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Famous Priviledge Poems by Famous Poets

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

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by Killigrew, Anne
...us alone to Her and Heaven: 
 Should she her Airy Race forget, 
 On Earth affect to walk and sit; 
Should she so high a Priviledge neglect, 
As still on Earth, to walk and sit, affect, 
 What could she of Wrong complain, 
 Who thus her Birdly Kind doth stain, 
 If all her Feathers moulted were, 
 And naked she were left and bare, 
 The Jest and Scorn of Earth and Aire ? 
III. 
The Bird of Paradice the Soul,...Read more of this...



by Sidney, Sir Philip
...an show,
That not my soul, which at thy foot did fall
Long since, forc'd by thy beams, but stone nor tree,
By Sences priviledge, can scape from thee! 
XXXVII 

My mouth doth water, and my breast doth swell,
My tongue doth itch, my thoughts in labour be:
Listen then, lordings, with good ear to me,
For of my life I must a riddle tell.
Toward Auroras Court a nymph doth dwell,
Rich in all beauties which mans eye can see;
Beauties so farre from reach of words that ...Read more of this...

by Milton, John
...a living death, 
And buried; but O yet more miserable!
My self, my Sepulcher, a moving Grave,
Buried, yet not exempt
By priviledge of death and burial
From worst of other evils, pains and wrongs,
But made hereby obnoxious more
To all the miseries of life,
Life in captivity
Among inhuman foes.
But who are these? for with joint pace I hear 
The tread of many feet stearing this way;
Perhaps my enemies who come to stare
At my affliction, and perhaps to insult,
Thir daily prac...Read more of this...

by Hacker, Marilyn
...'s a boy
crossing out words: the rain, the linen-mender,
are all the homework he will do today.
The absence and the priviledge of gender

confound in him, soprano, clumsy, frail.
Not neuter—neutral human, and unmarked,
the younger brother in the fairy tale
except, boys shouted "Jew!" across the park

at him when he was coming home from school.
The book that he just read, about the war,
the partisans, is less a terrible
and thrilling story, more a warning, more

a ...Read more of this...

by Strode, William
...ne,
I thinke heale ne'er come hether.
The Boyes that climbe like Crickets
And steale my trade, Ile strippe them,
By priviledge I, growne Chimney hy,
Soone out of towne will whippe them.


Then will I rush, etc....Read more of this...



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