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Best Famous Clappers Poems

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

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Written by Rg Gregory | Create an image from this poem

after the parties

 let's all go to the party friends
where left over bottles and stale ***-ends
are proudly on offer from the last time round
and our hosts believe by a ritual sound
fine spirits will flow and new cellophane wrappers
will tingle the fingers of eligible clappers

let's all ignite at the party friends
and burn with the best of the latest trends
which prove that the world is a running sore
whose plight can't be laid at this party's door
so let us look deep in our empty glasses
and puff short of breath at the weaker classes
whose salvation must lie in a further imbibing
of the rush of hot air this party's prescribing

let's all depart from the party friends
and seek other ways of making amends
for the mess that we're all in up to our noses
let's kick the conviction the party is moses
with tablets worth taking for any condition
while the world holds its breath for the big collision
let's kick off the hangovers all parties swear
is part of the bargain f or breathing free air
and dare to be lost and risk being found
in the springs that are cracking the crust of dead ground

and when we're all shot of the parties friends
maybe then odd beginnings will perk up from dead ends


Written by Jean Arp | Create an image from this poem

Kaspar Is Dead

 alas our good kaspar is dead.
who will bury a burning flag in the wings of the clouds who will pull black wool over our eyes day by day.
who will turn the coffee mills in the primal barrel.
who will lure the idyllic roe from his petrified paperbag.
who will sneeze oceanliners unbrellas windudders beekeepers spindles of ozone who will pick clean the pyramids' bones.
alas alas alas our good kaspar is dead.
holy saint bong kaspar is dead.
the clappers raise heart-rending echoes of sorrow in the barns of the bells when we murmur his name.
therefore i will only sigh out his surname kaspar kaspar kaspar.
why hast thou forsaken us.
in what shape has thy lovely great soul taken flight.
hast thou changed to a star or a chain made of water in a tropical whirlwind or a teat of black light or a transparent brick in a drum that howls for its craggy existence.
now the soles of our feet and the crowns of our heads have dried up and the fairies are lying half-charred on the funeral piles.
now the black bowling alleys thunder in back of the sun and no one is setting a compass or spinning the wheelbarrow's wheels.
who will eat with the phosphorized rat on the lonely barefooted table.
who will chase the siroccoco devil that's trying to lead off our horses.
who will decipher the monograms scratched on the stars.
his bust shall adorn the mantels of people ennobled by truth through it leaves but small comfort or snuff for his death's head.
Written by Rg Gregory | Create an image from this poem

cherries and birds

 cherries are so vulnerable
blinking their way from green
to polished red in trees
guileless to stave off birds

a murmur does its rounds
and when the bright day comes
and ripeness throws its coyness
in the air a seething mesh

of wings and whetted beaks 
(knowing its cherry-right)
falls upon the fleshy fruit
and rips it to the stone

then birds become the foe
of people leaden in their legs
who gasp below (fists raised
at butchery so sweet)

nets and scarecrows (clappers
in the wind) disfigure trees
to keep the prize intact
for human beaks to gorge on

cherries in baskets though
are spoils cherished - they spill
their luscious clusters wisely
they crave towards eating

and eaten then restore
round memories of eden
birds are divine messengers
fruits of the world abundant
Written by Amy Lowell | Create an image from this poem

To Elizabeth Ward Perkins

 Dear Bessie, would my tired rhyme
Had force to rise from apathy,
And shaking off its lethargy
Ring word-tones like a Christmas chime.
But in my soul's high belfry, chill The bitter wind of doubt has blown, The summer swallows all have flown, The bells are frost-bound, mute and still.
Upon the crumbling boards the snow Has drifted deep, the clappers hang Prismed with icicles, their clang Unheard since ages long ago.
The rope I pull is stiff and cold, My straining ears detect no sound Except a sigh, as round and round The wind rocks through the timbers old.
Below, I know the church is bright With haloed tapers, warm with prayer; But here I only feel the air Of icy centuries of night.
Beneath my feet the snow is lit And gemmed with colours, red, and blue, Topaz, and green, where light falls through The saints that in the windows sit.
Here darkness seems a spectred thing, Voiceless and haunting, while the stars Mock with a light of long dead years The ache of present suffering.
Silent and winter-killed I stand, No carol hymns my debt to you; But take this frozen thought in lieu, And thaw its music in your hand.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things