Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Minorities Poems

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

Search and read the best famous Minorities poems, articles about Minorities poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Minorities poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Ralph Waldo Emerson | Create an image from this poem

Mithridates

 I cannot spare water or wine,
Tobacco-leaf, or poppy, or rose;
From the earth-poles to the Line,
All between that works or grows,
Every thing is kin of mine.
Give me agates for my meat, Give me cantharids to eat, From air and ocean bring me foods, From all zones and altitudes.
From all natures, sharp and slimy, Salt and basalt, wild and tame, Tree, and lichen, ape, sea-lion, Bird and reptile be my game.
Ivy for my fillet band, Blinding dogwood in my hand, Hemlock for my sherbet cull me, And the prussic juice to lull me, Swing me in the upas boughs, Vampire-fanned, when I carouse.
Too long shut in strait and few, Thinly dieted on dew, I will use the world, and sift it, To a thousand humors shift it, As you spin a cherry.
O doleful ghosts, and goblins merry, O all you virtues, methods, mights; Means, appliances, delights; Reputed wrongs, and braggart rights; Smug routine, and things allowed; Minorities, things under cloud! Hither! take me, use me, fill me, Vein and artery, though ye kill me; God! I will not be an owl, But sun me in the Capitol.


Written by Philip Larkin | Create an image from this poem

Since The Majority Of Me

 Since the majority of me 
Rejects the majority of you, 
Debating ends forwith, and we 
Divide.
And sure of what to do We disinfect new blocks of days For our majorities to rent With unshared friends and unwalked ways, But silence too is eloquent: A silence of minorities That, unopposed at last, return Each night with cancelled promises They want renewed.
They never learn.
Written by Paul Laurence Dunbar | Create an image from this poem

RIGHT'S SECURITY

What if the wind do howl without,
And turn the creaking weather-vane;
What if the arrows of the rain
Do beat against the window-pane?
Art thou not armored strong and fast
Against the sallies of the blast?
Art thou not sheltered safe and well
Against the flood's insistent swell?
What boots it, that thou stand'st alone,
And laughest in the battle's face
When all the weak have fled the place
And let their feet and fears keep pace?
Thou wavest still thine ensign, high,
And shoutest thy loud battle-cry;
Higher than e'er the tempest roared,
It cleaves the silence like a sword.
Right arms and armors, too, that man
Who will not compromise with wrong;
Though single, he must front the throng,
And wage the battle hard and long.
Minorities, since time began,
Have shown the better side of man;
And often in the lists of Time
One man has made a cause sublime!

Book: Shattered Sighs