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Best Famous Watchword Poems

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

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Written by Rudyard Kipling | Create an image from this poem

The Holy War

 "For here lay the excellent wisdom of him that built Mansoul, thatthe
walls could never be broken down nor hurt by the most mighty adverse
potentate unless the townsmen gave consent thereto."--Bunyan's Holy War.)


A tinker out of Bedford,
A vagrant oft in quod,
A privet under Fairfax,
A minister of God--


Two hundred years and thirty
 Ere Armageddon came
His single hand portrayed it,
 And Bunyan was his name!


He mapped for those who follow,
 The world in which we are--
"This famous town of Mansoul"
 That takes the Holy War.
Her true and traitor people,
 The gates along her wall,
From Eye Gate unto Feel Gate,
 John Bunyan showed them all.


All enemy divisions,
 Recruits of every class,
And highly-screened positions
 For flame or poison-gas;
The craft that we call modern,
 The crimes that we call new,
John Bunyan had 'em typed and filed
 In sixteen Eighty-two.


Likewise the Lords of Looseness
 That hamper faith and works,
The Perseverance-Doubters,
 And Present-Comfort shirks,
With brittle intellectuals
 Who crack beneath a strain--
John Bunyan met that helpful set
 In Charles the Second's reign.


Emmanuel's vanguard dying
 For right and not for rights,
My Lord Apollyon lying
 To the State-kept Stockholmites,
The Pope, the swithering Neutrals
 The Kaiser and his Gott--
Their roles, their goals, their naked souls--
 He knew and drew the lot.


Now he hath left his quarters,
 In Bunhill Fields to lie,
The wisdom that he taught us
 Is proven prophecy--
One watchword through our Armies,
 One answer from our Lands:--
"No dealings with Diabolus
 As long as Mansoul stands!"


A pedlar from a hovel,
 The lowest of the low,
The Father of the Novel,
 Salvation's first Defoe,
Eight blinded generations
 Ere Armageddon came,
He showed us how to meet it,
 And Bunyan was his name!


Written by Vachel Lindsay | Create an image from this poem

Love and Law

 TRUE Love is founded in rocks of Remembrance 
In stones of Forbearance and mortar of pain. 
The workman lays wearily granite on granite, 
And bleeds for his castle, 'mid sunshine and rain. 

Love is not velvet, not all of it velvet, 
Not all of it banners, not gold-leaf alone. 
'Tis stern as the ages and old as Religion. 
With Patience its watchword and Law for its throne.
Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

For Australia

 Now, with the wars of the world begun, they'll listen to you and me, 
Now while the frightened nations run to the arms of democracy, 
Now, when our blathering fools are scared, and the years have proved us right – 
All unprovided and unprepared, the Outpost of the White! 

"Get the people – no matter how," that is the way they rave, 
Could a million paupers aid us now, or a tinpot squadron save? 
The "loyal" drivel, the blatant boast are as shames that used to be – 
Our fight shall be a fight for the coast, with the future for the sea! 

We must turn our face to the only track that will take us through the worst – 
Cable to charter that we lack, guns and cartridges first, 
New machines that will make machines till our factories are complete – 
Block the shoddy and Brummagem, pay them with wool and wheat. 

Build to-morrow the foundry shed ['tis a task we dare not shirk], 
Lay the runs and the engine-bed, and get the gear to work. 
Have no fear when we raise the steam in the hurried factory – 
We are not lacking in the brains that teem with originality. 

Have no fear for the way is clear – we'll shackle the hands of greed – 
Every lad is an engineer in his country's hour of need; 
Many are brilliant, swift to learn, quick at invention too, 
Born inventors whose young hearts burn to show what the South can do! 

To show what the South can do, done well, and more than the North can do. 
They'll make us the cartridge and make the shell, and the gun to carry true, 
Give us the gear and the South is strong - and the docks shall yield us more; 
The national arm like the national song comes with the first great war. 

Books of science from every land, volumes on gunnery, 
Practical teachers we have at hand, masters of chemistry. 
Clear young heads that will sift and think in spite of authorities, 
And brains that shall leap from invention's brink at the clash of factories. 
Still be noble in peace or war, raise the national spirit high; 
And this be our watchword for evermore: "For Australia – till we die!"
Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

A Voice from the Town

 I thought, in the days of the droving, 
Of steps I might hope to retrace, 
To be done with the bush and the roving 
And settle once more in my place. 
With a heart that was well nigh to breaking, 
In the long, lonely rides on the plain, 
I thought of the pleasure of taking 
The hand of a lady again. 
I am back into civilization, 
Once more in the stir and the strife, 
But the old joys have lost their sensation -- 
The light has gone out of my life; 
The men of my time they have married, 
Made fortunes or gone to the wall; 
Too long from the scene I have tarried, 
And somehow, I'm out of it all. 

For I go to the balls and the races 
A lonely companionless elf, 
And the ladies bestow all their graces 
On others less grey than myself; 
While the talk goes around I'm a dumb one 
'Midst youngsters that chatter and prate, 
And they call me "The Man who was Someone 
Way back in the year Sixty-eight." 

And I look, sour and old, at the dancers 
That swing to the strains of the band, 
And the ladies all give me the Lancers, 
No waltzes -- I quite understand. 
For matrons intent upon matching 
Their daughters with infinite push, 
Would scarce think him worthy the catching, 
The broken-down man from the bush. 
New partners have come and new faces, 
And I, of the bygone brigade, 
Sharply feel that oblivion my place is -- 
I must lie with the rest in the shade. 
And the youngsters, fresh-featured and pleasant, 
They live as we lived -- fairly fast; 
But I doubt if the men of the present 
Are as good as the men of the past. 

Of excitement and praise they are chary, 
There is nothing much good upon earth; 
Their watchword is nil admirari, 
They are bored from the days of their birth. 
Where the life that we led was a revel 
They "wince and relent and refrain" -- 
I could show them the road -- to the devil, 
Were I only a youngster again. 

I could show them the road where the stumps are, 
The pleasures that end in remorse, 
And the game where the Devil's three trumps are 
The woman, the card, and the horse. 
Shall the blind lead the blind -- shall the sower 
Of wind read the storm as of yore? 
Though they get to their goal somewhat slower, 
They march where we hurried before. 

For the world never learns -- just as we did 
They gallantly go to their fate, 
Unheeded all warnings, unheeded 
The maxims of elders sedate. 
As the husbandman, patiently toiling, 
Draws a harvest each year from the soil, 
So the fools grow afresh for the spoiling, 
And a new crop of thieves for the spoil. 

But a truce to this dull moralizing, 
Let them drink while the drops are of gold. 
I have tasted the dregs -- 'twere surprising 
Were the new wine to me like the old; 
And I weary for lack of employment 
In idleness day after day, 
For the key to the door of enjoyment 
Is Youth -- and I've thrown it away.
Written by Robert Francis | Create an image from this poem

The Bulldozer

 Bull by day
And dozes by night.

Would that the bulldozer
Dozed all the time

Would that the bulldozer
Would rust in peace.

His watchword
Let not a witch live

His battle cry
Better dead than red.

Give me if you must
The bull himself

But not the bulldozer
No, not the bulldozer.


Written by Algernon Charles Swinburne | Create an image from this poem

Monotones

 Because there is but one truth;
Because there is but one banner;
Because there is but one light;
Because we have with us our youth
Once, and one chance and one manner
Of service, and then the night;

Because we have found not yet
Any way for the world to follow
Save only that ancient way;
Whosoever forsake or forget,
Whose faith soever be hollow,
Whose hope soever grow grey;

Because of the watchwords of kings
That are many and strange and unwritten,
Diverse, and our watchword is one;
Therefore, though seven be the strings,
One string, if the harp be smitten,
Sole sounds, till the tune be done;

Sounds without cadence or change
In a weary monotonous burden,
Be the keynote of mourning or mirth;
Free, but free not to range;
Taking for crown and for guerdon
No man's praise upon earth;

Saying one sole word evermore,
In the ears of the charmed world saying,
Charmed by spells to its death;
One that chanted of yore
To a tune of the sword-sweep's playing
In the lips of the dead blew breath;

Therefore I set not mine hand
To the shifting of changed modulations,
To the smiting of manifold strings;
While the thrones of the throned men stand,
One song for the morning of nations,
One for the twilight of kings.

One chord, one word, and one way,
One hope as our law, one heaven,
Till slain be the great one wrong;
Till the people it could not slay,
Risen up, have for one star seven,
For a single, a sevenfold song.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things