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Best Famous Blissfully Poems

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

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Written by Li Po | Create an image from this poem

Down from the Mountain

 As down Mount Emerald at eve I came,
The mountain moon went all the way with me.
Backward I looked, to see the heights aflame With a pale light that glimmered eerily.
A little lad undid the rustic latch As hand in hand your cottage we did gain, Where green limp tendrils at our cloaks did catch, And dim bamboos o'erhung a shadowy lane.
Gaily I cried, "Here may we rest our fill!" Then choicest wines we quaffed; and cheerily "The Wind among the Pines" we sang, until A few faint stars hung in the Galaxy.
Merry were you, my friend: and drunk was I, Blissfully letting all the world go by.


Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Simplicity

 What I seek far yet seldom find
Is large simplicity of mind
 In fellow men;
For I have sprouted from the sod,
Like Bobbie Burns, my earthly god,
 --From plough to pen.
So I refuse my brain to vex With problems prosy and complex, Beyond my scope; To me simplicity is peace, So I persue it without cease, And growing hope.
"The world is too much with us," wrote Wise Wordsworth, whom I love to quote, When rhymes are coy; And simple is the world I see, With bud and bloom and brook and tree To give me joy.
So blissfully I slip away From brazen and dynamic day To dingle cool .
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Now tell me friend, if in your eyes, By being simple I am wise,-- Or just a fool?
Written by Rainer Maria Rilke | Create an image from this poem

The Second Elegy

Every angel is terrifying.
And yet alas I invoked you almost deadly birds of the soul knowing about you.
Where are the days of Tobias when one of you veiling his radiance stood at the front door slightly disguised for the journey no longer appalling; (a young man like the one who curiously peeked through the window).
But if the archangel now perilous from behind the stars took even one step down toward us: our own heart beating higher and higher would bear us to death.
Who are you? Early successes Creation's pampered favorites mountain-ranges peaks growing red in the dawn of all Beginning -pollen of the flowering godhead joints of pure light corridors stairways thrones space formed from essence shields made of ecstasy storms of emotion whirled into rapture and suddenly alone: mirrors which scoop up the beauty that has streamed from their face and gather it back into themselves entire.
But we when moved by deep feeling evaporate; we breathe ourselves out and away; from moment to moment our emotion grows fainter like a perfume.
Though someone may tell us: Yes, you've entered my bloodstream, the room, the whole springtime is filled with you¡­ -what does it matter? he can't contain us we vanish inside him and around him.
And those who are beautiful oh who can retain them? Appearance ceaselessly rises in their face and is gone.
Like dew from the morning grass what is ours floats into the air like steam from a dish of hot food.
O smile where are you going? O upturned glance: new warm receding wave on the sea of the heart¡­ alas but that is what we are.
Does the infinite space we dissolve into taste of us then? Do the angels really reabsorb only the radiance that streamed out from themselves or sometimes as if by an oversight is there a trace of our essence in it as well? Are we mixed in with their features even as slightly as that vague look in the faces of pregnant women? They do not notice it (how could they notice) in their swirling return to themselves.
Lovers if they knew how might utter strange marvelous Words in the night air.
For it seems that everything hides us.
Look: trees do exist; the houses that we live in still stand.
We alone fly past all things as fugitive as the wind.
And all things conspire to keep silent about us half out of shame perhaps half as unutterable hope.
Lovers gratified in each other I am asking you about us.
You hold each other.
Where is your proof? Look sometimes I find that my hands have become aware of each other or that my time-worn face shelters itself inside them.
That gives me a slight sensation.
But who would dare to exist just for that? You though who in the other's passion grow until overwhelmed he begs you: No more¡­ ; you who beneath his hands swell with abundance like autumn grapes; you who may disappear because the other has wholly emerged: I am asking you about us.
I know you touch so blissfully because the caress preserves because the place you so tenderly cover does not vanish; because underneath it you feel pure duration.
So you promise eternity almost from the embrace.
And yet when you have survived the terror of the first glances the longing at the window and the first walk together once only through the garden: lovers are you the same? When you lift yourselves up to each other's mouth and your lips join drink against drink: oh how strangely each drinker seeps away from his action.
Weren't you astonished by the caution of human gestures on Attic gravestones? Wasn't love and departure placed so gently on shoulders that is seemed to be made of a different substance than in our world? Remember the hands how weightlessly they rest though there is power in the torsos.
These self-mastered figures know: "We can go this far This is ours to touch one another this lightly; the gods Can press down harder upon us.
But that is the gods' affair.
" If only we too could discover a pure contained human place our own strip of fruit-bearing soil between river and rock.
For our own heart always exceeds us as theirs did.
And we can no longer follow it gazing into images that soothe it into the godlike bodies where measured more greatly if achieves a greater repose.
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Tranquillity

 This morning on my pensive walk
I saw a fisher on a rock,
Who watched his ruby float careen
In waters bluely crystalline,
While silver fishes nosed his bait,
Yet hesitated ere they ate.
Nearby I saw a mother mid Who knitted by her naked child, And watched him as he romped with glee, In golden sand, in singing sea, Her eyes so blissfully love-lit She gazed and gazed and ceased to knit.
And then I watched a painter chap, Grey-haired, a grandfather, mayhap, Who daubed with delicate caress As if in love with loveliness, And looked at me with vague surmise, The joy of beauty in his eyes.
Yet in my Morning Rag I read Of paniked peoples, dark with dread, Of flame and famine near and far, Of revolution, pest and war; The fall of this, the rise of that, The writhing proletariat.
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I saw the fisher from his hook Take off a shiny perch to cook; The mother garbed her laughing boy, And sang a silver lilt of joy; The artist, packing up his paint, Went serenely as a saint.
The sky was gentleness and love, The sea soft-crooning as a dove; Peace reigned so brilliantly profound In every sight, in every sound.
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Alas, what mockery for me! Can peace be mine till Man be free?
Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Security

 There once was a limpet puffed with pride
Who said to the ribald sea:
"It isn't I who cling to the rock,
It's the rock that clings to me;
It's the silly old rock who hugs me tight,
Because he loves me so;
And though I struggle with all my might,
He will not let me go.
" Then said the sea, who hates the rock That defies him night and day: "You want to be free - well, leave it to me, I'll help you get away.
I know such a beautiful silver beach, Where blissfully you may bide; Shove off to-night when the moon is bright, And I'll swig you thee on my tide.
" "I'd like to go," said the limpet low, "But what's a silver beach?" "It's sand," said the sea, "bright baby rock, And you shall be lord of each.
" "Righto!" said the limpet; "Life allures, And a rover I would be.
" So greatly bold she slacked her hold And launched on the laughing sea.
But when she got to the gelid deep Where the waters swish and swing, She began to know with a sense of woe That a limpet's lot is to cling.
but she couldn't cling to a jelly fish, Or clutch at a wastrel weed, So she raised a cry as the waves went by, but the waves refused to heed.
Then when she came to the glaucous deep Where the congers coil and leer, The flesh in her shell began to creep, And she shrank in utter fear.
It was good to reach that silver beach, That gleamed in the morning light, Where a shining band of the silver sand Looked up with with a welcome bright.
Looked up with a smile that was full of guile, Called up through the crystal blue: "Each one of us is a baby rock, And we want to cling to you.
" Then the heart of the limpet leaped with joy, For she hated the waters wide; So down she sank to the sandy bank That clung to her under-side.
That clung so close she couldn't breath, So fierce she fought to be free; But the silver sand couldn't understand, While above her laughed the sea.
Then to each wave that wimpled past She cried in her woe and pain: "Oh take me back, let me rivet fast To my steadfast rock again.
" She cried till she roused a taxi-crab Who gladly gave her a ride; But I grieve to say in his crabby way He insisted she sit inside.
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So if of the limpet breed ye be, Beware life's brutal shock; Don't take the chance of the changing sea, But - cling like hell to your rock.


Written by Robert William Service | Create an image from this poem

Relax

 Do you recall that happy bike
 With bundles on our backs?
How near to heaven it was like
 To blissfully relax!
In cosy tavern of good cheer
 To doff our heavy packs,
And with a mug of foamy beer
 Relax.
Learn to relax: to clean the mind Of fear and doubt and care, And in vacuity to find The perfect peace that's there.
With lassitude of heart and hand, When every sinew slacks, How good to rest the old bean and Relax, relax.
Just sink back in an easy chair For forty winks or so, And fold your hands as if in prayer, --That helps a lot, you know.
Forget that you are you awhile, And pliable as wax, Just beatifically smile .
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Relax, relax, relax.
Written by Francesco Petrarch | Create an image from this poem

Sonnet CXXXIV

SONNET CXXXIV.

Quando Amor i begli occhi a terra inchina.

LAURA SINGS.

If Love her beauteous eyes to earth incline,
And all her soul concentring in a sigh,
Then breathe it in her voice of melody,
Floating clear, soft, angelical, divine;
My heart, forth-stolen so gently, I resign,
And, all my hopes and wishes changed, I cry,—
"Oh, may my last breath pass thus blissfully,
If Heaven so sweet a death for me design!"
But the rapt sense, by such enchantment bound,
And the strong will, thus listening to possess
Heaven's joys on earth, my spirit's flight delay.
And thus I live; and thus drawn out and wound
Is my life's thread, in dreamy blessedness,
By this sole syren from the realms of day.
Dacre.
Her bright and love-lit eyes on earth she bends—
Concentres her rich breath in one full sigh—
A brief pause—a fond hush—her voice on high,
Clear, soft, angelical, divine, ascends.
Such rapine sweet through all my heart extends,
New thoughts and wishes so within me vie,
Perforce I say,—"Thus be it mine to die,
If Heaven to me so fair a doom intends!"
But, ah! those sounds whose sweetness laps my sense,
The strong desire of more that in me yearns,
Restrain my spirit in its parting hence.
Thus at her will I live; thus winds and turns
The yarn of life which to my lot is given,
Earth's single siren, sent to us from heaven.
Macgregor.
Written by Friedrich von Schiller | Create an image from this poem

The Fugitive

 The air is perfumed with the morning's fresh breeze,
From the bush peer the sunbeams all purple and bright,
While they gleam through the clefts of the dark-waving trees,
And the cloud-crested mountains are golden with light.
With joyful, melodious, ravishing, strain, The lark, as he wakens, salutes the glad sun, Who glows in the arms of Aurora again, And blissfully smiling, his race 'gins to run.
All hail, light of day! Thy sweet gushing ray Pours down its soft warmth over pasture and field; With hues silver-tinged The meadows are fringed, And numberless suns in the dewdrop revealed.
Young Nature invades The whispering shades, Displaying each ravishing charm; The soft zephyr blows, And kisses the rose, The plain is sweet-scented with balm.
How high from yon city the smoke-clouds ascend! Their neighing, and snorting, and bellowing blend The horses and cattle; The chariot-wheels rattle, As down to the valley they take their mad way; And even the forest where life seems to move, The eagle, and falcon, and hawk soar above, And flutter their pinions, in heaven's bright ray.
In search of repose From my heart-rending woes, Oh, where shall my sad spirit flee? The earth's smiling face, With its sweet youthful grace, A tomb must, alas, be for me! Arise, then, thou sunlight of morning, and fling O'er plain and o'er forest thy purple-dyed beams! Thou twilight of evening, all noiselessly sing In melody soft to the world as it dreams! Ah, sunlight of morning, to me thou but flingest Thy purple-dyed beams o'er the grave of the past! Ah, twilight of evening, thy strains thou but singest To one whose deep slumbers forever must last!
Written by Edna St. Vincent Millay | Create an image from this poem

The Bean-Stalk

 Ho, Giant! This is I!
I have built me a bean-stalk into your sky!
La,—but it's lovely, up so high!

This is how I came,—I put
Here my knee, there my foot,
Up and up, from shoot to shoot—
And the blessed bean-stalk thinning
Like the mischief all the time,
Till it took me rocking, spinning,
In a dizzy, sunny circle,
Making angles with the root,
Far and out above the cackle
Of the city I was born in,
Till the little dirty city
In the light so sheer and sunny
Shone as dazzling bright and pretty
As the money that you find
In a dream of finding money—
What a wind! What a morning!—

Till the tiny, shiny city,
When I shot a glance below,
Shaken with a giddy laughter,
Sick and blissfully afraid,
Was a dew-drop on a blade,
And a pair of moments after
Was the whirling guess I made,—
And the wind was like a whip

Cracking past my icy ears,
And my hair stood out behind,
And my eyes were full of tears,
Wide-open and cold,
More tears than they could hold,
The wind was blowing so,
And my teeth were in a row,
Dry and grinning,
And I felt my foot slip,
And I scratched the wind and whined,
And I clutched the stalk and jabbered,
With my eyes shut blind,—
What a wind! What a wind!

Your broad sky, Giant,
Is the shelf of a cupboard;
I make bean-stalks, I'm
A builder, like yourself,
But bean-stalks is my trade,
I couldn't make a shelf,
Don't know how they're made,
Now, a bean-stalk is more pliant—
La, what a climb!

Book: Radiant Verses: A Journey Through Inspiring Poetry