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Best Famous Picket Poems

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

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Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

Black Bonnet

 A day of seeming innocence, 
A glorious sun and sky, 
And, just above my picket fence, 
Black Bonnet passing by. 
In knitted gloves and quaint old dress, 
Without a spot or smirch, 
Her worn face lit with peacefulness, 
Old Granny goes to church. 

Her hair is richly white, like milk, 
That long ago was fair -- 
And glossy still the old black silk 
She keeps for "chapel wear"; 
Her bonnet, of a bygone style, 
That long has passed away, 
She must have kept a weary while 
Just as it is to-day. 

The parasol of days gone by -- 
Old days that seemed the best -- 
The hymn and prayer books carried high 
Against her warm, thin breast; 
As she had clasped -- come smiles come tears, 
Come hardship, aye, and worse -- 
On market days, through faded years, 
The slender household purse. 

Although the road is rough and steep, 
She takes it with a will, 
For, since she hushed her first to sleep 
Her way has been uphill. 
Instinctively I bare my head 
(A sinful one, alas!) 
Whene'er I see, by church bells led, 
Brave Old Black Bonnet pass. 

For she has known the cold and heat 
And dangers of the Track: 
Has fought bush-fires to save the wheat 
And little home Out Back. 
By barren creeks the Bushman loves, 
By stockyard, hut, and pen, 
The withered hands in those old gloves 
Have done the work of men. 

..... 

They called it "Service" long ago 
When Granny yet was young, 
And in the chapel, sweet and low, 
As girls her daughters sung. 
And when in church she bends her head 
(But not as others do) 
She sees her loved ones, and her dead 
And hears their voices too. 

Fair as the Saxons in her youth, 
Not forward, and not shy; 
And strong in healthy life and truth 
As after years went by: 
She often laughed with sinners vain, 
Yet passed from faith to sight -- 
God gave her beauty back again 
The more her hair grew white. 

She came out in the Early Days, 
(Green seas, and blue -- and grey) -- 
The village fair, and English ways, 
Seemed worlds and worlds away. 
She fought the haunting loneliness 
Where brooding gum trees stood; 
And won through sickness and distress 
As Englishwomen could. 

..... 

By verdant swath and ivied wall 
The congregation's seen -- 
White nothings where the shadows fall, 
Black blots against the green. 
The dull, suburban people meet 
And buzz in little groups, 
While down the white steps to the street 
A quaint old figure stoops. 

And then along my picket fence 
Where staring wallflowers grow -- 
World-wise Old Age, and Common-sense! -- 
Black Bonnet, nodding slow. 
But not alone; for on each side 
A little dot attends 
In snowy frock and sash of pride, 
And these are Granny's friends. 

To them her mind is clear and bright, 
Her old ideas are new; 
They know her "real talk" is right, 
Her "fairy talk" is true. 
And they converse as grown-ups may, 
When all the news is told; 
The one so wisely young to-day, 
The two so wisely old. 

At home, with dinner waiting there, 
She smooths her hair and face, 
And puts her bonnet by with care 
And dons a cap of lace. 
The table minds its p's and q's 
Lest one perchance be hit 
By some rare dart which is a part 
Of her old-fashioned wit. 

..... 

Her son and son's wife are asleep, 
She puts her apron on -- 
The quiet house is hers to keep, 
With all the youngsters gone. 
There's scarce a sound of dish on dish 
Or cup slipped into cup, 
When left alone, as is her wish, 
Black Bonnet "washes up."


Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Memoir of a Proud Boy

 HE lived on the wings of storm.
The ashes are in Chihuahua.

Out of Ludlow and coal towns in Colorado
Sprang a vengeance of Slav miners, Italians, Scots, Cornishmen, Yanks.
Killings ran under the spoken commands of this boy
With eighty men and rifles on a hogback mountain.

They killed swearing to remember
The shot and charred wives and children
In the burnt camp of Ludlow,
And Louis Tikas, the laughing Greek,
Plugged with a bullet, clubbed with a gun butt.

As a home war
It held the nation a week
And one or two million men stood together
And swore by the retribution of steel.

It was all accidental.
He lived flecking lint off coat lapels
Of men he talked with.
He kissed the miners’ babies
And wrote a Denver paper
Of picket silhouettes on a mountain line.

He had no mother but Mother Jones
Crying from a jail window of Trinidad:
“All I want is room enough to stand
And shake my fist at the enemies of the human race.”

Named by a grand jury as a murderer
He went to Chihuahua, forgot his old Scotch name,
Smoked cheroots with Pancho Villa
And wrote letters of Villa as a rock of the people.

How can I tell how Don Magregor went?

Three riders emptied lead into him.
He lay on the main street of an inland town.
A boy sat near all day throwing stones
To keep pigs away.

The Villa men buried him in a pit
With twenty Carranzistas.

There is drama in that point…
…the boy and the pigs.
Griffith would make a movie of it to fetch sobs.
Victor Herbert would have the drums whirr
In a weave with a high fiddle-string’s single clamor.

“And the muchacho sat there all day throwing stones
To keep the pigs away,” wrote Gibbons to the Tribune.

Somewhere in Chihuahua or Colorado
Is a leather bag of poems and short stories.
Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

Bridge-Guard in the Karroo

 1901 ". . . and will supply details to guard the Blood River Bridge." District Orders-Lines of Communication, South African War.
Sudden the desert changes,
 The raw glare softens and clings,
Till the aching Oudtshoorn ranges
 Stand up like the thrones of Kings --

Ramparts of slaughter and peril --
 Blazing, amazing, aglow --
'Twixt the sky-line's belting beryl
 And the wine-dark flats below.

Royal the pageant closes,
 Lit by the last of the sun --
Opal and ash-of-roses,
 Cinnamon, umber, and dun.

The twilight svallows the thicket,
 The starlight reveals the ridge.
The whistle shrills to the picket --
 We are changing guard on the bridge.

(Few, forgotten and lonely,
 Where the empty metals shine --
No, not combatants-only
 Details guarding the line.)

We slip through the broken panel
 Of fence by the ganger's shed;
We drop to the waterless channel
 And the lean track overhead;

We stumble on refuse of rations,
 The beef and the biscuit-tins;
We take our appointed stations,
 And the endless night begins.

We hear the Hottentot herders
 As the sheep click past to the fold --
And the click of the restless girders
 As the steel contracts in the cold --

Voices of jackals calling
 And, loud in the hush between
A morsel of dry earth falling
 From the flanks of the scarred ravine.

And the solemn firmament marches,
 And the hosts of heaven rise
Framed through the iron arches --
 Banded and barred by the ties,

Till we feel the far track humming,
 And we see her headlight plain,
And we gather and wait her coming --
 The wonderful north-bound train.

(Few, forgotten and lonely,
 Where the white car-windows shine --
No, not combatants-only
 Details guarding the line.)

Quick, ere the gift escape us!
 Out of the darkness we reach
For a handful of week-old papers
 And a mouthful of human speech.

And the monstrous heaven rejoices,
 And the earth allows again,
Meetings, greetings, and voices
 Of women talking with men.
Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

Rimmon

 1903

After Boer War


Duly with knees that feign to quake--
 Bent head and shaded brow,--
Yet once again, for my father's sake,
 In Rimmon's House I bow.

The curtains part, the trumpet blares,
 And the eunuchs howl aloud;
And the gilt, swag-bellied idol glares
 Insolent over the crowd.

"This is Rimmon, Lord of the Earth--
 "Fear Him and bow the knee!"
And I watch my comrades hide their mirth
 That rode to the wars with me.

For we remember the sun and the sand
 And the rocks whereon we trod,
Ere we came to a scorched and a scornful land
 That did not know our God;

As we remember the sacrifice,
 Dead men an hundred laid--
Slain while they served His mysteries,
 And that He would not aid--

Not though we gashed ourselves and wept,
 For the high-priest bade us wait;
Saying He went on a journey or slept,
 Or was drunk or had taken a mate.

(Praise ye Rimmon, King of Kings,
 Who ruleth Earth and Sky!
And again I bow as the censer swings
 And the God Enthroned goes by.)

Ay, we remember His sacred ark
 And the virtuous men that knelt
To the dark and the hush behind the dark
 Wherein we dreamed He dwelt;

Until we entered to hale Him out
 And found no more than an old
Uncleanly image girded about
 The loins with scarlet and gold.

Him we o'erset with the butts of our spears--
 Him and his vast designs--
To be scorn of our muleteers
 And the jest of our halted line.

By the picket-pins that the dogs defile,
 In the dung and the dust He lay,
Till the priests ran and chattered awhile
 And we wiped Him and took Him away.

Hushing the matter before it was known,
 They returned to our fathers afar,
And hastily set Him afresh on His throne
 Because he had won us the war.

Wherefore with knees that feign to quake--
 Bent head and shaded brow--
To this dog, for my father's sake,
 In the Rimmon's House I bow!
Written by Arna Bontemps | Create an image from this poem

Length of Moon

 Then the golden hour 
Will tick its last 
And the flame will go down in the flower.
A briefer length of moon 
Will mark the sea-line and the yellow dune.
Then we may think of this, yet 
There will be something forgotten
And something we should forget.
It will be like all things we know: .
A stone will fail; a rose is sure to go.
It will be quiet then and we may stay Long at the picket gate
But there will be less to say.


Written by Howard Nemerov | Create an image from this poem

The Goose Fish

 On the long shore, lit by the moon
To show them properly alone,
Two lovers suddenly embraced
So that their shadows were as one.
The ordinary night was graced
For them by the swift tide of blood
That silently they took at flood,
And for a little time they prized
Themselves emparadised.

Then, as if shaken by stage-fright
Beneath the hard moon's bony light,
They stood together on the sand
Embarrassed in each other's sight
But still conspiring hand in hand,
Until they saw, there underfoot,
As though the world had found them out,
The goose fish turning up, though dead,
His hugely grinning head.

There in the china light he lay,
Most ancient and corrupt and grey.
They hesitated at his smile,
Wondering what it seemed to say
To lovers who a little while
Before had thought to understand,
By violence upon the sand,
The only way that could be known
To make a world their own.

It was a wide and moony grin
Together peaceful and obscene;
They knew not what he would express,
So finished a comedian
He might mean failure or success,
But took it for an emblem of
Their sudden, new and guilty love
To be observed by, when they kissed,
That rigid optimist.

So he became their patriarch,
Dreadfully mild in the half-dark.
His throat that the sand seemed to choke,
His picket teeth, these left their mark
But never did explain the joke
That so amused him, lying there
While the moon went down to disappear
Along the still and tilted track
That bears the zodiac.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The Last Parade

 With never a sound of trumpet, 
With never a flag displayed, 
The last of the old campaigners 
Lined up for the last parade. 

Weary they were and battered, 
Shoeless, and knocked about; 
From under their ragged forelocks 
Their hungry eyes looked out. 

And they watched as the old commander 
Read out to the cheering men 
The Nation's thanks, and the orders 
To carry them home again. 

And the last of the old campaigners, 
Sinewy, lean, and spare -- 
He spoke for his hungry comrades: 
"Have we not done our share? 

"Starving and tired and thirsty 
We limped on the blazing plain; 
And after a long night's picket 
You saddled us up again. 

"We froze on the windswept kopjes 
When the frost lay snowy-white, 
Never a halt in the daytime, 
Never a rest at night! 

"We knew when the rifles rattled 
From the hillside bare and brown, 
And over our weary shoulders 
We felt warm blood run down, 

"As we turned for the stretching gallop, 
Crushed to the earth with weight; 
But we carried our riders through it -- 
Sometimes, perhaps, too late. 

"Steel! We were steel to stand it -- 
We that have lasted through, 
We that are old campaigners 
Pitiful, poor, and few. 

"Over the sea you brought us, 
Over the leagues of foam: 
Now we have served you fairly 
Will you not take us home? 

"Home to the Hunter River, 
To the flats where the lucerne grows; 
Home where the Murrumbidgee 
Runs white with the melted snows. 

"This is a small thing, surely! 
Will not you give command 
That the last of the old campaigners 
Go back to their native land?" 

They looked at the grim commander, 
But never a sign he made. 
"Dismiss!" and the old campaigners 
Moved off from their last parade.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

My Bear

 I never killed a bear because
I always thought them critters was
 So kindo' cute;
Though round my shack they often came,
I'd raise my rifle and take aim,
 But couldn't shoot.
Yet there was one full six-feet tall
Who came each night and gobbled all
 The grub in sight;
On my pet garden truck he'd feast,
Until I thought I must at least
 Give him a fight.

I put some corn mush in a pan;
He lapped it swiftly down and ran
 With bruin glee;
A second day I did the same,
Again with eagerness he came
 To gulp and flee.
The third day I mixed up a cross
Of mustard and tobasco sauce,
 And ginger too,
Well spiced with pepper of cayenne,
Topped it with treacled mush, and then
 Set out the brew.

He was a huge and husky chap;
I saw him shamble to the trap,
 The dawn was dim.
He squatted down on his behind,
And through the cheese-cloth window-blind
 I peeked at him.
I never saw a bear so glad;
A look of joy seraphic had
 His visage brown;
He slavered, and without suspish-
- Ion hugged that horrid dish,
 And swilled it down.

Just for a moment he was still,
Then he erupted loud and shrill
 With frantic yell;
The picket fence he tried to vault;
He turned a double somersault,
 And ran like hell.
I saw him leap into the lake,
As if a thirst of fire to slake,
 And thrash up foam;
And then he sped along the shore,
And beat his breast with raucous roar,
 And made for home.

I guess he told the folks back there
My homestead was taboo for bear
 For since that day,
Although my pumpkins star the ground,
No other bear has come around,
Nor trace of bruin have I found,
 - Well, let me pray!
Written by Carl Sandburg | Create an image from this poem

Trinity Place

 THE GRAVE of Alexander Hamilton is in Trinity yard at the end of Wall Street.

The grave of Robert Fulton likewise is in Trinity yard where Wall Street stops.

And in this yard stenogs, bundle boys, scrubwomen, sit on the tombstones, and walk on the grass of graves, speaking of war and weather, of babies, wages and love.

An iron picket fence … and streaming thousands along Broadway sidewalks … straw hats, faces, legs … a singing, talking, hustling river … down the great street that ends with a Sea.

… easy is the sleep of Alexander Hamilton.
… easy is the sleep of Robert Fulton.
… easy are the great governments and the great steamboats.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The Scottish Engineer

 With eyes that searched in the dark, 
Peering along the line, 
Stood the grim Scotsman, Hector Clark, 
Driver of "Forty-nine". 
And the veldt-fire flamed on the hills ahead, 
Like a blood-red beacon sign. 

There was word of a fight to the north, 
And a column too hardly pressed, 
So they started the Highlanders forth. 
Heedless of food or rest. 

But the pipers gaily played, 
Chanting their fierce delight, 
And the armoured carriages rocked and swayed. 
Laden with men of the Scots Brigade, 
Hurrying up to the fight, 
And the grim, grey Highland engineer 
Driving them into the night. 

Then a signal light glowed red, 
And a picket came to the track. 
"Enemy holding the line ahead; 
Three of our mates we have left for dead, 
Only we two got back." 
And far to the north through the still night air 
They heard the rifles crack. 

And the boom of a gun rang out, 
Like the sound of a deep appeal, 
And the picket stood in doubt 
By the side of the driving-wheel. 

But the engineer looked down, 
With his hand on the starting-bar, 
"Ride ye back to the town, 
Ye know what my orders are, 
Maybe they're wanting the Scots Brigade 
Up on those hills afar. 

"I am no soldier at all, 
Only an engineer; 
But I could not bear that the folk should say 
Over in Scotland -- Glasgow way -- 
That Hector Clark stayed here 
With the Scots Brigade till the foe was gone, 
With ever a rail to run her on. 
Ready behind! Stand clear! 

"Fireman, get you gone 
Into the armoured train -- 
I will drive her alone; 
One more trip -- and perhaps the last -- 
With a well-raked fire and an open blast; 
Hark to the rifles again!" 

On through the choking dark, 
Never a lamp nor a light, 
Never an engine spark 
Showing her hurried flight, 
Over the lonely plain 
Rushed the great armoured train, 
Hurrying up to the fight. 

Then with her living freight 
On to the foe she came, 
And the rides snapped their hate. 
And the darkness spouted flame. 

Over the roar of the fray 
The hungry bullets whined, 
As she dashed through the foe that lay 
Loading and firing blind, 
Till the glare of the furnace, burning clear, 
Showed them the form of the engineer 

Sharply and well defined. 
Through! They are safely through! 
Hark to the column's cheer! 
Surely the driver knew 
He was to halt her here; 
But he took no heed of the signals red, 
And the fireman found, when he climbed ahead, 
There on the door of his engine -- dead -- 
The Scottish Engineer!

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry