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John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
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Poetry Listing
Please Note: This list is not comprehensive, but is an ongoing work of the love of poetry.
Within this area you will be able to read, and give your thoughts on the poetry listed.
Please, if you find an error, let me know.
Read More About John Kendall (Dum-Dum) below poetry list
| | Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads | | 1: | A Ballad Of Buttonry | Clothes and the Man I sing. Reformers, note | | 50 | 1117 | | 2: | A Happy New Year | Friend, when the year is on the wing, | | 56 | 474 | | 3: | A Soldier Of Weight | In the dim and distant ages, in the half-forgotten days, | | 40 | 487 | | 4: | A Sombre Retrospect | Long, long ago, in that heroic time | | 32 | 510 | | 5: | Adam | When in my white-washed walls confined | | 72 | 481 | | 6: | Christmas Greetings | Christmas comes but once a year. | | 40 | 467 | | 7: | Elegy On A Rhinoceros (Recently Deceased) | Come, let us weep for Begum; he is dead. | | 49 | 459 | | 8: | Elysium | From the dust, and the drought, and the heat, | | 36 | 527 | | 9: | Farewell | Farewell. What a subject! How sweet | | 48 | 513 | | 10: | Haven | Here, in mine old-time harbourage installed, | | 44 | 426 | | 11: | Kal | | | 31 | 464 | | 12: | Marie | We hear the opening refrain, | | 48 | 516 | | 13: | Nocturne Written In An Indian Garden | The time-gun rolls his nerve-destroying bray; | | 52 | 487 | | 14: | Ode On A Distant Prospect Of Ever Getting To The Hills | Ye distant Hills, ye smiling glades, | | 60 | 469 | | 15: | Ode To The Time-Gun Of Gurrumbad | Strong scion of the sturdy past | | 45 | 424 | | 16: | Omar Out Of Date | Wake! for Reveillée scatters into flight | | 52 | 467 | | 17: | Sairey - Excerpts From An Incongruity | In Spring there are lashings of new books, | | 72 | 482 | | 18: | Song Of Bells | Allons! Allons! Tra-la-la! Hear my Bellata! | | 22 | 498 | | 19: | Summer Portents | Come, let us quaff the brimming cup | | 64 | 476 | | 20: | The Ballad Of Morbid Mothers | Why do you sit in the churchyard weeping? | | 32 | 483 | | 21: | The Finest View | Away, away! The plains of Ind | | 40 | 442 | | 22: | The Happy Ending | I am tired of the day with its profitless labours, | | 32 | 454 | | 23: | The Iron Hand | To him that reads with careless eyes | | 40 | 452 | | 24: | The Last Hockey | So for the last great Hockey of the Hills, | | 107 | 489 | | 25: | The Shores Of Nothing | There's a little lake that lies | | 55 | 563 | | 26: | The Story Of Rud. | Once for a tight little Island, fonder of ha'pence than kicks, | | 38 | 461 | | 27: | The Wooin' O' Tummas | Tummas Katt cam' roun' to woo, | | 40 | 468 | | 28: | To An Elephant On His Tonic Qualities | Solace of mine hours of anguish, | | 80 | 469 | | 29: | To His Peculiar Friend Within-Doors | A strong discomfort in the dress | | 18 | 445 | | 30: | To Mandalay - Greeting | A song of Mandalay! | | 27 | 468 | | 31: | To My Lady Of The Hills | Tis the hour when golden slumbers | | 56 | 396 | | 32: | Valediction To The SS. 'Arabia,' When Returning With Her Passengers From The Delhi Durbar | Now the busy screw is churning, | | 40 | 484 | | 33: | Visionary On The Advantages Of An 'Astral Body' | It is told, in Buddhi-theosophic Schools | | 70 | 436 |
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