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Best Famous Bequeaths Poems

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

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Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

How dare the robins sing

 How dare the robins sing,
When men and women hear
Who since they went to their account
Have settled with the year! --
Paid all that life had earned
In one consummate bill,
And now, what life or death can do
Is immaterial.
Insulting is the sun
To him whose mortal light
Beguiled of immortality
Bequeaths him to the night.
Extinct be every hum
In deference to him
Whose garden wrestles with the dew,
At daybreak overcome!


Written by Emily Dickinson | Create an image from this poem

The Lilac is an ancient shrub

 The Lilac is an ancient shrub
But ancienter than that
The Firmamental Lilac
Upon the Hill tonight --
The Sun subsiding on his Course
Bequeaths this final Plant
To Contemplation -- not to Touch --
The Flower of Occident.
Of one Corolla is the West --
The Calyx is the Earth --
The Capsules burnished Seeds the Stars
The Scientist of Faith
His research has but just begun --
Above his synthesis
The Flora unimpeachable
To Time's Analysis --
"Eye hath not seen" may possibly
Be current with the Blind
But let not Revelation
By theses be detained --
Written by Sylvia Plath | Create an image from this poem

Sculptor

 For Leonard Baskin

To his house the bodiless
Come to barter endlessly
Vision, wisdom, for bodies
Palpable as his, and weighty.

Hands moving move priestlier
Than priest's hands, invoke no vain
Images of light and air
But sure stations in bronze, wood, stone.

Obdurate, in dense-grained wood,
A bald angel blocks and shapes
The flimsy light; arms folded
Watches his cumbrous world eclipse

Inane worlds of wind and cloud.
Bronze dead dominate the floor,
Resistive, ruddy-bodied,
Dwarfing us. Our bodies flicker

Toward extinction in those eyes
Which, without him, were beggared
Of place, time, and their bodies.
Emulous spirits make discord,

Try entry, enter nightmares
Until his chisel bequeaths
Them life livelier than ours,
A solider repose than death's.
Written by Walt Whitman | Create an image from this poem

Souvenirs of Democracy

 THE business man, the acquirer vast, 
After assiduous years, surveying results, preparing for departure, 
Devises houses and lands to his children—bequeaths stocks, goods—funds for a
 school
 or hospital, 
Leaves money to certain companions to buy tokens, souvenirs of gems and gold; 
Parceling out with care—And then, to prevent all cavil,
His name to his testament formally signs. 

But I, my life surveying, 
With nothing to show, to devise, from its idle years, 
Nor houses, nor lands—nor tokens of gems or gold for my friends, 
Only these Souvenirs of Democracy—In them—in all my songs—behind me
 leaving,
To You, who ever you are, (bathing, leavening this leaf especially with my
 breath—pressing
 on it a moment with my own hands; 
—Here! feel how the pulse beats in my wrists!—how my heart’s-blood is
 swelling,
 contracting!) 
I will You, in all, Myself, with promise to never desert you, 
To which I sign my name.
Written by James Joyce | Create an image from this poem

Thou Leanest to the Shell of Night

 Thou leanest to the shell of night, 
Dear lady, a divining ear. 
In that soft choiring of delight 
What sound hath made thy heart to fear? 
Seemed it of rivers rushing forth 
From the grey deserts of the north? 

That mood of thine 
Is his, if thou but scan it well, 
Who a mad tale bequeaths to us 
At ghosting hour conjurable -- - 
And all for some strange name he read 
In Purchas or in Holinshed.



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