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Best Famous Obstruct Poems

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Written by Anne Killigrew | Create an image from this poem

Upon the saying that my VERSES were made by another

 NExt Heaven my Vows to thee (O Sacred Muse! ) 
I offer'd up, nor didst thou them refuse. 
 O Queen of Verse, said I, if thou'lt inspire, 
And warm my Soul with thy Poetique Fire, 
No Love of Gold shall share with thee my Heart, 
Or yet Ambition in my Brest have Part, 
More Rich, more Noble I will ever hold
The Muses Laurel, than a Crown of Gold. 
An Undivided Sacrifice I'le lay
Upon thine Altar, Soul and Body pay; 
Thou shalt my Pleasure, my Employment be, 
My All I'le make a Holocaust to thee. 

 The Deity that ever does attend
Prayers so sincere, to mine did condescend. 
I writ, and the Judicious prais'd my Pen: 
Could any doubt Insuing Glory then ? 

What pleasing Raptures fill'd my Ravisht Sense ? 
How strong, how Sweet, Fame, was thy Influence ?
And thine, False Hope, that to my flatter'd sight
Didst Glories represent so Near, and Bright ? 
By thee deceiv'd, methought, each Verdant Tree, 
Apollos transform'd Daphne seem'd to be; 
And ev'ry fresher Branch, and ev'ry Bow
Appear'd as Garlands to empale my Brow. 
The Learn'd in Love say, Thus the Winged Boy
Does first approach, drest up in welcome Joy; 
At first he to the Cheated Lovers sight
Nought represents, but Rapture and Delight, 
Alluring Hopes, Soft Fears, which stronger bind
Their Hearts, than when they more assurance find. 

 Embolden'd thus, to Fame I did commit, 
(By some few hands) my most Unlucky Wit. 
But, ah, the sad effects that from it came ! 
What ought t'have brought me Honour, brought me shame ! 
Like Esops Painted Jay I seem'd to all, 
Adorn'd in Plumes, I not my own could call: 

Rifl'd like her, each one my Feathers tore, 
And, as they thought, unto the Owner bore. 
My Laurels thus an Others Brow adorn'd, 
My Numbers they Admir'd, but Me they scorn'd: 
An others Brow, that had so rich a store
Of Sacred Wreaths, that circled it before; 
Where mine quite lost, (like a small stream that ran 
Into a Vast and Boundless Ocean)
Was swallow'd up, with what it joyn'd and drown'd, 
And that Abiss yet no Accession found. 

 Orinda, (Albions and her Sexes Grace) 
Ow'd not her Glory to a Beauteous Face, 
It was her Radiant Soul that shon With-in, 
Which struk a Lustre through her Outward Skin; 
That did her Lips and Cheeks with Roses dy, 
Advanc't her Height, and Sparkled in her Eye. 
Nor did her Sex at all obstruct her Fame, 
But higher 'mong the Stars it fixt her Name; 
What she did write, not only all allow'd, 
But ev'ry Laurel, to her Laurel, bow'd ! 

 Th'Envious Age, only to Me alone, 
Will not allow, what I do write, my Own, 
But let 'em Rage, and 'gainst a Maide Conspire, 
So Deathless Numbers from my Tuneful Lyre 
Do ever flow; so Phebus I by thee
Divinely Inspired and possest may be; 
I willingly accept Cassandras Fate, 
To speak the Truth, although believ'd too late


Written by Anne Killigrew | Create an image from this poem

The Discontent

 I.
HEre take no Care, take here no Care, my Muse,
 Nor ought of Art or Labour use:
 But let thy Lines rude and unpolisht go,
Nor Equal be their Feet, nor Num'rous let them flow.
 The ruggeder my Measures run when read,
They'l livelier paint th'unequal Paths fond Mortals tread.
 Who when th'are tempted by the smooth Ascents,
 Which flatt'ring Hope presents,
 Briskly they clime, and Great Things undertake;
 But Fatal Voyages, alas, they make:
 For 'tis not long before their Feet,
 Inextricable Mazes meet,
 Perplexing Doubts obstruct their Way,
 Mountains with-stand them of Dismay;
 Or to the Brink of black Dispaire them lead,
 Where's nought their Ruine to impede, 

 In vain for Aide they then to Reason call,
 Their Senses dazle, and their Heads turn round,
 The sight does all their Pow'rs confound,
And headlong down the horrid Precipice they fall:
 Where storms of Sighs for ever blow,
 Where raped streams of Tears do flow,
 Which drown them in a Briny Floud.
My Muse pronounce aloud, there's nothing Good,
 Nought that the World can show,
 Nought that it can bestow. 

II.
 Not boundless Heaps of its admired Clay,
 Ah, too successful to betray,
 When spread in our fraile Vertues way:
 For few do run with so Resolv'd a Pace,
That for the Golden Apple will not loose the Race.
 And yet not all the Gold the Vain would spend,
 Or greedy Avarice would wish to save;
 Which on the Earth refulgent Beams doth send,
 Or in the Sea has found a Grave,
 Joyn'd in one Mass, can Bribe sufficient be,
 The Body from a stern Disease to free, 
 Or purchase for the Minds relief
One Moments sweet Repose, when restless made by grief,
But what may Laughter, more than Pity, move:
 When some the Price of what they Dear'st Love
 Are Masters of, and hold it in their Hand,
 To part with it their Hearts they can't command:
 But chose to miss, what miss't does them torment,
 And that to hug, affords them no Content.
 Wise Fools, to do them Right, we these must hold,
 Who Love depose, and Homage pay to Gold. 

III.
 Nor yet, if rightly understood,
 Does Grandeur carry more of Good;
 To be o'th' Number of the Great enroll'd,
 A Scepter o're a Mighty Realm to hold.
 For what is this?
 If I not judge amiss.
 But all th'Afflicted of a Land to take,
 And of one single Family to make?
 The Wrong'd, the Poor, th'Opprest, the Sad,
 The Ruin'd, Malecontent, and Mad? 

 Which a great Part of ev'ry Empire frame,
 And Interest in the common Father claime.
 Again what is't, but always to abide
 A Gazing Crowd? upon a Stage to spend
 A Life that's vain, or Evil without End?
And which is yet not safely held, nor laid aside?
And then, if lesser Titles carry less of Care,
Yet none but Fools ambitious are to share
Such a Mock-Good, of which 'tis said, 'tis Best,
When of the least of it Men are possest. 

IV.
 But, O, the Laurel'd Fool! that doats on Fame,
 Whose Hope's Applause, whose Fear's to want a Name;
 Who can accept for Pay
 Of what he does, what others say;
 Exposes now to hostile Arms his Breast,
To toylsome Study then betrays his Rest;
 Now to his Soul denies a just Content,
 Then forces on it what it does resent;
 And all for Praise of Fools: for such are those,
 Which most of the Admiring Crowd compose.
 O famisht Soul, which such Thin Food can feed!
 O Wretched Labour crown'd with such a Meed! 

 Too loud, O Fame! thy Trumpet is, too shrill,
 To lull a Mind to Rest,
 Or calme a stormy Breast,
 Which asks a Musick soft and still.
 'Twas not Amaleck's vanquisht Cry,
 Nor Israels shout of Victory,
 That could in Saul the rising Passion lay,
'Twas the soft strains of David's Lyre the Evil Spirit chace't away. 

V.
 But Friendship fain would yet it self defend,
 And Mighty Things it does pretend,
 To be of this Sad Journey, Life, the Baite,
The Sweet Refection of our toylsome State.
 But though True Friendship a Rich Cordial be,
 Alas, by most 'tis so alay'd,
 Its Good so mixt with Ill we see,
 That Dross for Gold is often paid.
 And for one Grain of Friendship that is found,
 Falshood and Interest do the Mass compound,
Or coldness, worse than Steel, the Loyal heart doth wound.
 Love in no Two was ever yet the same,
 No Happy Two ere felt an Equal Flame. 

VI.
 Is there that Earth by Humane Foot ne're prest?
 That Aire which never yet by Humane Breast
 Respir'd, did Life supply?
 Oh, thither let me fly!
 Where from the World at such a distance set,
All that's past, present, and to come I may forget:
 The Lovers Sighs, and the Afflicted Tears,
 What e're may wound my Eyes or Ears.
 The grating Noise of Private Jars,
 The horrid sound of Publick Wars,
 Of babling Fame the Idle Stories,
 The short-liv'd Triumphs Noysy-Glories,
 The Curious Nets the subtile weave,
 The Word, the Look that may deceive.
No Mundan Care shall more affect my Breast,
 My profound Peace shake or molest:
But Stupor, like to Death, my Senses bind,
 That so I may anticipate that Rest,
Which only in my Grave I hope to find.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

The Battle Of The Bulge

 This year an ocean trip I took, and as I am a Scot
And like to get my money's worth I never missed a meal.
In spite of Neptune's nastiness I ate an awful lot,
Yet felt as fit as if we sailed upon an even keel.
But now that I am home again I'm stricken with disgust;
How many pounds of fat I've gained I'd rather not divulge:
Well, anyway I mean to take this tummy down or bust,
So here I'm suet-strafing in the
 Battle of the Bulge.
No more will sausage, bacon, eggs provide my breakfast fare;
On lobster I will never lunch, with mounds of mayonnaise.
At tea I'll Spartanly eschew the chocolate éclair;
Roast duckling and péche melba shall not consummate my days.
No more nocturnal ice-box raids, midnight spaghetti feeds;
On slabs of pâté de foie gras I vow I won't indulge:
Let bran and cottage cheese suffice my gastronomic needs,
And lettuce be my ally in the
 Battle of the Bulge.

To hell with you, ignoble paunch, abhorrent in my sight!
I gaze at your rotundity, and savage is my frown.
I'll rub you and I'll scrub you and I'll drub you day and night,
But by the gods of symmetry I swear I'll get you down.
Your smooth and smug convexity, by heck! I will subdue,
And when you tucker in again with joy will I refulge;
No longer of my toes will you obstruct my downward view . . .
With might and main I'll fight to gain the
 Battle of the Bulge.
Written by Du Fu | Create an image from this poem

In Abbot Zan's Room at Dayun Temple: Four Poems (3)

Lamplight shine without sleep Heart clear smell wonderful incense Night deep hall sudden lofty Wind move gold clank clank Sky black obstruct spring court Earth clear dwell secret fragrance Jade rope revolve cut sever Iron phoenix dark soar Sanskrit release sometimes out temple Bell remnant remain thunder bed Tomorrow at fertile field Bitter see dirt sand yellow
The lamplight shines on my sleeplessness, My mind clear, I smell the splendid incense. Deep in the night, the hall rears up high, The wind stirs, and gold is heard to clank. The black sky masks the springtime court, To the pure earth clings a hidden fragrance. The Jade Rope wheels round and is cut, The iron phoenix seems about to soar. Sanskrit sometimes flows out from the temple, The lingering bells still echo round my bed. Tomorrow morning in the fertile field, I'll bitterly behold the yellow dirt.
Written by Isaac Watts | Create an image from this poem

Hymn 149

 The offices of Christ. From several scriptures.

Join all the names of love and power
That ever men or angels bore,
All are too mean to speak his worth,
Or set lmmannel's glory forth.

But O what condescending ways
He takes to teach his heav'nly grace
My eyes with joy and wonder see
What forms of love he bears for me.

[The Angel of the cov'nant stands
With his commission in his hands,
Sent from his Father's milder throne,
To make the great salvation known.]

[Great Prophet! let me bless thy name;
By thee the joyful tidings came
Of wrath appeased, of sins forgiv'n,
Of hell subdued, and peace with heav'n.]

[My bright Example and my Guide,
I would be walking near thy side;
O let me never run astray,
Nor follow the forbidden way!]

[I love my Shepherd, he shall keep
My wand'ring soul among his sheep;
He feeds his flock, he calls their names,
And in his bosom bears the lambs.]

[My Surety undertakes my cause,
Answering his Father's broken laws:
Behold my soul at freedom set,
My Surety paid the dreadful debt.]

[Jesus, my great High Priest, has died;
I seek no sacrifice beside;
His blood did once for all atone,
And now it pleads before the throne.]

[My Advocate appears on high,
The Father lays his thunder by;
Not all that earth or hell can say
Shall turn my Father's heart away.]

[My Lord, my Conqueror, and my King!
Thy sceptre and thy sword I sing;
Thine is the vict'ry, and I sit
A joyful subject at thy feet.]

[Aspire, my soul, to glorious deeds,
The Captain of salvation leads;
March on, nor fear to win the day,
Though death and hell obstruct the way.]

[Should death, and hell, and powers unknown,
Put all their forms of mischief on,
I shall be safe; for Christ displays
Salvation in more sovereign ways.]


Written by Isaac Watts | Create an image from this poem

Hymn 150

 The offices of Christ. From several scriptures.

Join all the glorious names
Of wisdom, love, and power,
That ever mortals knew,
That angels ever bore:
All are too mean to speak his worth,
Too mean to set my Savior forth.

But O what gentle terms,
What condescending ways,
Doth our Redeemer use
To teach his heav'nly grace!
Mine eyes with joy and wonder see
What forms of love he bears for me.

[Arrayed in mortal flesh,
He like an angel stands,
And holds the promises
And pardons in his hands;
Commissioned from his Father's throne
To make his grace to mortals known.]

[Great Prophet of my God,
My tongue would bless thy name;
By thee the joyful news
Of our salvation came:
The joyful news of sins forgiv'n,
Of hell subdued, and peace with heav'n.]

[Be thou my Counsellor,
My Pattern, and my Guide;
And through this desert land
Still keep me near thy side:
O let my feet ne'er run astray,
Nor rove, nor seek the crooked way.]

[I love my Shepherd's voice,
His watchful eyes shall keep
My wand'ring soul among
The thousands of his sheep:
He feeds his flock, he calls their names,
His bosom bears the tender lambs.]

[To this dear Surety's hand
Will I commit my cause;
He answers and fulfils
His Father's broken laws:
Behold my soul at freedom set!
My Surety paid the dreadful debt.]

[Jesus, my great High Priest,
Offered his blood, and died;
My guilty conscience seeks
No sacrifice beside:
His powerful blood did once atone,
And now it pleads before the throne.]

[My Advocate appears
For my defence on high;
The Father bows his ears,
And lays his thunder by:
Not all that hell or sin can say
Shall turn his heart, his love away.]

[My dear Almighty Lord,
My Conqueror and my King!
Thy sceptre and thy sword,
Thy reigning grace I sing:
Thine is the power; behold, I sit
In willing bonds before thy feet.]

[Now let my soul arise,
And tread the tempter down;
My Captain leads me forth
To conquest and a crown:
A feeble saint shall win the day,
Though death and hell obstruct the way.]

Should all the hosts of death,
And powers of hell unknown,
Put their most dreadful forms
Of rage and mischief on,
I shall be safe, for Christ displays
Superior power, and guardian grace.
Written by Amy Lowell | Create an image from this poem

The Fool Errant

 The Fool Errant sat by the highway of life
And his gaze wandered up and his gaze wandered down,
A vigorous youth, but with no wish to walk,
Yet his longing was great for the distant town.
He whistled a little frivolous tune
Which he felt to be pulsing with ecstasy,
For he thought that success always followed desire,
Such a very superlative fool was he.
A maiden came by on an ambling mule,
Her gown was rose-red and her kerchief blue,
On her lap she carried a basket of eggs.
Thought the fool, "There is certainly room for two."
So he jauntily swaggered towards the maid
And put out his hand to the bridle-rein.
"My pretty girl," quoth the fool, "take me up,
For to ride with you to the town I am fain."
But the maiden struck at his upraised arm
And pelted him hotly with eggs, a score.
The mule, lashed into a fury, ran;
The fool went back to his stone and swore.
Then out of the cloud of settling dust
The burly form of an abbot appeared,
Reading his office he rode to the town.
And the fool got up, for his heart was cheered.
He stood in the midst of the long, white road
And swept off his cap till it touched the ground.
"Ah, Reverent Sir, well met," said the fool,
"A worthier transport never was found.
"I pray you allow me to mount with you,
Your palfrey seems both sturdy and young."
The abbot looked up from the holy book
And cried out in anger, "Hold your tongue!
"How dare you obstruct the King's highroad,
You saucy varlet, get out of my way."
Then he gave the fool a cut with his whip
And leaving him smarting, he rode away.
The fool was angry, the fool was sore,
And he cursed the folly of monks and maids.
"If I could but meet with a man," sighed the fool,
"For a woman fears, and a friar upbraids."
Then he saw a flashing of distant steel
And the clanking of harness greeted his ears,
And up the road journeyed knights-at-arms,
With waving plumes and glittering spears.
The fool took notice and slowly arose,
Not quite so sure was his foolish heart.
If priests and women would none of him
Was it likely a knight would take his part?
They sang as they rode, these lusty boys,
When one chanced to turn toward the highway's side,
"There's a sorry figure of fun," jested he,
"Well, Sirrah! move back, there is scarce room to ride."
"Good Sirs, Kind Sirs," begged the crestfallen 
fool,
"I pray of your courtesy speech with you,
I'm for yonder town, and have no horse to ride,
Have you never a charger will carry two?"
Then the company halted and laughed out loud.
"Was such a request ever made to a knight?"
"And where are your legs," asked one, "if you start,
You may be inside the town gates to-night."
"'T is a lazy fellow, let him alone,
They've no room in the town for such idlers as he."
But one bent from his saddle and said, "My man,
Art thou not ashamed to beg charity!
"Thou art well set up, and thy legs are strong,
But it much misgives me lest thou'rt a fool;
For beggars get only a beggar's crust,
Wise men are reared in a different school."
Then they clattered away in the dust and the wind,
And the fool slunk back to his lonely stone;
He began to see that the man who asks
Must likewise give and not ask alone.
Purple tree-shadows crept over the road,
The level sun flung an orange light,
And the fool laid his head on the hard, gray stone
And wept as he realized advancing night.
A great, round moon rose over a hill
And the steady wind blew yet more cool;
And crouched on a stone a wayfarer sobbed,
For at last he knew he was only a fool.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things