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Famous Frauds Poems by Famous Poets

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

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by Swinburne, Algernon Charles
...servitudes.
Their young wings weaken, plume by plume
Drops, and their eyelids gather gloom
And close against man's frauds and feuds,
And their tongues call they know not whom
To help in their vicissitudes;
For many slaveries are, but one
Liberty, single as the sun.

One light, one law, that burns up strife,
And one sufficiency of life.
Self-stablished, the sufficing soul
Hears the loud wheels of changes roll,
Sees against man man bare the knife,
Sees the world se...Read more of this...



by Paterson, Andrew Barton
..., daily, William Johnson, down among those poisonous hordes, 
Shooting every stray goanna, calls them “black and yaller frauds”. 
And King Billy, of the Mooki, cadging for the cast-off coat, 
Somehow seems to dodge the subject of the snake-bite antidote....Read more of this...

by Larkin, Philip
...r>

But o, photography! as no art is,
Faithful and disappointing! that records
Dull days as dull, and hold-it smiles as frauds,
And will not censor blemishes
Like washing-lines, and Hall's-Distemper boards,

But shows a cat as disinclined, and shades
A chin as doubled when it is, what grace
Your candour thus confers upon her face!
How overwhelmingly persuades
That this is a real girl in a real place,

In every sense empirically true!
Or is it just the past? Those flowers, tha...Read more of this...

by Trumbull, John
...And throw the world in common stock;
Reduce all grievances and ills
To Magna Charta of your wills;
Establish cheats and frauds and nonsense,
Framed to the model of your conscience;
Cry justice down, as out of fashion,
And fix its scale of depreciation;
Defy all creditors to trouble ye,
And keep new years of Jewish jubilee;
Drive judges out, like Aaron's calves,
By jurisdiction of white staves,
And make the bar and bench and steeple
Submit t' our Sovereign Lord, The People;
By...Read more of this...

by Watts, Isaac
...nity and lies
The scoffer and the hypocrite
Are the abhorrence of mine eyes.

Amongst thy saints will I appear
With frauds well washed in innocence;
But when I stand before thy bar,
The blood of Christ is my defence.

I love thy habitation, Lord,
The temple where thine honors dwell;
There shall I hear thine holy word,
And there thy works of wonder tell.

Let not my soul be joined at last
With men of treachery and blood,
Since I my days on earth have passed
Among t...Read more of this...



by Whitman, Walt
...and joy—joy universal. 

Out of the bulk, the morbid and the shallow,
Out of the bad majority—the varied, countless frauds of men and States, 

Electric, antiseptic yet—cleaving, suffusing all, 
Only the good is universal. 

3
Over the mountain growths, disease and sorrow, 
An uncaught bird is ever hovering, hovering,
High in the purer, happier air. 

From imperfection’s murkiest cloud, 
Darts always forth one ray of perfect light, 
One flash of Heaven’s glory.Read more of this...

by Paterson, Andrew Barton
...e 
Of the Governor's hair 
When the little boys say, "Go it, Ginger!" 

Then some wandering lords -- 
They so often are frauds -- 
This out-of-way country invading, 
If a man dresses well 
And behaves like a swell, 
Then he's somebody's cook masquerading. 

But an out-an-out ass 
With a thirst for the glass 
And the symptoms of drink on his "boko", 
Who is perpetually 
Pursuing the ballet, 
He is always the "true Orinoco". 

We must slave with our quills -- 
Keep the ...Read more of this...

by Dryden, John
...oft convenient, seldom just; 
Even in the most sincere advice he gave 
He had a grudging still to be a knave. 
The frauds he learnt in his fanatic years 
Made him uneasy in his lawful gears. 
At best, as little honest as he could, 
And, like white witches, mischievously good. 
To his first bias longingly he leans 
And rather would be great by wicked means. 
Thus framed for ill, he loosed our triple hold, 
(Advice unsafe, precipitous, and bold.) 
From henc...Read more of this...

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