Category

Heroes & Patriotism

Showing 1-20 of 379 results
  • Poem
    By Thomas Bracken
    God of Nations at Thy feet,
    In the bonds of love we meet,
    Hear our voices, we entreat,
    God defend our free…
  • Poem
    By Unknown
    Heyla! We have a story about the Spear-Danes, from the old days 
    when they were big and their kings showed their strength. There 
    was one king, Shield Schefing, who stole many mead-benches from 
    other tribes and terrified their leaders. At first, he was...
  • Poem
    By Unknown
    Oft him anhaga are gebideð,
    metudes miltse, þeah þe he modcearig
    geond lagulade longe sceolde
    hreran mid hondum hrimcealde sæ,
    wadan wræclastas. Wyrd bið ful aręd!
    Swa cwæð eardstapa, earfeþa gemyndig,
    wraþra wælsleahta, winemæga hryre:
    “Oft ic sceolde ana uhtna gehwylce
    mine ceare cwiþan. Nis nu cwicra nan
    þe...
  • Poem
    By Janet Loxley Lewis
    We have forgotten Paris, and his fate.
    We have not much inquired
    If Menelaus from the Trojan gate
    Returning found the long desired
    Immortal beauty by his hearth. Then late,

    Late, long past the morning hour,
    Could even she recapture from the dawn
    The young delightful love?...
  • Poem
    By Countee Cullen
    Wherein are words sublime or noble? What
    Invests one speech with haloed eminence,
    Makes it the sesame for all doors shut,
    Yet in its like sees but impertinence?
    Is it the hue? Is it the cast of eye,
    The curve of lip or Asiatic breath,
    Which...
  • Poem
    By Duane Niatum
    Hin-Mah-Too-Yah-Lat-Ket: Thunder-rolling in-the-mountains,
    never reached with his people,
    the Wal-lam-wat-kins, Canada’s promised land.
    Instead, the fugitive chief sits in a corner of the prison car
    clicking its way to Oklahoma.
    Chained to his warriors, he is like a featherless eagle
    forced to look at a sky...
  • Poem
    By Derek Walcott
    There were still shards of an ancient pastoral
    in those shires of the island where the cattle drank
    their pools of shadow from an older sky,
    surviving from when the landscape copied such subjects as
    “Herefords at Sunset in the Valley of the Wye.”
    The...
  • Poem
    By Patrick Durgin
    How do I compare the costs
    Of leaving one system
    Of cooperation
    For another
    System of cooperation?
    How do I loosen the tongue
    Enough to inhabit
    The temple incognito?
    What are the people to me
    Until I condense my hesitations
    And drink in stillness with
    The rest of us, slightly drunk
    But...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    The Government Lake

    By James Tate
              The way to the toy store was blocked by a fallen tree
    in the road. There was a policeman directing traffic down a
    side street. I asked him, “What happened?” He said, “Lightning
    in the night.” I took...
  • Poem
    By Natasha Trethewey
    1

    In which I try to decipher
                              the story it tells,
    this syntax of monuments
                              flanking the old courthouse:
     ...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    And Also with You

    By Natalie Shapero
    The comet taught us how to watch the war.
    The comet contended that fire

    is romantic and recommended we each behold it alone,
    envisioning out there somewhere our next
    lover, craning up at this same sky.

    Was the comet simply endeavoring
    to keep us divided, I...
  • Poem
    By Langston Hughes

    Let America be America again.
    Let it be the dream it used to be.
    Let it be the pioneer on the plain
    Seeking a home where he himself is free.
     
    (America never was America to me.)
     
    Let America be the dream the dreamers dreamed—
    Let it...
  • Poem
    By Ada Limón
    The truth is, I’ve never cared for the National
    Anthem. If you think about it, it’s not a good
    song. Too high for most of us with “the rockets
    red glare” and then there are the bombs.
    (Always, always, there is war and bombs.)
    Once,...
  • Poem
    By David Hernandez
    I’m this tiny, this statuesque, and everywhere
    in between, and everywhere in between
    bony and overweight, my shadow cannot hold
    one shape in Omaha, in Tuscaloosa, in Aberdeen.
    My skin is mocha brown, two shades darker
    than taupe, your question is racist, nutmeg, beige,
    I’m...
  • Poem
    By Alurista
                                  what for the rush and bloody pain
                                  what for the blooming and the rain
                                  what for the quest and odyssey
                                  what for the swimming and...
  • Poem
    By Luljeta Lleshanaku
    Translated By Ani Gjika
    1.
    Here I rest, in South Georgia.
    A few feet of evolution away
    lie the graves of whale hunters, pointing north.
    A white fence shields them from elephant seals
    and their apocalyptic screams that each day warn
    of the end of the world, or maybe the...
  • Poem
    By Margaret Burroughs
    My children, my children, remember the day
    When the Drum Major of Freedom's parade went away.
    Stop crying now little children and listen
    And you will know for the future what really did happen. 

    You will know why your father was solemn and grim
    And...
  • Poem
    By Margaret Burroughs
    Venerable black women
    You of yesterday, you of today.
    Black mothers of tomorrow yet to be
    These lines are homage to you, for you. 

    Magnificent black women
    The poets and singers have been remiss
    Have sung too few poems and songs of you
    And the image makers...
  • Poem
    By Margaret Burroughs
    Let it be known to all, the story
    Of the glorious struggle of my people.
    Let it be known that black men and women
    Helped to build this our country.
    Let it be known that black men and women of the past
    In an effort...
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