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Best Famous Shovelled Poems

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

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Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

A Song of Travel

 Where's the lamp that Hero lit
 Once to call Leander home?
Equal Time hath shovelled it
 'Neath the wrack of Greece and Rome.
Neither wait we any more
That worn sail which Argo bore.

Dust and dust of ashes close
 All the Vestal Virgin's care;
And the oldest altar shows
 But an older darkness there.
Age-encamped Oblivion
Tenteth every light that shone.

Yet shall we, for Suns that die,
 Wall our wanderings from desire?
Or, because the Moon is high,
 Scorn to use a nearer fire?
Lest some envious Pharaoh stir,
Make our lives our sepulcher?

Nay! Though Time with petty Fate
 Prison us and Emperors,
By our Arts do we create 
 That which Time himself devours--
Such machines as well may run
'Gainst the Horses of the Sun.

When we would a new abode,
 Space, our tyrant King no more,
Lays the long lance of the road 
 At our feet and flees before,
Breathless, ere we overwhelm,
To submit a further realm!


Written by Vernon Scannell | Create an image from this poem

A Case Of Murder

 They should not have left him there alone, 
Alone that is except for the cat. 
He was only nine, not old enough 
To be left alone in a basement flat, 
Alone, that is, except for the cat. 
A dog would have been a different thing, 
A big gruff dog with slashing jaws, 
But a cat with round eyes mad as gold, 
Plump as a cushion with tucked-in paws--- 
Better have left him with a fair-sized rat! 
But what they did was leave him with a cat. 
He hated that cat; he watched it sit, 
A buzzing machine of soft black stuff, 
He sat and watched and he hated it, 
Snug in its fur, hot blood in a ****, 
And its mad gold stare and the way it sat 
Crooning dark warmth: he loathed all that. 
So he took Daddy's stick and he hit the cat. 
Then quick as a sudden crack in glass 
It hissed, black flash, to a hiding place 
In the dust and dark beneath the couch, 
And he followed the grin on his new-made face, 
A wide-eyed, frightened snarl of a grin, 
And he took the stick and he thrust it in, 
Hard and quick in the furry dark. 
The black fur squealed and he felt his skin 
Prickle with sparks of dry delight. 
Then the cat again came into sight, 
Shot for the door that wasn't quite shut, 
But the boy, quick too, slammed fast the door: 
The cat, half-through, was cracked like a nut 
And the soft black thud was dumped on the floor. 
Then the boy was suddenly terrified 
And he bit his knuckles and cried and cried; 
But he had to do something with the dead thing there. 
His eyes squeezed beads of salty prayer 
But the wound of fear gaped wide and raw; 
He dared not touch the thing with his hands 
So he fetched a spade and shovelled it 
And dumped the load of heavy fur 
In the spidery cupboard under the stair 
Where it's been for years, and though it died 
It's grown in that cupboard and its hot low purr 
Grows slowly louder year by year: 
There'll not be a corner for the boy to hide 
When the cupboard swells and all sides split 
And the huge black cat pads out of it.
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The Swagmans Rest

 We buried old Bob where the bloodwoods wave 
At the foot of the Eaglehawk; 
We fashioned a cross on the old man's grave 
For fear that his ghost might walk; 
We carved his name on a bloodwood tree 
With the date of his sad decease 
And in place of "Died from effects of spree" 
We wrote "May he rest in peace". 
For Bob was known on the Overland, 
A regular old bush wag, 
Tramping along in the dust and sand, 
Humping his well-worn swag. 
He would camp for days in the river-bed, 
And loiter and "fish for whales". 
"I'm into the swagman's yard," he said. 
"And I never shall find the rails." 

But he found the rails on that summer night 
For a better place -- or worse, 
As we watched by turns in the flickering light 
With an old black gin for nurse. 
The breeze came in with the scent of pine, 
The river sounded clear, 
When a change came on, and we saw the sign 
That told us the end was near. 

He spoke in a cultured voice and low -- 
"I fancy they've 'sent the route'; 
I once was an army man, you know, 
Though now I'm a drunken brute; 
But bury me out where the bloodwoods wave, 
And, if ever you're fairly stuck, 
Just take and shovel me out of the grave 
And, maybe, I'll bring you luck. 
"For I've always heard --" here his voice grew weak, 
His strength was wellnigh sped, 
He gasped and struggled and tried to speak, 
Then fell in a moment -- dead. 
Thus ended a wasted life and hard, 
Of energies misapplied -- 
Old Bob was out of the "swagman's yard" 
And over the Great Divide. 



The drought came down on the field and flock, 
And never a raindrop fell, 
Though the tortured moans of the starving stock 
Might soften a fiend from hell. 
And we thought of the hint that the swagman gave 
When he went to the Great Unseen -- 
We shovelled the skeleton out of the grave 
To see what his hint might mean. 

We dug where the cross and the grave posts were, 
We shovelled away the mould, 
When sudden a vein of quartz lay bare 
All gleaming with yellow gold. 
'Twas a reef with never a fault nor baulk 
That ran from the range's crest, 
And the richest mine on the Eaglehawk 
Is known as "The Swagman's Rest".

Book: Reflection on the Important Things