Religion poems

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The Rain-bow

© Thomas Love Peacock

The day has pass’d in storms, though not unmix’d

With transitory calm.  The western clouds,

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Paradise Lost: Book I

© Patrick Kavanagh

So spake th' apostate Angel, though in pain,
Vaunting aloud, but rack'd with deep despair.
And him thus answer'd soon his bold compeer:

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Hands

© Robinson Jeffers

Inside a cave in a narrow canyon near Tassajara

The vault of rock is painted with hands,

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A Little Language

© Robert Duncan

I know a little language of my cat, though Dante says 
that animals have no need of speech and Nature 
abhors the superfluous. My cat is fluent. He 
converses when he wants with me. To speak

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An Apology for the Revival of Christian Architecture in England

© Geoffrey Hill

And, after all, it is to them we return.
Their triumph is to rise and be our hosts:
lords of unquiet or of quiet sojourn,
those muddy-hued and midge-tormented ghosts.

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Afterword

© Louise Gluck

Reading what I have just written, I now believe
I stopped precipitously, so that my story seems to have been
slightly distorted, ending, as it did, not abruptly
but in a kind of artificial mist of the sort
sprayed onto stages to allow for difficult set changes.

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Satire III

© John Donne

Kind pity chokes my spleen; brave scorn forbids

Those tears to issue which swell my eyelids;

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I Sing the Body Electric

© Walt Whitman

1
I sing the body electric,
The armies of those I love engirth me and I engirth them,
They will not let me off till I go with them, respond to them,
And discorrupt them, and charge them full with the charge of the soul.

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Song of the Open Road

© Walt Whitman

1
Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road,
Healthy, free, the world before me,
The long brown path before me leading wherever I choose.

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Epistles to Several Persons: Epistle II: To a Lady on the Characters of Women

© Alexander Pope

Nothing so true as what you once let fall,
"Most Women have no Characters at all."
Matter too soft a lasting mark to bear,
And best distinguish'd by black, brown, or fair.

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The Columbiad: Book VIII

© Joel Barlow

On fame's high pinnacle their names shall shine,
Unending ages greet the group divine,
Whose holy hands our banners first unfurl'd,
And conquer'd freedom for the grateful world.

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The Purgatory Of St. Patrick - Act I

© Denis Florence MacCarthy

KING.  Yes, from this rocky height,
Nigh to the sun, that with one starry light
Its rugged brow doth crown,
Headlong among the salt waves leaping down
Let him descend who so much pain perceives;
There let him raging die who raging lives.

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The Don’t Believers

© Edgar Albert Guest

The new - fangled churches that don't believe I things

Aren't the churches that satisfy me;

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My Shoes

© Charles Simic

Shoes, secret face of my inner life: 
Two gaping toothless mouths,
Two partly decomposed animal skins 
Smelling of mice nests.

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Written in London. September, 1802

© André Breton



O Friend! I know not which way I must look

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Drought And Doctrine.

© James Brunton Stephens

COME, take the tenner, doctor . . . yes, I know the bill says "five,"

But it ain't as if you'd merely kep' our little 'un alive;

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The Child Of The Islands - Summer

© Caroline Norton

I.
FOR Summer followeth with its store of joy;
That, too, can bring thee only new delight;
Its sultry hours can work thee no annoy,

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With Antecedents

© Walt Whitman

I respect Assyria, China, Teutonia, and the Hebrews;
I adopt each theory, myth, god, and demi-god;
I see that the old accounts, bibles, genealogies, are true, without
  exception; 

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October's Little Miseries

© Jules Laforgue

Every October I start to get upset.
The factories' hundred throats blow smoke to the sky.
The pullets are getting fat
for Christmas Day.