Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Hugo Williams Poems

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

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

See Also:
Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Siren Song

 This is the one song everyone 
would like to learn: the song
that is irresistible:

the song that forces men
to leap overboard in squadrons
even though they see the beached skulls

the song nobody knows
because anyone who has heard it
is dead, and the others can't remember.
Shall I tell you the secret and if I do, will you get me out of this bird suit? I don'y enjoy it here squatting on this island looking picturesque and mythical with these two faethery maniacs, I don't enjoy singing this trio, fatal and valuable.
I will tell the secret to you, to you, only to you.
Come closer.
This song is a cry for help: Help me! Only you, only you can, you are unique at last.
Alas it is a boring song but it works every time.


Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Unobtainable

 Whether it was putting in an extra beat, 
or leaving one out, I couldn't tell.
My heart seemed to have forgotten everything it ever knew about timing and co-ordination in its efforts to get through to someone on the other side of a wall.
As I lay in bed, I could hear it hammering away inside my pillow, being answered now and then by a distant guitar-note of bedsprings, pausing for a moment, as if listening, Then hurrying on as before.
Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Her News

 You paused for a moment and I heard you smoking
on the other end of the line.
I pictured your expression, one eye screwed shut against the smoke as you waited for my reaction.
I was waiting for it myself, a list of my own news gone suddenly cold in my hand.
Supposing my wife found out, what would happen then? Would I have to leave her and marry you now? Perhaps it wouldn't be so bad, starting again with someone new, finding a new place, pretending the best was yet to come.
It might even be fun, playing the family man, walking around in the park full of righteous indignation.
But no, I couldn't go through all that again, not without my own wife being there, not without her getting cross about everything.
Perhaps she wouldn't mind about the baby, then we could buy a house in the country and all move in together.
That sounded like a better idea.
Now that I'd been caught at last, a wave of relief swept over me.
I was just considering a shed in the garden with a radio and a day bed, when I remembered I hadn't seen you for over a year.
"Congratulations," I said.
"When's it due?"
Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Saturday Morning

 Everyone who made love the night before 
was walking around with flashing red lights 
on top of their heads-a white-haired old gentlemen, 
a red-faced schoolboy, a pregnant woman 
who smiled at me from across the street 
and gave a little secret shrug, 
as if the flashing red light on her head 
was a small price to pay for what she knew.
Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Bar Italia

 How beautiful it would be to wait for you again 
in the usual place, 
not looking at the door, 
keeping a lookout in the long mirror,
knowing that if you are late
it will not be too late,
knowing that all I have to do
is wait a little longer
and you will be pushing through the other customers,
out of breath, apologetic.
Where have you been, for God's sake? I was starting to worry.
How long did we say we would wait if one of us was held up? It's been so long and still no sign of you.
As time goes by, I search other faces in the bar, rearranging their features until they are monstrous versions of you, their heads wobbling from side to side like heads on sticks.
Your absence inches forward until it is standing next to me.
Now it has taken a seat I was saving.
Now we are face to face in the long mirror.


Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Timer

 The smell of ammonia in the entrance hall.
The racing bike.
The junk mail.
The timer switch whose single naked bulb allowed us as far as the first floor.
The backs of your legs as you went ahead of me up the stairs.
The landing where we paused for breath and impatient key searching.
The locks which would never open quickly enough to let us in.
The green of the paintwork we slid down as if we had nowhere else to go.
Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Siren Song

 I phone from time to time, to see if she's 
changed the music on her answerphone.
'Tell me in two words', goes the recording, 'what you were going to tell in a thousand'.
I peer into that thought, like peering out to sea at night, hearing the sound of waves breaking on rocks, knowing she is there, listening, waiting for me to speak.
Once in a while she'll pick up the phone and her voice sings to me out of the past.
The hair on the back of my neck stands up as I catch her smell for a second
Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

Billys Rain

 How do you think I feel
when you make me talk to you
and won't let me stop
till the words turn into a moan?
Do you think I mind
when you put your hand over my mouth
and tell me not to move
so you can "hear" it happening?


And how do you think I like it
when you tell me what to do
and your mouth opens
and you look straight through me?
Do you think I mind
when the blank expression comes
and you set off alone
down the hall of collapsing columns?
Written by Hugo Williams | Create an image from this poem

During An Absence

 Now that she has left the room for a moment
to powder her nose,
we watch and wait, watch and wait,
for her to bring back the purpose into our lives.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things