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Best Famous Lacerated Poems

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

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Written by Donald Hall | Create an image from this poem

Wolf Knife

 In the mid August, in the second year
of my First Polar Expedition, the snow and ice of winter
almost upon us, Kantiuk and I
attempted to dash the sledge
along Crispin Bay, searching again for relics
of the Frankline Expedition.
Now a storm blew, and we turned back, and we struggled slowly in snow, lest we depart land and venture onto ice from which a sudden fog and thaw would abandon us to the Providence of the sea.
Near nightfall I thought I heard snarling behind us.
Kantiuk told me that two wolves, lean as the bones of a wrecked ship, had followed us the last hour, and snapped their teeth as if already feasting.
I carried the one cartridge only in my riffle, since, approaching the second winter, we rationed stores.
As it turned dark, we could push no further, and made camp in a corner of ice hummocks, and the wolves stopped also, growling just past the limits of vision, coming closer, until I could hear the click of their feet on ice.
Kantiuk laughed and remarked that the wolves appeared to be most hungry.
I raised my rifle, prepared to shoot the first that ventured close, hoping to frighten the other.
Kantiuk struck my rifle down and said again that the wolves were hungry, and laughed.
I feared that my old companion was mad, here in the storm, among ice-hummocks, stalked by wolves.
Now Kantiuk searched in his pack, and extracted two knives--turnoks, the Innuits called them-- which by great labor were sharpened, on both sides, to the sharpness like the edge of a barber's razor, and approached our dogs and plunged both knives into the body of our youngest dog who had limped all day.
I remember that I consider turning my rifle on Kantiuk as he approached, then passed me, carrying knives red with the gore of our dog-- who had yowled, moaned, and now lay expired, surrounded by curious cousins and uncles, possibly hungry--and he trusted the knives handle-down in the snow.
Immediately after he left the knives, the vague, gray shape of wolves turned solid, out of the darkness and the snow, and set ravenously to licking blood from the honed steel.
the double-edge of the knives so lacerated the tongues of the starved beasts that their own blood poured copiously forth to replenish the dog's blood, and they ate more furiously than before, while Knatiuk laughed, and held his sides laughing.
And I laughed also, perhaps in relief that Providence had delivered us yet again, or perhaps--under conditions of extremity-- far from Connecticut--finding there creatures acutely ridiculous, so avid to swallow their own blood.
First one, and then the other collapsed, dying, bloodless in the snow black with their own blood, and Kantiuk retrieved his turnoks, and hacked lean meat from the thigh of the larger wolf, which we ate grateful, blessing the Creator, for we were hungry.


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

Deaths Way

 Old Man Death's a lousy heel who will not play the game:
Let Graveyard yawn and doom down crash, he'll sneer and turn away.
But when the sky with rapture rings and joy is like a flame, Then Old Man Death grins evilly, and swings around to slay.
Jack Duval was my chosen pal in the ranks of the Reckless Men.
Thick as thieves they used to say, and it may be that we were: Where the price of life is a naked knife and dammed are nine in ten, It doesn't do to be curious in the Legion Etrangère.
So when it came to a hidden shame our mugs were zippered tight; He never asked me what I'd done, and he would never tell; But though like men we revelled, when it came to bloody fight I knew that I could bank on him clear to the hubs of hell.
They still tell how we held the Fort back on the blasted bled, And blazed from out the shambles till the fagged relief arrived.
"The garrison are slaughtered all," the Captain grimly said: Piped Jack: "Give us a slug of hooch and say that TWO survived.
" Then was that time we were lost, canteen and carcase dry, As on we staggered with the thought: "Here's where our story ends.
" Ten desert days delirious, when black against the sky, We saw a line of camels, and the Arabs were our friends.
And last of all, the lurid night we crashed the gates of hell And stemmed the Teuton torrent as it roared on every side; And we were left in blood and mud to rot on the Moselle - Two lacerated Legionaires, whom all supposed had died.
Three times death thought to take us and three times he stayed his hand; But when we left the Legion what a happy pair we were, Then reckless roving up and down the sunny land, I found Jack eating bouillabaisse back on the Cannebière.
"Next week I wed," he gaily said, "the sweetest girl on earth.
I wonder why did Death pass by just then and turn to gloat? "Oh I'm so happy! You must come and join us in our mirth.
".
.
.
Death struck .
.
.
Jack gasped and choked and - died: A fishbone in his throat.

Book: Shattered Sighs