
in rippled waves the eternal air hs breath 
Eternal bears to stir all noble strife. 
Dead Homer from his lost and vanished grave 
Keeps battle glorious still and soldiers brave.


Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

Our Mat

 It came from the prison this morning, 
Close-twisted, neat-lettered, and flat; 
It lies the hall doorway adorning, 
A very good style of a mat. 

Prison-made! how the spirit is moven 
As we think of its story of dread -- 
What wiles of the wicked are woven 
And spun in its intricate thread! 

The letters are new, neat and nobby, 
Suggesting a masterly hand -- 
Was it Sikes, who half-murdered the bobby, 
That put the neat D on the "and"? 

Some banker found guilty of laches -- 
It's always called laches, you know -- 
Had Holt any hand in those Hs? 
Did Bertrand illumine that O? 

That T has a look of the gallows, 
That A's a triangle, I guess; 
Was it one of the Mount Rennie fellows 
Who twisted the strands of the S? 

Was it made by some "highly connected", 
Who is doing his spell "on his head", 
Or some wretched woman detected 
In stealing her children some bread? 

Does it speak of a bitter repentance 
For the crime that so easily came? 
Of the wearisome length of the sentence, 
Of the sin, and the sorrow, and shame? 

A mat! I should call it a sermon 
On sin, to all sinners addressed; 
It would take a keen judge to determine 
Whether writer or reader is best. 

Though the doorway be hard as a pavestone, 
I rather would use it than that -- 
I'd as soon wipe my boots on a gravestone, 
As I would on that Darlinghurst mat!

Book: Reflection on the Important Things