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Best Famous Biological Poems

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

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Written by Ogden Nash | Create an image from this poem

Biological Reflection

 A girl whose cheeks are covered with paint
Has an advantage with me over one whose ain't.


Written by Craig Raine | Create an image from this poem

An Attempt At Jealousy

 So how is life with your new bloke?
Simpler, I bet.
Just one stroke of his quivering oar and the skin of the Thames goes into a spin, eh? How is life with an oarsman? Better? More in--out? Athletic? Wetter? When you hear the moan of the rowlocks, do you urge him on like a cox? Tell me, is he bright enough to find that memo-pad you call a mind? Or has he contrived to bring you out-- given you an in-tray and an out? How did I ever fall for a paper-clip? How could I ever listen to office gossip even in bed and find it so intelligent? Was is straight biological bent? I suppose you go jogging together? Tackle the Ridgeway in nasty weather? Face force 55 gales and chat about prep or how you bested that Birmingham rep? He must be mad with excitement.
So must you.
What an incitement to lust all those press-ups must be.
Or is it just the same? PE? Tell me, I'm curious.
Is it fun being in love with just anyone? How do you remember his face if you meet in a public place? Perhaps you know him by his shoes? Or do you sometimes choose another pinstriped clone by accident and drag that home instead? From what you say, he's perfect.
For a Chekhov play.
Tall and dark and brightly dim, Kulygin's part was made for him.
Imagine your life with a 'beak'.
Week after week after week like homework or detention; all that standing to attention whenever his colleagues drop in for a spot of what's-your-toxin.
Speech Day, matron, tuck-shop, Christ, you'll find school fees are over-priced and leave, but not come back to me.
You've done your bit for poetry.
Words, or deeds? You'll stick to youth.
I'm a stickler for the truth-- which makes me wonder what it was I loved you for.
Tell me, because now I feel nothing--except regret.
What is it, love, I need to forget?
Written by Anne Sexton | Create an image from this poem

The Doctor Of The Heart

 Take away your knowledge, Doktor.
It doesn't butter me up.
You say my heart is sick unto.
You ought to have more respect! you with the goo on the suction cup.
You with your wires and electrodes fastened at my ankle and wrist, sucking up the biological breast.
You with your zigzag machine playing like the stock market up and down.
Give me the Phi Beta key you always twirl and I will make a gold crown for my molar.
I will take a slug if you please and make myself a perfectly good appendix.
Give me a fingernail for an eyeglass.
The world was milky all along.
I will take an iron and press out my slipped disk until it is flat.
But take away my mother's carcinoma for I have only one cup of fetus tears.
Take away my father's cerebral hemorrhage for I have only a jigger of blood in my hand.
Take away my sister's broken neck for I have only my schoolroom ruler for a cure.
Is there such a device for my heart? I have only a gimmick called magic fingers.
Let me dilate like a bad debt.
Here is a sponge.
I can squeeze it myself.
O heart, tobacco red heart, beat like a rock guitar.
I am at the ship's prow.
I am no longer the suicide with her raft and paddle.
Herr Doktor! I'll no longer die to spite you, you wallowing seasick grounded man.
Written by Bernadette Geyer | Create an image from this poem

Pearls

 And so I look back
still thinking of her
with painful heart,
this clench of inner flesh.
—Kakinomoto Hitomaro from Manyoshu * Praise the irritant, that genesis, implanted within the soft and malleable animal that bore you.
* Your brethren strung around my neck, dangling from my earlobes.
The imperfections the jeweler slights, I praise.
* Artifact of a biological process, why do we expect symmetry from a grain of sand? * Praise the oblong beauty of you, solidified raindrops, your stony quietude.
* Let me praise the waters that bestow your milky luster, worshipped to ensure a bountiful hunt.
* Manyoshu poems praised the ama, female divers, who collected you, as gently as quail eggs.
* Let me rub you against my teeth to test the veracity of you, roll you around my tongue to weigh your heft.
* The heart clenches, hides its moon among clouds.
Would that I, too, could build a radiant world around a bitter nucleus.

Book: Shattered Sighs