Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Assassination Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Assassination poems. This is a select list of the best famous Assassination poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Assassination poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of assassination poems.

Search and read the best famous Assassination poems, articles about Assassination poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Assassination poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Donald Justice | Create an image from this poem

The Assassination

 It begins again, the nocturnal pulse.
It courses through the cables laid for it.
It mounts to the chandeliers and beats there, hotly.
We are too close.
Too late, we would move back.
We are involved with the surge.
Now it bursts.
Now it has been announced.
Now it is being soaked up by newspapers.
Now it is running through the streets.
The crowd has it.
The woman selling carnations And the man in the straw hat stand with it in their shoes.
Here is the red marquee it sheltered under.
Here is the ballroom, here The sadly various orchestra led By a single gesture.
My arms open.
It enters.
Look, we are dancing.


Written by William Topaz McGonagall | Create an image from this poem

Attempted Assassination of the Queen

 God prosper long our noble Queen,
And long may she reign!
Maclean he tried to shoot her,
But it was all in vain.
For God He turned the ball aside Maclean aimed at her head; And he felt very angry Because he didn't shoot her dead.
There's a divinity that hedges a king, And so it does seem, And my opinion is, it has hedged Our most gracious Queen.
Maclean must be a madman, Which is obvious to be seen, Or else he wouldn't have tried to shoot Our most beloved Queen.
Victoria is a good Queen, Which all her subjects know, And for that God has protected her From all her deadly foes.
She is noble and generous, Her subjects must confess; There hasn't been her equal Since the days of good Queen Bess.
Long may she be spared to roam Among the bonnie Highland floral, And spend many a happy day In the palace of Balmoral.
Because she is very kind To the old women there, And allows them bread, tea, and sugar, And each one get a share.
And when they know of her coming, Their hearts feel overjoy'd, Because, in general, she finds work For men that's unemploy'd.
And she also gives the gipsies money While at Balmoral, I've been told, And, mind ye, seldom silver, But very often gold.
I hope God will protect her By night and by day, At home and abroad, When she's far away.
May He be as a hedge around her, As he's been all along, And let her live and die in peace Is the end of my song.
Written by Victor Hugo | Create an image from this poem

NO ASSASSINATION

 ("Laissons le glaive à Rome.") 
 
 {Bk. III. xvi., October, 1852.} 


 Pray Rome put up her poniard! 
 And Sparta sheathe the sword; 
 Be none too prompt to punish, 
 And cast indignant word! 
 Bear back your spectral Brutus 
 From robber Bonaparte; 
 Time rarely will refute us 
 Who doom the hateful heart. 
 
 Ye shall be o'ercontented, 
 My banished mates from home, 
 But be no rashness vented 
 Ere time for joy shall come. 
 No crime can outspeed Justice, 
 Who, resting, seems delayed— 
 Full faith accord the angel 
 Who points the patient blade. 
 
 The traitor still may nestle 
 In balmy bed of state, 
 But mark the Warder, watching 
 His guardsman at his gate. 
 He wears the crown, a monarch— 
 Of knaves and stony hearts; 
 But though they're blessed by Senates, 
 None can escape the darts! 
 
 Though shored by spear and crozier, 
 All know the arrant cheat, 
 And shun the square of pavement 
 Uncertain at his feet! 
 Yea, spare the wretch, each brooding 
 And secret-leaguers' chief, 
 And make no pistol-target 
 Of stars upon the thief. 
 
 The knell of God strikes seldom 
 But in the aptest hour; 
 And when the life is sweetest, 
 The worm will feel His power! 


 





Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry