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Best Famous Retribution Poems

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

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Written by Ogden Nash | Create an image from this poem

No You Be A Lone Eagle

 I find it very hard to be fair-minded
About people who go around being air-minded.
I just can't see any fun In soaring up up up into the sun When the chances are still a fresh cool orchid to a paper geranium That you'll unsoar down down down onto your (to you) invaluable cranium.
I know the constant refrain About how safer up in God's trafficless heaven than in an automobile or a train But .
.
.
My God, have you ever taken a good look at a strut? Then that one about how you're in Boston before you can say antidis- establishmentarianism So that preferring to take five hours by rail is a pernicious example of antiquarianism.
At least when I get on the Boston train I have a good chance of landing in the South Station And not in that part of the daily press which is reserved for victims of aviation.
Then, despite the assurance that aeroplanes are terribly comfortable I notice that when you are railroading or automobiling You don't have to take a paper bag along just in case of a funny feeling.
It seems to me that no kind of depravity Brings such speedy retribution as ignoring the law of gravity.
Therefore nobody could possibly indict me for perjury When I swear that I wish the Wright brothers had gone in for silver fox farming or tree surgery.


Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

In the Street

 Where the needle-woman toils 
Through the night with hand and brain, 
Till the sickly daylight shudders like a spectre at the pain – 
Till her eyes seem to crawl, 
And her brain seems to creep – 

And her limbs are all a-tremble for the want of rest and sleep! 
It is there the fire-brand blazes in my blood; and it is there 
That I see the crimson banner of the Children of Despair! 
That I feel the soul and music in a rebel's battle song, 
And the greatest love for justice and the hottest hate for wrong! 

When the foremost in his greed 
Presses heavy on the last – 
In the brutal spirit rising from the grave-yard of the past – 
Where the poor are trodden down 
And the rich are deaf and blind! 

It is there I feel the greatest love and pity for mankind: 
There – where heart to heart is saying, though the tongue and lip be still: 
We've been through it all and know it! brother, we've been through the mill! 
There the spirits of my brothers rise the higher for defeat, 
And the drums of revolution roll for ever in the street! 

Christ is coming once again, 
And his day is drawing near; 
He is leading on the thousands of the army of the rear! 
We shall know the second advent 
By the lower skies aflame 

With the signals of his coming, for he comes not as he came – 
Not humble, meek, and lowly, as he came in days of old, 
But with hatred, retribution for the worshippers of gold! 
And the roll of battle music and the steady tramp of feet 
Sound for ever in the thunder and the rattle of the street!
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 Edwin Arlington Robinson | Create an image from this poem

The Town Down by the River

 I

Said the Watcher by the Way 
To the young and the unladen, 
To the boy and to the maiden, 
"God be with you both to-day.
First your song came ringing, Now you come, you two-- Knowing naught of what you do, Or of what your dreams are bringing.
"O you children who go singing To the Town down the River, Where the millions cringe and shiver, Tell me what you know to-day; Tell me how far you are going, Tell me how you find your way.
O you children who are dreaming, Tell me what you dream to-day.
" "He is old and we have heard him," Said the boy then to the maiden; "He is old and heavy laden With a load we throw away.
Care may come to find us, Age may lay us low; Still, we seek the light we know, And the dead we leave behind us.
"Did he think that he would blind us Into such a small believing As to live without achieving, When the lights have led so far? Let him watch or let him wither,-- Shall he tell us where we are? We know best, who go together, Downward, onward, and so far.
" II Said the Watcher by the Way To the fiery folk that hastened To the loud and the unchastened, "You are strong, I see, to-day.
Strength and hope may lead you To the journey's end,-- Each to be the other's friend If the Town should fail to need you.
"And are ravens there to feed you In the Town down the River, Where the gift appalls the giver And youth hardens day by day? O you brave and you unshaken, Are you truly on your way? And are sirens in the River, That you come so far to-day?" "You are old and we have listened," Said the voice of one who halted; "You are sage and self-exalted, But your way is not our way.
You that cannot aid us Give us words to eat.
Be assured that they are sweet, And that we are as God made us.
"Not in vain have you delayed us, Though the river still be calling Through the twilight that is falling And the Town be still so far.
By the whirlwind of your wisdom Leagues are lifted as leaves are; But a king without a kingdom Fails us, who have come so far.
" III Said the Watcher by the Way To the slower folk who stumbled, To the weak and the world-humbled, "Tell me how you fare to-day.
Some with ardor shaken, All with honor scarred, Do you falter, finding hard The far chance that you have taken? "Or, do you at length awaken To an antic retribution, Goading to a new confusion The drugged hopes of yesterday? O you poor mad men that hobble, Will you not return or stay? Do you trust, you broken people, To a dawn without the day?" "You speak well of what you know not," Muttered one; and then a second: "You have begged, and you have beckoned, But you see us on our way.
Who are you to scold us, Knowing what we know? Jeremiah, long ago, Said as much as you have told us.
"As we are, then, you behold us: Derelicts of all conditions, Poets, rogues, and sick physicians, Plodding forward from afar; Forward now into the darkness Where the men before us are; Forward, onward, out of grayness, To the light that shone so far.
" IV Said the Watcher by the Way To some aged ones who lingered, To the shrunken, the claw-fingered, "So you come for me to-day.
"-- "Yes, to give you warning; You are old," one said; "You have hairs on your head, Fit for laurel, not for scorning.
"From the first of early morning We have toiled along to find you; We, as others, have maligned you, But we need your scorn to-day.
By the light that we saw shining, Let us not be lured alway; Let us hear no River calling When to-morrow is to-day.
" "But your lanterns are unlighted And the Town is far before you: Let us hasten, I implore you," Said the Watcher by the Way.
"Long have I waited, Longer have I known That the Town would have its own, And the call be for the fated.
"In the name of all created.
Let us hear no more my brothers; Are we older than all others? Are the planets in our way?"-- "Hark," said one; I hear the River, Calling always, night and day.
"-- "Forward, then! The lights are shining," Said the Watcher by the Way.
Written by Louise Bogan | Create an image from this poem

The Dream

 O God, in the dream the terrible horse began
To paw at the air, and make for me with his blows,
Fear kept for thirty-five years poured through his mane,
And retribution equally old, or nearly, breathed through his nose.
Coward complete, I lay and wept on the ground When some strong creature appeared, and leapt for the rein.
Another woman, as I lay half in a swound Leapt in the air, and clutched at the leather and chain.
Give him, she said, something of yours as a charm.
Throw him, she said, some poor thing you alone claim.
No, no, I cried, he hates me; he is out for harm, And whether I yield or not, it is all the same.
But, like a lion in a legend, when I flung the glove Pulled from my sweating, my cold right hand; The terrible beast, that no one may understand, Came to my side, and put down his head in love.


Written by Walt Whitman | Create an image from this poem

France the 18th year of These States

 1
A GREAT year and place; 
A harsh, discordant, natal scream out-sounding, to touch the mother’s heart closer
 than
 any yet.
I walk’d the shores of my Eastern Sea, Heard over the waves the little voice, Saw the divine infant, where she woke, mournfully wailing, amid the roar of cannon, curses, shouts, crash of falling buildings; Was not so sick from the blood in the gutters running—nor from the single corpses, nor those in heaps, nor those borne away in the tumbrils; Was not so desperate at the battues of death—was not so shock’d at the repeated fusillades of the guns.
2 Pale, silent, stern, what could I say to that long-accrued retribution? Could I wish humanity different? Could I wish the people made of wood and stone? Or that there be no justice in destiny or time? 3 O Liberty! O mate for me! Here too the blaze, the grape-shot and the axe, in reserve, to fetch them out in case of need; Here too, though long represt, can never be destroy’d; Here too could rise at last, murdering and extatic; Here too demanding full arrears of vengeance.
4 Hence I sign this salute over the sea, And I do not deny that terrible red birth and baptism, But remember the little voice that I heard wailing—and wait with perfect trust, no matter how long; And from to-day, sad and cogent, I maintain the bequeath’d cause, as for all lands, And I send these words to Paris with my love, And I guess some chansonniers there will understand them, For I guess there is latent music yet in France—floods of it; O I hear already the bustle of instruments—they will soon be drowning all that would interrupt them; O I think the east wind brings a triumphal and free march, It reaches hither—it swells me to joyful madness, I will run transpose it in words, to justify it, I will yet sing a song for you, MA FEMME.
Written by William Topaz McGonagall | Create an image from this poem

The Battle of Atbara

 Ye Sons of Great Britain, pray list to me,
And I'll tell ye of a great victory.
Where the British defeated the Dervishes, without delay, At the Battle of Atbara, without dismay.
The attack took place, 'twas on the 8th of April, in the early morning dawn, And the British behaved manfully to a man; And Mahmud's front was raked fearfully, before the assault began, By the disposition of the force under Colonel Long : Because the cannonading of their guns was very strong.
The main attack was made by General Gatacre's British Brigade, And a heroic display they really made; And General Macdonald's and General Maxwell's Brigade looked very fine, And the Cameron Highlanders were extended along the line.
And behind them came the Lincolnshire Regiment, on the right, And the Seaforth Highlanders in the centre, 'twas a most gorgeous sight, And the Warwickshire Regiment were on the left, And many of the Dervishes' heads by them were cleft.
General Macdonald's Brigade was on the right centre in similar formation, And the 9th Battalion also in line in front rotation; Then the whole force arrived about four o'clock, And each man's courage was as firm as the rock.
At first the march was over a ridge of gravel, But it didn't impede the noble heroes' travel; No, they were as steady as when marching in the valley below, And each man was eager to attack the foe.
And as the sun shone out above the horizon, The advancing army, with banners flying, came boldly marching on; The spectacle was really imposing to see, And a dead silence was observed throughout the whole army.
Then Colonel Murray addressed the Seaforth Highlanders, and said, "Come now my lads, don't be afraid, For the news of the victory must be in London to-night, So ye must charge the enemy with your bayonets, left and right.
" General Gatacre also delivered a stirring address, Which gave courage to the troops, I must confess: He told the troops to drive the Dervishes into the river, And go right through the zereba, and do not shiver.
Then the artillery on the right opened fire with shrapnel and percussion shell, Whereby many of the Dervishes were wounded and fell, And the cannonading raked the whole of the Dervishes' camp, and did great execution, Which to Mahmud and his followers has been a great retribution.
Then the artillery ceased fire, and the bugles sounded the advance, And the Cameron Highlanders at the enemy were eager to get a chance; So the pipers struck up the March of the Cameron Men, Which reminded them of the ancient Camerons marching o'er mountain and glen.
The business of this regiment was to clear the front with a rifle fire, Which to their honour, be it said, was their greatest desire; Then there was a momentary pause until they reached the zereba, Then the Dervishes opened fire on them, but it did not them awe.
And with their pipes loudly sounding, and one ringing cheer, Then the Cameron Highlanders soon did the zereba clear.
And right through the Dervish camp they went without dismay, And scattered the Dervishes across the desert, far, far away.
Then the victory was complete, and the British gave three cheers, While adown their cheeks flowed burning tears For the loss of their commanders and comrades who fell in the fray, Which they will remember for many a day.
Captain Urquhart's last words were "never mind me my lads, fight on," While, no doubt, the Cameron Highlanders felt woebegone For the loss of their brave captain, who was foremost in the field, Death or glory was his motto, rather than yield.
There have been 4,000 prisoners taken, including Mahmud himself, Who is very fond of dancing girls, likewise drink and pelf; Besides 3,000 of his followers have been found dead, And the living are scattered o'er the desert with their hearts full of dread.
Long life and prosperity to the British army, May they always be able to conquer their enemies by land and by sea, May God enable them to put their enemies to flight, And to annihilate barbarity, and to establish what is right.

Book: Shattered Sighs