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Best Famous Succumb Poems

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

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Written by Ogden Nash | Create an image from this poem

More About People

 When people aren't asking questions 
They're making suggestions 
And when they're not doing one of those 
They're either looking over your shoulder or stepping on your toes 
And then as if that weren't enough to annoy you 
They employ you. 
Anybody at leisure 
Incurs everybody's displeasure. 
It seems to be very irking 
To people at work to see other people not working, 
So they tell you that work is wonderful medicine, 
Just look at Firestone and Ford and Edison, 
And they lecture you till they're out of breath or something 
And then if you don't succumb they starve you to death or something. 
All of which results in a nasty quirk: 
That if you don't want to work you have to work to earn enough money so that you won't have to work.


Written by Rg Gregory | Create an image from this poem

absinthe and stained glass

 (i)
absinthe makes the hurt grow fonder
the green fairy burbles what's this 'ere
when vincent (sozzled) knifes his lug off
all spirits then succumb to fear
depression takes the gloss off wonder
and people (lost) tell god to bug off
the twentieth century drowns in sheer
excuse that life is comic blunder
temporality dons its gear
forbidden thought soon rips its gag off

stained glass (you think) must be bystander
its leaded eyes seek far not near
the day's bleak dirt it learns to shrug off

(ii)
the history of the race confuses
heady spirit with bloody need
nothing can stop the sky from tingling
intrinsic hope rewords its screed
assumes it must outlive its bruises

stained glass deigns to face the mingling
of atavistic search for creed
with each desire gets what it chooses
it tries to suck out truth from greed
and calmly pacifies the wrangling

lasting spirit allows no ruses
what's bottled dreads to pay much heed
between the two meek life is dangling

(from le trianon - stained glass window by berge)
Written by John Greenleaf Whittier | Create an image from this poem

Stanzas for the Times

 Is this the land our fathers loved, 
The freedom which they toiled to win? 
Is this the soil whereon they moved? 
Are these the graves they slumber in? 
Are we the sons by whom are borne 
The mantles which the dead have worn? 

And shall we crouch above these graves, 
With craven soul and fettered lip? 
Yoke in with marked and branded slaves, 
And tremble at the driver's whip? 
Bend to the earth our pliant knees, 
And speak but as our masters please? 

Shall outraged Nature cease to feel? 
Shall Mercy's tears no longer flow? 
Shall ruffian threats of cord and steel, 
The dungeon's gloom, the assassin's blow, 
Turn back the spirit roused to save 
The Truth, our Country, and the slave? 

Of human skulls that shrine was made, 
Round which the priests of Mexico 
Before their loathsome idol prayed; 
Is Freedom's altar fashioned so? 
And must we yield to Freedom's God, 
As offering meet, the *****'s blood? 

Shall tongue be mute, when deeds are wrought 
Which well might shame extremest hell? 
Shall freemem lock the indignant thought? 
Shall Pity's bosom cease to swell? 
Shall Honor bleed?- shall Truth succumb? 
Shall pen, and press, and soul be dumb? 

No; by each spot of haunted ground, 
Where Freedom weeps her children's fall; 
By Plymouth's rock, and Bunker's mound; 
By Griswold's stained and shattered wall; 
By Warren's ghost, by Langdon's shade; 
By all the memories of our dead! 

By their enlarging souls, which burst 
The bands and fetters round them set; 
By the free Pilgrim spirit nursed 
Within our inmost bosoms, yet, 
By all above, around, below, 
Be ours the indignant answer,- No! 

No; guided by our country's laws, 
For truth, and right, and suffering man, 
Be ours to strive in Freedom's cause, 
As Christians may, as freemen can! 
Still pouring on unwilling ears 
That truth oppression only fears. 

What! shall we guard our neighbor still, 
While woman shrieks beneath his rod, 
And while he trampels down at will 
The image of a common God? 
Shall watch and ward be round him set, 
Of Northern nerve and bayonet? 

And shall we know and share with him 
The danger and the growing shame? 
And see our Freedom's light grow dim, 
Which should have filled the world with flame? 
And, writhing, feel, where'er we turn, 
A world's reproach around us burn? 

Is't not enough that this is borne? 
And asks our haughty neighbor more? 
Must fetters which his slaves have worn 
Clank round the Yankee farmer's door? 
Must he be told, beside his plough, 
What he must speak, and when, and how? 

Must he be told his freedom stands 
On Slavery's dark foundations strong; 
On breaking hearts and fettered hands, 
On robbery, and crime, and wrong? 
That all his fathers taught is vain,- 
That Freedom's emblem is the chain? 

Its life, its soul, from slavery drawn! 
False, foul, profane! Go, teach as well 
Of holy Truth from Falsehood born! 
Of Heaven refreshed by airs from Hell! 
Of Virtue in the arms of Vice! 
Of Demons planting Paradise! 

Rail on, then, brethren of the South, 
Ye shall not hear the truth the less; 
No seal is on the Yankee's mouth, 
No fetter on the Yankee's press! 
From our Green Mountains to the sea, 
One voice shall thunder, We are free!
Written by Mihai Eminescu | Create an image from this poem

Mortua Est

Two candles, tall sentry, beside an earth mound, 
A dream with wings broken that trail to the ground,  
Loud flung from the belfry calamitous chime... 
'Tis thus that you passed o'er the bound'ries of time. 

Gone by are the hours when the heavens entire 
Flowed rivers of milk and grew flowers of fire, 
When the thunderous clouds were but castles erect 
Which the moon like a queen each in turn did inspect. 

I see you a shadow bright silver transcending, 
With wings high uplifted to heaven ascending, 
I see you slow climbing through the sky's scaffold bars 
Midst a tempest of light and a snowstorm of stars; 

While the witches the sound of their spinning prolong, 
Exalted in sunshine, swept up by a song, 
O'er your breast like a saint you white arms crossed in prayer, 
And gold on the water, and silver in the air. 

I see your soul's parting, its flight I behold; 
Then glaze at the clay that remains ... mute and cold, 
At the winding-sheet clung to the coffin's rude sill, 
At your smile sweet and candid, that seems alive still. 

And i ask times unending my soul torn with doubt, 
O why, pallid angel, your light has gone out, 
For were you not blameless and wonderfully fair ? 
Have you gone to rekindle a star in despair ? 

I fancy on high there are wings without name, 
Broad rivers of fire spanned by bridges of flame, 
Strange castles that spires till the zenith up fling, 
With stairways of incense and flowers that sing. 

And you wonder among them, a worshipful queen, 
With hair of bright starlight and eyes vespertine, 
In a tunic of turquoise bespattered with gold, 
While a wreath of green laurels does your forehead enfold. 

O, death is a chaos, an ocean of stars gleaming,  
While life is a quagmire of doubts and of dreaming, 
Oh, death is an aeon of sun-blazoned spheres, 
While life but a legend of wailing and tears. 

Trough my head beats a whirlwind, a clamorous wrangle 
Of thoughts and of dreams that despair does entangle; 
For when suns are extinguished and meteors fail 
The whole universe seems to mean nothing at all. 

Maybe that one day the arched heavens will sunder, 
And down through their break all the emptiness thunder, 
Void's night o'er the earth its vast nothing extending, 
The loot of an instant of death without ending.  

If so, then forever your flame did succumb, 
And forever your voice from today will be dumb. 
If so, then hereafter can bring no rebirth. 
If so, then this angel was nothing but earth. 

And thus, lovely soil that breath has departed, 
I stand by your coffin alone broken-hearted; 
And yet i don't weep, rather praise for its fleeing 
Your ray softly crept from this chaos of being. 

For who shell declare which is ill and which well, 
The is, or the isn't ? Can anyone tell ? 
For he who is not, even grief can't destroy, 
And oft is the grieving, and seldom the joy. 

To exist! O, what nonsense, what foolish conceit; 
Our eyes but deceive us, our ears but cheat, 
What this age discovers, the next will deny, 
For better just nothing than naught a lie. 

I see dreams in men's clothing that after dreams chase, 
But that tumble in tombs ere the end of the race, 
And i search in may soul how this horror to fly, 
To laugh like a madman ? To curse ? Or to cry ? 

O, what is the meaning ? What sense does agree ? 
The end of such beauty, had that what to be ? 
Sweet seraph of clay where still lingers life's smile, 
Just in order to die did you live for a while ? 

O, tell me the meaning. This angel or clod ? 
I find on her forehead no witness of God. 

English version by Corneliu M. Popescu
Transcribed by Ana- Maria Ene
School No. 10, Focsani, Romania
Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

Dane-Geld

 A.D. 980-1016

It is always a temptation to an armed and agile nation
 To call upon a neighbour and to say: --
"We invaded you last night -- we are quite prepared to fight,
 Unless you pay us cash to go away."

And that is called asking for Dane-geld,
 And the people who ask ti explain
That you've only to pay 'em the Dane-geld
 And then you'll get rid of the Dane!

It is always a temptation to a rich and lazy nation,
 To puff and look important and to say: --
"Though we know we should defeat you, we have not the time to meet you.
 We will therefore pay you cash to go away."

And that is called paying the Dane-geld;
 But we've proved it again and again,
That if once you have paid him the Dane-geld
 You never get rid of the Dane.

It is wrong to put temptation in the path of any nation,
 For fear they should succumb and go astray;
So when you are requested to pay up or be molested,
 You will find it better policy to say: --

"We never pay any-one Dane-geld,
 No matter how trifling the cost;
For the end of that game is oppression and shame,
 And the nation that plays it is lost!"


Written by Barry Tebb | Create an image from this poem

Entanglements

 Why is it that in dreams I have visited -

As teacher or pupil - almost every college and school

In our once so green and pleasant land?

Hardly a subject from art to anthropology I have not

In dream seminar or floating spinning classroom

Studied or tried my prentice hand at, or learned

At the sandalled feet of some guru; as this minute

I returned from an easeled art room with the title

Of my weekly essay, ‘Discuss the links between the work

Of any symbolist poet and Monet.’

O, how slowly I drifted back to consciousness

Probing delightedly the dizzying whitenesses of Mallarm?

Strolling along an avenue of linden trees

Under a Provencal sky of azure

Wet with the scent of jasmine and lavender.

Yet in reality, things could hardly have been more different:

Watching our children grow from their first tottering steps,

Helping to tend them in sickness, learning the basics

Of the healer’s art, taking an old man to a ward,

Listening, listening to how many troubled lives

And to my own, perhaps; seeking to tease a meaning

Or find a thread in the jumbled maze of sorrows

Souls in their turbulence and grief have wandered through.

I even wrote a novel, ‘A Gone World’ I called it,

And helped another with the birth-pangs of her own.

Trying my hand at translation I puzzled the subtle

Metaphors of Reverdy, wandering his midnight landscapes

Of windmills and cross-roads where faith meets fate

And neither will succumb.

I sat in a packed lecture hall while a Lacanian

Misread early Freud through a crooked lens

And for a year turned every seminar to war

To make him see his vision’s fatal flaw.

I poured over cabinets of case histories,

Tried living here and there and met an amah,

Teaching her Auden and Empson. Her tears mingled

With my own at our last hurried meeting

In a crowded tea room, teaching her Klein.

I sat through many a summer watching the children play,

Feeling a hermit’s contentment in his cave,

Contemplating Plato and envisioning that cave

Of his where shadows move against the wall;

And turn to see or fail to see

The need to turn at all.
Written by Victor Hugo | Create an image from this poem

The Giant In Glee

 ("Ho, guerriers! je suis né dans le pays des Gaules.") 
 
 {V., March 11, 1825.} 


 Ho, warriors! I was reared in the land of the Gauls; 
 O'er the Rhine my ancestors came bounding like balls 
 Of the snow at the Pole, where, a babe, I was bathed 
 Ere in bear and in walrus-skin I was enswathed. 
 
 Then my father was strong, whom the years lowly bow,— 
 A bison could wallow in the grooves of his brow. 
 He is weak, very old—he can scarcely uptear 
 A young pine-tree for staff since his legs cease to bear; 
 
 But here's to replace him!—I can toy with his axe; 
 As I sit on the hill my feet swing in the flax, 
 And my knee caps the boulders and troubles the trees. 
 How they shiver, yea, quake if I happen to sneeze! 
 
 I was still but a springald when, cleaving the Alps, 
 I brushed snowy periwigs off granitic scalps, 
 And my head, o'er the pinnacles, stopped the fleet clouds, 
 Where I captured the eagles and caged them by crowds. 
 
 There were tempests! I blew them back into their source! 
 And put out their lightnings! More than once in a course, 
 Through the ocean I went wading after the whale, 
 And stirred up the bottom as did never a gale. 
 
 Fond of rambling, I hunted the shark 'long the beach, 
 And no osprey in ether soared out of my reach; 
 And the bear that I pinched 'twixt my finger and thumb, 
 Like the lynx and the wolf, perished harmless and dumb. 
 
 But these pleasures of childhood have lost all their zest; 
 It is warfare and carnage that now I love best: 
 The sounds that I wish to awaken and hear 
 Are the cheers raised by courage, the shrieks due to fear; 
 
 When the riot of flames, ruin, smoke, steel and blood, 
 Announces an army rolls along as a flood, 
 Which I follow, to harry the clamorous ranks, 
 Sharp-goading the laggards and pressing the flanks, 
 Till, a thresher 'mid ripest of corn, up I stand 
 With an oak for a flail in my unflagging hand. 
 
 Rise the groans! rise the screams! on my feet fall vain tears 
 As the roar of my laughter redoubles their fears. 
 I am naked. At armor of steel I should joke— 
 True, I'm helmed—a brass pot you could draw with ten yoke. 
 
 I look for no ladder to invade the king's hall— 
 I stride o'er the ramparts, and down the walls fall, 
 Till choked are the ditches with the stones, dead and quick, 
 Whilst the flagstaff I use 'midst my teeth as a pick. 
 
 Oh, when cometh my turn to succumb like my prey, 
 May brave men my body snatch away from th' array 
 Of the crows—may they heap on the rocks till they loom 
 Like a mountain, befitting a colossus' tomb! 
 
 Foreign Quarterly Review (adapted) 


 




Written by A S J Tessimond | Create an image from this poem

Attack On The Ad-Man

 This trumpeter of nothingness, employed
To keep our reason dull and null and void.
This man of wind and froth and flux will sell
The wares of any who reward him well.
Praising whatever he is paid to praise,
He hunts for ever-newer, smarter ways
To make the gilt seen gold; the shoddy, silk;
To cheat us legally; to bluff and bilk
By methods which no jury can prevent
Because the law's not broken, only bent.

This mind for hire, this mental prostitute
Can tell the half-lie hardest to refute;
Knows how to hide an inconvenient fact
And when to leave a doubtful claim unbacked;
Manipulates the truth but not too much,
And if his patter needs the Human Touch,
Skillfully artless, artlessly naive,
Wears his convenient heart upon his sleeve.

He uses words that once were strong and fine,
Primal as sun and moon and bread and wine,
True, honourable, honoured, clear and keen,
And leaves them shabby, worn, diminished, mean.
He takes ideas and trains them to engage
In the long little wars big combines wage...
He keeps his logic loose, his feelings flimsy;
Turns eloquence to cant and wit to whimsy;
Trims language till it fits his clients, pattern
And style's a glossy tart or limping slattern.

He studies our defences, finds the cracks
And where the wall is weak or worn, attacks.
lie finds the fear that's deep, the wound that's tender,
And mastered, outmanouevered, we surrender.
We who have tried to choose accept his choice
And tired succumb to his untiring voice.
The dripping tap makes even granite soften
We trust the brand-name we have heard so often
And join the queue of sheep that flock to buy;
We fools who know our folly, you and I.
Written by Ellis Parker Butler | Create an image from this poem

When Ida Puts Her Armor On

 When Ida puts her armor on
 And draws her trusty blade
The turnips in the bin turn pale,
 The apples are afraid.
The quiet kitchen city wakes
 And consternation feels,
And quick the tocsin pealeth forth
 In long potato peels.

When Ida puts her armor on
 The pots and pans succumb,
A wooden spoon her drum-stick is,
 A mixing pan her drum;
She charges on the kitchen folk
 With silver, tin and steel
She beat the eggs, she whips the cream,
 The victory is a meal.

When Ida puts her apron on
 Her breast-plate is of blue.
(Checked gingham ruffled top and sides)
 Her gauntlets gingham, too;
And thus protected from assault
 Of batter, stain and flour
She wars with vegetable foes
 And conquers in an hour.

When Ida puts her armor on
 She is so fair to see
Her battle with the kitchen folk
 Is reproduced in me;
So sweet she is, armed cap-a-pie,
 So good her kitchen art
I hardly know which loves her best
 My palate or my heart.
Written by Eugene Field | Create an image from this poem

With Trumpet and Drum

 With big tin trumpet and little red drum,
Marching like soldiers, the children come!
It 's this way and that way they circle and file---
My! but that music of theirs is fine!
This way and that way, and after a while
They march straight into this heart of mine!
A sturdy old heart, but it has to succumb
To the blare of that trumpet and beat of that drum! 
Come on, little people, from cot and from hall---
This heart it hath welcome and room for you all!
It will sing you its songs and warm you with love,
As your dear little arms with my arms intertwine;
It will rock you away to the dreamland above---
Oh, a jolly old heart is this old heart of mine,
And jollier still is it bound to become
When you blow that big trumpet and beat that red drum! 
So come; though I see not his dear little face
And hear not his voice in this jubilant place,
I know he were happy to bid me enshrine
His memory deep in my heart with your play---
Ah me! but a love that is sweeter than mine
Holdeth my boy in its keeping to-day!
And my heart it is lonely---so, little folk, come,
March in and make merry with trumpet and drum!

Book: Reflection on the Important Things