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Famous By Rights Poems by Famous Poets

These are examples of famous By Rights poems written by some of the greatest and most-well-known modern and classical poets. PoetrySoup is a great educational poetry resource of famous by rights poems. These examples illustrate what a famous by rights poem looks like and its form, scheme, or style (where appropriate).

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by Parker, Dorothy
...

But I have no lethal weapon-
Thus does Fate our pleasure step on!
So they still are quick and well
Who should be, by rights, in hell....Read more of this...



by Nesbit, Edith
...alone in my single bed
28 And count what a girl can earn
29 To buy the baby the bits of things
30 He ought to a bought, by rights;
31 And wonder whether e thinks of Us ...
32 And if e sleeps sound o' nights....Read more of this...

by Service, Robert William
...ve it every day;
My line-up of eleven
Combine to make it gay;
Yet when in June they're leaving
For Sandport by the sea,
By rights I should be grieving,
But gosh! I just fell free.

I'm left with parting kisses,
The guardian of the house;
The romp, it's true, one misses,
I'm quiet as a mouse.
In carpet slippers stealing
From room to room alone
I get the strangest feeling
The place is all my own.

It seems to nestle near me,
It whispers in my ear;
My books and pictu...Read more of this...

by Paterson, Andrew Barton
...women weep and their children die -- how dare they presume to fight! 
For none of them dress in a uniform, the same as by rights they ought. 
They're fighting in rags and in naked feet, like Wallace's Scotchmen fought! 
(And they clothe themselves from our captured troops -- and they're catching them every week; 
And they don't hand them -- and the shame is ours, but we cover the shame with a shriek!) 
And, lastly, we'll shriek the political shriek as we sit in the dark ...Read more of this...

by Carroll, Lewis
..."DON'T they consult the 'Victims,' though?"
I said. "They should, by rights,
Give them a chance - because, you know,
The tastes of people differ so,
Especially in Sprites." 

The Phantom shook his head and smiled.
"Consult them? Not a bit!
'Twould be a job to drive one wild,
To satisfy one single child -
There'd be no end to it!" 

"Of course you can't leave CHILDREN free,"
Said I, "to pick and choose:
But, in the ...Read more of this...



by Morris, William
...uty; if I had 

"Held out my long hand up against the blue,
And, looking on the tenderly darken'd fingers,
Thought that by rights one ought to see quite through, 

"There, see you, where the soft still light yet lingers,
Round by the edges; what should I have done,
If this had joined with yellow spotted singers, 

"And startling green drawn upward by the sun?
But shouting, loosed out, see now! all my hair,
And trancedly stood watching the west wind run 

"With faintest half-h...Read more of this...

by Masefield, John
...ench Suzanne, the Circus Dancer, 
I'm going to dance a bloody Lancer." 
"If I'd my rights I'm Squire's heir." 
"By rights I'd be a millionaire." 
"By rights I'd be the lord of you, 
But Farmer Scriggins had his do, 
He done me, so I've had to hoove it, 
I've got it all wrote down to prove it. 
And one of these dark winter nights 
He'll learn I mean to have my rights; 
I'll bloody him a bloody fix, 
I'll bloody burn his bloody ricks." 

From three long hour...Read more of this...

by Edgar, Marriott
...est gas is eight pence a therm. 

There's my time, six shillings an hour; 
You can't do these things in two ticks- 
By rights I should charge you a guinea, 
But I'll do it for eighteen and six." 

"Wot, eighteen and six to get sovereign?" 
Said Father, "That doesn't sound sense 
I'll tell you, you'd best keep young Albert 
And give us the odd eighteen pence!" 

The doctor concurred this arrangement, 
But to this day he stands in some doubt 
As to whether he's in eight...Read more of this...

by Frost, Robert
...h one would win,
We should see which one would be first to yield.
The world was black invisible field.
The rain by rights was snow for cold.
The wind was another layer of mold.
But the strangest thing: in the thick old thatch,
Where summer birds had been given hatch,
had fed in chorus, and lived to fledge,
Some still were living in hermitage.
And as I passed along the eaves,
So low I brushed the straw with my sleeves,
I flushed birds out of hole after hole...Read more of this...

by Sassoon, Siegfried
...>’ 

He eyed the Cemetery across the road. 
‘There’s scores of bodies out abroad, this while, 
‘That should be here by rights. They little know’d 
‘How they’d get buried in such wretched style.’

I told him with a sympathetic grin, 
That Germans boil dead soldiers down for fat; 
And he was horrified. ‘What shameful sin! 
‘O sir, that Christian souls should come to that!’...Read more of this...

by Browning, Robert
...;
And the shops with fanciful signs which are painted properly.

V

What of a villa? Though winter be over in March by rights,
'Tis May perhaps ere the snow shall have withered well off the heights:
You've the brown ploughed land before, where the oxen steam and wheeze,
And the hills over-smoked behind by the faint grey olive trees.

VI

Is it better in May, I ask you? You've summer all at once;
In a day he leaps complete with a few strong April suns.
'Mid the sha...Read more of this...

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