Best Famous Unflagging Poems

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

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Written by Lucy Maud Montgomery | Create an image from this poem

To My Enemy

 Let those who will of friendship sing,
And to its guerdon grateful be,
But I a lyric garland bring
To crown thee, O, mine enemy! 

Thanks, endless thanks, to thee I owe
For that my lifelong journey through
Thine honest hate has done for me
What love perchance had failed to do. 

I had not scaled such weary heights
But that I held thy scorn in fear,
And never keenest lure might match
The subtle goading of thy sneer. 

Thine anger struck from me a fire
That purged all dull content away,
Our mortal strife to me has been
Unflagging spur from day to day. 

And thus, while all the world may laud
The gifts of love and loyalty,
I lay my meed of gratitude
Before thy feet, mine enemy!

Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Work

 When twenty-one I loved to dream,
 And was to loafing well inclined;
Somehow I couldn't get up steam
 To welcome work of any kind.
While students burned the midnight lamp,
 With dour ambition as their goad,
I longed to be a gayful tramp
 And greet adventure on the road.

But now that sixty years have sped,
 Behold! I toil from morn to night.
The thoughts that teem into my head
 I pray: God give me time to write.
With eager and unflagging pen
 No drudgery of desk I shirk,
And preach to all retiring men
 The gospel of unceasing work.

And yet I do not sadly grieve
 Such squandering of golden days;
For from my dreaming I believe
 Have stemmed my least unworthy lays.
Aye, toil is best when all is said,
 As age has made me understand . . .
So fitly fold, when I am dead,
 A pencil in my hand.
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) 


 




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