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Best Famous Jawed Poems

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

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Written by James Dickey | Create an image from this poem

FOR THE LAST WOLVERINE

 They will soon be down

To one, but he still will be
For a little while still will be stopping

The flakes in the air with a look,
Surrounding himself with the silence
Of whitening snarls.
Let him eat The last red meal of the condemned To extinction, tearing the guts From an elk.
Yet that is not enough For me.
I would have him eat The heart, and, from it, have an idea Stream into his gnawing head That he no longer has a thing To lose, and so can walk Out into the open, in the full Pale of the sub-Arctic sun Where a single spruce tree is dying Higher and higher.
Let him climb it With all his meanness and strength.
Lord, we have come to the end Of this kind of vision of heaven, As the sky breaks open Its fans around him and shimmers And into its northern gates he rises Snarling complete in the joy of a weasel With an elk's horned heart in his stomach Looking straight into the eternal Blue, where he hauls his kind.
I would have it all My way: at the top of that tree I place The New World's last eagle Hunched in mangy feathers giving Up on the theory of flight.
Dear God of the wildness of poetry, let them mate To the death in the rotten branches, Let the tree sway and burst into flame And mingle them, crackling with feathers, In crownfire.
Let something come Of it something gigantic legendary Rise beyond reason over hills Of ice SCREAMING that it cannot die, That it has come back, this time On wings, and will spare no earthly thing: That it will hover, made purely of northern Lights, at dusk and fall On men building roads: will perch On the moose's horn like a falcon Riding into battle into holy war against Screaming railroad crews: will pull Whole traplines like fibers from the snow In the long-jawed night of fur trappers.
But, small, filthy, unwinged, You will soon be crouching Alone, with maybe some dim racial notion Of being the last, but none of how much Your unnoticed going will mean: How much the timid poem needs The mindless explosion of your rage, The glutton's internal fire the elk's Heart in the belly, sprouting wings, The pact of the "blind swallowing Thing," with himself, to eat The world, and not to be driven off it Until it is gone, even if it takes Forever.
I take you as you are And make of you what I will, Skunk-bear, carcajou, bloodthirsty Non-survivor.
Lord, let me die but not die Out.
Copyright © 1966 by James Dickey Online Source - http://www.
theatlantic.
com/unbound/poetry/dickey/wolverine.
htm


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

Jobson Of The Star

 Within a pub that's off the Strand and handy to the bar,
With pipe in mouth and mug in hand sat Jobson of the Star.
"Come, sit ye down, ye wond'ring wight, and have a yarn," says he.
"I can't," says I, "because to-night I'm off to Tripoli; To Tripoli and Trebizond and Timbuctoo mayhap, Or any magic name beyond I find upon the map.
I go errant trail to try, to clutch the skirts of Chance, To make once more before I die the gesture of Romance.
" The Jobson yawned above his jug, and rumbled: "Is that so? Well, anyway, sit down, you mug, and have a drink before you go.
" Now Jobson is a chum of mine, and in a dusty den, Within the street that's known as Fleet, he wields a wicked pen.
And every night it's his delight, above the fleeting show, To castigate the living Great, and keep the lowly low.
And all there is to know he knows, for unto him is spurred The knowledge of the knowledge of the Thing That Has Occurred.
And all that is to hear he hears, for to his ear is whirled The echo of the echo of the Sound That Shocks The World.
Let Revolutions rage and rend, and Kingdoms rise and fall, There Jobson sits and smokes and spits, and writes about it all.
And so we jawed a little while on matters small and great; He told me his cynic smile of graves affairs of state.
Of princes, peers and presidents, and folks beyond my ken, He spoke as you and I might speak of ordinary men.
For Jobson is a scribe of worth, and has respect for none, And all the mighty ones of earth are targets for his fun.
So when I said good-bye, says he, with his satyric leer: "Too bad to go, when life is so damned interesting here.
The Government rides for a fall, and things are getting hot.
You'd better stick around, old pal; you'll miss an awful lot.
" Yet still I went and wandered far, by secret ways and wide.
Adventure was the shining star I took to be my guide.
For fifty moons I followed on, and every moon was sweet, And lit as if for me alone the trail before my feet.
From cities desolate with doom my moons swam up and set, On tower and temple, tent and tomb, on mosque and minaret.
To heights that hailed the dawn I scaled, by cliff and chasm sheer; To far Cathy I found my way, and fabolous Kashmir.
From camel-back I traced the track that bars the barren bled, And leads to hell-and-blazes, and I followed where it led.
Like emeralds in sapphire set, and ripe for human rape, I passed with passionate regret the Islands of Escape.
With death I clinched a time or two, and gave the brute a fall.
Hunger and cold and thirst I knew, yet.
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how I loved it all! Then suddenly I seemed to tire of trecking up and town, And longed for some domestic fire, and sailed for London Town.
And in a pub that's off the Strand, and handy to the bar, With pipe in mouth and mug in hand sat Jobson of the Star.
"Hullo!" says he, "come, take a pew, and tell me where you've been.
It seems to me that lately you have vanished from the scene.
" "I've been," says I, "to Kordovan and Kong and Calabar, To Sarawak and Samarkand, to Ghat and Bolivar; To Caracas and Guayaquil, to Lhasa and Pekin, To Brahmapurta and Brazil, to Bagdad and Benin.
I've sailed the Black Sea and the White, The Yellow and the Red, The Sula and the Celebes, the Bering and the Dead.
I've climbed on Chimborazo, and I've wandered in Peru; I've camped on Kinchinjunga, and I've crossed the Great Karoo.
I've drifted on the Hoang-ho, the Nile and Amazon; I've swam the Tiber and the Po.
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" thus I was going on, When Jobson yawned above his beer, and rumbled: "Is that so?.
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It's been so damned exciting here, too bad you had to go.
We've had the devil of a slump; the market's gone to pot; You should have stuck around, you chump, you've missed an awful lot.
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In haggard lands where ages brood, on plains burnt out and dim, I broke the bread of brotherhood with ruthless men and grim.
By ways untrod I walked with God, by parched and bitter path; In deserts dim I talked with Him, and learned to know His Wrath.
But in a pub that's off the Strand, sits Jobson every night, And tells me what a fool I am, and maybe he is right.
For Jobson is a man of stamp, and proud of him am I; And I am just a bloody tramp, and will be till I die.
Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Fire Dreams

 I REMEMBER here by the fire,
In the flickering reds and saffrons,
They came in a ramshackle tub,
Pilgrims in tall hats,
Pilgrims of iron jaws,
Drifting by weeks on beaten seas,
And the random chapters say
They were glad and sang to God.
And so Since the iron-jawed men sat down And said, “Thanks, O God,” For life and soup and a little less Than a hobo handout to-day, Since gray winds blew gray patterns of sleet on Plymouth Rock, Since the iron-jawed men sang “Thanks, O God,” You and I, O Child of the West, Remember more than ever November and the hunter’s moon, November and the yellow-spotted hills.
And so In the name of the iron-jawed men I will stand up and say yes till the finish is come and gone.
God of all broken hearts, empty hands, sleeping soldiers, God of all star-flung beaches of night sky, I and my love-child stand up together to-day and sing: “Thanks, O God.
Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

With Mercy For The Greedy

 for my friend Ruth, who urges me to make an
appointment for the Sacrament of Confesson

Concerning your letter in which you ask
me to call a priest and in which you ask
me to wear The Cross that you enclose;
your own cross,
your dog-bitten cross,
no larger than a thumb,
small and wooden, no thorns, this rose --

I pray to its shadow,
that gray place
where it lies on your letter .
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deep, deep.
I detest my sins and I try to believe in The Cross.
I touch its tender hips, its dark jawed face, its solid neck, its brown sleep.
True.
There is a beautiful Jesus.
He is frozen to his bones like a chunk of beef.
How desperately he wanted to pull his arms in! How desperately I touch his vertical and horizontal axes! But I can't.
Need is not quite belief.
All morning long I have worn your cross, hung with package string around my throat.
It tapped me lightly as a child's heart might, tapping secondhand, softly waiting to be born.
Ruth, I cherish the letter you wrote.
My friend, my friend, I was born doing reference work in sin, and born confessing it.
This is what poems are: with mercy for the greedy, they are the tongue's wrangle, the world's pottage, the rat's star.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

Tar and Feathers

 Oh! the circus swooped down 
On the Narrabri town, 
For the Narrabri populace moneyed are; 
And the showman he smiled 
At the folk he beguiled 
To come all the distance from Gunnedah.
But a juvenile smart, Who objected to "part", Went in on the nod, and to do it he Crawled in through a crack In the tent at the back, For the boy had no slight ingenuity.
And says he with a grin, "That's the way to get in; But I reckon I'd better be quiet or They'll spiflicate me," And he chuckled, for he Had the loan of the circus proprietor.
But the showman astute On that wily galoot Soon dropped -- you'll be thinking he leathered him -- Not he; with a grim Sort of humourous whim, He took him and tarred him and feathered him.
Says he, "You can go Round the world with a show, And knock every Injun and Arab wry; With your name and your trade On the posters displayed, The feathered what-is-it from Narrabri.
Next day for his freak By a Narrabri Beak, He was jawed with a deal of verbosity; For his only appeal Was "professional zeal" -- He wanted another monstrosity.
Said his Worship, "Begob! You are fined forty bob, And six shillin's costs to the clurk!" he says.
And the Narrabri joy, Half bird and half boy.
Has a "down" on himself and on circuses.



Book: Shattered Sighs