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Best Famous Albums Poems

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

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Written by Etheridge Knight | Create an image from this poem

As You Leave Me

 Shiny record albums scattered over
the living room floor, reflecting light
from the lamp, sharp reflections that hurt
my eyes as I watch you, squatting among the platters, 
the beer foam making mustaches on your lips.
And, too, the shadows on your cheeks from your long lashes fascinate me--almost as much as the dimples in your cheeks, your arms and your legs.
You hum along with Mathis--how you love Mathis! with his burnished hair and quicksilver voice that dances among the stars and whirls through canyons like windblown snow, sometimes I think that Mathis could take you from me if you could be complete without me.
I glance at my watch.
It is now time.
You rise, silently, and to the bedroom and the paint; on the lips red, on the eyes black, and I lean in the doorway and smoke, and see you grow old before my eyes, and smoke, why do you chatter while you dress? and smile when you grab your large leather purse? don't you know that when you leave me I walk to the window and watch you? and light a reefer as I watch you? and I die as I watch you disappear in the dark streets to whistle and smile at the johns


Written by Sasha Skenderija | Create an image from this poem

Weirdos

Deep and unreachable in their darknesses, 
capriciously childish and tender
when we write to each other,
while we talk about one of us
who is not around.
I grew up with some of them, others, who I met as grown-up people, I could unerringly pick out in their photo albums on group pictures of their school classes.
They've always been like that.
They remember every detail I've ever told them about myself, and even some I left untold.
There's always one of them around to remind me of important things about myself when I sink or soar too high in my petty existential delirium.
Some of them had nearly given up on themselves and on me: they fell in and grew together with their own lunacies pulling me and lifting me up as a magnet picks up iron filings, or a comb torn bits of paper.
People that I love, scattered along the meridians and along their abysses: among monsters of normalcy.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Stamp Collector

 My worldly wealth I hoard in albums three,
My life collection of rare postage stamps;
My room is cold and bare as you can see,
My coat is old and shabby as a tramp's;
Yet more to me than balances in banks,
My albums three are worth a million francs.
I keep them in that box beside my bed, For who would dream such treasures it could hold; But every day I take them out and spread Each page, to gloat like miser o'er his gold: Dearer to me than could be child or wife, I would defend them with my very life.
They are my very life, for every night over my catalogues I pore and pore; I recognize rare items with delight, Nothing I read but philatelic lore; And when some specimen of choice I buy, In all the world there's none more glad than I.
Behold my gem, my British penny black; To pay its price I starved myself a year; And many a night my dinner I would lack, But when I bought it, oh, what radiant cheer! Hitler made war that day - I did not care, So long as my collection he would spare.
Look - my triangular Cape of Good Hope.
To purchase it I had to sell my car.
Now in my pocket for some sous I grope To pay my omnibus when home is far, And I am cold and hungry and footsore, In haste to add some beauty to my store.
This very day, ah, what a joy was mine, When in a dingy dealer's shop I found This franc vermillion, eighteen forty-nine .
.
.
How painfully my heart began to pound! (It's weak they say), I paid the modest price And tremblingly I vanished in a trice.
But oh, my dream is that some day of days, I might discover a Mauritius blue, poking among the stamp-bins of the quais; Who knows! They say there are but two; Yet if a third one I should spy, I think - God help me! I should faint and die.
.
.
.
Poor Monsieur Pns, he's cold and dead, One of those stamp-collecting cranks.
His garret held no crust of bread, But albums worth a million francs.
on them his income he would spend, By philatelic frenzy driven: What did it profit in the end.
.
.
You can't take stamps to Heaven.
Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

By such and such an offering

 By such and such an offering
To Mr.
So and So, The web of live woven -- So martyrs albums show!

Book: Reflection on the Important Things