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Best Famous Mollify Poems

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

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Written by Michael Drayton | Create an image from this poem

Sonnet XXV: O Why Should Nature

 O why should Nature niggardly restrain 
That foreign nations relish not our tongue? 
Else should my lines glide on the waves of Rhene 
And crown the Pyrens with my living song. 
But, bounded thus, to Scotland get you forth, 
Thence take you wing unto the Orcades; 
There let my verse get glory in the North, 
Making my sighs to thaw the frozen seas; 
And let the Bards within that Irish isle, 
To whom my Muse with fiery wing shall pass, 
Call back the stiff-neck'd rebels from exile, 
And mollify the slaught'ring Gallowglass; 
And when my flowing numbers they rehearse, 
Let wolves and bears be charmed with my verse.


Written by George Herbert | Create an image from this poem

The H. Scriptures I

 Oh Book! infinite sweetness! let my heart
Suck ev'ry letter, and a honey gain, 
Precious for any grief in any part; 
To clear the breast, to mollify all pain.
Thou art all health, health thriving, till it make
A full eternity: thou art a mass
Of strange delights, where we may wish and take.
Ladies, look here; this is the thankfull glass, 
That mends the looker's eyes: this is the well
That washes what it shows. Who can endear
Thy praise too much? thou art heav'n's Lidger here, 
Working against the states of death and hell.
Thou art joy's handsel: heav'n lies flat in thee, 
Subject to ev'ry mounter's bended knee.
Written by Edmund Spenser | Create an image from this poem

Sonnet XXXII

 The paynefull smith with force of feruent heat,
the hardest yron soone doth mollify:
that with his heauy sledge he can it beat,
and fashion to what he it list apply.
Yet cannot all these flames in which I fry,
her hart more harde then yron soft awhit;
ne all the playnts and prayers with which I
doe beat on th'anduyle of her stubberne wit:
But still the more she feruent sees my fit:
the more she frieseth in her wilfull pryde:
and harder growes the harder she is smit,
with all the playnts which to her be applyde.
What then remaines but I to ashes burne,
and she to stones at length all frosen turne?

Book: Reflection on the Important Things